
love enough
honey moon rising
sweetening the dark’ning sky
rest weary dreamers
there is always hope
love enough to bear all ills
rest weary dreamers
grace flows softly from the source
moonlight, a glimpse of her heart
~kat
Happy Monday as we begin a new week and a new poetry form, the Hainka! Read more about this amazing form below. It has everything I love in poetry, brevity, a melding of two of my favorite forms…the haiku and the tanka, and even includes a refrain line to tie it all together. 😊 This should be a fun week!
The Hainka
The 17-syllable haiku is the shortest form of poetry, and the 31-syllable tanka is probably the second shortest format of verse. Precisely the new form of poetry, hainka, is an assimilation of objective sensitivity of haiku with the more subjective oriented of tanka poetry. The synthesis in hainka is based on the image linking (the ‘fragment’ of haiku acting as the ‘pivot line’ of the following tanka) to explore and interweave human nature, love, emotion, humor in a broader sense by juxtaposition of the imageries.
It is also interesting to see the syllabic coherency between the ‘fragment’ (5-syllable words) with the 5-syllable words of the ‘pivot line’ of tanka. The final structural configuration would be 5/7/5/5/7/5/7/7 (s/l/s/s/l/s/l/l) with the significance of the image linking. A breathing gap (swinging space) is preferred between the haiku and tanka for the reader to imagine and experience the essence of poetry.
This image-linking across time and space is the art of painting an integrated poetic expression and exhibiting the fervent elucidation of hainka writing. Moreover, it retains its focus on the beauty of genetic image-linking to explore the poetic spell within the broader structural framework of the aesthetic essence and rhythms of Japanese short forms of poetry. Echoing the spirit of Basho’s ‘atarashimi’ (newness), I wish that the new verse will entwine the art of gratitude encompassing nature, living beings, non-living beings, and humanity as a whole.
Read more about the evolution of this form at Poetry Digest here: https://www.writersdigest.com/write-better-poetry/hainka-haiku-tanka-new-genre-of-poetic-form




June 6th, 2023 at 3:41 am
Beautiful poem Kat.
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June 6th, 2023 at 7:15 am
Thank you Sadje. 🥰
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June 6th, 2023 at 8:53 am
You’re most welcome
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