Lynx Master

January 13, 2011 1:52 pm | Golf Clubs


Shaolin Vs Wu-Tang (CD + Large T-Shirt Special Edition)


Shaolin Vs Wu-Tang (CD + Large T-Shirt Special Edition)


$34.99


The special edition of Shaolin vs. Wu-Tang includes an exclusive Shaolin vs. Wu-Tang t-shirt (size large).
Track listing:
1. Shaolin Vs. Wutang
2. Every Soldier In The Hood (Feat. Method Man)
3. Silver Rings (Feat. Ghostface Killah)
4. Chop Chop Ninja (Feat. Inspectah And Estelle)
5. Butter Knives
6. Snake Pond
7. Crane Style (Feat. Busta Rhymes)
8. Rock N Roll (Feat. Jim Jones, Ghostface Killah A…

Liftmaster 375LM Remote Clicker Universal Remote


Liftmaster 375LM Remote Clicker Universal Remote


$12.90


The Liftmaster 375 LM Universal Remote is compatible with the following brands: Genie® Intellicode 1995 to Present, Linear/Moore-o-Matic® from 1997 to Present, Stanley from 1998 to Present, Overhead Door CodeDodger® 2005 to Present, Wayne-Dalton® from 1999 to Present, Craftsman®, Chamberlain®, LiftMaster®, 300/310/315/372/390 MHz compatible, Not compatible with garage door openers manufactu…

Lynx Touch Starter Kit


Lynx Touch Starter Kit


$246.90


Contents:

1 Honeywell Lynx Touch Wireless Control Panel

1 Interior Siren

1 Battery Backup

3 Wireless Door / Window Contacts

1 Wireless Motion Detector

1 – 4 Button Wireless Keychain Remote Control

1 – Installation Manual & 1 – User Manual

1 – User DVD Video

System Features:

4.7 inch color graphic touchscreen
- Resolution 470 x 256 pixels
- 16.7 million colors
- Intuitive easy-to-use …


Wagner WC108106 Wheel Cylinder Assembly


Wagner WC108106 Wheel Cylinder Assembly


$6.19


Wagner – Wc Assembly – Wheel Cylinder – Fits Years: 1983-1994 – Domestic – Ford Escort/Exp – MAY also fit: Ford – Mercury Models: Escort/Exp – Lynx/Ln7 – Tempo – Topaz…

L. Erickson USA Petite Bow on 8cm Barrette


L. Erickson USA Petite Bow on 8cm Barrette



The L. Erickson USA Petite Bow on 8cm Barrette is a subtle combination of high style elegance and master craftsmanship. This obsession-worthy piece features a luxurious triple layered bow set atop a French lock barrette. Add a vibrant accent to your ensemble with this enviably posh accessory….


Beyblades JAPANESE Metal Fusion Accessory #BB109 Random Booster Vol.7


Beyblades JAPANESE Metal Fusion Accessory #BB109 Random Booster Vol.7


$9.73


Details coming soon……

Beyblades Metal Fusion CUSTOM Battle Top LOOSE Beat Lynx TH170WD


Beyblades Metal Fusion CUSTOM Battle Top LOOSE Beat Lynx TH170WD


$24.99


Face LynxClear Wheel LynxMetal Wheel BeatTrack TH170Bottom WDLOOSE DOES NOT COME WITH A LAUNCHER! No package, comes as shown, never has been played with….

Beyblades Metal Fusion CUSTOM Battle Top LOOSE Hell Herculeo 100XF


Beyblades Metal Fusion CUSTOM Battle Top LOOSE Hell Herculeo 100XF


$18.88


Face HerculeoClear Wheel HerculeoMetal Wheel HellTrack 100Bottom XFLOOSE DOES NOT COME WITH A LAUNCHER! No package, comes as shown, never has been played with….

