Mythical Journeys - A Month of Daily Haiku (Day 11)

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(Edited)

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Image by M W from Pixabay


The land's limestone bones
and winterbourne blood vessels -
a giant's graveyard.


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Mythology bleeds into modern day story telling on many levels. We see this in fantasy with Tolkien's archetypal wizards inspired by the character of Merlin in Arthurian fables, and in many TV shows such as Battlestar Galactica that utilizes concepts from Greek mythology.

There are many ways myth and legend can inspire new writing. For example, a modern day interpretation of the themes in Greek mythology provide great fodder for a screenplay. Or reading the obscure legends of the Polynesian islands could be the basis of the culture of a tribe of nomadic seafarers in a fantasy setting.

It is this process of using elements of legend to populate fantasy worlds that make classics such as Ursula le Guin's Earthsea, Tolkien's Middle Earth or George R R Martin's Westeros so vivid and believable.

Blessed are the legend-makers with their rhyme of things not found within recorded time.

— J R R Tolkien, from "Mythopoeia" (1931 poem)

I have personally used Myth/Legend in creating my own Fantasy world. The process is almost like a magical spell in of itself. For me, it is all about taking the roots of allegory I see in Legend and lending my setting strength through those archetypes. There is no direct element of any myth apparent as I created my own mythology for the three kingdoms, but by reading mythology I learned the patterns and modality of how myth works. Often myth and religion are intertwined bringing a believable sacred element to a fantasy world.

Malevernine, horse of stars,
mane waving in heavens bright,
before the yoke of death’s embrace,
take saddle into endless night.

In your timeless realm we sing
Around the endless fire burning
Of Maleverine, whose shelter brings
escape from death returning.

A song from my fantasy short story, The Gelded One


I have decided to challenge myself for a month to post a daily Haiku on Hive. Each week will have a different theme based on a picture prompt.

This week's broad theme is Inspiration.

To read more about the aesthetics of true haiku, and the difference between haiku and senryu, please check out my post: Haiku Vs Senryu - The Aesthetics of Form

All images in this post are creative commons sources, linked below pic. If you have enjoyed this Haiku, please check out my homepage @raj808 for similar content. Thank you.

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6 comments
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Did you see this series from James May from Top Gear that he goes to Japan and tries to fit the whole trip in just haikus?

If not so, it was an hilarious thing to watch and now I want to visit Japan as well haha.

The world really needs more haikus

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Did you see this series from James May from Top Gear that he goes to Japan and tries to fit the whole trip in just haikus?

No I haven't seen that! I shall seek it out and watch it 🙂 I'm not a big fan of Clarkson on topgear, but the other two are OK I suppose. Even when Clarkson is on it there are still crazy fast cars to salivate over lol

Thanks for the recommendation @karinxxl 👍
I'm going to keep up with this month of Haiku with the writing tips attached. It's a good practice to keep my writing muscles exorcised.

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Same here not a fan of Clarkson at all and not a fan of topgear in that way, but james may presents himself different in this series and he does it really easy which is very fun to watch :D

(but on the cars?? commmmmmoooooon dude :D)

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Is it this show you're talking about @karinxxl?

"James May Our Man in Japan."

When will I get the call to explore the world on the BBC's £££ based on my poetry? 😂😏

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