live on little mouse / i cannot hunt one more cold / and lonely creature
Posts Tagged ‘haiku’
Haiku Poem | “live on little mouse”
Posted in Haiku, tagged haiku, haiku about nature, modern haiku, Poems, poetry on February 28, 2024| Leave a Comment »
Haiku Poem | “ireland / america”
Posted in Haiku, tagged haiku, modern haiku, Poems, poetry on February 17, 2024| Leave a Comment »
Haiku Poems | Examples of the 5-7-5 Format
Posted in Haiku, tagged haiku, Poems, poetry on November 28, 2023| 1 Comment »
Haiku Poems about Hope
here there is no thirst / from the stone the water flows / inexhaustible
through the cold branches / in a far corner of sky / a single star shines
i tend my garden / as a meditation. hope / in a broken world
Haiku Poems about Music
no theory no word / no intent. i was taken / by the song alone
lost inside this song / i am as wide and weightless / as the summer sky
the rising music / promises even weary / souls can fly away
i heard no music / until the music was you / all love songs are true
Haiku Poems about Grief
at a certain age / every goodbye starts to be / practice for the last
unseen and unknown / behind every face and door / what black worlds of pain
feel her weight heavy / for the earth. this is a task / of the working day
this yearning for you / fills my sails, longer than years / wider than the sea
Haiku Poems about Joy

joy is a bubble / a shimmering rainbow world / lighter than the air
let your laughter rise / through the velvet evening sky / and delight the moon
the ocean is wide / and my green heart close, caught in / the wonder of time
we are made of time / and stardust. joy is what stays / after grief has gone
Haiku Poems about the City
in the grand station / the undulating echoes / an ocean of sound
what news, what cruel words / from the remorseless screen made / the young woman weep
blank masks of boredom / the metal cars jerk and screech / close heat, tang of sweat
see her painted face / a pantomime of beauty / parody of youth
alone in the booth / he sits over cold coffee / and stares at the road
on the steel blue glass / a hushed jet slips and shivers / the city dreaming
Haiku Poem Videos
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This video collects some of my favorite haiku about love, yearning, loss, hope, and endurance. It features the song “Drifting By” written and performed by Pineapple Hat, which is used with the permission of the artists.
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This video collects haiku about rage, despair, darkness, and death. It features the song “I Forgot to Water My Potted Plant… Yay!” written and performed by Pineapple Hat, which is used with the permission of the artists.
Notes on These Haiku Poems
The three line, 5-7-5 syllable structure of classic haiku in English approximates the three lines and seventeen mora of haiku in Japanese. The equivalence is not exact because a mora is a unit of sound, and it is common in English for one syllable to contain two mora. Diphthongs, which have two vowel sounds in a single syllable, are an example.
I follow this three line, 5-7-5 format when I write haiku. I often find it useful to divide the poem in two and place a break at the end of a line, as haiku that follow the rules do. I like breaking a poem in the middle of the line too, as this haiku does to place the emphasis on the word “hope”:
i tend my garden
as a meditation. hope
in a broken world
Breaking the poem into two parts isn’t the only solution to the haiku format. Another solution is to make a single statement, which you can organize into clean phrases or use enjambment to jump across the lines like this:
the rising music
promises even weary
souls can fly away
In this haiku, much of its effect comes from wanting the words “music” and “promises” and “weary” and “souls” to sit in the same lines. The enjambment creates a feeling of motion and flight. The break between “weary” from “souls” is particularly important to this effect.
This analysis leads to an interesting question. If I don’t follow the constraints of the 5-7-5 format, do we get a better poem?
the rising music promises
even weary souls
can fly away
I’m not sure this version is better but it has a different feeling: stillness, calm, and certainty rather than the feeling of motion. This poem is an example of how the haiku format, like any poetic format, influences the results.
Finally, three equal lines – independent but interrelated – are a solution to the 5-7-5 syllable count, like this haiku about winter:
a low stone grey sky
the cold heavy on our bones
faint lights in the dusk
This is my favorite solution because I find these haiku the most difficult to write and because they yield results closer to painting or photography than poetry. There’s no meaning in this haiku, but rather space for the reader to decide the message of the poem for herself. There is image, mood, and feeling. A portrait of a moment of consciousness without comment.
