You might think that
mixing poetry and math would make people head for the hills, but everyday folks
admit to liking the ancient Haiku format.
I’ve watched friends engage in epic Haiku battles on Facebook - lobbing verse back and forth for days.
I find it’s hard to
limit myself to just one Haiku, so I’ll share a couple extra poems today: the first two were written by my oldest son (I
try to make sure their own poems, as well as poetry written by other kids, make
it into the lunchbox once in a while!). He wrote the first during a school retreat along the Cheapeake Bay, the second he composed just for
kicks. The last Haiku is a nod to Thanksgiving
being around the corner.
The wind’s cold fingers
brush the surface of the Bay.Ripples lick the shore.
- ML, age 11
Pimple on my nose.
No matter how I wash it
it won't go away.
No matter how I wash it
it won't go away.
wild turkey’s snow
tracks
their arrows point us
one waythey go the other
Michael J. Rosen, The Cuckoo’s
Haiku