Week 24: “Rotten Grass Becomes Fireflies”

June 10 – June 16 is the 24th week of 2024.  This week, we have the Solar Term of Grain in Ear (June 05 – June 20), and the micro-season of “Rotten Grass Becomes Fireflies” (June 11 – June 15).

Basho, Issa, Buson, and Reichhold wrote the poems selected for this week.


The 24 Solar Terms 

The 24 solar terms were created by farmers in ancient China  (206 BCE and 24 CE) to help guide their agricultural activities. Each solar term is 15 days long and is based on the climate around Xi’an, the capital of China during the Han Dynasty (206 BCE to 220 CE). (1)

Grain in Ear

Grain in Ear is the ninth Solar Term of the year and the third Solar Term of Summer. Mangzhong (芒种) is the Chinese name for this season. Mangzhong means “wheat with awn should be harvested soon, and rice seeds with awn can be sown”(2)  Awn is the bristles on the grain.  Grain in Ear is traditionally a busy time for farmers in China. 


The 72 Seasons

The 72-season calendar was established in 1685 by Japanese astronomer Shibukawa Shunkai.  Each season lasts for about 5 days and offers “a poetic journey through the Japanese year in which the land awakens and blooms with life and activity before returning to slumber.”(4)

The micro-season for this week is  “Rotten Grass Becomes Fireflies” (June 11 – June 15).

Fireflies

Did you know that fireflies are not flies, but beetles? A unique characteristic of the beetle is that they have a hardened pair of front wings called elytra. The elytra protect a beetle’s flight wings. When a beetle flies, it opens its elytra to release its flight wings. If you have ever watched a ladybug (aka ladybeetle) take off, you have seen how the elytra open.  Fireflies do the same thing, but we usually don’t see it.

Fireflies belong to the Lampyridae family within the Coleoptera order of insects. There are about 2,000 species of insect in the Lampyridae family and most of them can emit light.

Lifecycle of the Firefly

Fireflies usually mate in April or May.  After mating, female fireflies lay their eggs below the earth’s surface.  In about three weeks, the eggs hatch, and the larva emerge.  

The fireflies can remain in the larva stage for up to two years.  During this time the larvae feed on other larvae, slugs, and terrestrial snails.  These larvae will hibernate over the winter months by burying themselves in the dirt or finding spaces behind the bark of trees.

The pupa stage is where the firefly transforms from larva to adult. This stage can last up to three weeks.

During the adult stage, the firefly looks to mate, lay more eggs, and then will die. This stage may only last two or three weeks.  

The Light of the Firefly

Fireflies produce light in their lower abdomen through a chemical process called bioluminescence. Bioluminescence is the production and emission of light from living organisms.

In fireflies, light is produced when two chemicals, luciferin and luciferase, combine with magnesium ions (also known as ATP) and oxygen. The ATP, luciferin, and luciferase are located in the lower abdomen, and oxygen is introduced through an abdominal trachea.

Fireflies use their light to communicate. Most commonly, males use unique blinking patterns to attract mates. However, fireflies also use their light to defend territory and warn predators.


Astronomical Season

June 16, is the last day of week 24.  June 16 is 89 days past the spring equinox and 4 days until the summer solstice (June 20, 2024).  

Moon Phases

The Moon reached its first quarter phase on June 14th. The First Quarter is seven days after the New Moon and marks the first quarter of the Moon’s orbit around the Earth.  After the First Quarter, the Moon shifts to its Waxing Gibbous phase. During the Waxing Gibbous phase, the Moon’s illumination increases until it reaches the Full Moon. On June 16, the last day of this week, the Moon is in a Waxing Gibbous phase with 77% illumination. June’s full Moon will occur on June 21.


Haiku and Kigo 

The kigo, or season word, is one of the key parts of the haiku.  The Yuki Teikei Haiku Society provides us with the following explanation for why we use kigo in haiku. 

“A kigo is a poetic device used in haiku to denote a season; it’s a powerful word or phrase that can conjure up many allusions, historical references, spiritual meanings, and/or cultural traditions. Its use in haiku, a poem of few words, is especially effective because of this power to expand its meaning beyond the literal and to create a larger aura of seasonal mood, historical/ literary context, and/or cultural implications.”(9)

Visit The Haiku Foundation’sNew To Haiku: What is a Kigo?” for more information


This Week’s Kigo

In The Five Hundred Essential Japanese Season Words selected by Kenkichi Yamamoto “firefly” and “lightning bug” are listed as summer kigo.