This leads me to a related topic. One of the requirements of traditional haiku is that the meaning is implied not stated. Meaning should be there but it should sit in the tantalizing distance, a dazzling insight or deeper feeling waiting to be discovered by the reader, if she is clever enough.
I think this is the result of restricting haiku to the subject of nature, which offers us beauty, mystery, wonder, awe, and terror but no information about its meaning or purpose. Nature is a fact. It expresses no opinion on why it exists. And haiku about nature, respecting their subject, should express no opinion either.
Clearly, I don’t follow this rule, which is one of the reasons it’s fair to describe my work as modern haiku. I don’t follow the rules so much from stubborn contrariness (although doubtlessly there is some of that too) but from the desire to write a poem that hasn’t been written before. Which means I often prefer to make direct statements in my haiku or no statement at all.
This is also the effect of expanding my subject beyond nature to human experience. The mountains may not have opinions but we do, and we can keep ourselves very busy expressing them, which is why I’ve written haiku about love and haiku about death. This also explains the tension in much of my work. The quiet acceptance you find in traditional haiku is a kind of wisdom. Fool that I am, I’m still banging on the door of consciousness, demanding answers, demanding whatever is behind that door to open up.
Haiku FAQs
What Are the Rules of Haiku?
The classic form of haiku in English has strict rules governing its structure, syllable count, topics, themes, and tone. These rules include:
- 3 lines, 17 syllables. The traditional haiku format in English has three lines with five syllables in the first line, seven syllables in the second, and five syllables in the third.
- Alive to a moment in the natural world. Classic haiku capture the essence of a moment in time, typically set in nature. The use of a seasonal word (“kigo” in Japanese) or seasonal reference can reinforce the themes of time and nature.
- Images, implied emotions, and unspoken meanings. Haiku often use images to create impressions and feelings. Direct statements of the poem’s ideas, themes, and meaning are avoided.
- A relationship between two elements. Haiku frequently use the juxtaposition of two elements, and especially two images, to achieve its effects. These elements break the poem into two parts. In Japanese, this break is often achieved using a kireji or “cutting word.” In English, poets can use em dashes, ellipses, or line breaks.
- No rhyming or other poetic devices. Haiku should be written in simple, clear language without rhyme, meter, metaphors, symbols, or other literary techniques.
Modern haiku in English can bend or break all these rules. Ezra Pound’s 1913 poem “In a Station of the Metro”, which is often considered the first haiku in English, breaks many of them.
Probably the only rules you can’t break and still have your poem considered a haiku are the ones concerning its brevity: the number of lines and the number of syllables. You don’t have to conform to the three line, 5-7-5 syllable format to call your poem a haiku, but you do have to stay somewhere in their vicinity.
Push your poem to five lines and you’ve left the realm of haiku and entered the realm of tanka. Go beyond five lines and your flirting with short free verse. I don’t have a problem with poets breaking any rule of haiku they want (god knows, I break most of them most of the time) but you do have to follow some of the rules somewhat to use the word haiku to describe your work.
Are Haiku Easy to Write?
Haiku are the easiest and hardest poems to write in English. They are particularly easy to write if you ignore the 5-7-5 syllable format and just write a poem with three short lines. Their brevity, traditional focus on nature, and emphasis on images, impressions, and associations make haiku simple to write as well.
Haiku also benefit from apophenia, which is “the tendency to perceive a connection or meaningful pattern between unrelated or random things (such as objects or ideas)” according to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary.
The rules that limit classic haiku to implied emotions and unspoken feelings help poets fill their haiku with suggested meanings without necessarily needing to know what those meanings are. In this way, haiku are like nature, which feels full of importance but offers no information about what that importance might be.
Because they are easy to write, haiku are frequently included in school lesson plans and are particularly susceptible to composition by artificial intelligence programs, which can instantaneously generate mediocre poetic slop in tremendous volume.
All the elements that make haiku easy to write also make them hard to write – if your intention is to write a poem that is new and good.
The traditional rules of haiku are so restrictive that they leave the form both perfected and exhausted. Famous poets like Basho and Issa were so successful that when you try to compose a classic haiku, you often end up writing an inferior version of a poem that already exists.
