Music, or: Magic

A Choka

white wire untangled
jack pops into computer
earbuds muffle sounds
eyes scan music videos
fingers scroll scroll click
boom thump twang boom boom thump twang
lalalalala
external voices silenced
nanananana
internal voices silenced
lalalalala
disquiet bucks contentment
dadadadada
still- thoughts sharpen and converge
po-po-po-po-poetry

Choka?

The most intricate Japanese Poetry form is the Choka, or Long Poem. The early form consisted of a series of katauta joined together. This gives a choice of form structures of 5/7/5/5/7/7… etc., or: 5/7/7/5/7… etc.

The Choka could be any total line length and indeed many exceeded 100 lines. Looking at this, it is easy to see why Poetic Historians believe the katauta is the original basic unit of Japanese poetry using either the 17 or 19 unit onji.


d’Verse Quadrille

The above choka is my take on d’Verse’s Quadrille challenge.

The Quadrille is simply a poem of 44 words (excluding the title), and it can take any form. This week’s challenge was to use the word “music” in a Quadrille.


Let’s write poetry together!

When it comes to partnership, some humans can make their lives alone – it’s possible. But creatively, it’s more like painting: you can’t just use the same colours in every painting. It’s just not an option. You can’t take the same photograph every time and live with art forms with no differences.

Ben Harper (b. 1969)

Would you like to create poetry with me and have a completed poem of yours featured here at the Skeptic’s Kaddish? I am very excited to have launched the ‘Poetry Partners’ initiative and am looking forward to meeting and creating with you… Check it out!

59 thoughts on “Music, or: Magic”

  1. Ewwww We! I love this!

    Why couldn’t this have been my poetic idea! Its a little of both, music and magic! Anything that can silence my brain and jumpstart it at the same time is music and magic! Very creative David ❤

    "lalalalala
    external voices silenced
    nanananana
    internal voices silenced
    lalalalala"

  2. David,
    This poem is excellent. It could be anyone, but as I read it, I wondered if you were watching me.
    And thanks for the poetry lesson. 🙂

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