Space travel – sijo for dVerse

A sijo for dVerse written at my Thursday Concert visit, listening to Beethoven and Nielsen.

20130425-185922.jpg
tuning instruments, preparing for maestro’s entrance
then flowing symphony, strings in harmony with woodwind
I’m traveling the universe, carried by the music’s flow

April 25, 2013

57 responses to “Space travel – sijo for dVerse

  1. oh music can take us to distant universes for sure…wow…sounds like a wonderful concert..and your sijo looks flawless…and musical… i bet sam loves it…i do..smiles

  2. nice…great last line in this bjorn….music has that ability…and if i close my ears i can hear it just a bit in that description of it lifting me up and floating along off into the universe…..

  3. I hate to pour water on yur sijo, but Iam pretty sure the first line only contains 13 syllables which I also believe is outside of the form? 14-16 syllables per line? I also making the total syllable count to be below the the forms requirement.

    If thats all wrong, please excuse me, the form is new to me, so I am still getting to grips with it. Please delete this if I am wrong or you are using a different form that I am completely unware of.

    Other than that, I enjoyed the content because I love music, so something like this piece will always appeal.

    • Oops – I have ceased to count syllables in haiku… might be wrong in this case, but I tried to listen to how it sounds, and I could not fit in another syllable. Many of my early haiku was flawed in that way. But I will look into it. — I did get it to 14 however after checking… but maybe I pronounce maestro wrong…

  4. Ah … what’s a syllable or two between friends 🙂
    I reckon the old Koreans didn’t drum their fingers on the lutes to count the lines.Lovely thought to have your music flow across the oceans to us all.
    Lovely idea to have thes

  5. I counted the first line and its 14 syllables to me ~ I love the way music can bring us away, far into the universe ~ lovely sijo ~

  6. Syllable counting is fraught with danger; different pronunciations of the same word give different numbers of syllables. I have the word families in my sijo, which for some people is 3 syllables – fam-ill-ease – but is only 2 for others – fam-lees.

    I enjoyed the musicality of your sijo – and the musical theme helped it right along.

    • On top of that, it might be that if you want ot keep close to the korean version… it might be that syllables are not even defined in the same way. That’s the case with haik, and is part of the movement away from 575… …

      • As you say, English – and most other European languages – work in a different way to Japanese and some other Asian languages, which is why the practice of syllable counting so often does a dis-service to Asian poetic forms.

  7. Ah, nice. Music has such a strong power to transport us most anywhere. I could just hear all the instruments being tuned…that’s a fun part of a concert too…isn’t it.

  8. The last line is splendid. What preceded it worked up to it. I like it, and I love that you wrote this on the scene… The best type of writing is this way; in another world.

Leave a reply to The Happy Amateur Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.