“Then I’ll invent
the American Haiku type:
The simple rhyming triolet:–
Seventeen syllables?
No, as I say, American Pops:–
Simple 3-line poems”
-Jack Kerouac, Reading Notes 1965
"Experts on the subject have determined that a 17 onji (Japanese sound unit) haiku in Japanese should be about a 12 to 15 syllable poem in English."1 Two lines that lead you to a moment of awe. Possibly a moment of breathlessness...
Does that mean you should not write Haiku in 5-7-5? No, many people are content to write in that format; however, I personally find it less stressful to write in the "one-breath" (Haiku, the length of one breath) style.
stealing
my breath--
his lips
-Amy Loewy 2004
Little gray squirrel
end of his season
Cat with a long gray tongue
-Amy Loewy 2004
David Ruiz
exhausted
long night in the city of New Orleans
street lamp leans against a palm tree
-Amy Loewy 2003
raindrops dancing
on the sidewalk
-Amy Loewy 2003
to take the lead
cat dancing with a butterfly
-Amy Loewy 2003
Bicycling in the early morn
pedaling through fudge
-Amy Loewy 2003
applying makeup,
one eye at a time.
-Amy Loewy 2012
Whether traditional Japanese Haiku or it's American sibling...give it a try, it's addicting
1 Curtis Dunlap, An Introduction to Haiku &; Senryu for New Haiku &; Senryu Poets