The original artwork for this strip is available for purchase. See the original artwork information page for more information.
Notes: Pasted-in corrections and white-out corrections in the first and last panels.
The original artwork for this strip is available for purchase. See the original artwork information page for more information.
Notes: Pasted-in corrections and white-out corrections in the first and last panels.
Dirt is not tasty.
Trust me, it managed to make
Spinach even worse.
Spinach is alright:
But only if it is raw.
Cooking ruins it.
You make a good point.
Salads are always quite good,
Even with spinach.
Spinach is awful.
Eating the nasty stuff,
is never pleasant.
My apologies,
the haiku syllable rules
simply slipped my mind.
Spinach is tasty
But you must add vinegar
After you serve it!
vinigar spinach?
that sounds disgusting to me
but it could be good
I can eat spinach
but a vegetarian
can even eat kale
Hokku is the opening stanza of an orthodox collaborative linked poem, or renga, and of its later derivative, renku (or haikai no renga). By the time of Matsuo Bashō (1644–1694), the hokku had begun to appear as an independent poem, and was also incorporated in haibun (a combination of prose and hokku), and haiga (a combination of painting with hokku). In the late 19th century, Masaoka Shiki (1867–1902) renamed the standalone hokku to haiku.[20] The latter term is now generally applied retrospectively to all hokku appearing independently of renku or renga, irrespective of when they were written, and the use of the term hokku to describe a stand-alone poem is considered obsolete.[21]
I have eaten grass
The kind that’s on a front lawn
Experimenting.
Spinach is tasty
Why, then, do you shame it?
Call me Rabbit Girl
(this is based on when I ate spinach out of the bag one time and everybody called me a rabbit)
I once ate clover. do you know that clover tastes like asparagus?