Restricting your poems to observations of the natural world have a similar difficulty. People have been watching sunrises and sunsets and sunlight and moonlight and mountains and oceans and rain and mist and all sorts of weather and wild flowers dancing in breezes and birds chirping in trees and puppies frolicking on lawns (you get the point) for a long long long long time, and it’s really hard to write a haiku about nature that twenty other people aren’t also writing right now. Unless you write something so bad no one else would think to do it, which is its own kind of problem.
Haiku are also hard to write if you follow the 5-7-5 syllable format. This restriction makes writing haiku a difficult technical challenge, similar to trying to find an elegant solution to a challenging chess problem. The 5-7-5 rule is arbitrary and unnecessary and can easily be ignored unless you’re me – in which case you obsessively follow it for reasons that you can’t explain. Really, go ahead and write a 4-6-5 haiku if you want. It won’t hurt anyone.
Should You Use Punctuation in Haiku?
Punctuation is mostly unnecessary in haiku because the structure and briefness of the poem replaces punctuation’s function, which is to make writing more understandable.
For example, a period is used to mark the end of a sentence and separate its thoughts from the thoughts that follow. In haiku, this function is performed by the line breaks. You don’t need a period at the end of the first or second lines, if these are complete thoughts, because the sense of the words and line break does the work. You especially don’t need a period at the end of the third line because the poem has clearly come to an end.
Using a comma or period within a line makes sense, because punctuation here does make the writing more understandable. Similarly, if your replacement for traditional haiku’s cutting word falls in the middle of a line, marking this break with an em dash or ellipsis makes sense.
But for the most part, punctuation in haiku introduces the rigidity of the school teacher with his ruler or the fussiness of the copyeditor with her red pencil to the feeling of the work and diminishes it as a result. Question marks can be implied by the phrasing of the words. Exclamation points are trying too hard or are an admission of failure (although I’ll give translators of Basho’s “The Old Pond” their “Splash!”). Colons and semi-colons are pompous and pretentious unless you mean them as a joke, in which case I’ll laugh with you.
Capitalizing the first word of each line of a haiku is similarly unnecessary. The line has clearly begun and your eye does not need a visual clue to help you read it. Capitalizing proper nouns has a different effect. It gives more weight and emphasis to the word than it deserves, particularly when you capitalize the word “i” and let it loom in its egotism and self-importance over the rest of the poem. A haiku is a democracy and all its words are citizens with equal rights.
Updated 27 July 2025
Haiku Poems About Death
Posted in Haiku, tagged haiku, haiku about death, modern haiku, Poems on November 1, 2023| Leave a Comment »
black bible, black suit / coffin in the snow. crows call / through the empty air
the knife found my hand / and the green park my footsteps / death found her. not me
they are alone now / their bodies in a dim hall / waiting for nothing
with an endless sigh / the slow water falls and falls / the names are silent
unseen and unknown / behind every face and door / what black worlds of pain
tinker and tinker / the old machine mechanic / one day it wears out
keep this in your heart / this glowing warm yellow day / when it is winter
at a certain age / every goodbye starts to be / practice for the last
feel her weight heavy / for the earth. this is a task / of the working day
endless black waters / old death deep as an ocean / bones beneath our feet
Watch My Haiku About Rage and Despair Video
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These are haiku about death or more accurately, poems about death, dying, time, and memory. Death is a common theme in haiku although traditional poets tend to deal with it implicitly through poems about nature and the seasons, which if you follow the stricter rules of haiku are the only allowable topics for this type of poetry.
For various reasons, I don’t follow these rules and that is particularly true in this collection of haiku. Perhaps the most important rule of haiku is that meaning is implied rather than stated and boy do I break that rule with a vengeance with these poems. They are all statements, except for the first one. I normally consider myself allergic to the “get out your pencils kids, this is the stuff that’s going to be on the test” school of poetry but there is no evidence of the allergy here.
That said, I’m fairly pleased with this collection. (I wouldn’t post it if I weren’t.) One of my goals when I write haiku is to find unpoetic subjects, which is one of the reasons it is fair to describe my work as modern haiku. The clearest example of this is the “knife found my hand” haiku, which is about a murder in a London park that happened a few hours after my wife and I walked through it. The killer was deranged and the poem which sits inside his head is deranged as a result. The “endless black waters” haiku was inspired by a visit to the Paris catacombs, which left me in a state of existential crisis that I needed to treat with several glasses of French wine. The last haiku is about my mother’s death and while I think it could have been written by thousands of other people too, it does accurately reflect my feelings so I have kept it on my publish list.
