Poetry Prompt: Writing Poems Inspired by Haiku

Writing Poems Inspired by Haiku

 

Haiku are the perfect icebreaker poems. They are easy to remember, they are approachable, short, and they are low-risk, because they are only seventeen syllables and three short lines, and even those requirements are flexible. Haiku are also a great starting point. I have written many poems that use a haiku as a title, or as a first line, or as a seventeen syllable sentence–what Allen Ginsberg called an American Sentence, and inside of prisons, that word ‘sentence’ carries a heavier meaning. The Poetry Foundation website has a great page dedicated to the haiku: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/education/glossary/haiku-or-hokku. If you are hesitant about getting started, use this simple model: 

 

Even in ____________ (place or state of being)

hearing ___________ (be as specific as possible)

I long for ___________ (same as first line)

 

Even in Kyoto, 

hearing the cuckoo cry, 

I long for Kyoto. (Basho, translated by Robert Hass)

 

Even in Louisiana–

hearing the absence of a breeze, 

I long for Louisiana.

 

Even in life, 

hearing the laughter of others, 

I long for life

 

Even in the cypress swamp,

Hearing the hoot of the owl,

I long for the sounds of my youth

 

This haiku is by the American writer Richard Wright and a line from a longer poem it inspired:

 

I am nobody.                                              If I am the red sinking sun,                      

A red sinking autumn sun                          let every eye wonder and every lover love

took my name away                                   and cling and sing