Crickets and Change in Haiku

Saturday, 9 November 2024

Do animals and insects have an insight into the world that we don’t? Maybe it pays to listen to them more often. I was doing so the other night, and this haiku was the result.

the crickets
tell me
change is coming

蟋蟀の音に感じる移ろいを
kōrogi no oto ni kanjiru utsuroi o[1]

Kobayashi Kiyochika - Night Scene at Sumida River
Kobayashi Kiyochika – Night Scene at Sumida River

This was right after the US election, I should say. By the time I was preparing for bed, the final results still weren’t in, but the writing was on the wall and we could guess who had won. I am not a Trump fan,[2] so I wasn’t very happy. As I often do at night in autumn, I found myself with the balcony window open and listening to the night insects.

I’ve written at length about how listening to the night insects is a very traditional activity in Japan in autumn. It dates quite far back. Here is a recent post mentioning it. It seems like a traditional quaint activity, and it is. Simple, yet pleasant. It’s a good way to relax in the evening before bed—or to get ideas for haiku!

The other day I mentioned the idea of divining the future from the wind. What if the insects themselves could give us hints of the same?

Published by David

Watching the world drift by, learning as I go, lost in Japan





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