 In Jane Reichhold’s A Dictionary of Haiku,  “firefly” is also a summer kigo.

Looking at the World Kigo Database by Dr. Gabi Greves, the firefly (hotaru) is primarily a mid-summer kigo.  However, “Fireflies in Autumn” is a potential autumn kigo. 

The firefly holds various meanings in Japanese culture. Fireflies may represent the souls of warriors lost in battle or they may represent love and beauty.  Because of their short adult life, fireflies have also been known to symbolize the transitory nature of all things.  

With all this in mind, let’s read some haiku. 


Basho

How foolish! In the dark 
I grab a thorn, mistaking
it for a firefly
(translated by Sam Hamill)
firefly’s glow 
disappears at daylight
behind the pillar
(translated by Jane Reichhold)
leaves of grass 
as soon as it drops it flies
a firefly
(translated by Jane Reichhold)

Issa

in the thick weeds
same as yesterday...
fireflies
(translated by David G. Lanoue)
the owl
seems to be hooting
for fireflies
(translated by David G. Lanoue)
he flips a page
of the Lotus Sutra...
a firefly flies
(translated by David G. Lanoue)

Buson

Education
emitted from the ass — 
a firefly
(translated by Allan Persinger)

Reichhold

lightning
fireflies above puddles
peek at themselves

Haiku invitation

This week’s haiku invitation is to write a haiku or senryu about fireflies.

Share your haiku in the comments below, or post on your page and link back. I can’t wait to read what you write! 

Formatting Note:  To eliminate the spaces between the lines of your haiku, hit shift-enter at the end of the line.  For example:

line one (shift-enter)
line two (shift-enter)
the third line (shift-enter)

Thanks to LaMon for sharing these instructions!


You can support this newsletter work by donating at “Buy Me a Coffee” or shopping at our bookstore.

Thank You!

About the Haiku

Basho’s haiku were retrieved from “Matsuo Bashō’s haiku poems in romanized Japanese with English translations” Editor: Gábor Terebess.  Issa’s haiku were retrieved from David G. Lanoue’s Haiku Guy. Buson’s haiku was retrieved from Foxfire: the Selected Poems of Yosa Buson, a Translation by Allan Persinger. Jane Reichhold’s haiku were retrieved from the Dictionary of Haiku

  1. “The 24 Solar Terms”; China Educational Tours
  2. “6 Solar Terms of Summer”; China Educational Tours
  3. 72 Seasons App
  4. “Japan’s 72 Microseasons”; Nippon.com
  5. Firefly” Wikipedia
  6. Cheyenne McKinley and Sarah Lower; “11 Cool Things You Never Knew About Fireflies”: Scientific America
  7. “Beetle” Wikipedia

83 thoughts on “Week 24: “Rotten Grass Becomes Fireflies”

Add yours

  1. Sorry, nothing about fireflies comes to mind. I found two haiku I had written, but neither is share worthy. So, here is a bug related haiku from this morning. First time I have seen one of these cute little creatures:

    cool June morning
    hopping hurriedly away
    two-lined spittlebug

    Peace,
    LaMon

    1. Hi LaMon: A great haiku! I love the name, spittlebug. And it’s wonderful you were able to see one! I am pretty sure I haven’t. Its name sounded familiar and I looked it up, also called a frog leaper…very lovely!

    2. Your ku sent me straight to my childhood, LaMon. Spittlebugs sure could create a mess to walk into!

    3. Thank you LaMon for the lovely coinage in line three “two-lined spittlebug” Outstanding! I hav seen the foamy outside of this bug but did not realize there was a bug inside.

