The R H Blyth Award

WHR March 2019

THE R. H. Blyth Award 2019 (Haiku)

Susumu Takiguchi announcing the Award at the World Haiku Utsav

The Award winner was first announced on 3 February 2019 at TRIVENI World Haiku Utsav 2019, Savitribai Phule Pune University, Pune, India, 1-3 February 2019. Here, in the March 2019 issue of the WHR we wish to show the rest of the result, together with the text of the winner’s announcement. The way the selected haiku poems are shown partly follows the usual practice of the WHR but it is also partly dictated by the selection procedure of the Award.

* * * * *

The World Haiku Club is pleased to announce

that the winner of The R. H. Blyth Award 2019 (Haiku),

who will recieve GBP 300 minus money transfer fees,

is as follows:

THE R. H. Blyth Award 2019 (Haiku) Winner

fallen leaves

the lost time

of another life

Eufemia Griffo,

Italy

TRIVENI World Haiku Utsav 2019, Savitribai Phule Pune University,

Pune, India, 1-3 February 2019

COMMENTS by Susumu Takiguchi

Many of the good entries for this year’s R. H. Blyth Award (Haiku) have demonstrated rather dark and anxious themes. It may perhaps be a reflection of the dark and anxious time we live in today. However, at any time in our history we have always had wars, illnesses, old age problems, massacres and existentialist anxieties. If we could ask people long dead in the medieval time or in the 19th century or whenever it was, they could have answered, “Well, to be honest our situation is much worse than yours. You are absolutely lucky.”

And it is a good thing that more than a handful of haiku poets are honest and brave enough to deal with these difficult subjects. This is one of the conspicuous characteristics of the R. H. Blyth Award this year. We had an enormous number of submissions from across the world and the selection job proved to be three times or four times as big as usual.

Some of them even enquire, deep inside us, into our inability to cope with these formidable challenges. Their haiku are therefore about our perplexity, self-doubt, resignation, loss of identity, direction or hope, disillusionment and despair. The Award-winning haiku has come out as the finest example of honest haiku by those facing up to this human frailty.

In only eight plain words, it reaches a universal truth, depicts an inconvenient fact with detachment and creates a resigned observation of the seemingly unending cycle of life and death and the human predicament of being at the mercy of it.

The layers of fallen leaves hide many realities as they decay and die. They may be completely ignored or forgotten until, that is, next time leaves fall again. Our lives follow the same natural pattern. And death hides all the vicissitudes of each of our lives. Its long, long story now looks but a momentary memory of our time lost. We are all therefore condemned to repeat the same search in perpetuity as in À la recherche du temps perdu.

The author is an Italian writer, poet, teacher and haijin, living in Milano.

THE R. H. Blyth Award 2019 (Haiku)

TWO RUNNERS UP

the nursing home

she greets the stranger

she gave birth to

Mary Alves Sella

United States

(About this haiku, see the Editor’s Choice of the present issue)

fading contrails

a line of refugees

turned back from the border

Jay Friedenberg

United States

A brief comment by Susumu Takiguchi: A powerful haiku on an inconvenient truth which has become horrendously common across the world. And how timely and topical it is! The embodiment of haiku capable of dealing with serious questions of our contemporary time. And yet, apart from the contrails, it has also been the same old problem for us humans from the time immemorial. Thus, it is a universal truth in time and space. Let us therefore not call it the Mexican border, or Syria. It is a human and universal tragedy. The images of L1 and L2 present an exemplary toriawase of exquisite nuances and subtleties, rarely seen among shallow and meaningless juxtapositions around.

SEVEN HONORABLE MENTIONS

(In no particular order)

first frost

a drop of whisky

in father’s tea

Rachel Sutcliffe

England

a row of backbones

facing a row of clouds —

rice planting song

Indra Neil Mekala

India

the dervish’s dance…

spring wind swirls

in each whirl

Ali Znaidi

Tunisia

storm shadows

souls of the pogrom

forgotten by humankind

Marilyn Humbert

Australia

the emptiness

after my hysterectomy

pumpkin carving

Christina Sng

Singapore

river eddy ...

what is it

that I've lost

Sanjuktaa Asopa

India

distant starlight

the way we cling

to illusion

Jay Friedenberg

United States

THE REST OF THE SHORT-LISTED HAIKU

(In no particular order)

As there were so many good haiku in the short list from which the best ten were selected, it has been decided that the rest should also be shown.

abandoned station

a fragrance of thyme at every step

to nowhere

Annie Chassing

France

without leaves

the ginkgo even thinner

her chemo treatment

Gregory Longenecker

USA

bedtime story...

she asks me to be louder

for the stars

Akila Gopalakrishnan

India

care home

she deadheads

spent roses

Ernest Wit

Poland

the potter

shaping

the sense of things

Mary Stevens

USA

losing my way. . .

raindrops find the part

in my hair

Carole MacRury

USA

flying kites...

