Welcome, friends! Once again we gather for a round of 30 poems in the month of April. This is my 12th year in a row writing Poem-a-Day and NaPoWriMo poems. TWELVE! Crazy. I'm happy this April to welcome back my longtime poet friend Thomas Alan Holmes who's rejoining the poetic fun this year. ¡Abrazos, Alan! I hope all of you, our faithful poetry fans, will come back all month to read our poems! Here is the first prompt: Robert Lee Brewer’s Poem-a-Day suggestion: “For today's prompt, write a foolish poem. The poem could be about a fool, about being fooled, about fooling someone, or whatever other foolish direction you wish to take it.” Maureen Thorson’s NaPoWriMo prompt. “They say you can’t judge a book by its cover, but they never said you can’t try to write a poem based on a book cover — and that’s your challenge for today! Take a look through Public Domain Review’s article on ‘The Art of Book Covers.’” The book cover that intrigued me was for the 1907 book The Thinking Machine by Jacques Futrelle. This made me think of the AIs we currently encounter in the news, esp. ChatGPT, which can write pretty human-sounding texts. Here's my curtal sonnet today, merging both prompts. The Thinking Machine Incidentally, I decided to see what ChatGPT could do with these two prompts. I asked ChatGPT to "write a poem in the style of Vince Gotera about fools and thinking machines." Here's what I got back, under the title "Fools and Thinking Machines," six quatrains of aabb beginning Fools believe that thinking machinesEssentially this is an apology for AIs, pleading for humans to treat them as equal entities. Fascinating! Hmm. Anyone sensing Skynet here? Skynet was the worldwide AI that warred with humans in the Terminator movie franchise, creating seemingly invincible android soldiers. Maybe less fascinating and more chilling? Regarding ChatGPT's ability to "write in the style of Vince Gotera," not even close. But it's quite amazing that ChatGPT wrote this verse instantaneously. Much faster than the hour it took me, roughly, to write my poem above. Okay, moving on to Alan's poem today: the book cover he chose to work with was for The Hollow Earth by Franklin Titus Ive, (1904). Alan also worked with both prompts today. Here's what he said about the poem: “It’s been nothing but shootings, Trump, and tornadoes on the news today, and the cover of Hollow Earth just seemed relevant. I know that I don’t offer the word ‘fools’ in this piece, but I mark the date, and the subject matter of the poem addresses fools, too.” Hollow Earth An excellent poem, Alan. Chilling as well. Okay, friends, there's the first day. Come on back tomorrow for more! Friends, won’t you comment, please? Love to know what you’re thinking. Thanks! Ingat, everyone. ヅ |
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6 comments:
Hi, Vince--thank you for asking me to join you for this year's NaPoWriMo. I hope I can offer some good drafts this month.
I have been busy, and I published a book of poetry, In the Backhoe's Shadow, with Iris Press last August.
I have another project in mind and hope this month's prompts will permit me to work on it, but I will do my best not to "go rogue" much this year.
It's good to be back.
Nice sonnet, Vince! I was less impressed with the AI's poem - trite couplets and a pathetic plea to be taken seriously, LOL. Alan's poem was brilliant, with a chilling closing image - bravo.
Alan, I'm glad to have you back. It's okay if you go rogue every time! Of course, if you can work on the project AND hew to the prompts, that would be most impressive. Good luck with the project.
Bruce, thanks for your generous comment. Going over to your blog now to check out your first two days!
Alan, congrats on the new book again!
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