  2. Thanks for all the great information you provided in this week’s blog, Mark. Once again, I learned so much from it. Here are some haiku referencing fireflies:

    the fireflies’ repeated flashes
    at the rock concert
    –Blink-182
    ~Nancy Brady, 2024

    an off-the-cuff haiku

    in the tall grass
    lightning bugs flash
    –the setting sun
    ~Nancy Brady, 2024

    another off-the-cuff haiku

    late summer…
    the Morse Code
    of fireflies
    ~Nancy Brady, 2017

    This is a summer re-run as this haiku was published in Stardust Haiku: Poetry With a LIttle Sparkle, Issue #1  

    https://www.nbsmithblog.wordpress.com

    1. Hi Nan: I love all your haiku…the first one is so witty and made me chuckle. The second is lovely. The third line completes it so well. Your last poem is perfect!

      1. Thanks, Madeleine, for your positive comments. They make me smile, and I’m glad you appreciated the humor in the first one. I actually wrote another haiku afterwards, but I posted it along with the first two on my blog site. That’s the problem with off-the-cuff haiku, they tend to generate others. Have a great weekend, Maddy.  ~Nan

    2. Wow, Nan, great minds and all that. I swear I had never read your poem when I wrote this one (which was a Golden Haiku selectee last year):

      S.O.S.

      blinking from the jar

      fireflies

      Ever since I wrote it, I’ve been afraid I’ll never write another as good.

      You remind me that such thoughts are nonsense.

      1. Congratulations Eavonka! Wonderful it was a Golden Haiku selectee. I can see why it was selected. It’s delightful! You have written many exquisite poems since then. 🙂 As Mark said a few weeks ago, this is a very talented community.

      2. Eavonka,

        Such a sensational haiku! No wonder it was selected for a Golden Triangle placard.

        Of course, you’ll write another that good; you already have! Many times over. As Dory says, “Just keep writing, just keep writing.”

      1. Thanks, LaMon. It’s a favorite of mine, too. It was actually chosen for the In the Spotlight feature of Stardust Haiku for that month (and that was the only time any of my ku was chosen for that distinction, by the way). ~Nan

    3. Hi Nan, Talk about synchronicities. I was scrolling up to read your haiku and “All the Small Things” by Blink-182 came on the radio. Crazy!
      As a result of this, your first haiku is my favorite!

      1. Thanks, Mark. That’s cool! Glad you liked the ku. I could say I asked all the radio stations to play Blink-182 this afternoon, but I didn’t. It was just luck on my part. My sons were fans back in the day (they still may be, actually) so I was aware of the group. ~Nan

  3. Hi Mark, another wonderful post!  🙂 I am leaving tomorrow morning on a family trip.  I will be gone all week!

    When I was little and lived in Florida…  

    these strange 

    little flying machines

    which light up

    ~ ~ ~

    the universal catching of lights in empty jars

    ~ ~ ~

    I live in Northern California and haven’t seen fireflies in a long time, (not that I am complaining! 🙂

    to see

    a  firefly today

    my heart would leap

    I enjoyed reading about the firefly and delighted that like the ladybug, the firefly is actually a beetle!

    I love Issa’s “…the owl seems to be hooting…” and Reichhold’s “…the fireflies above puddles peek at themselves.”  Have a great weekend everyone! 🙂

    1. Hi Maddy, For not seeing a firefly in years, you have captured the fireflies poetic potential here!
      Have a great trip and I look forward to see what haiku come out of your adventures!

    2. The monoku was really cool. I lived in Mill Valley 1970-71. When I went back to Alabama and heard thunder, I realized I had not heard any the year we were gone. It is fascinating how different the environment is in various part of America.

      Peace,
      LaMon

      1. Thanks, La Mon. I don’t know for how long I haven’t heard thunder, either here in Northern California. I do miss it! … It is.

  4. Mark – I just got home from being away for a few days. I’ll post your prompted piece plus a link to a specialized nonet tomorrow.

    I’ll catch up eventually. ~Jules

      1. Thanks… visiting elders can be stressful – when you try to make every brief moment count – knowing that they may not remember when they wake the next day. sigh

  5. children chase

    them down in the field

    flashing fireflies

    The first time I saw fireflies was absolutely magical, and I wish I lived where I could see them more often.

    Thanks, as always, Mark, for all your wealth of information!

    1. Hi Eavonka, You haiku reminds me of how much joy fireflies used to bring me. I definitely chased them around the yard. Thanks for prompting the memory.

