Monthly Archives: November 2016

Juvenilia – Friday’s Word of the Day Haiku

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Another Friday, another interesting word of the day from dictionary.com:

Juvenilia means “youthful (works)” in Latin. It is the neuter plural form of the adjective juvenilis, a derivative of the adjective and noun, juvenis, “young, a young person (ie., between the ages of 20 and 40).” It entered English in the early 1600’s.

When I read the origin of this word, I found it interesting that a “young” person is considered, according to dictionary.com, to be between 20 and 40. I can think of several young authors, much younger than 20, who have had a profound impact on the world.

heartsongs

I think of Mattie Stepanek, who wrote “Heart-Songs” and four additional books of poetry before his death  from muscular dystrophy just before his 14th birthday.

 

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And then there is Dorothy Straight who wrote “How the World Began” for her Grandmother at the tender age of 4! Perhaps not particularly profound, but notable for the fact that she is considered one of the youngest published authors.

 

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And of course, many of us are familiar with Anne Frank’s, “The Diary of a Young Girl”, the heart-felt words of a young author who filled the pages of a diary that she received on her 13th birthday while confined to an attic before her family was betrayed and sent to a concentration camp during the Nazi regime. Sadly, Anne succumbed to Typhus while imprisoned, but her diary was found by her father, Otto, the only survivor of his family, and published in 1947. It has been translated into more than 60 different languages.

 

I’ll stop here. There are many other wonderful books by children, wise beyond their years. Wise perhaps because they have not yet learned to filter truth and reason to make it palatable to overly-sensitive ears. How I love the unabashed honesty of children. We would all do well to discount the common saying, “children should be seen and not heard” and give them a listen every now and again. We might learn something.

Especially during these interesting, and for some frightening, times, I’m dedicating this week’s haiku to Miss Frank…

Ann Frank’s diary,
a wise juvenilia
holds truth for our times.

kat ~ 18 November 2016


Utopia

tltweek42

As the ruling class had promised, internment camps were established in every district to house the undesirables who were identified and sorted during the great purge, to be kept safe with their own kind: the immigrants, the refugees, the gays, the Muslims, non-Christians, Agnostics and Atheists, single, divorced and widowed women over 21 who did not have the covering of a husband, native peoples, the homeless and the disabled.

Small delegations from each sub-community were given authority to keep the peace, to report dissidents, who were swiftly removed to an undisclosed location and to order basic necessities, such as food and medicine for their respective areas.

It was meant to be a temporary inconvenience until everyone could be registered and vetted sufficiently to re-enter the regime, but the process was long and ridden with changing rules and red tape, and the longer it took, the more comfortable the outcasts became, staying behind their walls with their own kind, where it was safe.

~kat ~ 17 November 2016

For Sonya’s Three Line Tale Challenge based on the photo above by photo by Jace Grandinetti via Unsplash.


Breathe New – Haiku Challenge

cloud24

new day dawns
on a whisp’ring breeze
breathing life
————————
new things will frighten
those who like familiar things
breathing helps let go

kat ~ 16 November 2016

A few haiku for Ronovan Writes Haiku Challenge, prompt words: Breathe & New.


Rows

in rows over rows
a flock of quacking quackers
were all aflutter

kat ~ 16 November 2016

A Haiku in response to Haiku Horizon’s weekly challenge, prompt word: “Row”.


Luna

her name is Luna
some say she has a man-face
others, cows and spoons
but who else but a woman
can shift the tides with a glance

kat ~ 15 November 2016
(Tanka- 5/7/5/7/7)