11/10/2006

Winter solstice (tooji)

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For Summer Solstice, see below.
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Winter solstice (tooji, Japan)

***** Location: Japan, worldwide
***** Season: Mid-Winter
***** Category: Season


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Explanation

Winter solstice, tooji 冬至

ichiyoo raifuku 一陽来復(いちようらいふく)"sun comes back"
The 21st of December.

sakutan tooji 朔旦冬至 (さくたんとうじ )
"morning of the first and solstice"
when the solstice falls on November 1 of the lunar calendar. Once in 19 years, this is an auspicious day and has been celebrated at court.


On this special day, we eat pumpkin soup and take a bath with yuzu fruit (see below). This a Japanese custom to keep your good health in the winter season.
This day is also called "The sun is coming back" (ichiyoo raifuku 一陽来復). Yin and Yang are changing. Bad things are coming to an end and new, better ones are to be expected.

Etsuko Yanagibori


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ichiyoo raifuku 一陽来福
a pun with "luck coming back"

This is also the name of restaurants and noodle soup.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

. . . CLICK here for Photos
of "sun coming back" !


At the temple Hojo-ji (hoojooji 放生寺) in Tokyo, there is a large stone memorial with these words in the compounds.


A ricewine from Niigata with this name
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

At the shrine Ana Hachimangu in Tokyo people come at the day of the winter solstice to buy this amulet. It is good for business and to make money, when they put it into the auspicious driection of the new year (ehoo 恵方). They also hang it outside on the last day of the year and for the Setsubun rituals in February. The letters of the amulet have to face the auspicious direction.
Just as shadow receedes to new light, bad fortune will not receede and good luck is bound to come.

穴八幡宮

. Amulets and Talismans from Japan . 


. Auspicious direction of this year (ehoo 恵方) .

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by Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (1839-1892)
The sun goddess Amaterasu emerges from her cave.

. Amaterasu Oomikami (Omikami) 天照大神 .
The Sun Deity of Japan

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Some Astronomical Facts
As the Earth travels around the Sun in its orbit, the north-south position of the Sun changes over the course of the year due to the changing orientation of the Earth's tilted rotation axes with respect to the Sun. A QuickTime movie illustrates the tilt of the Earth's equatorial plane relative to the Sun which is responsible for the seasons. The dates of maximum tilt of the Earth's equator correspond to the summer solstice and winter solstice, and the dates of zero tilt to the vernal equinox and autumnal equinox.

In the northern hemisphere, the Winter solstice is day of the year (near December 22) when the Sun is farthest south. However, in the southern hemisphere, winter and summer solstices are exchanged so that the winter solstice is the day on which the Sun is farthest north. The winter solstice marks the first day of the season of winter. The declination of the Sun on the (northern) winter solstice is known as the tropic of capricorn (-23° 27').

The winter solstice is the shortest day of the year, respectively, in the sense that the length of time elapsed between sunrise and sunset on this day is a minimum for the year. Of course, daylight saving time means that the first Sunday in April has 23 hours and the last Sunday in October has 25 hours, but these human meddlings with the calendar and do not correspond to the actual number of daylight hours. In Chicago, there are 9:20 hours of daylight on the winter solstice of December 22, 1999.
http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/astronomy/WinterSolstice.html




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quote
Virtually all cultures have their own way of acknowledging this moment. The Welsh word for solstice translates as “the point of roughness,” while the Talmud calls it “Tekufat Tevet,” first day of “the stripping time.” For the Chinese, winter’s beginning is “dongzhi,” when one tradition is making balls of glutinous rice, which symbolize family gathering. In Korea, these balls are mingled with a sweet red bean called pat jook. According to local lore, each winter solstice a ghost comes to haunt villagers. The red bean in the rice balls repels him.

In parts of Scandinavia, the locals smear their front doors with butter so that Beiwe, sun goddess of fertility, can lap it up before she continues on her journey. (One wonders who does all the mopping up afterward.) Later, young women don candle-embedded helmets, while families go to bed having placed their shoes all in a row, to ensure peace over the coming year.

Street processions are another common feature. In Japan, young men known as “sun devils,” their faces daubed to represent their imagined solar ancestry, still go among the farms to ensure the earth’s fertility (and their own stocking-up with alcohol). In Ireland, people called wren-boys take to the roads, wearing masks or straw suits. The practice used to involve the killing of a wren, and singing songs while carrying the corpse from house to house.

Sacrifice is a common thread. In areas of northern Pakistan, men have cold water poured over their heads in purification, and are forbidden to sit on any chair till the evening, when their heads will be sprinkled with goats’ blood. (Unhappy goats.) Purification is also the main object for the Zuni and Hopi tribes of North America, their attempt to recall the sun from its long winter slumber. It also marks the beginning of another turning of their “wheel of the year,” and kivas (sacred underground ritual chambers) are opened to mark the season.
source : www.nytimes.com/2010
Richard Cohen, author of
“Chasing the Sun:
The Epic Story of the Star That Gives Us Life.”


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Worldwide use

Ireland

The Winter Solstice, or Yule,
is the shortest day and the longest night of the year. It is associated with the birth of the Sun King. It falls on the first day of winter, which is either 21 or 22 December, and is celebrated as the day that the Sun is reborn (later adapted by Christianity as the "son" is born) to warm the Earth again. Yule comes from the word Jule, which in Old Norse means, "wheel."

Celtic people celebrate Yule as the battle between the aging Holly King, who represents the darkness of the old year, and the young Oak King, who symbolizes the light of the new year. Sometimes the battle is re-enacted during the burning of the Yule log — which is done to encourage the Sun's easy birth, welcome it back to Earth.

This was a time of joy and hope — a holiday meant to uplift spirits weary from winter and a time to appreciate the wonders that will come with the spring.

Along with the evergreen, the holly and the ivy and the mistletoe were important plants of the season, all symbolizing fertility and everlasting life. According to the Bardic Tradition, the Winter Solstice was called 'Alban Arthan' by the Druids. It was then that the Chief Druid cut the sacred mistletoe from the Oak. The Celtic Druids would cut the mistletoe with a golden sickle on the sixth night of the moon. Later Christian churches would ban mistletoe from Christmas celebrations because of its fertility rite connotations.