      1. As an adult, I feel guilty about capturing fireflies, but the joy on children’s faces is irresistible!

    2. Eavonka,

      That haiku is so joyful, so summery, so firefly-like (firefly-ey didn’t work). I live in a place where lightning bugs are common and I love to watch them blink on and off. I still try to predict where they’ll blink next as that how I could catch them as a kid. (I don’t catch them and put them in jars any more). ~Nan

      PS. and that haiku proves you still write awesome haiku worthy of a placard in D.C. (Wouldn’t be cool for the Golden Triangle organization offer to print an extra so that the poets could buy a copy of their ku? I know I’d have been willing to pay a reasonable price for mine.)

      1. I would have paid a ridiculous sum tbh. 😳 I was so incredibly lucky though because Adele Evershed went and found my placard! That photo alone still brings me great joy.

        I envy you getting to see fireflies every summer. There are none here in Southern CA (that I’ve seen or know of). I suppose they need more water.

        I think there’s a great poem in that memory of figuring out when they’d blink.

      2. Eavonka,    The first time I had a haiku chose for a Golden Triangle placard, Thomas Haynes and family took a trip to D.C. during that month. Thomas made it a mission to find all of the placards by Ohio poets, take a photo, and share it on the Ohio Haiku group on Facebook. It was special. I sent a suggestion to the organization that it might want to offer placards to those poets who’d be willing to pay for them. I know I would be willing if the cost was reasonable.      I am sorry you don’t get the joy of watching fireflies wink on and off every year. They are like my party lights for the summer, bringing smiles. They may only last a week or so, though. Alas…

      3. But what a week!

        So happy you got a photo of your placard! That was fantastic of Thomas Hays to do.

      4. Yes, I think they had a great time walking around looking the Golden Triangle for all the haiku. The photos were posted on Facebook for anyone from our Ohio Haiku group. ~Nan

  6. don’t look where it was
    but where it will be —
    firefly

    Thanks, Mark, for all the seasonal and poetic info. I recall my neices visiting us here in the NC foothills years ago and was shocked to hear they’d never seen a firefly back home in Montana.

    tonight at dusk
    return to childhood —
    lightning bugs

    1. Griffin,

      I really like both of these, but the first haiku was always my philosophy on catching lightning bugs. Your second is how I feel each summer when I see them light up (and it’s almost time).

      ~Nan

  7. Hey Mark, question for you (that I’m too lazy to luck up myself): can fireflies emit light in the larval stage? Is that what we find in the grass and call a “glow worm?”

  8. Mark, you’re always sharing valuable information with the group—I thank you. Here’s something I think would be of interest:

    After the Gentle Poet Kobayashi Issa

    BY ROBERT HASS

    New Year’s morning—

    everything is in blossom!   

       I feel about average.

       A huge frog and I   

    staring at each other,   

       neither of us moves.

       This moth saw brightness   

    in a woman’s chamber—

       burned to a crisp.

       Asked how old he was   

    the boy in the new kimono   

       stretched out all five fingers.

       Blossoms at night,   

    like people

       moved by music

       Napped half the day;   

    no one

       punished me!

    Fiftieth birthday:

       From now on,   

    It’s all clear profit,   

       every sky.

       Don’t worry, spiders,   

    I keep house   

       casually.

       These sea slugs,   

    they just don’t seem   

       Japanese.

    Hell:

       Bright autumn moon;   

    pond snails crying   

       in the saucepan.

    ***

    A Note from the Editor

    Kobayashi Issa was born on this day in 1763.

    Robert Hass, “After the Gentle Poet Kobayashi Issa” from Field Guide. Copyright © 1973 by Robert Hass. Reprinted with the permission of Yale University Press, http://www.yale.edu/yup/.

    Source: Field Guide (1973)

    my source: Poetry Foundation.
    happy Sunday

    happy Father’s Day to all dads

      1. I wish! Ah, thanks for reminding me I forgot to add the credit. I am a little bit addicted to Microsoft Designer. All I’m responsible for is feeding it a prompt.

      2. Does that mean the art was AI created or that it finds an image an artist made?

      3. It is AI generated. I’d never use someone’s art, photography, etc. without giving credit. Designer produces some pretty neat things. Sometimes you get bloopers, warped faces, an arm coming out of a leg.😂

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