Walking from the train station to work this morning, I found myself composing Haikus in honour of Fulham's win against Norwich on Saturday (not sure why, particularly, but I did it anyway). I share them here for those who are interested. While some hold that a haiku should consist of 17 syllables in a strict 5-7-5 formation, others allow a more total-poetry style freeform arrangement of the 17 syllables. I've gone for the latter, partly in honour of Martin Jol's Dutch roots, but mainly because it's easier to write. The first is inspired by seeing Roy Hodgson signing autographs (including one for my eldest son) while constantly making progress through the crowd, not allowing himself to be swamped and trapped by the ever-growing throng which would have happened if he'd stopped to talk to anyone. The other two are, I think, self-explanatory. Craven Cottage, 18 May 2012, number 1 Roy Hodgson moves through the crowd, signing. A shark: if he stops, he is lost. Craven Cottage, 18 May 2012, number 2 Petric from distance, 3-0. We see no deflection, only glory. Craven Cottage, 18 May 2012, number 3 Transfers and rumours of transfers herald our demise. 5-0. Clint who?
Fine efforts from Cottager and Craving, although by my count they come in at 16 and 18 syllables respectively, not the regulation 17. Mooching the QPR board this week, I came across a post on this thread http://www.not606.com/showthread.php/163383-Open-Training-Session where one of their fans was castigated as a plastic for reading 'a fancy book'. Just saying.
One for Paddy Kenny; Smart lad, to slip betimes away From fields where glory does not stay, And early though the squad grows It withers quick, when facing foes. I'm not sure what Housman would have to say about my changes- makes it read better, in my opinion
Stamford Bridge, 22 August 2012 The Pog with bullet header. A Quantum Leap for Reading From Russia with Love. 1-1
Can't read the word 'double rainbow' without thinking of this http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OQSNhk5ICTI
Captain, I think that Cottager and myself were changing the Haiku model into a more liberal, free and exploratative model!