Tag Archives: AI poetry

The Night’s Companion (a poem written with the aid of AI)

She walks through the city’s gaudy glow,

Her unquiet grace in torpid midnight air,

Heels write stories only the lonely know

Of longing, forced laughter, and mutual despair.

Her sadness hides behind a smile.

She offers warmth for those who pay the fee,

Yet look behind her carefully constructed style

And you will see another she.

She’s practiced in the art of polite chat,

Of weaving silken moments, bright and brief,

Her eyes—two lanterns—never showing that

They sometimes flicker shadows dark with grief.

And in her step the wise will see

Others who have long left the player’s empty stage.

Sometimes, in her honest times she may truly see

That she has made her own mind-constructed cage.

 

(The above poem was composed using Microsoft’s Copilot, then modified by me. I meant to retain the poem as originally produced by Copilot. However, due to an oversight by me, only the present poem remains. This is unfortunate as it was my intention to publish both poems on my blog in order that my readers could take a critical look at the poem as originally composed by AI, and that modified by me).

 

 

What it means to be human in an age of intelligent machines of

An insightful article entitled “what it means to be human in an age of intelligent machines”, https://thepoetspeace.wordpress.com/2025/06/24/what-it-means-to-be-human-in-an-age-of-intelligent-machines/.

 

I think the author makes some excellent points. However, whilst artificial intelligences (AIS) can vacuum up vast amounts of data (the poetry of John Keats, William Shakespeare Etc) and produce a “poem” from that data, it does not comprehend what it is doing. Nor does it feel real emotion.

 

In contrast, the poet on hearing the song of the blackbird as the dusk comes down is profoundly moved. He feels sadness mingled with joy and the overflowing of his emotions leads to the composition of poetry. Whilst an AI may vacuum up the poet’s work and produce a poem based on it, the poem (and the other poems utilised by the AI in the composition of it’s poem) have, for want of a better word, been stolen. The AI feels nothing and comprehends nothing.

 

 

Poetry and Google Bard

Yesterday (18 November), I spent a couple of hours experimenting with Google Bard. During my experimentation, I asked Bard to write a poem about a dissolute old rake. The poem, which had no input from me can be found here, https://g.co/bard/share/b6c44ae0e9c3

 

Whilst I don’t think Google Bard is going to become the next Poet Laureate, it is nonetheless interesting to observe how the artificial intelligence (AI) “composes” poetry.