Punk’s Reviews > Poetry of Chiyo-ni: The Life and Art of Japan's Most Celebrated Woman Haiku Master > Status Update
Punk
is 42% done
among a field
of horsetail weeds–
temple ruins
I like the way this is structured, that by putting the horsetails first it suggests they were there first and the ruins are just incidental. Happily I can confirm that this feeling is even stronger in the original:
tsukutsukushi
kokora ni tera no
ato mo ari
And my own quick and dirty literal translation:
horsetail plants
around here temple's
ruins also here
— Jan 16, 2026 03:36PM
of horsetail weeds–
temple ruins
I like the way this is structured, that by putting the horsetails first it suggests they were there first and the ruins are just incidental. Happily I can confirm that this feeling is even stronger in the original:
tsukutsukushi
kokora ni tera no
ato mo ari
And my own quick and dirty literal translation:
horsetail plants
around here temple's
ruins also here
Like flag
Punk’s Previous Updates
Punk
is 81% done
Patricia Donegan's essay on renga actually comes out and says that the rules were meant to ensure no continuity in the poem as a whole, that it was closer to an exercise in Buddhist meditation—of all times and seasons at once—than a cohesive piece of work. I don't enjoy renga as an art form, but I can appreciate it as a social activity, a kind of literary game, and Donegan's description makes me see that appeal more.
— 18 minutes ago
Punk
is 76% done
This is one of Chiyo-ni's best known Buddhist haiku and is supposedly expressing the peace of detachment, but I just love how dismissive it is:
anyway
leave it to the wind—
dry pampas grass
— Mar 02, 2026 02:03PM
anyway
leave it to the wind—
dry pampas grass
Punk
is 74% done
Got this back from the library just in time to finish up the winter section:
falling down laughing
at others falling down—
snow viewing
— Mar 01, 2026 02:01PM
falling down laughing
at others falling down—
snow viewing
Punk
is 74% done
Managed to squeeze in a few more poems before my loan expired. Now on page 189.
— Feb 04, 2026 01:16PM
Punk
is 72% done
This book is about to self-destruct, so for future reference, I'm on page 184.
— Feb 03, 2026 02:47PM
Punk
is 70% done
but for their voices
the herons would disappear—
this morning's snow
— Feb 02, 2026 01:15PM
the herons would disappear—
this morning's snow
Punk
is 64% done
I feel like many of Chiyo-ni's haiku depend on their zen exhibitionism and don't offer much to the non-enlightened reader. But occasionally I find one that is enjoyable or meaningful even without the zen background, like the previous gourd poem, and this one:
autumn field—
some grasses flower
some don't
— Jan 30, 2026 04:45PM
autumn field—
some grasses flower
some don't
Punk
is 63% done
Chiyo-ni's other famous haiku:
a hundred gourds
from the heart
of one vine
— Jan 30, 2026 04:27PM
a hundred gourds
from the heart
of one vine
Punk
is 59% done
Chiyo-ni's most famous haiku:
morning glory–
the well-bucket entangled
I ask for water
— Jan 28, 2026 01:24PM
morning glory–
the well-bucket entangled
I ask for water
Punk
is 57% done
the mosquito net
with a corner untied—
ah, the moon
I don't care what this poem is really about, something zen, I'm sure, or that there's some question of whether Chiyo-ni even wrote it, I just love how it sounds like the moon's snuck inside the netting.
— Jan 27, 2026 03:05PM
with a corner untied—
ah, the moon
I don't care what this poem is really about, something zen, I'm sure, or that there's some question of whether Chiyo-ni even wrote it, I just love how it sounds like the moon's snuck inside the netting.