Clarion FZ409 MP3/WMA/AAC Receiver with USB Port


Clarion FZ409 MP3/WMA/AAC Receiver with USB Port


$189.99


FZ409 represent Clarion”s idea of next generation design and performance. The OEL display as well as capacitive sensor operation buttons provide an advanced user-interface, resulting from our continuous quest for the ideal H.M.I. (Human Machine Interface). In terms of sound and connectivity, they promise to satisfy even the most discerning user….

Clarion FZ709 MP3/WMA/AAC Receiver with USB Port


Clarion FZ709 MP3/WMA/AAC Receiver with USB Port


$199.99


FZ709 represent Clarion”s idea of next generation design and performance. The OEL display as well as capacitive sensor operation buttons provide an advanced user-interface, resulting from our continuous quest for the ideal H.M.I. (Human Machine Interface). In terms of sound and connectivity, they promise to satisfy even the most discerning user….

From the Lynx Eye. Incantation as sung by Miss Leak. Master Welsh & Mrs Bland, etc (P.2 is signed by the compo)


From the Lynx Eye. Incantation as sung by Miss Leak. Master Welsh & Mrs Bland, etc (P.2 is signed by the compo)




LE DECORATEUR AU PAPIER HYGIENIQUE.   (Oeil-de-Lynx et Annie Adams)


LE DECORATEUR AU PAPIER HYGIENIQUE. (Oeil-de-Lynx et Annie Adams)




Hayden Automotive 3653 Economy Adjustable Thermostatic Fan Control


Hayden Automotive 3653 Economy Adjustable Thermostatic Fan Control


$16.17


Hayden Econo Adjustable Electric Radiator Fan Thermostat features: Adjustable from 32F to 284F (0 to 120C)Temperature activation onlyNo relay required16 Amp maximum loadRadiator mounted probe Compatible with Hayden electric fans and original equipment fans….

Airtex E8016S Electric Fuel Pump


Airtex E8016S Electric Fuel Pump


$40.26


For over 50 years, the Airtex brand has been the benchmark of fuel delivery and cooling system components for leading companies in the automotive aftermarket. Airtex Fuel Pumps Feature:Latest technological advancement for better performanceFeatures consistent pressure and superior performanceIncreased flow over original designPrecision machined for consistent performanceImproved noise dampening o…

MSD Ignition 8202 Blaster 2 Hi-Performance Coil


MSD Ignition 8202 Blaster 2 Hi-Performance Coil


$38.99


Blaster 2 Ignition Coil…

Lynx Master
Lynx Master

HAIKU OF R.K.SINGH


Haiku is one of the oldest forms of poetry yet the form has recently been discovered and embraced by writers around the world. It is believed that in 1970’s haiku as a literary genre got highlighted internationally. Today, it is written in English as well as in several different languages and enjoyed widely in nearly 50 countries. But the actual credit for this haiku boom goes to Paul Louis who with the publication of his collection entitled Haiku, in the early 20th century, revived this genre. And since then the popularity and internationalization of haiku has kept on multiplying.

Haiku is short and light poetry with traditionally 5-7-5 sound syllables with a season word. Historically speaking, this poetic form had its roots in tanka, a kind of prayer/incantations to Gods by the Japanese. Tanka, with its 5-7-5-7-7 sound syllable count, its lofty ancestry and its shortness and ease for memorization, later became the favourite poetical form of the Japanese Imperial court. And from 9th to 12th centuries it reached the highest popularity and brilliance. However, in the 12th century a new form generated out of tanka, with the rival of an old Chinese form of linking tanka poems together in a novel way. The poem was ‘split’ in half, allowing one author to write the first three lines 5-7-5 and the concluding lines i.e. 7-7 part to be written by another, especially by men. This chain of writing did not stop there, again a new 5-7-5 was written as an answer to the previous 7-7 links and this genre was called ‘renga’ (meaning linked elegance). Renga became a fashionable form of poetry in the 14th century with two main styles: a serious, courtly style and the comic style, especially of the merchant class. Basho was a renga master of the comic style. This poetic form was not as simple to write as it appeared. Writing a good hokku i.e. the starting verse and haikai  (any verse in a renga) was really a challenging task. Thus all could not meet the standards of a good hokku/ haikai. The quality of the renga tended to fluctuate with Buson and Issa and in the beginning of the 19th century M.Shiki declared renga officially dead and also ended the ongoing debate on hokku/ haikai by combining the two names into a new one- haiku.

