Poetry Friday: Poetry and the Seasons
There’s a lovely haiku by Basho about the first snow where he awaits the event with great anticipation, returning to his hut every time the clouds gather in the sky in early December. He wants to be ready to write the words down as soon as he experiences the moment. When the snow first came to our city in mid November, my daughter made me fetch a pair of cross country skis we’d acquired from a friend and set out into the slush with glee. For the last few years we have had very warm, languorous autumns in my part of Canada, and this has oddly increased our anticipation of the first snow.
The seasons are often written about in poetry of every language. This past summer, I stumbled on a children’s poetry book at a library cast-off sale. It is called Seasons and is edited by the master anthologist, Alberto Manguel. Manguel has selected poetry from all over the world and of different periods and languages that note, in some way, the seasons. The book is illustrated by Japanese Canadian artist Warabe Aska who has a playful way of engaging the childish imagination with his pictures. Often embedded in his colorful drawings are hidden pictures of animals or people. My daughter delights in finding these images and this activity enhances her appreciation of the book’s contents. For winter, there is this lovely poem by eleventh century Japanese court lady Sei Shonagon:
Snow
As though pretending to be blooms
The snowflakes scatter in the winter sky.
Accompanying the text, is Aska’s picture of a popcorn vendor in the park on a snowy day. Popcorn, blooms — all are lovely metaphors, visual and literary, for snowflakes. And so did my daughter and I feast our eyes this year on popcorn puffs and garden blooms in the otherwise dreary skies of November.
This week’s Poetry Friday is hosted at Lisa’s blog…
November 28th, 2008 at 8:39 am
Popcorn and snowflakes–what a wonderful image! I want this book!
November 28th, 2008 at 6:39 pm
What a lovely image! Thanks for the haiku and for the book title. I’ll have to look for that one.
November 28th, 2008 at 9:19 pm
Sally -
This book sounds wonderful. You definitely found a treasure in the cast-off sale. How exciting!
November 29th, 2008 at 7:11 pm
Library cast off sales can be treasure troves. Titles there are usually ones that are supposedly no longer read, but books can have more than one life after the initial printing, that is for sure. Especially when they’re being talked about again, now, in blogs like ours and others!
February 9th, 2010 at 1:02 am
[...] whose books I’ve posted on before, loves to play with hidden images. Each page presents a familiar [...]