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SOWELU

BACKGROUND
What is Haiku?
Haiku is a Japanese form of poetry that consists of short, unrhymed lines. These lines can take various forms of brief verses. However, the most common structure of haiku features three lines of five, seven, and five syllables, respectively. A haiku poem generally presents a single and concentrated image or emotion. Haiku is considered a fixed poetic form and is associated with brief, suggestive imaginary intending to evoke emotion in the reader.
Though this poetic form originated in Japan during the thirteenth century, it is also a significant element of English poetry, especially in its influence on the Imagist movement of the early twentieth century.
Because of the haiku form’s brevity as well as fixed verse and syllabic pattern, it leaves little room for anything more than the presentation of a single and focused idea or feeling. Therefore, haiku poems are allusive and suggestive, calling upon the reader to interpret the meaning and significance of the words and phrases presented.
For example, here is a haiku written by Issa, a Japanese poet, and translated by Cid Corman:
only one guy and
only one fly trying to
make the guest room do
This haiku creates an image of a man and a fly in the same room. The phrase “guest room” is clever in that it implies that both the guy and the fly are welcome temporarily and neither have ownership of the room. This evokes a humorous response and sense of enforced coexistence between man and nature in shared space. Though the poem consists of a single image, presented with simple phrasing, it evokes humour and inspires thought and interpretation for the reader.
Each poem consists of 3 lines. There may be no connection between the subject of one poem and the next
Thank you Library Devices
Some History
The Sumerians told the tale of death and destruction brought about by Nibiru - as documented by Zecharia Setchin. The Babylonians were fully aware of the phenomenon and Albert Schott referred to ‘Marduk and her system’ back in 1886
Our present day reference to this planet has become more complex, not by the time it takes to travel its 3,600 year orbit but in the complexity of its companion travellers, aliens and the variation of the Earth’s and its orbits.
Sitchin tells us of the ‘Four Winds,’ moons of Nibiru which created their own path of destruction.
Nemesis has become the brown dwarf star.
The complete solar system has been (variously) suggested as comprising Charra, Arboda, Helion and moons, Mobius, Nemesis, Harrington, Quesat, Malbek, Sedna, Nibiru and moons.
Present day interpretations of the sun’s coronal mass ejections by Scott C’one show a fiery planet orbiting our Sun every 14 days, a very special orbit indeed, whereas no reference to other planets or sun(s) is mentioned by the Sumerians. The CMEs by our Sun are visible and tie in with Earth disruptions such as volcanic eruptions, techtonic plate movement and bad weather.
Of course, no planet (nor its sun) makes exactly the same orbit time after time and so the possibility exists for any one (or several) of the Nemesis system to be caught.
And again, there is no present evidence supported by our ‘official’ astronomical informants (NASA) of any aspect of the Nemesis system.
So where is Nemesis and where is Nibiru? Dates seem to come and go with the ‘dark state’ confusing us all with disinformation (and just who are its collaborators?)
Many unwary amateur astronomers have offered sightings they attribute to Nubiru, yet the ancient tale tells us of sever earthquackes, incredinble weather and volcanic erruptions and ‘pestilence.’ Yet we are not seeing such chaotic abberations, merely warning signs.
Reports have also come in of the other planets in our solar system being ‘affected’ by something big and ominous - thin atmospheres and orbits all awry.
And yet still no Nibiru, either incoming, visible or outgoing.
Evidence from the year 2020 seams to suggest two planets orbiting our Sun (so therefore Nemesis and Nibiru and other planets are still incoming.)
But where’s the visual evidence?
What are all the orbiting and ground based telescopes doing?
Predictions for Nibiru incoming seem to vary from 2017 to 2020 to 2029 to never.
In the meantime, we keep watching here.
INFO AND COPYRIGHT
This publication (blog) was first printed 10.03.2024 by Sigvaldi Fridarsonur
and published by him in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England at the same time.
The copyright of this work falls strictly under the original book titled
HAIKU GINKO by Sigvaldi Fridarsonur. All rights reserved.
NIBIRU KILLS is similarly under copyright to Sigvaldi Fridarsonur. Any reference to any poetry printed in this, herewith blog, will be, by rights, referred to as from 'the blog NIBIRU KILLS' in capital letters and inverted commas.
There can be no reproduction, copying or transmission of this publication without previous written permission. No reference to any of the text, herein, is permitted unless as part of a publicity campaign, or editorial and previous written permission must be obtained, signed by Sigvaldi Fridarsonur.
All rights also applies to the book and film script known as "The Lizards" published and written in London in 1983 by Melvyn Anthony Sewell.
Copyright Act 1956 (as amended)
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