Dear Haijin, visitors and travelers,
Recently, last month actual, I gave you something to "wrestle" with a new CDHK challenge ... the Haiku Puzzler. In that Haiku Puzzler you had to retrieve four (4) haiku from an image (see above) in which I had scrambled the lines of these four haiku.
To give you a "hint" I gave you a few ideas through some questions.
Here is the solution of this Haiku Puzzler:
1. This haiku poet brought haiku into the 20th century by mentioning a modern invention:
smoke swirls
after the passage of a train –
young foliage
© Masaoka Shiki
2. This haiku is renown all over the globe:
an old pond
frogs jump into
water sound
© Matsuo Basho (Tr. Jane Reichhold)
3. At the end of the life of a haiku poet the custom was to write a Jisei (death-poem). This is the jisei of a famous female poet:
having gazed at the moon
I depart from this life
with a blessing
© Chyio-ni (Tr. Jane Reichhold)
And the last haiku was a haiku written by myself:
morning dew
evaporates in the early sunlight –
spirit climbs to the sky
© Chèvrefeuille
To return to Carpe Diem Haiku Kai you can click. HERE
Recently, last month actual, I gave you something to "wrestle" with a new CDHK challenge ... the Haiku Puzzler. In that Haiku Puzzler you had to retrieve four (4) haiku from an image (see above) in which I had scrambled the lines of these four haiku.
To give you a "hint" I gave you a few ideas through some questions.
Here is the solution of this Haiku Puzzler:
1. This haiku poet brought haiku into the 20th century by mentioning a modern invention:
smoke swirls
after the passage of a train –
young foliage
© Masaoka Shiki
2. This haiku is renown all over the globe:
an old pond
frogs jump into
water sound
© Matsuo Basho (Tr. Jane Reichhold)
3. At the end of the life of a haiku poet the custom was to write a Jisei (death-poem). This is the jisei of a famous female poet:
having gazed at the moon
I depart from this life
with a blessing
© Chyio-ni (Tr. Jane Reichhold)
And the last haiku was a haiku written by myself:
morning dew
evaporates in the early sunlight –
spirit climbs to the sky
© Chèvrefeuille
To return to Carpe Diem Haiku Kai you can click.
1 comment:
Ah! I got the second one, rest rest was a soup.
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