In addition to fertility rituals, divinations were cast for the coming Spring both through ritual means and through good-natured taunting and wagering.
© www.irelandsown.net

.....

Silver-white frostwork
sleeping in winter-clad towns:
Yule hibernation


Nuala Ní Chonchúir
(from ¡Divas! New Irish Women's Writing publ. by Arlen House)



WKD : Winter Solstice in Ireland



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"Eucalyptus Yule"
Winter solstice June 2010 in Australia


Winter Solstice Celebrations around the World
www.religioustolerance.org/winter_solstice.htm


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. Sanziana, Yellow Bedstraw (Galium verum) .
Midsummer Rituals in Romania


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Things found on the way



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HAIKU


さぼてんを上座に直ス冬至哉
saboten o kamiza ni naosu tooji kana

I move my cactus
to the upper shelf –
it’s Winter Solstice.


Kobayashi Issa 一茶 文化二
(Tr. Robin Gill)


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風雲の少しく遊ぶ冬至かな
fuu-un no sukoshiku asobu tooji kana

wind and clouds
playing just a little -
winter soltice

(Tr. Gabi Greve)

Ishida Hakyo (1913-1969) 石田波郷 
http://jindaiji.co.jp/sobazen/199712.html
http://www.lib.ehime-u.ac.jp/KUHI/ENG/hakyoeng.html

Fuu-un can also mean: winds and clouds/elements/situation/state of affairs

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winter solstice
headlights
in both directions

willard

From the Shiki Archives. The Photo above is also from this link.
Read more haiku on this topic here:
http://shiki1.cc.ehime-u.ac.jp/~shiki/kukai/kukai51-1.html

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winter solstice
a titmouse moves deeper
into the bush

B. Ross


winter solstice-
where are my
sheepskin slippers?

Kate Steere
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cherrypoetryclub/message/21086

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Beethoven
and some incense smoke -
the longest night

Beethoven
und Incenserauch -
die laengste Nacht

Gabi Greve
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/happyhaiku/message/977

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winter solstice
a rainbow
around the moon

susan delphine delaney

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winter solstice -
a dark shadow grows
darker


gabi greve, Dezember 2008

I Ching 24. Fu - Return (The Turning Point)
and some musings about American Haiku


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Related words

***** Plum blossoms of the Winter Solstice
(tooji bai 冬至梅)

The Japanese UME is in fact an apricot, but usually translated as plum blossoms.


Fritz Capelari (1884-1950)

apricot blossoms
start to bloom
the winter solstice

etsuko yanagibori

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堀端の風の甘さや冬至梅
horibata no kaze no amasa ya tooji bai

the wind from the riverbank
smells so sweet -
plums at winter solstice
(Tr. Gabi Greve)

source : www.hpmix.com/home/tetsuan/


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The Winter Solstice day and the time around it is a time to care for your health, with food like this and with a hot bath.


***** Pumpkin Soup at the Winter Solstice
(tooji kabocha 冬至南瓜)

tooji konnyaku 冬至蒟蒻(とうじこんにゃく)konyak for winter solstice
tooji mochi 冬至餅(とうじもち) ricecakes for winter solstice


***** Rice Gruel at the Winter Solstice
(tooji-gayu 冬至粥)

akaragashiwa 赤柏(あからがしわ)"red oak"
azuki no kayu 赤豆の粥(あずきのかゆ)gruel with red adzuki beans


***** Yuzu Bath on the Winter Solstice Day
yuzu yu 柚子湯 (ゆずゆ) / yuzuburo 柚子風呂(ゆずぶろ
(tooji yu 冬至湯, tooji-buro冬至風呂)

... ... see Yuzu (citron family)

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. kiku no toojime 菊の冬至芽(きくのとうじめ)
chrysanthemum budding at the winter solstice



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***** Long Night (yonaga, nagaki yo 夜長、長き夜) 
kigo for atumn
(The above link also includes explanations for : short night, long day, short day.)

Properly speaking, the longest night is that of the winter solstice (around 21 December by the Gregorian calendar), but "long night(s)" as an autumn topic is based less on the calendar than on poetic sensibility: the contrast with summer's brief nights. At night-work or reading a book in the pleasant climate of autumn, one keenly feels the lengthening nights.


山鳥の枝ふみかゆる夜長かな
yamadori no eda fumikayuru yonaga kana

a copper pheasant's
feet fidget on the branch--
this long night

Buson ... 蕪村

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よそに鳴る夜長の時計数へけり
yoso ni naru yonaga no tokei kazoekeri

distant striking
of a clock in the long night--
I counted each

Sugita Hisajo .... 杉田久女


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long night
moon playing hide and seek
with the sun


Ella Wagenmakers


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***** Summer Solstice, geshi 夏至
kigo for mid-summer

geshi no hi 夏至の日(げしのひ)day of the summer solstice
geshi no ame 夏至の雨(げしのあめ)rain on the summer solstice
geshi no yoru 夏至の夜(げしのよる)night of the summer solstice
geshi yokaze 夏至夜風(げしよかぜ)windy night of the summer solstice

geshi byakuya 夏至白夜(げしびゃくや)
white night of the summer solstice

white night in the polar region (byakuya)




Chinese astronomers determining the summer solstice
The Mathematics of the Chinese Calendar


The Summer Solstice is the beginning of the Astronomical Summer, and is often considered the start of summer in the United States (even though Summer vacations started at the end of the school year--usually in May).
The traditional European Summer, as well as the definition of Summer used for Japanese haiku, has the Summer Solstice as the middle of the Summer season.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Season


Click HERE to see more photos, of Stonehenge and other places


first night of summer...
neither the mockingbird
nor I can sleep

© gK
tinywords.com/haiku.2002


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summer solstice --
an old pine anchors
the moon


Laryalee Frazer, 2005


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summer solstice--
we hang suspended
in the first light


John Daleiden, June 2006

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sweltering . . .
the summer solstice
a month away


Laura Becker Sherman
- WKD facebook 2012 -

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ENYOVDEN / Enyo’s Day (Midsummer Day)
June 24

Name day of everyone named Yanko, Yana, Yanka.