Haiku is the smallest literary form with lot many rules and it is difficult for one to follow all the rules. Moreover, several of the rules are so contradictory with each other that there is no way to honour them all at once. Say, for example, the sound units of the three liners have a wide range of patterns-seventeen syllables in one line, seventeen syllables written in three lines, seventeen syllables written in three lines divided into 5-7-5, seventeen syllables written in a vertical (flush left or centred) line, less than seventeen syllables written in three lines as short- long- short, less than seventeen syllables written in three vertical lines as short- long- short and writing in one breath (which nearly covers 12-17 syllables). Second, the number of images and the kind of images which again do not follow any fixity- a haiku with two images that are only comparative when illuminated by the third image; a haiku with two images that are only associative when illuminated by the third image, two images that are only in contrast when illuminated by the third image and then the kind of images- images that evoke simple rustic seclusion/accepted poverty (sabi), images evoking classical elegant separateness (shubumi), images that evoke nostalgic romantic images/austere beauty(wabi),images from nature, images not from nature, season words (kigo),  non-season words (muki), lofty / uplifting images. Third, the rules of punctuation- no punctuation to attain ambiguity, all normal sentence punctuation are also admissible- a colon (:) and full stop (.), a pause (;), three dots for something left unsaid, a comma for a slight pause, a dash for saying the same thing in other words, capitalizing the first word of every line or only the first word as well as the proper names according to English rules. Next, the rules of grammar– eliminating all the possible uses of gerunds and adverbs, little use of pronouns, ending the haiku with a noun, avoiding too many/all verbs and prepositions. Finally, the rules of rhetoric– avoiding rhymes/ bringing in rhymes by rhyming the last words in the first and third lines, using rhymes in other places within the haiku, using assonance and alliteration; and using puns and paradoxes to attain levels of meaning in haiku.

It is quite natural that with so many options, a beginner of haiku might get highly confused and find it difficult to start off with. But it is to be noted here that rules are not written in stone. Thus, it can be said that there is no one way to write a haiku, there is no one style or technique that is absolutely the best. Every writer can work out for herself. In fact, the varieties in style and technique of haiku provide enough freedom for the readers and writers of haiku to expose, expand and to investigate.

Today one can notice new trends emerging in haiku from several countries, including as well. Now, there is no strict adherence to the old, traditional guidelines. Despite a small community of haiku writers in , the haiku form has been widely experimented and written in several regional languages, including English and Hindi.

In the traces of haiku can be found in the beginning of the 20th century. The Indian Nobel Laureate, Rabindra Nath Tagore, is probably considered to be the first haikuist of . His collection of haiku like poems ‘Fireflies’ was published in English and Bengali. The names of Subramania Bharati, Prof. Satya Bhushan Verma and Prof. B.S. Agarwala are also familiar names in regional haiku in . Among the Indian English haiku poets the few familiar names are- Dwarakanath H. Kabadi, N.V.Subbaraman, Angelee Deodhar, Kala Ramesh, K.Ramesh, Mujeeb Yar Jung, I.H.Rizvi, Urmila Kaul, D.C.Chambial, Kanwar Dinesh Singh, R.K.Singh, Mahashweta Chaturvedi, etc. Yet, not many people are aware of haiku or its intricacies because of lack of literature and/or criticism in various languages in the Indian market.

