-
Hokku (発句, lit. "starting verse") is the
opening stanza of a ****anese
orthodox collaborative linked poem, renga, or of its
later derivative,
renku (haikai...
-
poetry called renga.
These haiku written as an
opening stanza were
known as
hokku and over time they
began to be
written as stand-alone poems.
Haiku was given...
-
maintains in his
research work "Bashō y el
metro 5-7-5" that of the 1012
hokkus analyzed by
master Bashō 145
cannot fit into the 5-7-5 meter,
since they...
- It is
regarded as a
requirement in
traditional haiku, as well as in the
hokku, or
opening verse, of both
classical renga and its
derivative renku (haikai...
- The
first stanza of the
renga chain, the
hokku, is the
forebear of the
modern haiku. The stand-alone
hokku was
renamed haiku in the
Meiji period by the...
- inventions.
Noguchi published his own
volume of English-language ****anese
Hokkus in 1920 and
dedicated it to Yeats.
During the
Imagist period, a
number of...
- of
unrhymed ****anese poetry,
which evolved in the 17th
century from the
hokku, or
opening verse of a renku.
Generally written in a
single vertical line...
- such as haiku, a form of ****anese
poetry that
evolved from the
ancient hokku (****anese language: 発句) mode.
Haiku consists of
three sections (all in a...
-
depending upon
their place in the poem.
According to
these rules, the
hokku (the
opening stanza of the renga) must
include a
reference to the season...
-
haiku are more serious. Like haiku, senryū
originated as an
opening part (
hokku) of a
larger ****anese poem
called renga.
Unlike haiku, senryū do not include...