статья Ли Гурги в Симпли Хайку:
simplyhaiku.webs.com/reprintsleegurga.htm
This altered definition of image can be used as the basis for a definition of haiku as "a short poem that uses images of nature and the seasons to present an intuitive and emotional complex in an instant of time." This definition of haiku has all the elements that are essential to haiku. It is a poem. It is a poem limited in length, in English that limit being somewhere between 15 and 20 syllables. It presents images rather than ideas. It is intuitive rather than intellective. It uses observation of nature and the seasons as a basis for that intuition. Its observations are specific rather than general. This is the haiku that can be used as a spiritual path, following a lineage from Bashô and Santôka, through Blyth, preserved in our literature by the likes of James W. Hackett and Robert Spiess. As Alfred North Whitehead wrote, "The foundations of the world are to be found, not in the cognitive experience of conscious thought, but in the aesthetic experience of everyday life." (quoted in The Heart of Buddhist Philosophy by Nolan Pliny Jacobsen, Southern Illinois University Press, 1988, p. 83.)
simplyhaiku.webs.com/reprintsleegurga.htm
This altered definition of image can be used as the basis for a definition of haiku as "a short poem that uses images of nature and the seasons to present an intuitive and emotional complex in an instant of time." This definition of haiku has all the elements that are essential to haiku. It is a poem. It is a poem limited in length, in English that limit being somewhere between 15 and 20 syllables. It presents images rather than ideas. It is intuitive rather than intellective. It uses observation of nature and the seasons as a basis for that intuition. Its observations are specific rather than general. This is the haiku that can be used as a spiritual path, following a lineage from Bashô and Santôka, through Blyth, preserved in our literature by the likes of James W. Hackett and Robert Spiess. As Alfred North Whitehead wrote, "The foundations of the world are to be found, not in the cognitive experience of conscious thought, but in the aesthetic experience of everyday life." (quoted in The Heart of Buddhist Philosophy by Nolan Pliny Jacobsen, Southern Illinois University Press, 1988, p. 83.)
опять некогда (такая е фигня. пока тока до половины разгребла.