Haiku writers from all over the country, even though small in number, have contributed their lot in promoting this poetic form in India and out of the many contributors writing in English R.K.Singh as a haikuist stands apart. R.K.Singh who has been known for economy of expression and brevity for the last three decades has drawn attention of readers to his haiku, first published in trilogies Every Stone Drop Pebble (pub.1999) and Peddling Dreams (pub.2003 in Pacem in Terris), and more recently in The River Returns (pub.2006, a collection of tanka and haiku). Abdul Rashid Bijapure seems right in his observation that “perhaps it is the single-minded journey of R.K. Singh to press for brevity in expression that leads him to devote his poetic energy to the three line haiku poems.” Even Singh says “ a haiku is terse, dynamic and complete poetry, rendering the vital energy, which animates not only an individual’s small world but also the entire cosmos.” For Singh it is rather a self-disciplining spiritual exercise marked by living moment ness of a moment, imagining a moment:

After morning walk

the trio gossip each day

fresh revelation

Each day of our life is full of happenings and one such is captured here with all subtlety in the same fashion as a photographer clicks a moment.

The poem:

Ripe on the branches

mangoes fall one by one

end of the season

is highly sensuous in appeal. The reader gets an immediate image of a season. The ripeness of the mangoes can be seen and felt in the lines.

The lines:

The leaves sway

to fly like birds

free in the sky

evoke the image even before the eye blinks. Like the swaying of the leaves, the lines appear soft, light and rhythmic.

Singh’s nature poems perfectly meet the traditional haiku standards:

Smell of Kamini

In front of my house excites:

hummingbirds mate

Or

The night queen fragrance

seeps from the window

my bedroom blooms

The naturalness of the lines instantly hits the sensory organs of the readers. The two poems:

Shining from the blade of grass

a drop on earth’s breast:

tribute to sun

and

The mynahs

herald the day clamouring

for moths

reflect the honesty of the poet in creating the images. There is no artificiality or imaginary renderings in these lines. With minutest details the poet constructs a striking image and allows space for reader to create his own image and interpretations.

Singh is not only a sharp watcher of the thinginess of the things in nature but is also a keen observer of complex human nature. Running away from reality is human nature and this hollowness of human beings is described in these poems with a tinge of irony:

She hides the mirror

with rose and lipstick

and keeps her fiction

and

He closes the eyes

expanding inner space

a short – cut tour

Some of his haiku appear as if speaking directly to the reader. To quote:

Among the white hairs

a solitary black one

keeps her hope alive

and

She reads my age in

the synthetic dark of moustache

and whitening chest

Singh’s haiku have distinct local and Indian cultural flavour too:

Red oleander and

hibiscus calling morning

to Kali

The poet is unconventional in his form. He does not strictly abide by the traditional haiku rules. The adjective in the following poem depicts the unconventionality in the poet’s style:

After prolonged heat wave

sky watery explosion

earth lovely doom

The use of the adjective ‘lovely’ with the noun ‘doom’ is highly contrastive.

The poet’s experimentation with the syllabic pattern is again his break away from the rigid rules. Some of his poems are in 5-7-5 pattern, while the others are in 4-6-4, 3-5-3 and 4-7-4 patterns:

No letters today

addresses of his dead friends

graying in diary

Monsoon shower

after a long heat wave

monotony breaks

My bedroom

a maze of cobweb

spiders breed

Seeking good news

I watch the lines on my palms

taking new turns

This experimentation with the syllabic structure is actually due to the globalization of haiku and thus Singh alone is not to be blamed for it. In fact, it is to be noted here that the varied syllabic structures do not mar the haikuness of his haiku. His three liners, even though roped in different sound patterns/breathe, evoke the images explicitly.

