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Harry Potter Haiku Handout

  1. What is a haiku?
      Haiku is a very old form of poetry from Japan. It consists of three unrhymed lines. Traditionally, the first and last lines have five syllables each, and the middle line has seven syllables. Notice how many syllables are in each line of this haiku by the 17th-century Japanese poet Basho. (Often when haiku is translated, however, the number of syllables is changed.)

    
    	from all directions
    	winds bring petals of cherry
    	into the bird lake
    	—Basho
    	

    Having few words and pausing at the end of each short line gives a special feeling to haiku. Even a simple statement sounds thoughtful—as though it has a deeper meaning.

  2. How do you write a haiku?
    • Make sure your first line has five syllables, your second line has seven syllables and your final line has five syllables in it.
    • Check out the examples below. These are dialogue taken from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, and written as if they were haiku. Count the number of syllables in each line.


    Behold the Wisdom of Hogwarts


    I hope you're pleased with
    yourselves. We could all have been
    killed — or worse, expelled.
    Hermione Granger


    I can teach you how
    to bottle fame, brew glory
    even stopper death
    Professor Snape


    Flint with the Quaffle —
    passes Spinnet — passes Bell —
    hit hard in the face
    Lee Jordan, at Quidditch


    how many times in
    our lives are we going to see
    a dragon hatching?
    Ron Weasley


    I can't see you. Are
    you ghoulie or ghostie or
    wee student beastie?
    Peeves the Ghost


    Hagrid, we saved the
    Stone, it's gone, he can't use it.
    Have a Chocolate Frog
    Harry Potter


  3. Here is an example of a haiku written by a student:
      Harry soars past us
      a song in his heart, the Snitch
      in his sweaty palms
      Mirror Girl, 12

  4. Now you try it!

  5. Line # 1 (five syllables):


    Line # 2 (seven syllables):


    Line # 3 (five syllables):


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