This ancient Bulgarian ritual is considered the turning point in the mythological calendar of the ancient people – a ritual connected to the summer Equinox, when the day is longest and the night is shortest. Enyovden / Enyo’s Day is a favorite summer holiday for young and old. It practically divides the year into two. It is believed that after that feast, winter sets on its long way to the people. The story of Enyo putting on his furcoat and going to search for snow reminds that it is time to think of the long cold months to come.
People get up early that day to see the sun “turning three times” - whoever manages to "bathe" in the dew will be safe from illnesses until Midsummer Day next year. Old people say the legend of Enyo - once upon a time, in a village, there used to live two young people, Enyo and Stana, who were very much in love. Every day they thought of each other,and the bread had no taste at all until they saw each another at least from afar. But the girl’s father had decided else and arranged an engagement for Stana in another village.
MORE
source : www.plovdivguide.com


standing tall
in front of the sun-
Enyovden


- Shared by Tzetzka Ilieva -
Haiku Culture Magazine, 2013


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Solstice December 2012 - Mayan Doomsday

A New Age interpretation of this transition was that the date marked the start of a period during which Earth and its inhabitants would undergo a positive physical or spiritual transformation, and that 21 December 2012 would mark the beginning of a new era.
Others suggested that the date marked the end of the world or a similar catastrophe. Scenarios suggested for the end of the world included the arrival of the next solar maximum, an interaction between Earth and the black hole at the center of the galaxy,or Earth's collision with a planet called Nibiru.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !


snowy morning,
December 21...
reciting Basho


for Mayan Doomsday believers

Chen-ou Liu
Canada

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. jikan 時間 time in Edo - Edo no jikoku 江戸の時刻 .

. SAIJIKI
OBSERVANCES, FESTIVALS, RITUALS



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Winter (fuyu)

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Winter (fuyu)

***** Location: Japan
***** Season: All Winter
***** Category: Season, plants, earth ...


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Explanation

The winter season in Japanese Haiku
is fixed according to the Asian lunar calendar from the beginning of winter at November seven until the fouth of February. In reality the winter in Central Japan lasts roughly from December to March.



.. .. .. .. .. .. .. icecold morning -
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. and yet
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. hope on the way


Haiku Winter Wonders by Gabi Greve
http://happyhaiku.blogspot.com/2005/01/winter-wonders.html

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. beginning of winter, rittoo 立冬  
..... according to the 24 seasons, on November 7.

24 Seasons (nijuu sekki 二十節季) according to the Asian Lunar Calendar



There are many kigo related to WINTER.

. . . . WINTER
the complete SAIJIKI



. WINTER
kigo LIST for category SEASON




. Names of the Japanese winter months and solar sections  


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fuyu shoogun 冬将軍(ふゆしょうぐん) "general Winter"
„Väterchen Frost“
When the cold front from Siberia begins to reach Japan.

gentoo 厳冬(げんとう)very cold winter


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fuyuzare 冬ざれ (ふゆざれ) withering in winter
..... fuyu sare 冬され(ふゆされ)
fuyu zaruru 冬ざるる(ふゆざるる)
Plants begin to wither and dry out.


冬ざれや小鳥のあさる韮畠
fuyuzare ya kotori no asaru nirabatake

withering in winter . . .
little birds search food
in the leek fields


Yosa Buson 蕪村


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fuyu atataka 冬暖か (ふゆあたたか) winter is warm
fuyu nukushi 冬ぬくし(ふゆぬくし)
toodan 冬暖(とうだん) warm winter
dantoo 暖冬(だんとう)


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kigo for late winter

bantoo 晩冬 (ばんとう) "late winter"
..... kitoo 季冬(きとう)、katoo 下冬(かとう)
..... matsutoo, mattoo 末冬(まつとう)
According to the lunar calendar, this was a word for the twelfth month.
It was never used as often as the kigo for "late summer" or "late autumn".




fuyu fukashi 冬深し (ふゆふかし) winter deepnes
..... fuyu fukamu 冬深む(ふゆふかむ)
..... fuyu sabu 冬さぶ(ふゆさぶ)
mafuyu 真冬(まふゆ) "midwinter"
This is the coldest time of winter, when all are waiting eagerly for spring and yet have to endure the coldest part of winter still.



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earth kigo for all winter

fuyugeshiki 冬景色 (ふゆげしき) landscape in winter
..... fuyukei 冬景(とうけい)
..... fuyu no kei 冬の景(ふゆのけい)
fuyu no iro 冬の色(ふゆのいろ)the color of winter



. SAIJIKI ... category EARTH


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Worldwide use

The Winter in Shinjuku Gyoen National Garden
This is the season that we feel something powerful of brancheswhose leaves were already fallen.Leaf buds continue to swell even during the sleeping time of trees. Flower buds begin swelling in the feeble sunshine.The twittering of winter birds resting their wings is conspicuously bustlingand resonant in the garden.The winter in Shinjuku Gyoen is going toward spring step by step.

Link with many flower pictures, names in Japanese and English.
http://www.japan-i.jp/explorejapan/kanto/tokyo/shinjuku/4oa00l000000499s.html


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Winter in India has its own entry.


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Things found on the way


Pages of winter haiku, although the word WINTER is not mentioned specially.
http://www.brooksbookshaiku.com/wlhaiku/winterhaiku.html
http://www.zikaden.de/gedruckt/jamben/Winter-Haiku.html




A bitter morning:
sparrows sit together
without any necks


Winter Haiku by J.W.Hackett
http://hacketthaiku.com/haiku2005winter.html



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Keyaki wood from Amagi, Ise peninsula, is especially famous for the beauty of its grain and patterns.

