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Haiku of Issa

by Mark McGuinness on 31 October, 2009

If you’re remotely interested in haiku, you should sign up to receive a daily poem by the haiku master Issa, via e-mail. (You can also pick them up on Twitter, by following @issa_haiku. And there’s an enormous searchable archive of Issa haiku on the site.)

What better way to start the day than by reading something like this?

lightning flash–
the astonished face
of the dog

Or this:

the child
clutches them tightly…
plum blossoms

But that’s not all. As well as providing the English text, translator David G. Lanoue gives us the original Japanese, in Western and Japanese scripts:

osanago ya nigi nigi shitari ume no hana

幼子や掴々したり梅の花

My Japanese is very rudimentary, but I know ‘ume’ (plum) and ‘hana’ (flower), as well as the kanji character for ‘hana’, and I get a frisson of pleasure from being able to read a few syllables in the original, with Lanoue’s help.

Some poems are accompanied by a note explaining the context or references:

the calf begins
his journey…
autumn rain

Evidently it has been sold and now must leave its mother, a scene that becomes even more poignant in light of Issa’s own childhood.

I don’t know Issa’s haiku as well as those of Basho, and this is a wonderful way to remedy my ignorance. Reading a single poem each day makes you pause and consider it properly, without the temptation to rush on to the next poem in a book.

If only all the e-mails in my inbox were as inspiring as these.

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

Kate B Hall 29 November, 2009 at 5:13 pm

Hi Mark
I was in your workshop yesterday, for which I thank you, and today I downloaded the Time Managment book , thank you for that too. As I was wandering around I noticed that you had posted someting about the Daily Issa thing. I don’t know if you are generally into Haiku? If you are do you know about the British Haiku Society and the London meetings? just thought you might be interested.
Best wishes,Kate

Reply

Mark McGuinness 30 November, 2009 at 10:58 pm

Hi Kate. Glad you liked the workshop. I’m a keen amateur where haiku are concerned – I love Basho, and am getting into Issa. I’ve come across the British Haiku Society – my friend Graham High edited the journal until recently. I didn’t know they met in London though.

Btw I can’t access your website at http://www.katebhall.com/ is the address correct?

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