Hay(na)ku/Sci(na)ku
– Six-Word Poetry
by
Lauren McBride
[This
article appeared in Scifaikuest
(May 2015) print edition.]
Six words. Three lines. One word, two words, three words
sequentially per line. This is the basis of hay(na)ku, a delightfully simple
tercet with no syllable or rhyme restrictions.
The form surfaced on the web around 2003, and was invented
by the award-winning Filipino-American poet, Eileen Tabios, author of essay,
fiction, and poetry collections. About her poetry, Tabios says, "I try to
create an emotion that transcends the dictionary sense of what words mean or
what they typically evoke in the current cultural context." Considered an
experimental writer with a love of words, some of which "are beautiful
outside of their meaning, like azure or jasmine or cobalt . . ." it might
naturally follow that Tabios would invent a form based on six precisely chosen
words.
The name, Hay(na)ku (pronounced Ai-na-ku), came later from
Vince Gotera, also a Filipino-American poet, who says that it is a pun on
"haiku" and the Filipino phrase "ay naku," which means something
like "oh my gosh." There are
multiple examples of hay(na)ku on the web, including an essay about the form
followed by several poems at Dragoncave
and a hay(na)ku poetry blog.
Add a speculative element, and
the Hay(na)ku becomes Sci(na)ku. A post to the Science Fiction and Fantasy Poetry
Association's Facebook page on April 9, 2014, credits Martin Tomlinson with the
first ever published Sci(na)ku by the Aphelion
Webzine, April 2014, reprinted here with the author's permission:
space
lies empty
in the void
lies empty
in the void
After reading Tomlinson's Sci(na)ku, I was hooked both by
the speculative theme and minimalist form. For me, the appeal is the
distillation of a thought or an image to its essence for expression using
precise, economical word choices.
Tomlinson
also enjoys the "minimalist elegance" of the Hay(na)ku style he found
by browsing the Internet. He feels it fits speculative poetry, "almost
perfectly . . . leaving the details to the reader, letting them create their
own fantasies within the poem."
As
for his creative process, Tomlinson says, "When I make a Sci(na)ku, the
first thing I think of is the first line; this is what I base the poem around.
Then, I start to think about what possibilities there are for this theme. I
then base the rest of the poem around this theme." Here is
another example by Tomlinson:
Time
consumes
definitively
Ships
dance, lost
Like Tomlinson, I started with
the first line for my first Sci(na)ku, which was accepted by Star*Line (reprinted here). In this
case, the form led the poem. I had decided on daydreaming, and that it could be
a bad idea if . . . which left three words for what could go wrong.
daydreaming
bad
idea
during telepathic exchange
In the following unpublished example, the first line
came to me last as I imagined what it would take to leave safety behind and
step into the void of space.
courage
first
step
of
a spacewalk
In
this final unpublished example, I reverse the order, beginning with three words
and ending on one.
long,
hot showers
old
Earth
memory
Six words. Three Lines. A new minimalist form fun to try.
Write them in reverse, or as a chain. Write one. Write hundreds. They are
addictive.
Works
Cited
Brewer,
Robert Lee. “Hay (na) ku: Counting Up a New Poetic Form. Poetic Asides. 17 Sept. 2007. Web.
Durkee,
Arthur. “Hay(na)ku.” Dragoncave. 9.
Nov. 2009. Web.
Johnson,
Ben. “Haynaku.” Poetry Forms. n.d.
Web.
McBride, Lauren. “daydreaming.” Star*Line.37.3 (2014): 27.
Print.
Poetry
Foundation. “Vince Gotera.” Poetryfoundation.org. n.d. Web.
---.
“Eileen Tabios.” Poetryfoundation.org. n.d. Web.
Tabios,
Eileen. “Hay(na)ku Bibliography.” Hay(na)ku
Poetry. 30 May, 2014. Web.
Tomlinson,
Martin. “space.” Aphelion. 2014. Web.
---.
"Creating Sci(na)ku." Message
to the author. 23 July, 2014. Email Interview.
Zimmerman,
J. “The Hay(na)ku Verse Form, a 21st century poetry form. Baymoon.com. n.d. Web.
*****
Lauren McBride finds inspiration in faith, family, nature, science and membership in the Science Fiction & Fantasy Poetry Association (SFPA). Nominated for the Pushcart Prize and the SFPA's Rhysling and Dwarf Stars Awards, her poetry has appeared in dozens of publications including the Aurorean, The Heron's Nest, tinywords and Songs of Eretz where she is a frequent contributor. She enjoys swimming, gardening, baking, reading, writing and knitting scarves for troops.