Category Archives: Poetry

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!


heart over matter


my mind insists horizon’s glow of
yellow, orange and red is due to
scatterings of molecules, a spectrum
of prismatic twists, refracted rays
of fading light, the sun’s elliptic
pass on distant atmospheric paths
at dusk of night and then
again on rising, night to dawn.
but…
my heart…
my heart
simply
believes
it’s
magic!

~kat~ 24 September 2015


ode to autumn

autumnleaves

twirl me on the cooling breeze
toss my hair with feathered kiss,
gaze at me through smoky haze
of embers warm and luminous.
lay me down on sodden beds
where the veil is ever thin,
pungent, fragrant gold-red death
pale moon glow upon my skin.
season of my heart and soul
faithful, grace-filled, ever true
meet me for our yearly tryst
here beneath the harvest moon.

kat ~  23 September 2015
on this first day of Autumn 2015


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!)


Forever Listening – Stag & Noise – Haiku Challenge #63

In response to Ronovan’s Haiku Challenge #63…”Stag” & “Noise”.  This one was quite a challenge, but it got the old brain clicking, which is a good thing on a rainy Monday morning!  So…here’s my take…Poor deer. 😦

File:Flickr - Furryscaly - Deer Head.jpg

Photo Credit: by Matt Reinbold from Bismarck, ND, USA on Flickr

Ears perked toward the noise,
the stag became a statue
on some hunter’s wall.

kat ~ 21 September 2015

Ears perked toward the noise, the stag became a statue.
The stag became a statue on some hunter’s wall.