A HAIKU
Beautifully weaved
Lace uniquely intertwined
Colors are so bright
Crafted with pleasure
By little fingers and hands
Designed with fine art
Carpets from Persia
Are just but mats on the floor
Just rugs filled with dust
You have to bow low
So you can appreciate
Bend your knee even
Meant to be tread on
One foot after another
Filaments get loose
Soon as one gets by
After one feels the warmness
Beauty is dusted
05 May 2009
2:51am
Author's Note
A Persian Rug. So beautifully crafted but always taken for granted.
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http://www.filipinowriter.com/a-persian-carpet-0
Beautifully weaved
Lace uniquely intertwined
Colors are so bright
Crafted with pleasure
By little fingers and hands
Designed with fine art
Carpets from Persia
Are just but mats on the floor
Just rugs filled with dust
You have to bow low
So you can appreciate
Bend your knee even
Meant to be tread on
One foot after another
Filaments get loose
Soon as one gets by
After one feels the warmness
Beauty is dusted
05 May 2009
2:51am
Author's Note
A Persian Rug. So beautifully crafted but always taken for granted.
Please leave your comment...
Also, view other comments here...
http://www.filipinowriter.com/a-persian-carpet-0
Comments
Haiku combines form, content, and language in a meaningful, yet compact form.
Usually they use simple words and grammar. The most common form for Haiku is three short lines.
The first line usually contains five (5) syllables, the second line seven (7) syllables, and the third line contains five (5) syllables.
Haiku doesn't rhyme. A Haiku must "paint" a mental image in the reader's mind.
This is the challenge of Haiku - to put the poem's meaning and imagery in the reader's mind in ONLY 17 syllables over just three (3) lines of poetry!