As a final note, the title of this post over-determines the meaning of several of the haiku. The “oh that this flesh” poem is about more than mortality. I don’t think about “black worlds” as just discussing dying. If reading these death poems have left you depressed, a good tonic could be my haiku about love.
Haiku Poem | “the wide waters flowing”
Posted in Haiku, tagged haiku, haiku about nature, Poems on October 6, 2023| Leave a Comment »
How to Write a Haiku | Format, Rules, and Examples
Posted in How to Write Haiku, tagged haiku, Poems, poetry on April 8, 2023| Leave a Comment »
Haiku are the easiest and hardest poems to write in English. Haiku are easy to write because they have a simple format which captures the quality or mood of a moment. They are particularly easy to write if you use lines of variable length rather than follow the 5-7-5 syllable structure which approximates the 17 mora in traditional Japanese haiku.
The same qualities that make haiku easy to write also make them hard to write, however. When it is possible for casual poets to write credible or seemingly credible haiku, then the challenge of writing a haiku that deserves the reader’s attention becomes more difficult.
This challenge has been exponentially increased by the emergence of ChatGPT and other AI platforms. Haiku are well suited to machine creation because of their format and reliance on typical poetic themes and elements. Ask an AI to write a poem and you’ll get doggerel. Ask an AI to write a haiku and you can get something someone might publish. And probably has.
It is within these contexts that I will talk about how to write a haiku. My answers are personal and different from the answers other writers might offer. My goal is not to tell you how you should write a haiku. My goal is to describe how I write these poems with the hope you’ll find something useful to your own work.
The best place to start is with the definition, rules, and format of haiku. I’m not starting with these rules because I think you should follow them. I’m starting with definitions because I think knowing which rules you are breaking – and why you are breaking them – will help make your work better.
What Is a Haiku?
Haiku are short poems that describe nature and imply emotions. That’s a “correct” definition of haiku. It represents many of the poems written in English and it is consistent with definitions offered by other sources.
For example, the Report of the Definitions Committee of the Haiku Society of America states a haiku is “a short poem that uses imagistic language to convey the essence of an experience of nature or the season intuitively linked to the human condition.”
Their definition goes on to discuss useful concepts such as cutting words, the avoidance of metaphors and titles, and other matters. For a rules-based definition of haiku, this report is an excellent source.
The Britannica Online article states a haiku is “an unrhymed poetic form consisting of 17 syllables arranged in three lines of 5, 7, and 5 syllables respectively.”
The article goes on to say, “Originally, the haiku form was restricted in subject matter to an objective description of nature suggestive of one of the seasons, evoking a definite, though unstated, emotional response.”
The Poetry Foundation says a haiku is “a Japanese verse form most often composed, in English versions, of three unrhymed lines of five, seven, and five syllables [which] features an image, or a pair of images, meant to depict the essence of a specific moment in time.”
The Poetry Foundation page discusses how haiku developed in English and their website contains many examples of haiku that break the rules defined by the Haiku Society of America.
I would also read the works of Imagist poets like William Carlos Williams. The Imagists were interested in haiku and I think there is a great deal of similarity between the intentions and effects of their poems and the intentions and effects of haiku. Consider Williams’ famous “The Red Wheelbarrow”.
What Makes a Haiku “Good”?
The first test of a good haiku is that it answers the question “Does it deserve your attention?” with a “yes.” Unless you write a haiku entirely for your own satisfaction, then the poem is seeking attention from readers and its success is measured by how much it earns.
It is also important that the haiku earn attention from the same readers over time. Any haiku might stumble into being read once. These poems are so short that you often read them before you can stop yourself. But when you return to the same haiku again and again, at different times of your life, that’s a sign the poem is good.
Haiku as Meditation
Another test of a good haiku is whether reading it becomes an occasion for contemplation. Poetry has always had a quasi-religious function, which explains why so many poems embrace the ecstasy of the mystic or the didacticism of the Sunday sermon.
In the case of haiku, this function is meditation. Haiku focus on a single moment similar to the way meditation focuses on the present moment. Haiku are often best read in a state of mind where you are open to the thoughts, feelings, and sensations of the poem and accept them without judgment, similar again to the practice of meditation.
