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Biography:

Biography:

Foster Jewell was an American haiku poet and painter in the early and mid-1900’s. He was born July 21,1893, in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Jewell married Rhoda de Long Jewell, a piano teacher and fellow haiku poet. They lived in El Rito, New Mexico, Venice, California, and near Chicago, Illinois. They had a small publishing company there, called the Sangre de Cristo Press, named after a mountain range in New Mexico. He died in Illinois, in 1984.

 

His Art:

Foster Jewell wrote hundreds of haiku over the course of his life, in addition to sculpting and running his own publishing company. Jewell primarily wrote haiku—short verses dealing with nature and natural subjects, as opposed to senryu, which concern human subjects—in the traditional three line format. His haiku express an admiration and child-like wonder for the natural world. The structure of his haiku is not strictly traditional. There is no consistent use of number of syllables, such as the traditional 5-7-5, in Jewell’s haiku. However, the lines of his haiku are generally between 4 and 8 syllables in length, with the second line being the longest line in the haiku. The first letter of the first line of the haiku is always capitalized, and is the only capitalized letter in the haiku. Jewell likes to play with the alignment of his haiku. Sometimes he uses the traditional left alignment, but he uses center and right alignment, and indentations as well. The alignment chosen for a particular haiku seems to be matched to the moments the haiku includes.

Crossing the stream,

how confused the moon becomes

among the stones -

-Leaves In The Wind, pg. 30

The moments Jewell was interested in capturing do not generally concern anything relating to human relationships, except the relationship between humans and nature. He wrote about woodlands, wetlands, seasons, animals, insects, celestial bodies, and farms. Jewell’s haiku and senryu can be loosely grouped into three regional categories: Southwestern,

Voice of the coyote Cliff-dwelling ruins—

filling the voidshadows going in and out…

of this empty land.now and then, swallows.

-Modern Haiku Award, Eminent Mention -American Haiku Award winner

Northwestern,

From this waterfallLast screech owl cry—

another river rises,how quietly the daylight

weaving off in mist. comes creeping through the woods.

-American Haiku Award winner -Haiku Anthology

and Mid-western.

In the granaryComing up,

an unrehearsed ballet—taking a good long look…

“Cats and Sparrows.”the gopher.

-Searching Today… -Searching Today…

 

Awards:

American Haiku Award (8)

Modern Haiku Award-

Eminent Mention (7)

Honorable Mention (3)

Special Mention (9)

Bonsai Award

 

Books:

Leaves in the Wind, Foster Jewell

Searching Today for Yesterday’s Tomorrow, Foster Jewell

Haiku Anthology, Cor Van Den Heuvel

Haiku Handbook, William J. Higginson

[Seven more chapbooks, titles currently unknown], Foster Jewell

 

 

 

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Created: Saturday, April 13, 2002 / Last Updated: Monday, March 4, 2003

Beth Stiner, webmaster