天城のケヤキ


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HAIKU


winter solitude
in a world of one color
the sound of wind

Matsuo Basho

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winter cat
out wants in
in wants out

winter haiku writers
debate their work
the mouse cleans his whiskers


More haiku about winter are here:
http://www.oldgreypoet.com/haiku/winterhaiku.html

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cold winter night -
the way to the outhouse
sooooo far


.. .. .. Look at the cold night here:
http://happyhaiku.blogspot.com/2005/02/outhouse-joy.html

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round and round
in endless circles <>
winter sun


.. .. .. Look at some natural Mandala here:
http://happyhaiku.blogspot.com/2004/08/mandala.html

Gabi Greve

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winter sunrise
in the style of Degas--
misty bands of pastel

Ed Schwellenbach
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cherrypoetryclub/message/21204

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Wintry day
doors of the gipsy vans
all closed

Angelika Wienert, WHCgerman (AW, Dec. 2004)

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lacy winter trees
children walking hand-in-hand
tiny snow printing


crystal blue winter
checkerboard pattern blankets
my apple orchard


Judith A.Lindberg
http://www.bry-backmanor.org/januarypoetry2.html

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winter dawn -
the forest chorus
begins with a squirrel

Cindy Zackowitz

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snowing winter ...
even the concealed green shivers
inside leafless branches

Raju Samal, India


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late winter---
a chicken pecks
at its shadow


Robert Wilson


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long meeting
on a winter's day
... empty bird's nest

Ella Wagemakers, 2010
Kigo Hotline


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"Winter landscape" by Sesshu
Tokyo National Museum

Click on the Photo to read the details.


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Related words

Spring (haru, Japan)
Summer (natsu, Japan)
Autumn (aki, Japan)

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***** Winter fields, fields in winter,
fuyuta 冬田


Withered fields, kareta 枯れ田, on the other hand, is a
kigo for late autumn.

. . . . .

***** Winter trees fuyugi 冬木 ふゆき trees in winter
all winter
fuyuki kage 冬木影(ふゆきかげ)shadow of winter trees
fuyuki michi 、冬木道(ふゆきみち)road with winter trees
fuyuki yado 冬木宿(ふゆきやど)lodge with winter trees
fuyukinaka 冬木中(ふゆきなか)in the winter trees
fuyukibara 冬木原(ふゆきばら) fields and winter trees
fuyukodachi 冬木立 (ふゆこだち)grove of winter trees

kanrin 寒林 (かんりん) forest in the cold
kanboku 寒木(かんぼく) trees in the cold


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***** Winter withering, nature withered in winter,
fuyugare 冬枯れ

all winter
..... withered trees, kareki, koboku 枯木
"naked trees", hadakagi 裸木
bare branches, kare eda 枯枝
road lined with bare trees, kareki michi 枯木道
grove of withered trees, fuyukodachi 冬木立
withering in the cold, karuru 枯るる
lodge and withered trees, kareki yado 枯木宿(かれきやど)
stars and withered trees, kareki boshi 枯木星(かれきぼし)


. shimogare 霜枯 (しもがれ) withering in the frost



source : ttetsuo_2005

attributed to Matsuo Basho


冬枯れや 世は一色に 風の音
冬枯や世ハ一色能風の於登
fuyugare ya yo wa hito iro ni kaze no oto
fuyugare ya yo wa isshoku ni kaze no oto

Winter solitude —
In a world of one color
the sound of wind.

Tr. Robert Hass

With comment y Robert Hass:
source : www.ashokkarra.com

The Japanese is not "winter solitude" but "withering in winter" of plants.


a desolate winter:
in a one-colored world
wind resounds

Tr. Toshimi Horiuchi


winter faintness -
wind resounds through
a one-color world

Tr. yorukamome



désolation hivernale
dans le monde monochrome
le bruit du vent

Tr. nekojita



all the withered plants -
the sound of wind
in a world of one color

Tr. Gabi Greve

(I use the normal English word order, Japanese has the "sound of wind" in line 3.)



. - Matsuo Basho - The Sound of Wind - .


. WKD : Winter seclusion (fuyugomori 冬篭り) .
winter confinement, winter isolation, wintering - of human beings

- - - - - BTW, Chris Drakes reminds us:
I think this interesting hokku has not been recognized by Basho scholars as authentic, although there are several stones with the hokku carved on it standing here and there. The hokku first appeared in 1787, long after Basho's death, in a collection called Moto no Mizu (もとの水), but modern scholars doubt that about 90% of the hokku in that collection are actually by Basho.
There were many hokku forgeries that claimed to be by the famous Basho floating around in the late Edo period. The fuyugare hokku is interesting, but it is not included in any standard modern editions of Basho's hokku. I think it's best to list this hokku as "attributed to Basho." Actually, I doubt that there's much chance of it actually being by Basho. It would be interesting to know who actually wrote it, since it's a nice hokku.

. - Moto no Mizu もとの水 - 句集 - Hokku Collection - .

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nanoki karu 名の木枯る (なのきかる)
"trees with a name are withering

sakura karu 桜枯る(さくらかる)withering cherry tree
ichoo karu 銀杏枯る(いちょうかる)withering gingko tree
kunugi karu 櫟枯る(くぬぎかる)yew-tree withering
enoki karu 榎枯る(えのきかる)Chinese hackberry withering
budoo karu 葡萄枯る(ぶどうかる)grape plants withering

. keyaki karu 欅枯る(けやきかる)withering zelkova tree .

karekuwa, kare kuwa 枯桑 (かれくわ) withering mulberry tree
..... kuwa karu 桑枯る(くわかる)

kareyanagi, kare yanagi 枯柳 (かれやなぎ) willows withering
..... yanagi karu 柳枯る(やなぎかる)
fuyu yanagi 冬柳(ふゆやなぎ)willow in winter
..... fuyu no yanagi 冬の柳(ふゆのやなぎ)

kare ibara 枯茨 (かれいばら) withered wild roses
..... ibara karu 茨枯る(いばらかる)

karetsuta 枯蔦 (かれつた) withering ivy, wild wine withering
..... tsuta karu 蔦枯る(つたかる)

karezuru 枯蔓 かれづる wines withering
..... tsuri karu 蔓枯るる(つるかるる)
..... karekazura 枯かずら(かれかずら)

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***** Cold Spell, Cold wave (kanpa, kampa 寒波)
kigo for all winter


***** Cold (samusa, samushi, kan 寒さ、寒し、寒)
kigo for all winter

cold cold cold
ZEN ZEN ZEN
cold cold cold


remember, zenzen in Japanese can mean : not at all

Read my story about a COLD Zen-Temple, Eihei-Ji.
Gabi Greve
http://darumapilgrim.blogspot.com/2005/02/eihei-ji-temple.html

CLICK for more photos

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Warm Things to keep you warm in Winter in Japan
A KIGO list.
.....Including furniture, clothing and food.