Haiku traditionally focus on nature, an all-purpose substitute for God in English-language poetry since the Romantics. Finally, haiku’s use of implied or intuitive meaning – rather than clear statement – make reading them similar to the experience of contemplating a koan in the Buddhist tradition.
All of which explains why Jack Kerouac’s most famous haiku is an excellent example of the form:
The taste
of rain
—Why kneel?
This translation of the famous Basho haiku from an essay in Frogpond is also a good example:
The old pond—
a frog jumps in,
the sound of water.
In the case of the Kerouac poem, the religious context is explicit in the question and implies there is something in the universe worthy of worship and awe. In Basho’s poem, the question is implicit and the haiku takes a neutral position. Perhaps this moment is an intimation of the transcendental meaning of human life or perhaps it is just a random and unremarkable event in our meaningless journey to the void of death.
This is not to say that contemplation is the only experience a haiku can create. You could write a haiku that is purely descriptive or which makes a clear statement or which is humorous or sarcastic. But the traditional form and intentions of these poems make them suitable for reading as meditation, and many of the most successful haiku create a meditative experience.
Aesthetics of Haiku: 5-7-5 Structure, Music, and Design
Another test of a good haiku is whether it has formal or technical or aesthetic beauty. One aspect of this beauty is when the poet successfully solves the difficulty of the form. This is particularly true when the poet follows the 5-7-5 structure but merely writing a brief three line poem can be accomplished enough. Haiku are challenging puzzles and elegant solutions to challenging puzzles have a beauty of their own.
By this standard, the Kerouac haiku is half successful. It is brilliant in its compression. Six words, six syllables. But its form is a bit of a cheat. “The taste of rain. Why kneel?” works just as well but doesn’t signal that this is a poem and the break between the first and second lines is arbitrary. On the other hand, the translator of the Basho poem finds an elegant way to render in English the elegance of the haiku’s Japanese original.
The music of the words is important in haiku as it is with all poems. By this standard, Kerouac gets full points for the beauty of the assonance between the words “taste” and “rain” and “Why” and “kneel” as well as how the soft sounds of the words match the feelings they create.
The Basho translator also does well with the music. The words “old” and “pond” work together. “Frog” and “jump” both have a nice plopping sound and I hear the splash in “water.” The word “in” breaks the music however, and is unnecessary too. You can count on the average reader knowing that frogs jump “in” ponds and make a sound when they do.
Finally, the design of the poem and the look of the words have an effect on its beauty – so much so that I think you lose half the impact of a haiku when you hear it spoken rather than seeing the words. This is different from most other forms of poetry which are as good or better when they are spoken and the appearance of which on the page largely doesn’t matter, especially once the poem runs to any length.
By this standard, both poems are cluttered up with unnecessary punctuation and capitalizations that give visual weight to the least important word. In the case of the capitalization, it’s the “The” which offends. It’s grammatically correct but the effect is to make a functional word stand out more than the words that carry meaning.
In the case of the em dashes (–), I suppose the idea is they are used as a substitute for the cutting words in Japanese haiku. Except in English, the line breaks and the context do that for you. The same is true of the commas and periods when they occur at the end of line. These are grammatically correct but if poets are going to surrender their work to the tyranny of copy editors, all joy has ended. Kerouac’s question mark is useful for clarity however.
Which means if I were to be foolish enough to edit the work of other haiku poets, I would do this:
the taste of rain
why kneel?
the old pond
a frog jumps
the sound of water
The translator of the Basho poem might argue that this edit unbalances the lines and makes the word water stick out and they would be correct. This is an issue I would resolve by centering the lines of the haiku rather than making them left justified.
How to Write Haiku: A Personal View
I follow the 5-7-5 syllable structure and ignore the other rules when I write haiku. I don’t believe the 5-7-5 format is necessary or required. I use it because working within its constraints paradoxically makes it easier for me to write haiku, because the form creates designs that look right, and because it creates poetic experiences that feel right.
I don’t like associating an image from nature with an implied emotion because this often creates stock poems that have been written hundreds of times. There are no more shopworn images in poetry than nature images and they always seem to end up associated with commonplace poetic emotions: ecstasy, despair, longing, wonder, grief, transcendental love, visionary revelations. Include the human body in the universe of nature images and you get the same result.
