The limeraiku is a form of poetry devised by Ted Pauker, consisting of a haiku in which five of the syllables (usually the ends of the three lines plus two more) rhyme in the pattern of a limerick. He gives an examplae:
There's a vile old man
Of Japan who roars at whores:
‘Where's your bloody fan?’
                                 -Ted Pauker
Some authors have written limeraiku in an identical or very similar format, introducing the subject with "There's ...", choosing a place-name to rhyme with (cf. the stereotyped opening for limericks "There (once) was a ... from ..."), and dividing the second line as 3+2+2 syllables:
                There's a latent queer
                Of Tangier who brays at gays:
                ‘I'm hetero, dear.’
                                            - Tim Hopkins
                There's a cut-price whore
                Of Cawnpore who hails all males:
                 ‘Bed, Mattress - or Floor?’
                                           - Pascoe Polglaze
                 There's a man at Crewe
                  station who buggers muggers
                  so well there's a queue.
                                              - E. O. Parrott
Others have varied the form, changing the position within the lines of the five rhyming syllables, abandoning place-names as a source of rhymes, even forsaking the seemingly all-pervasive sexual humour in favour of historical or political themes:
                                   John Keats rose at dawn,
                                    Still forlorn, too chaste to taste
                                    The amorous Brawne.
                                                                 - Nick Enright
                                    A limeraiku
                                    needs two rhymes (used five times)
                                    plus wit (which I blew).
                                                                      - Anitra Freeman
          (References:
           * E. O. Parrott, The Penguin Book of Limericks, Penguin Books 1983
             * A. Davie, The Limeraiku, an introduction,         http://www.nospine.net/jellyfish/002_11.asp
            * A. Freeman, Spontaneous Exercise: rhyme vs. rhythm,  http://www.anitraweb.org/kalliope/limeraiku.html
Poet Thamizhanban,a prominent Tamil poet ,who is still ruling the literary world in Tamilnadu,by his supreme poetic skills,has brought out a volume of Limeraiku poems ,the first of its kind,in Tamil.
Instead of five rhymes,he prefers two rhymes,which appear in the first and third lines.
His thought-provoking poems are always a challenge to the translators.
As an ardent admirer and constant reader of his poems I ventured to translate some of the poems from the volume titled"Cleopatras of Chennimalai".Chennimalai is the native place of Thamizhanban.
Translations need not be craetive treasons,always.
I have done my best in transfering the sense of the poems.
Our beloved poet Thamizhanban,uses rhymes twice in every poem,in the first and third lines.
The linguistic and cultural barriers never allow anybody to present the original form of a poem in its source language after translating in the target language.
Hope you may enjoy my translations.
                                    Monotanous life in forest
                                     Deer and Rabbit wanted rest and haunted
                                     In children's songs, they found a place,the best!
                                    The wind lost its wings
                                    Took rest In the bird's nest,swinging,
                                    It stayed a while,puzzling?
                                   A bird lost its life;
                                   The heights it reached,while alive,
                                    Wept with unending tears.
                                    Fly away with birds
                                    But forget that you are a man.
                                    You don't need wings like birds.
                                  'Bernard never recieved any bribery'
                                  To pronounce such a witness
                                  John recieved a bribery.
                                    Smoke leads to death
                                     Drinking also kills us
                                     Selling them gives us wealth.
© ilakkuvanar., all rights reserved.
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அய்யா ஹைக்கூ கவிதைகளுக்கென்றே தனி தளம் அமைத்திதுக்கும் தங்களின் சேவை பாராட்ட தகுந்தது.
துபாயிருந்து நாங்களும் கவிதைகளுக்காக செயல்பட்டுக்கொண்டிருக்கிறோம்.
தொடர்க
வாழ்த்துகளுடன்
கவிமதி
(செயலாளர் அமீரகத் தமிழ்க் கவிஞர் பேரவை)
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