untangling the knots

of my mind

Lakshmi Iyer

India

our unsaid goodbyes

cormorant picks over

what the tide left

Hélène Duc

France

heat wave –

melting asphalt

reshaping a shoe print

Adjei Agyei-Baah

Ghana/New Zealand

too early

for cherry blossoms

this tiny white coffin

Maxianne Berger

Canada

snowflakes...

how soft the sound

of falling night

Gautam Nadkarni,

India

funeral’s end

with each step measuring

the depth of silence

Hélène Duc

France

war memories -

father's arthritic hands

collect the olives

Goran Gatalica

Croatia

winter chill...

on the zip of

the sleeping bag

K. Ramesh

India

mountainside—

the rugged ride

of eagle's shadow

Adjei Agyei-Baah

Ghana/New Zealand

only heavy rain

drumming the skylight

Armistice Day

Maxianne Berger

Canada

cut branches

the body remembers

all its past trauma

Christina Sng

Singapore

palmistry...

on the curve of my life line

so many deadlines

Zinovy Vayman

ZATSUEI, haiku of merit

(In no particular order)

egg moon

ellipses of geese

penetrate it

J. Brian Robertson

Canada

hushed evening

spent

with owls

Roberta Beach Jacobson

USA

a crescent moon

tugs at the Pacific tides ...

tangled thoughts of leaving

Chen-Ou Liu

Canada

the sky's clear

enough to spot Polaris . . .

New Year begins

Barnabas Adeleke

Nigeria

autumn crocus

mother’s memories

from before she was a mother

Debbi Antebi

United Kingdom

breaking in

the pointed shoes

spring thaw

Debbi Antebi

United Kingdom

doc says

the labour has started ...

half-open tulip

Sanjuktaa Asopa

India

hummingbird

mistaking my ear

for a petunia

Joan Barrett

USA

at the wake

your hammock weighed down

by dogs

Danny Blackwell

UK Citizen, resident in Valencia, Spain

too young

to look so old —

grey temples

Julie Bloss Kelsey

USA

cicada shell

clinging to the wall...

its soul

Ed Bremson

USA

old school

a collared dove

pounds the frost

Helen Buckingham

UK

quarter moon

waves fold

water

Owen Bullock,

New Zealand

winter chill

the domino effect

of dog barks

Claire Vogel Camargo

USA

harvest over . . .

the farmer bends his head

in prayer

Kanchan Chatterjee

India.

night drive

silvered arms of trees

and Chopin

Marta Chocilowska

Poland

ladybirds swarming

into the concrete bunker...

war headlines

Cezar Ciobîcă

Romania

sable door mat

watches me with one eye

and a languid stretch

Ben Clarkson

New Zealand

Desert street -

stuck in a gridlock

of memories

Vassileios Comporozos

Greece

encounter

despite the winter

a butterfly

Maria Concetta Conti

Italy

a garden with no children

dandelions

unblown

Guido Cupani

Italy

family dance

around the young cherry tree

its first blossom

Henryk Czempiel

Poland

mushroom gathering

saving the biggest ones

for the soup kitchen

Tracy Davidson

United Kingdom

frozen river

the ducks as usual

but on foot

Marie Derley

Ath-city, Belgium

waterfall

the cloud teaches him to fly

the river - to sing

Maria Dermendzhieva

Bulgaria

moor -

heather in bloom

lost in the fog

Rosa Maria Di Salvatore

Italy

neighbour’s wedding

the singing crickets

in my backyard

Gurpreet Dutt

India

their new aroma

wafting through crisp wrinkled sheets

making scents of love

Victor Fleming

United States of America

summer road trip

my father's ashes

in the wind

Joseph Fulkerson

Kentucky, USA

empty square

a mobile phone is ringing

from a litter bin

Zelyko Funda

Croatia

grazing cows . . .

the wind chases sleepy spring

across the meadow

Ivan Gaćina

Croatia

withered apples

on snowy branches ...

hospice garden

Lucia Cardillo - Rodi Garganico

Italia

thaw drip

a little girl jumps

imaginary rope

Nikolay Grankin.

Russia

night anemones

the rhythms

of tide and moon

Simon Hanson

Australia

rainy hike

loving words turn

to hail

Mariela Coromoto Hernandez

The Netherlands

cherry blossom rain -

his vocabulary

so poor

Dan Iulian

Romania

post box...

empty sound

of her love letters

Lakshmi Iyer

India

peace

what else is there

that I need?

Damir Janjalija

Montenegro

Night train

last race

to the dark unknown

Padmini Krishnan

Singapore

new year

without fireworks –

only full moon

Capotă Daniela Lăcrămioara

Roumanie

celestial vault

mom's still knitting

up there

Hervé Le Gall

France

pier fishing—

he eats the bait

for dinner

Michael H. Lester

USA

paper thin—

the skin on grandma's arm

numbered, like her days

Michael H. Lester

USA

obedient only

to herself: morning glory

defies the evening

Priscilla H. Lignori

United States

scattered blossoms

sparrows reclaim the schoolyard

after recess

Gregory Longenecker

USA

I forgive you

poor mosquito . . .