Because of this, I prefer to write haiku that are descriptive – more like a photograph than a poem – or that make direct statements. I use similes, metaphors, and titles. I’m always looking for non-poetic images and emotions. This can be difficult. Remove the natural world and the strongest emotions from your haiku and you can create a distinctly unpleasant body of work. All the same, I prefer writing this haiku to writing another poem about flowers.
sprawled on the sidewalk
the blue-gloved cop takes her pulse
the city walks on
I don’t think my haiku should be too personal. The purpose of poetry is to give readers experiences they can make their own when they need them. Poets don’t have deeper feelings or better souls than other people. But if we’re lucky, we have a knack for expressing what other people think, feel, and experience but don’t quite know how to say.
So we need to leave room for readers to enter into the experience of the poem and make it their own. The goal should be for readers to say “that’s how I feel” and not “that’s how I feel too.” Which is why I’ve never been happy with this haiku in addition to the fact it ignores the 5-7-5 structure and has familiar images and emotions.
grey clouds
in a blue sky
my mother’s eyes
Finally, writing haiku is about confronting failure and continuing to work. Most artists have to come to terms with the fact that they are not as good as they would like to be. That includes me and many of the haiku on my website are there to remind me how I failed and what not to do the next time.
How to Write Haiku: Personal Examples
That said, I believe I also need to give you examples of haiku I’ve written which I think are good. These poems could be considered modern haiku because they break all the rules except the 5-7-5 syllable format:
(cape may)
like scraps of paper
folding themselves into birds
the sea gulls settle
the shimmering light
on the water at sunset
keeps its promises
(broad street)
bright satin, bright brass
the thrilling banjos sing out
as the mummers strut
how soon the joy fades
paper hats and plastic horns
bought on new year’s day
Titles, metaphor, direct statement, the use of haiku as stanzas, no natural images or implied emotions in the case of “(broad street),” and room for readers to decide what the promises might be in the case of “(cape may).” These poems are sufficiently different from standard, rules-based haiku to satisfy me.
When it comes to poems that make direct statements, I like this one. It has mood and metaphor, it solves the challenge of the form, and it describes my process. Like many writers, I don’t find the subjects of my poems. They find me, and this haiku describes how I create the conditions in which I am found.
This image also shows how I’ve solved a problem with poetry on the internet. In print, you can control where the poem is placed on the page which acts as its frame. On the internet, you can’t. A single haiku can get lost on a web page or among the other elements of a site. This image is a way to solve the problem.
Among my descriptive haiku, I particularly like these two. They have mood rather than emotion. They solve the puzzle of the format. In the case of the “snow” haiku, the poem suggests a story but doesn’t tell you what it is.
I like these among my haiku as meditations. It is especially important to frame these poems so they look right to the reader.
There are more examples of haiku poems in the linked post which I think are good.
How to Write Haiku: In Summary
My personal recommendations are these. Use the 5-7-5 syllable structure to write your haiku. Solving the challenges of the form while paying attention to the look and sound of the poem will yield satisfying results. Look for topics and emotions beyond those expected in haiku. Leave space for readers to enter into the poem and make it their own. Be prepared to fail and follow Samuel Beckett’s advice when you do. “Fail again. Fail better.”
Watch My Haiku Videos
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Haiku Poems About Nature
Posted in Haiku, tagged haiku, haiku about fall, haiku about nature, haiku about spring, haiku about summer, haiku about winter, modern haiku, Poems on April 2, 2023| Leave a Comment »
Haiku about Fall
in the light fresh breeze / a single leaf pirouettes / the air enchanted
on the bare brown branch / a fat squirrel anxiously eats / another acorn
blooming in beauty / beauty when faded and dry / life and death are good
mirror on mirror / the wide waters flowing with / the light of the sky
dusk comes like a bruise / on the windshield, rain sparkles / diamonds and rubies
Haiku about Winter
a low stone grey sky / the cold heavy on our bones / faint lights in the dusk
when cold days turn dark / leaf the earth, lemon the sun / steam in summer’s cup
a pen and ink world / beautiful desolation / snow on ohio
through the cold branches / in a far corner of sky / a single star shines
Haiku about Spring
the first rain of spring / smells like your lover’s body / asleep in your bed
heavy grey, pure white / a drama of changing sky / blinding silver, blue
once in my childhood / all the dandelions bloomed / while i was sleeping
the sun pours herself / into the sea and the world / overflows with light
Haiku about Summer
boom of a deep drum / rain dappling a silver lake / the sky grows brighter
clash of katydids / barefoot on the dew lush grass / the bright watching stars
all of summer lives / in this peach full and sweet. still / sun warm from the tree
that shimmering sea / that blue day when our hearts burned / brighter than the sun
the orange trumpets / bloom like fire, blow summer / a final fanfare
Watch My Haiku Poems Video
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Nature Haiku FAQs
Do Haiku Poems Have to Be About Nature?
