
Travel in Verse — Taiwan & 32 Countries as AI Songs
Frequently asked
What is travel poetry?
Morgan turns trips to Taiwan and 32 countries into rhymed doggerel, each set to a three-minute AI-generated song — a minute to read, three to listen, like a travel diary written in verse.
Which countries are covered?
Taiwan plus 32 countries, from Romania to Cambodia to Norway — each place gets a rhyme naming the destination, set to an AI song.
Can I listen while I read?
Yes. Every travel poem comes with a three-minute AI song; tap any card to read the verse and play the track — good for a commute or before bed.
East Asia (6)
Southeast Asia (9)
South Asia (1)
Middle East (2)
Europe (9)
Africa (1)
Americas (1)
About this collection
Thirty-two countries and counting. This hub is the global travel record, rhymed and sung. Every doggerel track is a Morgan trip, condensed into 3 minutes of AI-music verse: Romania's Dracula's Castle as bass-heavy gothic; Norway's Geirangerfjord as choral; Singapore's Merlion as bright pop; Japan's Hokkaido as soft piano. Each country gets its own song. None overlap.
The pattern is consistent: Morgan visits a place, writes a doggerel poem about what stuck in his memory (a meal, a vista, a strange detail at dawn), then arranges AI music in a mood that fits the country. The doggerel describes; the music feels. Together they make a thing you can replay later when you want to remember the trip.
The current count splits by region: East Asia 7 (Taiwan, Korea, North Korea, Japan, Hong Kong, Macau, China), Southeast Asia 9, South Asia 1, Middle East 2, Europe 9, Africa 1, Americas 1. The list grows when Morgan travels. The list is not exhaustive it's the trips he chose to write about.
What makes this hub different from a travel blog: blogs describe places to help future travelers plan; this hub describes places to make them memorable for past travelers. The audience isn't researching their next trip they're reliving (or vicariously living) a place. The song format matters because songs survive on phone screens, in karaoke nights, in long flights. Photos don't sing.
Hand-rhymed in zh-TW originally. Available in 12 languages via Polylang. The full doggerel poem (or its source text) is linked from each country card with a "read full poem" arrow.



