I’m hungry too

Carole MacRury

USA

things that come

things that go

lacewing

Marietta McGregor

Australia

Arriving hungry –

May this smell of coffee

be from my home!

Franklin Magalhães

Brazil

spider web—

between wars

rumours of war

Martha Magenta

United Kingdom

sea of silence

my voice sailing

to a distant shore

Kumarendra Mallick

India

clear water . . .

floating petals followed

by their shadows

Tomislav Maretic

nightfall curfew

the old man walks

his dog

Anna Maris

Sweden

longest day…

bait fish in a bucket

dance in the sun

Scott Mason

USA

strong breeze —

the bulging branches

of cart puller’s veins

Indra Neil Mekala

India

June breeze

I sign for a package

with my finger

Paul Miller

United States

lunar eclipse -

the girl puts on

her first foundation

Radka Mindova

Bulgaria

plucked dandelions

still longing for the longing

in her eyes

Gautam Nadkarni,

India

Sweet pea...

not willing to move

the snail or I

Ashish Narain

The Philippines

washing plates

with her tears...

girl of ten

Shreya Narang

India

A moment, the sea

takes the shape of your body,

carrying it off-shore

Ecaterina Neagoe

Romania

autumn wildfire

a couple read their names

among the missing

Anthony Obaro

Nigeria

weak bladder

traffic jam makes my

forehead sweat

Franjo Ordanić

Croatia

home baked cookies

how does mom know how much

love to add

Vandana Parashar

India

first blossoms

stronger than sight

the sound of bees

Dejan Pavlinovic

Croatia

offshore breeze

I lick my lips

to taste the sea

Jacquie Pearce

Canada

splashed!

my toes in the pond

a frog jumps in

Carol Raisfeld

USA

graying sky, a

sudden chill as the moon

blots out the sun

Sondra Rosenberg

U.S.A.

mid-winter . . .

sunlight brings out the grain

on the old headstones

Bruce Ross

USA

yesterday’s funeral

the lingering scent

of mother’s lilies

Cynthia Rowe

Sydney, Australia

cheese-maker in tears -

his sheep ate

the pine boletes

Djurdja Vukelic Rozic

Croatia

Power cut -

darkness connecting

man to the moon

Raju Samal

India

bitter rain stops

my father fixing the roof

for another war

Ernesto P. Santiago

Greece

first handful of dirt

cemetery mockingbirds

keening heavenward

Agnes Eva Savich

USA

anniversary

a postcard addressed

to somebody else

Vessislava Savova

Bulgaria

single file

I follow my shadow home

winter sunset

Mary Alves Sella

United States

Alzheimer's-

Granny again counts

the floor tiles

Diksha Sharma

India

spring accessories

purple and yellow crocus

on a grassy bank

Adelaide B. Shaw

USA

on the horizon

an eagle appears to be

saluting the sun

Stuart Jay Silverman

U.S.A.,

The midnight hour…

last year’s resolutions

recycled

Keith A. Simmonds

France

Persian garden –

every avenue lined

with bitter oranges

Sandra Simpson

New Zealand

sudden rain -

street umbrella

a bestseller

Tomislav Sjekloća

Montenegro

cold rain

unpicked apple tree

hung naked

Dimitrij Škrk

Slovenia

(Translated by Đ.V.Rožić)

northern lights

the blur of scarves

as skaters pass

Debbie Strange

Canada

behind a curtain

of falling snow

village cenotaph

Rachel Sutcliffe

England

Storm

In the wind’s voice

There are notes of disquiet…

The bending pines groan.

Vitaly Svirin

Russia

heavy snowflakes

each word of the refugee

melting something

Eduard Tara

Romania

wrapped in fog

the whisper of owl's wings

above my head

Barbara Tate

USA

frosty morning...

your warm breath

tickles my lips

Diana Teneva

Bulgaria

raven at dusk

speaks a language

i can understand

Stephen Toft

United Kingdom

clothesline :

a rogue wind arm-twists

my blouses

Vidya S Venkatramani

India

The Moon

Silent in the sky

The silver coin

Buyer of dreams

Felice Vinci

Italy

such weakness!

I rest my head on the table…

thin dust

Anita Virgil

USA

winter evening

just the right amount

of tea leaves

Pragya Vishnoi

India

first kiss

in the meadow of daffodils…

no one to count Lyrids

Steliana Cristina Voicu

Romania

mellow rich sunset

burnishes pylon cables

alight with starlings

Michele Waering

United Kingdom

Midwestern farmer

takes handful of rich soil

honor, sweat and debt.

Jason Scott Wallace

Canada

helter skelter

down the wheelchair ramp

green acorns

Julie Warther

United States

blizzard clouds swallow

the wolf moon – dreams rise to

a squirrel’s nest

Tyson West

USA

last to leave

the garden of Eden

falling leaves

Ernest Wit

Poland

early morning hike

the forest path well hidden

beneath knee deep mist

David Wood

USA

the taste

of late summer fruit …

grabbing what's left

Beata Wrzal

U.K.

drought …

sharing the waterhole

predators and their prey

Beata Wrzal

U.K.