1) Why do you write haiku?
I write haiku to capture an instant, mostly for me. Often, though, I will share it in hopes of giving someone else the opportunity for insight and connection into that moment. For me, haiku occur without my planning for them. The energy in that spontaneity is long-lived and satisfying in its transcendence and connection to a universe in which I am a fortunate to be an observant but momentary speck. (I pay homage here to the Japanese masters [read, read, read] and also to the patience and early-on mentoring of Ferris Gilli, The Heron’s Nest, Lee Gurga, Modern Haiku, and Stanley Forrester, bottle rockets.)
2) What other poetic forms do you enjoy?
I am enjoying publishing photo haiga. I have published in all forms, but believe that my forte is haibun. Its compactness and melding of prose and haiku provide me with tremendous opportunity to reveal and explore ideas and emotions on many levels at once. Overall, haiku has aided my ability to write poetry; poetry has aided my ability to write haibun.
3) Of the many wonderful haiku you've written, what do you consider to be your top three? (Please provide original publication credits.)
Too many choices here: my list kept changing with the weather and time of day.
sudden shower
the first drops
raise dust
Mainichi Daily News, Best of 2006
evening shower
trees dripping
mosquitoes
Among the Lilies, White Lotus Anthology 2008, & Simply Haiku, 2.1, 2004
no breeze
still the pond
speaks
Mainichi Daily News, 2nd, 12th Haiku Contest, 2009, & Solares Hill, Oct. 2009
Thank you, Curtis, for providing this site.
Francis (Fran) Masat, an old but forever neophyte haijin.
If you've been enjoying this weekly series and have not contributed, please consider sharing your response (whether it be for haiku or tanka) to the three little questions that Francis answered. You must be a published poet to participate.
2 comments:
I love this comment:
"I am a fortunate to be an observant but momentary speck.
The "almost" ambiguity of:
sudden shower
the first drops
raise dust
Are we not mostly water ourselves, with a little dusting of a soul?
Thanks Fran! ;-)
Alan, With Words
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I am sorry to hear of Fran's passing last year in December. A great loss to the haiku community.
Francis "Fran" Masat passed peacefully on December 30th:
weblink: Francis Masat
my deepest condolences,
Alan, With Words
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