Peggy Willis Lyles, haiku poet, Magnapoet, and co-editor of The Heron's Nest responds to Haiku - Three Questions.
Vince Tripi asked me that question many years ago, and after considerable thought I answered, "To participate." That may be as close as I can come to the nearly impossible answer. I could add, "Because I want to and need to." Writing haiku is a way of partaking and sharing, of contributing to and becoming one with humanity, the earth, the universe. Searching, being, expressing, and discovering merge in this life-enriching habit that sharpens observation, intuition, and experience.
2. What other poetic forms do you enjoy?
A great many! I came to haiku from a love of British and American poetry, studied in some depth, and world poetry sampled in translation. Although haiku has become my "specialty," I continue to read and enjoy a broad variety of classic and contemporary poems.
3. Of the many wonderful haiku you've written, what do you consider to be your top three? (Please provide original publication credits.)
I hope the best ones are still ahead of me. I know that other people remember and value these:
summer stillness
the play of light and shadow
on the wind chimes
first published in Modern Haiku XI, 1980
-----
shimmering pines
a taste of the mountain
from your cupped hands
first published in Mayfly
#31, 2001
----
and
in spite of everything forsythia
first published in The Snapshot Press Haiku Calendar 2008
Next week, Paul David Mena.
1 comment:
Such a poignant posting since Peggy passed away this month, and such a good opportunity to catch Peggy online.
You are greatly missed all around the world.
all my best,
Alan
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