***** Cold weather in autumn, winter and spring
. . KIGO LIST


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***** "Out-of-season blooming"
(kaeri-zaku, kaerizaku 帰り咲)


 帰り咲分別もない垣ね哉
kaeri-zaku funbetsu mo nai kakine kana

lacking discretion
out-of-season flowers
on the fence


Issa, Tr. David Lanoue


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Check the WKD LIST of
. HUMANITY and Winter Kigo
work done in winter

. . . . WINTER
the complete SAIJIKI




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Windstorm

nnnnnnnnnnnn TOP nnnnnnnnnnnnn

Windstorm

***** Location: Hawaii
***** Season: Winter
***** Category: Heavens


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Explanation

Rain and windstorms are more frequent during Hawaii's winter months, but they generally clear up within 24 hours.

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Worldwide use


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Things found on the way



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HAIKU


mamas
puttin the hammer down
watch yr nails

top o the mountain
flying things....
plastic in the trees

wind gusts...
the poet tree
dances

holding on...
center
of the storm


Shanna Moore, March 2006

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Related words

***** Wind in various kigo


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Please send your contributions to Gabi Greve
worldkigo .....

Back to the WHC Worldkigo Index
http://worldkigodatabase.blogspot.com/

11/02/2006

Walpurgis Night

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Walpurgis Night (Walpurgisnacht, Germany)

***** Location: Germany, Brocken Mountain
***** Season: Late Spring, May 1
***** Category: Observance


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Explanation

Brocken Mountain

May 1 marks the final victory of Spring over Winter, but before departing, the witches and their cohorts have one last fling. The night from April 30 to May 1 is called "Walpurgisnacht", the night of Walpurgis or Walpurga. The festival is marked by numerous rituals to ward off evil. Legend has it that on Walpurgisnacht the witches would gather on the Brocken, the highest peak in the Harz Mountains. Because of the Walpurgisnacht scene in Goethe's Faust, in which Mephistopheles takes Faust to the Brocken and has him revel with the witches, the witches gathering became widely known.

The festival is marked by numerous rituals to ward off evil. On the eve of May 1st the bells toll in Luxembourg and many prayers are said, there are blessings with holy-water and blessed-palms in the homes and barns. In Schmalkalden in Thueringen the little girls, dressed as Hexen themselves, chase out the Walpermännchen. They wear paper hats and sometimes carry sticks in their hands. Similarly, in the south Harz region, the young boys ride stick-horses and chase the Hexen out of the fields. The most widespread remedy against evil spirits during Walpurgisnacht is noise. The boys begin making noise as soon as the sun sets.

In Bohemia boards are beaten onto the ground in front of the houses, accompanied by this chant: "Hex geh raus, 's brennt dei Haus." Whoever hears a pistol shot on that evening is supposed to say, "Schiess mei Hex a mit!" In Lippe the noise is referred to as "Maiklappen." A lot of noise is especially made in front of the houses of married couples who are childless, because it is believed that it is necessary to "further the blessings."

In the Berner Jura the shephard boys, on the eve of May 1, stand atop the manure-piles and crack whips in order to drive away wolves. The wolf is the incarnation of evil, and symbolizes the departure of winter. The manure-pile symbolizes fertility of the fields and gardens, and therefore is often the locale where prayers are said. Farmers who don't have as many cattle help each other out in the summer. They make a pledge-group, which takes this form in Donaueschingen: they go to a nearby chapel and pray, then they climb together onto a manure-pile, hold hands, and say "Mir (=wir) gmaren miteinand," which means "we are helping each other to bring home hay and grain with our cattle." [i.e. they are sharing each other's manure-piles, which is sprayed onto the fields as fertilizer].
http://www.serve.com/shea/germusa/walpurgi.htm

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The name derives from St. Walburga
Born in Devonshire, about 710; died at Heidenheim, 25 Feb., 777. She is the patroness of Eichstadt, Oudenarde, Furnes, Antwerp, Gronigen, Weilburg, and Zutphen, and is invoked as special patroness against hydrophobia, and in storms, and also by sailors. She was the daughter of St. Richard, one of the under-kings of the West Saxons, and of Winna, sister of St. Boniface, Apostle of Germany, and had two brothers, St. Willibald and St. Winibald. St. Richard, when starting with his two sons on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, entrusted Walburga, then eleven years old, to the abbess of Wimborne.

Read more about her here:
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/15526b.htm


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Link in German, with more LINKS to related pages.
http://www.harzlife.de/index.html?event/walpurgis.html

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CLICK for more photosDer Brocken ist ein sagenumwobener Berg. Auf ihm sollen sich seit alters her die Hexen treffen, um in der Walpurgisnacht mit dem Teufel zu tanzen. Aber erst gegen Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts wurden hier die ersten Hexenfeste abgehalten.


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Worldwide use

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Things found on the way


The full text in German of Goethe’s famous poem:
http://www.internetschriftsteller.de/autoren-forum-02/schriftsteller/goethe/walpurgisnacht.html


Myths about the Walpurgis Night (German)
Quote:
Die Skepsis gegenüber der Walpurgisnacht-These änderte sich erst ab dem Jahre 1800, als Johann Wolfgang von Goethe den ersten Teil seines „Faust“ veröffentlichte. Goethes Schilderung des Hexensabbat in der Walpurgisnacht basierte auf dem Buch von Praetorius, dessen Eingrenzung der angeblichen Hexentänze auf die Nacht zum 1. Mai durch die Aufnahme in das deutsche Nationalepos nunmehr sakrosankt wurde.

Die Hexen zu dem Brocken ziehn,
Die Stoppel ist gelb, die Saat ist grün.
Dort sammelt sich der große Hauf,
Herr Urian sitzt oben auf.
So geht es über Stein und Stock,
Es farzt die Hexe, es stinkt der Bock.


Goethe
http://members.aol.com/tombeee/hexverf/walpurgis.html

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Brocken Phenomenon, Brocken spectre
ブロッケン現象, burokken genshoo
topic for haiku

CLICK for more phoots !CLICK for more photos !