Haiku about nature and the season are the customary topics for these poems. If you follow the traditional rules, images of nature and the seasons paired with an implicit emotion are the only acceptable elements of haiku.
For various reasons, I don’t follow these rules. Sometimes I present an image from nature and leave out the emotion although you’ll feel a mood. These haiku I think of as closer to landscape painting than poetry. Other times, I’ll make the emotion explicit, make a statement, or use metaphor or other poetic elements that traditional haiku avoid.
What I’m trying to find is a poem that hasn’t been written before. In a real sense, haiku as a poetic form has been perfected and the subject of nature in haiku has been exhausted. I’m not sure you can write a better haiku about winter than the ones already written, for example. I’m also not sure you can write a haiku about winter different from the ones already written.
One point of my work is to try to find a way to write about nature in haiku that is different from other poems already written, however. For the same reason, I’ll write haiku about love and haiku about death and other subjects outside of nature, or try to tell a story in 17 syllables, or look for emotions outside the set standard to poetry.
I don’t want to exclude nature from my work, because the experience of nature is a fundamental element of human experience. Even when you live in a city, the sky and light and weather are always present and nature is present too despite our best efforts to eradicate it. Sometimes nature is there poetically. The raptors that nest in skyscrapers and hunt the canyons between them. Sometimes nature is there unpoetically. The rat gnawing on a pizza slice between the subway tracks. For more thoughts, see my post on how to write haiku.
Do Haiku Poems Have to Be About a Season?
Just like haiku do not need to be about nature, they don’t need to reference a season either. However, seasonal references in haiku are powerful because they make the poem by implication a meditation on time, which is as great a theme of our lives. It is time that drive change. It is time that brings us to death.
Young people don’t care much for time. It’s either an impediment to the future that can’t come too soon or a perfect eternal now that will never change. My parents may have grown old. I won’t because I’m smarter! They soon learn differently, as we all did. Then we learn that the eternal now is the only thing that matters, the only thing we have. This moment and now this moment, and making use of them is our work. Haiku are about paying attention to the moment, living in it as fully as we are able, and capturing some essence of our lives that is safe from the destruction of time. We can do this talking about the seasons in haiku. But we can talk about time other ways too.
Do Haiku Poems Have to Use the 5-7-5 Syllable Format?
No, haiku do not need to follow the five-seven-five syllable format. Most haiku poets in English use this form as a guideline. Haiku should have three lines, although you can get away with two. These lines should be short. But the lines do not need to have exactly five or seven syllables. Like most rules in art, follow the ones that serve your work and ignore the rest.
Think of the phase “doing it wrong” as a synonym for the word “creativity.” In the history of art, whenever the rules for a form are well codified and enforced by bean counters with commercial interests or self-appointed elites stuffed with mediocrities, this is a sign that form has been exhausted. Don’t listen to the bean counters and elites. They might help you make money. They might help you gain an academic appointment and the self-interested praise of colleagues expecting you will praise them back. But they will never help you become an artist.
Updated 23 September 2025.
Haiku Poem | “cape may”
Posted in Haiku, Poems, tagged haiku on March 10, 2023| 1 Comment »
like scraps of paper / folding themselves into birds / the sea gulls settle
the shimmering light / on the water at sunset / keeps its promises
“cape may” was originally published in the Fall 2020 issue of Philadelphia Stories.
Haiku Poem | “the city dreaming”
Posted in Haiku, tagged haiku, modern haiku, Poems on September 15, 2022| 1 Comment »
Haiku Poem | “joy is a bubble”
Posted in Haiku, tagged haiku, modern haiku, Poems on September 1, 2022| Leave a Comment »





