Haiku is a Japanese structure poem format. It consists of three lines with five, then seven, then five syllables. Generally, they are meant to be expressions of sensation (usually of nature). That is, something you saw, or smell. Like little poetry photographs. ''Didn't haiku develop from the final "answering" part of a longer structure, the renga: a thing rather like a sonnet, where an idea is introduced, developed then replied to, or thrown into a new light? So a haiku could be compared to the closing couplet of a ShakespeareanSonnet.'' The RenGa consists of a waki (sp?) followed by a hokku (sp?). These forms have been translated into English as 7-7, 5-7-5. Also, the RenGa is a truly collaborative form of poetry - so a RenGa wiki page is much more ideal than a HaiKu wikki page. Also, wakki just so happens to sound a whole lot like wiki. Haiku is usually spooged into its basic 5-7-5 format and then used to say anything. This is ok, provided you recognize that you're not ''really'' writing Haiku. ''I've also heard that the 5-7-5 format is too easy in English to suggest the same kind of profound economy that a Japanese haiku would.''' ''More importantly, it is difficult to even count syllables in English. How many does 'file' have? What about 'shit'? In Japanese, syllables are always clearly delimited.'' If you think the answer to both questions is One, understand that a Japanese speaker would normally pronounce them as ''fai-ru'' and ''shi-to''. ''And even more, Japanese do not count syllables, but "uttering time". i.e.: Do (way), as it has a "long O", counts as TWO "syllables".'' ---- : five, seven, then five, : nature's fragrant seasons grow : signal amidst noise ---- : mountains of clouds : cleansing winds of morning : wet apple blossom ---- : HaiKu's inventor : must have had seven fingers : on his middle hand -- Brian Del Vecchio ---- : OnceAndOnlyOnce : RefactorMercilessly : ExtremeProgramming ---- : "We will bury you!" : Freedom wins. We are dancing : on the Berlin Wall. : -- JasperPaulsen ---- : the invisible : rattlesnake: coiled, sleeping : Wakes! and glides away : -- Crotalus''''''Ruber 19940410 Mission''''''Gorge med Tico -- ChrisGarrod ---- : First snow, then silence. : This thousand dollar screen dies : so beautifully. ---- Seen taped to a printer... : The tao that is seen : Is not the true tao until : You bring fresh toner. and many more... http://www.enchanter.net/haiku.html ---- or join a good haiku mailing listfive7five http://www.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/five7five ---- I wrote a program in elisp to generate haiku at random from a buffer. I've also begun to write 'aesthetics' functions which judge lines according to an aesthetic function. The computer will then generate a number of random lines (100 to 10000, depending on how fast the computer is and how much time you have on your hands) and pick the most beautiful. See http://tommyrot.arrr.net/ComputerPoetry.html Here is a computer generated haiku from a buffer-ful of spam : today and ADULT : inconveniences NICKEL : FREE independence For a very similar project, see: http://www.headlinehaikus.com/ - haiku generated from the text of current news articles. E.g.: : '''Bankrupt World''''''Com resists breakup''' : When people see that : the big companies are worth : little or nothing ''That's really cool ... but the website seems to have been taken over by a domain squatter.'' ---- : Today is pretty : Miss, MyDogAteMyHomework : See you later then See: http://www.c2.com/cgi/wiki?search=Haiku, ComputerErrorHaiku, NetArt, MeetingHaiku ---- Why the japanese think seventeen syllables are enough is a : Writing a poem : In seventeen syllables : Is very diffic ---- : Paper ships at sea : Blue is the color of hope : It's about to rain ---- : Shattered illusions : pierce my space . . . I huddle back, : feel that one crack, too --- : -- AlistairCockburn ---- '''computer-generated haiku''' * http://everypoet.com/absurdities/ * http://everypoet.com/haiku/ * Davtri Haiku Generator http://www.versiontracker.com/dyn/moreinfo/macosx/23159&vid=142657 * programming contest: Can You Create An Intelligent Haiku Generator? http://slashdot.org/articles/00/06/13/2326222.shtml * Be Haiku generator http://news.begroovy.com/index.php?cat=3 ''(I suspect this doesn't really "generate" haiku; it merely randomly selects a human-written haiku from a database)'' '''news haiku''' * http://books.guardian.co.uk/games/haiku/0,5917,124810,00.html '''computer-generated news haiku''' Does such a thing still exist? ---- : Replace the method : the carefully chosen name : deletes the comment -- from somewhere in the early part of RefactoringMercilesslyHidesTheForest ---- : SmokeRunsComputers : ComputersStopFunctioning : if the smoke gets out ---- See SotoZen