In haiku there is no place for didacticism or philosophy. But Singh tries out even this trait in his poems. To cite-

He sweeps yellow leaves

or gathers years in a heap

burns to merge with dust

The first line gives a clear picture of the persona who is engaged in a task of cleaning the garden. The second line is suggestive of aging or nearing of death or the autumn of one’s life whereas the  ‘yellow leaves’ of the first line suggests winter i.e. death. Thus both the lines focus the temporality of all existence, which further gets strengthened in the last line- ‘burns to merge with dust’. The last line sounds philosophical and recalls to one’s mind the Biblical line-‘ Thou cometh from dust and thou returneth to dust’. Moreover, the word ‘burn’ is again related to Hindu rites where the body is brought to the crematorium ground to burn on the funeral pyre. It seems that the poet was all set to bring in the epigrammatic terseness in this haiku. It is to be remembered here that haiku celebrates the beauty of the moment, the truth and minuteness of the moment with clear images rather than witty and layered meanings.

Similarly, the following haiku is highly philosophical in tone:

Long forgotten

the beginning and the end

exist in middles

Except for the three-liner haiku pattern, the lines do not fulfill any of the requirements of a haiku. Neither the reader gets an instant flash of the image nor does he come to a clear idea. He is only left with an option of reading between the lines. And if this is done to a haiku, it is then no haiku. The second line of the poem–‘beginning and the end’– is here, probably suggestive of the cycle of life and death. And the last line depicts the mediocrity of people in the present times. Man has forgotten the essence of his existence. He is only given to materiality and his comfort zone is his ‘present’, which he never wants to leave. This haiku is a poor one. In a book review R.K. Singh comments, “It often depresses me to read in the ‘form’ of haiku moral commands, philosophical teaching, sentimental reflections and didactic expressions. Haiku is not epigrammatic poetry or short saying; nor is it intellectualizing, romanticizing, or pedantry”.  The poet fails to create a haiku in those three lines; he fails to practice what he says.

Singh puts the first letter of his three liners in capital. Most of his haiku are expressed in a concise and crystallized form, in present tense with a seasonal word. The poems focus on “what is happening” at a particular moment with all its freshness and truth.

Challenging/experimenting with established/classical rules requires a lot of guts. Singh’s experiments with the classical rules of haiku and the dexterity with which he handles his haiku are sufficient enough to define his poetic talent /craftsmanship.

References:

1. Abdul Rashid Bijapure. “The Poetry of R.K. Singh,” New Indian English Poetry: An Alternative Voice, edited by I.K. Sharma. Jaipur: Book Enclave, 2004, p.161.

2. R. K. Singh. Book review. Deuce: Haiku Poems (: K.K. Publishers and Distributors, 2001), Indian Book Chronicle, Vol. 28, no.4 April 2003, p. 5.

3.  Catherine Mair, Patricia Prime and R.K. Singh. Every Stone Drop Pebble. New :  Bahri Publications, 1999.

4. Patricia Prime. “Secrets Need Words: Critical Essay on the Haiku and Tanka of R.K. Singh,” New Indian English Poetry: An Alternative Voice, edited by I.K. Sharma. Jaipur: Book Enclave, 2004.

5. Urmila Kaul. “Indian Haiku and Peddling Dream,New Indian English Poetry: An Alternative Voice edited by I.K. Sharma, Jaipur: Book Enclave, 2004.

6. Angelee Deodhar. “ Haiku: An Indian Perspective,”  http://www.haiku-hia.com

7. http://tinywords.com

8. http://ahapoetry.com,Lynx

Copyright:

Dr Rajni Singh

Assistant Professor

Dept of Humanities & Social Sciences

of

DHANBAD  826004, India

R.K.SINGH

About the Author

please advise on value for Jerry Barber golf club set with serial # a 26197 us pat # 394704?

Hello, I have come across a set of full Jerry Barber golden touch golf club set, i dont know much about it but i do know that they were probably made around 1950′s 60′s they have serial number a-26197 and also US pat. #394704 i have the full set and still in good playing condition, I also have a masters pro model woden #2 and a lynx wooden #3. Please let me know if anyone knows anything about about the value of these clubs and if anyone is interested in them. Thank you.

They are probably a low value. People are goin for those newer clubs these days haha!

LYNX – “Hotriders” (ft. Master X & Simon Wiggins) – from LYNX & KEMO – “The Raw Truth LP”

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