A glory is an optical phenomenon produced by light backscattered (a combination of diffraction, reflection and refraction) towards its source by a cloud of uniformly-sized water droplets. A glory has multiple colored rings.

Glories are often seen in association with a Brocken spectre, the apparently enormously magnified shadow of an observer cast, when the Sun is low, upon the upper surfaces of clouds that are below the mountain upon which he stands. The name derives from the Brocken, the tallest peak of the Harz mountain range in Germany. Because the peak is above the cloud level, and the area is frequently misty, the condition of a shadow cast onto a cloud layer is relatively favored.

The appearance of giant shadows that seemed to move by themselves due to the movement of the cloud layer (this movement is another part of the definition of the Brocken Spectre), and which were surrounded by optical glory halos, may have contributed to the reputation the Harz mountains hold as a refuge for witches and evil spirits. In Goethe's Faust, the Brocken is called the Blocksberg and is the site of the Witches' Sabbath on Walpurgis Night.

© More in the WIKIPEDIA !



Basho and go-raikoo 来光, ブロッケン現象


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HAIKU


durch den Wald
ein Weg ohne Ende –
Walpurgisnacht !

through the forest
a walk without end -
Walpurgis Night !

Gabi Greve
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/happyhaiku/message/187

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Walpurgisnacht

Liebesgeschwuere.
Techtelmechtel ausfechtend
fuehlt fuer mich der Tod.

Swearing sveltering love.
Fighting back and forth
Feels like death for me.

(Tr. Gabi Greve)

Patjomkin
http://www.dulzinea.de/forum/haiku-fruehling-winter/t1902-walpurgisnacht-mai.html

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Walpurgisnacht laesst
wild im Licht des Feuerscheins
die Hexen tanzen.

Walpurgis night -
In the light of a bonfire
Witches dancing wildly

(Tr. Gabi Greve)

Medusa
http://www.dulzinea.de/forum/haiku-lichtungen/t3517-walpurgisnacht.html

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Related words

***** Walpurgis Fire, Walpurgis Bonfire
During the whole night, people are dancing around the bonfire, celebrating with the witches !

Walpurgisfeuer.
Um die lodernden Flammen
tanzen Technofreaks.

Walpurgis bonfire.
Around the blazing flames
Techno-freaks dancing.

Udo Wenzel
http://www.haiku-heute.de/Tafel/Tafel-002/tafel-002.html


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WKD : May Day in England

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Back to the Worldkigo Index
http://worldkigodatabase.blogspot.com/

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10/31/2006

October 2006

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..................................................................... October 2006

Marathon Kenya, worldwide.
..... Including Olympics, Olympic Games. Special Olympics, Paralympics.

Umewaka Memorial Day (Umewaka Ki) and Temple Mokubo-JiJapan

Nobel Prize Europe, worldwide

Mother Goddess in all cultures

Day of the African Child (16 June) Kenya, Africa, worldwide

Cotton rose, Rose-Mallow (fuyoo, fuyo, fuyoh) Hibiscus mutabilis. Japan

Hazel, hazelnut (hashibami) Japan

Chestnut (kuri) Japan

Walnut (kurumi) Japan

Hickory nuts Carya Fruits

Dussera, Dasara, Dussehra: Day Of Victory India
..... Navarati : Nine Nights Of Festivities

Ginger (shooga) Hawaii, India, Japan. Hajikami pickles.

Moss (koke) Japan

Fox God Shrine Festival (Inari Matsuri) Japan. First day of the horse, hatsu uma

Fox (kitsune) Japan

Sierra Nevada North America

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Please send your contributions to Gabi Greve
worldkigo .....

Back to the Worldkigo Index
http://worldkigodatabase.blogspot.com/

10/16/2006

Vog (Hawaii)

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Vog (Volcanic Smog)

***** Location: Big Island, Hawaii
***** Season: Non-seasonal Topic
***** Category: Earth / Heaven


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Explanation

I live in Hawaii and we realy have no seasons; i cannot write about fog and have another kigo?????

but then again we have no fog, we have * vog * which is adding volcanoe emissions to it... now it has earth, fetch , from the oceanwind, and fire.

the only season we have here is coffee season.. coffee flower season is spring and coffee cherry season is winter... even school gets out early for coffee picking time... there are three rounds of coffee and then the first rain the coffee blooms..

could then first rain be a kigo.. and now with the vog the coffee pickingtime varies and gos on until school is out

Shanna Moore

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Only in Hawaii can you experience vog. Vog is an atmospheric effect caused by emissions of the Kilauea volcano on the Big Island of Hawaii.

When sulfur dioxide gas is released, it reacts chemically with sunlight, oxygen, dust particles, and water in the air to form a mixture of sulfate aerosols, sulfuric acid and other oxidized sulfur species.

Together, this gas and aerosol mixture produces a hazy atmospheric condition known as volcanic smog or vog.

While for most residents, vog is merely an inconvenience, it can affect people with chronic diseases such as emphysema and asthma, although everyone reacts differently. Potential visitors to the Big Island who suffer from these problems should consult with their doctors before their visit.



http://gohawaii.about.com/cs/weather/a/hawaii_weather_2.htm

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VOG, some links

http://vognet.hpa.edu/

Madame Pele is the Hawaiian Volcano and Fire Goddess

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Worldwide use

India

. smog, black smog - kaala dhua or dhua .


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Things found on the way


Sakuo Nakamura answering to Shanna:

I suppose that Hawaii is nice place without snow, and a paradise, it is spring through all the year.
There is no change of season. Then there is no kigo.

What is a kigo? I think it is time passing by , from present to future. That means life is losing the balance, moving on toward death. So a kigo attracts people’s mind and the a poem will be born.

In Hawaii, there is no season, there is time changing, there is no kigo, there is no poem???

