Being the wonderful teacher that she is, Khara had us review all we had studied during the first eight weeks in order to complete this week's challenge. The final challenge is to create a form of our own.
This year, I have found myself reminding people that haiku is an important segment of jazz poetry. To that end, my form is the jazz haiku ensemble. Following are the guidelines:
1. The subject of the poem will be something related to jazz (person, place or thing) or contain elements of jazz.
2. Each stanza will be haiku and the minimum number of stanzas is two (a jazz haiku duet).
3. I won't hold you to the common 5-7-5 line length, but each haiku may have only 17 syllables.
4. The last stanza must be an American Sentence, which we had to write as part of last week's challenge.
Since August 29 is Charlie Parker's birthday, I wrote the following jazz haiku trio in his honor:
Bird’s Song
I hear Bird’s songs play.
He has been gone a long time,
but never left us.
Silky saxophone.
Bird could make it swing or moan.
Made Bebop the rage.
I wish he had been with us longer in body as well as in soul.
I wish he had been with us longer in body as well as in soul.