Category Archives: Haiku

Peripeteia – Friday’s Word of the Day Haiku

peripeteia

I’m beginning to think that Dictionary.com hates me! Or maybe it is just Fridays. Today’s word of the day contains a whopping 5 syllables! Fortunately I am allowed 7 syllables on line 2. This is one of those classic words.  Not generally used in modern times as much as it was in literary circles in the 16th century.

The Encyclopaedia Britannica describes this word thusly:

Peripeteia, ( Greek: “reversal”) the turning point in a drama after which the plot moves steadily to its denouement. It is discussed by Aristotle in the Poetics as the shift of the tragic protagonist’s fortune from good to bad, which is essential to the plot of a tragedy. It is often an ironic twist, as in Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex when a messenger brings Oedipus news about his parents that he thinks will cheer him, but the news instead slowly brings about the awful recognition that leads to Oedipus’s catastrophe.

When I consider this word and its meaning, I find it to be tragically timely in light of recent events in our insane, violent country.  I thought of several final lines, my own heart and soul still trying to reconcile our nation’s complicity in the daily violence that has become so commonplace. I’ll let you, dear reader choose the one that resonates. You may even wish to add your own in the comments. I wish it had been more difficult to come up with context for today’s Haiku. 😦

A Timely Haiku

When mad young men snap
it’s a peripeteia…
…that never ends well

…that pierces our hearts

…that rips through our souls

…that leads to terror

…of innocence lost

~kat ~ 2 October 2015


mania

gloom

HApPy HaPPY JoY!
brain unhinged, delirious
devoured by gloom…………

kat ~ 1 october 2015


Many Moons ~ Haiku

Through veils of mist
the eclipsing moon-glow swells
into many moons.

kat ~ 28 September 2015

Reflections on the full moon eclipse of 2015, magnificent even under overcast skies!


Donnybrook…Friday’s Word of the Day Haiku

Donnybrook…A Haiku

Brazen spectacles,
these donnybrooks called “debates”
where fools play to win!

~kat~ 25 September 2015

An interesting little word, donnybrook, and a timely one I would say in today’s polarized political climate!  I always research these Friday challenge words before writing my haiku so I am able to assess their full meaning.  This particular gem has a wee bit of history associated with it. The website: World Wide Words gives an enlightening account of its origin:

“We are in Ireland, in what was once a village on the high road out of Dublin but which is now one of that city’s suburbs. King John gave a licence in 1204 to hold an annual fair there.

By the eighteenth century it had become a vast assembly, held on August 26 and the following 15 days each year, a gathering-place for horse dealers, fortune-tellers, beggars, wrestlers, dancers, fiddlers, and the sellers of every kind of food and drink. It was renowned in Ireland and beyond for its rowdiness and noise, and particularly for the whiskey-fuelled fighting that went on after dark.

A passing reference in, of all sober works, Walter Bagehot’s The English Constitution of 1867, gives a flavour: “The only principle recognised … was akin to that recommended to the traditionary Irishman on his visit to Donnybrook Fair, ‘Wherever you see a head, hit it’.” The usual weapon was a stick of oak or blackthorn that Irishmen often called a shillelagh (a word which derives from the town of that name in County Wicklow). The legend was that visitors to Donnybrook fair would rather fight than eat.

As Donnybrook progressively became a residential suburb of Dublin, the fair became more and more a nuisance until a campaign was got up to have it closed; in 1855 the rights to the fair were bought up by Dublin Corporation and it was suppressed. It was around that time that its name started to be used to describe a brawl, at first in the form like Donnybrook fair but then elliptically.”

If you’d like to join the challenge, use this week’s Word of the Day from Dictionary.com, “Donnybrook” in a Haiku (a three line poem with five syllables in the first and last lines and seven in the second line). I don’t have any fancy banners to award you with, but I will lavish you with superfluous praise and accolades if you give it a go. Fridays should be FUN!


Punctuated ~ A Haiku

IMG_4483
Exclamation! Birth!
(Life between Parentheses)
The End…Period?

kat ~ 22 September 2015

(A note to earlier visitors to this Haiku. I was not satisfied with the ending. Just a tweak more punctuation needed. 😊 c’est fini!)