I don’t think so. In Hawaii, does time stop? Does the vog stay at the same place all day long ?
No, the vog always flows from place to place, from time to time.
Time is moving on in Hawaii the same as all over the world.
So people’s mind is moving always, creating poems.

vog from last night
can’t be found
only summer clouds


夜のガス 見えずに夏の 雲ばかり

yoru no gasu miezu ni natsu no kumo bakari

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HAIKU


vog is like a haiku made up from air sunshine volcanoe and sea salt... it makes the coffee bloom longer and bigger it nourishes growing things like the volcanic soil ..

vog disapears
with the tradewinds
another shore

Shanna Moore

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madam pele...
her second hand smoke
creates an atmoshere


Shanna Moore, April 2006

madam pele...
second hand smoke
creates vog


Shanna Moore

ペレ母さん 煙草の息が 煙害に
Pele kaasan tabako no iki ga engai ni

(Tr. Nakamura Sakuo)


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Related words

***** Madame Pele
Non-seasonal Topic for Haiku

The Halemaumau Crater of the Kilauea Volcano is the present home of Madame Pele. Madame Pele is the Hawaiian volcano and fire goddess. Whether or not you see hot fiery explosions and liquidity molten lava on your Hawaii volcano helicopter tour is strictly up to the temperament of Madame Pele.
The story of Madame Pele goes back to centuries-old chants and oral traditions of the Hawaiian people, describing the volcanic explosions and the lava of flows that formed today's Hawaiian Islands.
http://www.hawaiivolcanohelicoptertour.com/Madame-Pele.html

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this lady
that dances with fire
my muse
a goddess of the night
singing the blues


Shanna Moore, 2006

火と踊る 夜の女神や 哀愁歌
hito odoru yoru no megami ya aishuu-ka

(Tr. Nakamura Sakuo)


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. Volcano and Volcanic Ash (kazan, kazanbai)  


***** Fog, Mist, Haze and more


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10/02/2006

Valentine's Day

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Valentine's Day

***** Location: Worldwide
***** Season: Spring, Dry Season in Tropics
***** Category: Observance


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Explanation

The History of Saint Valentine's Day

Valentine's Day started in the time of the Roman Empire. In ancient Rome, February 14th was a holiday to honor Juno. Juno was the Queen of the Roman Gods and Goddesses. The Romans also knew her as the Goddess of women and marriage. The following day, February 15th, began the Feast of Lupercalia.

The lives of young boys and girls were strictly separate. However, one of the customs of the young people was name drawing. On the eve of the festival of Lupercalia the names of Roman girls were written on slips of paper and placed into jars. Each young man would draw a girl's name from the jar and would then be partners for the duration of the festival with the girl whom he chose. Sometimes the pairing of the children lasted an entire year, and often, they would fall in love and would later marry.

CLICK for more photos Under the rule of Emperor Claudius II Rome was involved in many bloody and unpopular campaigns. Claudius the Cruel was having a difficult time getting soldiers to join his military leagues. He believed that the reason was that roman men did not want to leave their loves or families. As a result, Claudius cancelled all marriages and engagements in Rome. The good Saint Valentine was a priest at Rome in the days of Claudius II. He and Saint Marius aided the Christian martyrs and secretly married couples, and for this kind deed Saint Valentine was apprehended and dragged before the Prefect of Rome, who condemned him to be beaten to death with clubs and to have his head cut off.

He suffered martyrdom on the 14th day of February, about the year 270. At that time it was the custom in Rome, a very ancient custom, indeed, to celebrate in the month of February the Lupercalia, feasts in honor of a heathen god. On these occasions, amidst a variety of pagan ceremonies, the names of young women were placed in a box, from which they were drawn by the men as chance directed.

The pastors of the early Christian Church in Rome endeavored to do away with the pagan element in these feasts by substituting the names of saints for those of maidens. And as the Lupercalia began about the middle of February, the pastors appear to have chosen Saint Valentine's Day for the celebration of this new feast. So it seems that the custom of young men choosing maidens for valentines, or saints as patrons for the coming year, arose in this way.

http://www.pictureframes.co.uk/pages/saint_valentine.htm
http://www.catholic-forum.com/saints/saintv06.htm

More about St. Valentine

http://www.lonekeep.com/lki_home/Valentine.htm


St. Valentine's Day in English Literature
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/15254a.htm

Motives connected with St. Valentine
http://www.catholic-forum.com/saints/saintv06.htm


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Worldwide use

England

Hundreds of years ago in England, many children dressed up as adults on Valentine's Day. They went singing from home to home. One verse they sang was:

Good morning to you, valentine;
Curl your locks as I do mine---
Two before and three behind.
Good morning to you, valentine.

In Wales wooden love spoons were carved and given as gifts on February 14th. Hearts, keys and keyholes were favorite decorations on the spoons. The decoration meant, "You unlock my heart!"

In the Middle Ages, young men and women drew names from a bowl to see who their valentines would be. They would wear these names on their sleeves for one week. To wear your heart on your sleeve now means that it is easy for other people to know how you are feeling.

Some people used to believe that if a woman saw a robin flying overhead on Valentine's Day, it meant she would marry a sailor. If she saw a sparrow, she would marry a poor man and be very happy. If she saw a goldfinch, she would marry a millionaire.

Think of five or six names of boys or girls you might marry, As you twist the stem of an apple, recite the names until the stem comes off. You will marry the person whose name you were saying when the stem fell off.

Pick a dandelion that has gone to seed. Take a deep breath and blow the seeds into the wind. Count the seeds that remain on the stem. That is the number of children you will have.
http://www.pictureframes.co.uk/pages/saint_valentine.htm

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France (or rather Japan :o)

The Mona Lisa
A copy of a painting - The Mona Lisa (77cm x 53cm) displayed at a counter of Japan's Mary Chocolate in a department store in Tokyo, 14 February 2003. The Japanese chocolate shop displays its version of the world famous Mona Lisa painting, made from 20 kilograms of chocolate at a department store in Tokyo. Women give chocolates to their boyfriends, husbands and male colleagues on Valentine's Day in Japan.

The fan in her hand shows the kanji for "Matsuri" Festival, and she wears a Japanese Happi Coat for Festivals.
http://www.tokyotimes.org/archives/2004/01/a_sugary_smile_1.html


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Japan

Barentain Dii バレンタインデー Valentine Day
.... barentain no hi バレンタインの日 (ばれんたいんのひ)


You know that Japanese St.Valentin's Day is very different from the original one now.
Because ofthe efforts and advertising tactics of the chocolate companies, the custom of St. Valentine's Day was accepted widely in Japan, and having passed though the Japanese groupism, it transformed strangely. Nowadays in many offices, every woman employee cooperates in paying money and the representative buys chocolates and puts them on the desks of each man employee on the morning of St.Valentine's Day.

