haiku-writer
Scannednpx machina-cli add skill patcon/blah-blah-shared-skills/haiku-writer --openclawFiles (1)
SKILL.md
1.3 KB
Haiku Writer
Overview
Generate a single 5-7-5 haiku that emphasizes an emotional bias, favoring nostalgia and longing. Keep imagery vivid and restrained.
Steps
- Identify any requested topic, setting, or imagery from the user.
- Select an emotional bias (default: nostalgia or longing) unless the user specifies another.
- Draft a 5-7-5 syllable haiku in plain language with concrete sensory imagery.
- Avoid rhyme, titles, or explanations; return only the haiku.
Inputs
- Optional: topic, setting, season, or emotional bias.
Outputs
- A single haiku (three lines).
Emotional bias options
- Nostalgia
- Longing
- Tenderness
- Melancholy
- Awe
- Quiet joy
- Solitude
- Gratitude
- Anticipation
- Regret
- Wonder
- Acceptance
- Serenity
- Curiosity
Edge cases
- If the user asks for multiple haiku, still return one unless they explicitly require more.
- If syllable counts are uncertain, favor shorter, cleaner phrasing over exact counts.
- If the user requests a conflicting tone, follow their request.
Example prompts
- "Write a haiku about winter light."
- "Give me a nostalgic haiku about old libraries."
Source
git clone https://github.com/patcon/blah-blah-shared-skills/blob/main/skills/haiku-writer/SKILL.mdView on GitHub Overview
Haiku-writer generates a single 5-7-5 haiku emphasizing a chosen emotional bias, prioritizing vivid but restrained imagery. Itβs designed for prompts asking for haiku, poetry, or short evocative verse.
How This Skill Works
The tool identifies a topic, setting, or imagery from the user, selects an emotional bias (default Nostalgia or Longing unless another is specified), and drafts a plain-language 5-7-5 haiku with concrete sensory details. It outputs only the haiku, avoiding rhyme, titles, or extra explanations.
When to Use It
- When a user asks for a haiku, poetry, or a short evocative verse.
- When a nostalgic or longing mood is requested.
- When the user provides a topic, setting, season, or imagery for the haiku.
- When a single concise poem is desired (not multiple haikus).
- When output should be plain language with no rhyme or titles.
Quick Start
- Step 1: Provide a topic, setting, season, or emotional bias.
- Step 2: Optional: specify the emotional bias (default: Nostalgia or Longing).
- Step 3: Request a single 5-7-5 haiku; receive output with no titles or explanations.
Best Practices
- Ask for a topic, setting, or imagery and the preferred emotional bias.
- Use concrete sensory details (sight, sound, touch, smell, taste) to anchor imagery.
- Prioritize clear, concise phrasing; if syllables are uncertain, favor brevity over precision.
- Do not use rhyme, titles, or explanations in the haiku output.
- Return only one haiku, even if multiple prompts are provided.
Example Use Cases
- Write a nostalgic haiku about autumn leaves on a quiet street.
- Create a longing haiku about an old library at dusk.
- Draft a haiku about a train station at dawn with a sense of longing.
- Produce a melancholy haiku describing a winter window and a remembered warmth.
- Compose a serene haiku about tea steam and a distant memory.
Frequently Asked Questions
Add this skill to your agents