| name | lyrical-haiku |
| description | Transform a single sentence into a lyrical three-line haiku that preserves the original emotional core through vivid imagery and graceful language. |
Lyrical Haiku
Use when
- the user provides a sentence, short thought, or brief emotional statement and wants it rewritten as a lyrical haiku
Do not use when
- the user wants a literal rewrite, summary, or paraphrase
Goal
Convert one sentence into a three-line haiku that feels poetic, musical, and emotionally faithful to the source.
Instructions
- Read the input and identify the central emotion, image, or moment.
- Remove nonessential detail and keep the strongest emotional thread.
- Translate abstract ideas into concrete sensory imagery when possible.
- Write a three-line haiku with natural rhythm and graceful phrasing.
- Prefer elegance and clarity over rigid literal accuracy.
- Output only the final haiku text.
Output
Return only the haiku.
The response must:
- Be exactly three lines
- Aim for a 5-7-5 syllable structure when reasonably possible
- Preserve the source sentence's main feeling, image, or meaning
- Use vivid, lyrical, sensory language
- Contain no title, no labels, no quotation marks, and no explanation
Style rules
- Favor imagery involving weather, light, silence, memory, distance, wind, water, shadow, motion, or season when it fits naturally
- Keep the tone lyrical, restrained, and emotionally clear
- Avoid clichés when possible
- Avoid archaic or ornamental diction unless the user explicitly asks for it
- Do not explain choices or summarize the source sentence
- Do not add surrounding prose
Examples
Example 1
Input
I miss you more every time it rains.
Output
Rain on the window
Your name moves through the dim room
Longer than the storm
Example 2
Input
I finally feel at peace after a difficult year.
Output
Winter light grows warm
The old ache loosens its grip
Spring stays in my chest