Women in the office feel that the man who doesn't get a chocolate is pitiful. On the other hand, if they gave chocolate to a few men whom they liked, the jealousy and bad feeling of the others would be troublesome for them. So they selected the safest and useless way as an obligation. In Japanese groupism, sameness is important. At first, a chocolate had a meaning of love or goodwill to the man or the boy. And then, the meaning of friendship or play was added and recently even the meaning of duty (giri-choko) was added.
Miserable metamorphosis !
http://www.linkclub.or.jp/~kosa/rie/small/barentain.html
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_8-2-2004_pg9_2


February 2005
A Volkswagen car covered with white chocolate of strawberry flavor, using 150 liters of chocolate. Children put on more candies and cookies.

Here is a picture from the Volkswagen in 2004:

Japanese patissiers decorate a chocolate covered Volkswagen’s New Beetle vehicle with colourful chocolate, cookies and bread at a shopping mall in Tokyo, one week before St Valentine’s Day. —AFP
Chocolate-Coated Volkswagen Displayed For Valentine's Day In Tokyo


. Christian Celebrations in Japanese Kigo   

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Kenya

Despite the little knowledge about its origin, the majority of Kenyans, especially the urban folks, believe Valentine is the celebration of love. The colour red is the predominant mark for this day, and it is exhibited in flowers and clothes.

In Nairobi, St. Valentine's Day is highly commercialised. Flower, clothes, shoe and
other accessory vendors and supermarkets, as well as hawkers, capitalise on this occasion and stock red coloured Valentine's items at strategic points to attract customer attention. Since red roses are expensive and in short supply, traders substitute them with plastic ones. Husbands and wives buy each other gifts and flowers and they dress in red; so do lovers. Couples go out to exclusive joints to
spent a romantic moment together. Restaurants, hotels, pubs and resorts are decorated in red and special entertainments and menus are prepared to match their clients' needs.

The best climax about St Valentine's Day however is the renewal of love vows and re-affirming love and faithfulness to each other in our relationships.

~ Patrick Wafula


. St Valentine's Day


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Things found on the way




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HAIKU


saint Valentine'd day
the Saturday morning sun
warms my face
2004

near Valentine's day
a crimson petunia
opens
2003

Saint Valentine's Day--
more broken hearts than roses
if the war
2003

appears at the Anti-War Haiku Wall
http://www.tempslibres.org/awhw/haiga/hgacdr.html
http://www.tempslibres.org/awhw/home.html



red
catches the eye
St Valentine's day
2001

also appearing at PatchWork Haiku Page
http://mongst.8k.com/custom2.html


by gillena cox
http://www.worldhaikureview.org/ecards/makecard.php?card=2171

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Another way to celebrate Valentine

sipping champagne
enjoying the tiny sounds
of living alone

susan delphine delaney plano, texas
appeared in bottlerockets and, later, the red moon anthology

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Valentine's Day —
The couple counseling
postponed again.

Asahi Haikuist Network, February 20, 2009

An Sankt Valentin
der Paarbeartungstermin
nochmals verschoben

Beate Conrad


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Global Haiku Tradition Kukai 2 (February 14, 2001)
Millikin University, Spring 2001

Grade school Valentine--
Should I give him
Garfield or Scooby Doo

Amanda Young
Many more are here
http://www.millikin.edu/haiku/courses/globalspring2001/valentinesdaykukai.html

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Valentine's Day Contemporary Haiku

valentine's day
in the vase
a dead rose

bridgetjanejones

And many more are here
http://www.forums.fantasticpoems.com/t4127.html

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Some fun poems about relationships on a Valentine competition.

Take some small issues,
bake for two months at high heat.
Relationship’s done!

-- Daniel Westreich
http://www.breakupgirl.net/special/vday/haiku.html


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Valentine's Day 2010 ... Love Day
co-incided with the beginning of the Chinese New Year


Chinese New Year...
the growl of the Tiger
on Valentine's Day

Valentine's Day
in the flower market...
bundles of roses

Chinese New Year...
a lady in red awaits
her blind date

New Year's Day...
a toddler takes a step
after a fumble

Year of the Tiger...
if only I could wear
a red terno

Love Day...
red shirt for New Year
and for my date too

Cupid's way...
I mark with rose petals
where my heart resides

Heart Day...
the sun casts intensely
on faceless partners

Willie Bongcaron, Manila 2010


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Valentine 2010 in Kenya

Valentine--
a little girl undusts her
fallen flowers

valentine--
red decorations on the pears
vendors wheelbarrow

valentine--
a hawker sells plastic roses
at the local market

valentine morning--
youthles church for the
morning service

red dressed--
she slips over a rotten mango
at the market

hussein haji

Kenya Saijiki Forum



. valetine day 2010
from the Peacocks in Kenya



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mid-february
the only rain here
is love


kenneth daniels (Guyana)


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. . . . . The Year 2001


Valentine's Day
she finds out where he hid
Playboys

Valentine's Day
bamboo shoots emerge
from the ground

Valentine's Night
he curls up
in bed

Valentine’s night
eating chocolate hearts
from my e-lover


Chen-ou Liu
Canada

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break up
at Valentine's Day -
headless gummi bears

Heike Gewi
Yemen


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Valentine's Day
a dozen red roses spells:
"I love you"

Valentine's Day
missing the tender kiss
when I wake up

Valentine's Day
roses and kisses and hugs...
and endearments


Willie Bongcaron
Philippines


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Valentine's day-
he sends her sms
of love


Sunil Uniyal, India


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Valentine's Day
we fall in love again
over B&W movies


Valentine’s Day
my wife reads up
on Henry VIII

Alan Summers
England


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Soweto market--
new red stalls mushroom
the roadsides


MORE Valentine Haiku from Kenya by
. Patrick Wafula

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SPECIAL

. Valentine's Day - 2012 .

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to Basho
Issa and Shiki . . .
valentines


Elaine Andre, 2013

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Related words

***** Bonifacio Day Philippines



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