"Heh heh heh heh heh heh"

"Hey, what's that?

The nose song of my favorite song I was casually singing.

The song was used for animation and met, but the original song appeared in New York in 1922, "Fly Me to the Moon", now well known when it was re-recorded by others in 1956. After a while it became widely known as the standard number for jazz, and America, which was in the middle of the Apollo project at the time, was really launched to the moon with this recorded song on Apollo, also famous as the first song a person was brought to the moon.

What? What are you trying to say?

"Oh! You're right! Music is culture!

... Suddenly, what's wrong? Please stop looking like this guy. No, seriously.

"This song is my favorite song." Take Me To The Moon "with a song..."

"The moon... that's lame. You're glowing in the night sky, aren't you? I can't, 'cause even the arrows are falling out of reach?

You did it... well, if you want an arrow to arrive or something, there's arrows all over the moon, right?

"Maybe tens of thousands of kilometers is a distance, so arrows are impossible...

"How long is a km?

"Wait a minute... uh, I'm sure of this...

I'll bring a stick of wood that was shredded later to make it an axe pattern for the salary lady. It is roughly cut into 1m lengths. He makes impromptu displacements by writing an index more or less 5 mm and 1 cm each with a pen brought from the earth on a handmade, upright sharpened stick. It's not that crazy because the 1cm pen was just in the luggage. When I bought my Nogis (* 1) for the first time, I measured the length of various items.

"This stick is more or less 1 m long, and this is 1 km long for 1000 pieces.

"1000 pieces... You said tens of thousands of kilometers earlier... I'm not sure.

Normally, a thousand or so in this world would have no choice because it is a number that only has the opportunity to touch about the people who manage the land, the merchants and those involved in the military.

"Mostly if it's that far, how did you measure it!?

"Do you know that the moon is an object, or star?

"The stars are the little glowing ones around them, aren't they?

It's my class because I have to make it out of my understanding of planets and satellites, so you can't make it out, can you? I mean, amateurs can't measure the distance between planets and satellites, and they don't even think about trying, do they?

"Well, it's too professional around there, so leave it... It's music. Music! Say music enriches your life, and it's a culture that leans on life at all times, whether it's fun, sad or lonely.

"But there's no such thing as a bard?

"You can sing for yourself if you're not there!

... that night.

"Listen to my song. Yeah, yeah, yeah!

The song of Masaru, which continues to be sung by one person in Norinori, lasted until the children were angry that they could not sleep. Everything matters.