Skip to content

Stones and a FW: haiku course

One Breath Poetry has the prompt of pebbles, stones, boulders.

oceanside campground
all night roll backs
of round stone

place to shake out shoe
not a pebble –
loose toenail in sock


lifting a stone
ant nursery, pink eggs
fussed over

While you’re out, be sure you don’t miss Laughing Gypsy’s response to the prompt.

—–FW: Online Haiku Course Coming——-

WHCbeginners mailing list is a unique forum to provide general initiation and tutorial of haiku writing on a basic and elementary level. It has been developed by the dedicated mentors led by an’ya whose ideas and initiatives formed its principles and structure. The mentors included Alison Williams, Sue Mill, Kirsty Karkow and Carole MacRuly. They worked on a voluntary basis and as poets of different views and style. Together, they have made WHCbeginners list a very popular and respected entity world-wide.

After their service, WHCbeginners forum has not been in session for some time in the absence of a new, suitable mentor (tutor). Despite this, applications have been pouring in.

Now we have a new mentor who is willing to conduct a haiku course for beginners. He is Mr. Paul Amphlett from England and is ready to start as soon as enough students are enrolled. The number of students at each session is limited but we still have some vacancies. Please apply if you are interested, or let others know who would benefit from WHCbeginners. You can apply by sending your e-mail to:

WHCbeginners-subscribe@yahoogroups.com

Related posts:

  1. Evening Haiku the catch gets harder – dusk levels distinctions between grass and frog (Cross-posted to Summer Haiku 2007) More Links: Here are Other Evening Haiku, Kigo (season indicators so we can...
  2. [haiku] two days after the fly’s last buzz the silence worrying [More bug prompt responses at One Deep Breath]...
  3. spring haiku love-mad crows don’t notice glass until cat — veer Spring/Fall haiku at One Breath...

Categories: Uncategorized.

Comment Feed

One Response

  1. Nice! Rocks seem to be a good starting step!

    AnonymousNovember 29, 2007 @ 4:24 am



Some HTML is OK

or, reply to this post via trackback.