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1992-04-08
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You'll be amazed and delighted!
POETRY STAR (Version 1.1)
COPYRIGHT 1991 & 1992 by Chatfield Software
Chatfield Software, Inc.
P.O. Box 115
Hiram, Ohio 44234
POETRY STAR is commercial entertainment/educational software
sold on a basis known as SHAREWARE, which means that you can decide
after trying it whether you wish to buy it or not.
-----
DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTY
THIS SOFTWARE AND DOCUMENTATION ARE SOLD "AS IS" AND WITHOUT
WARRANTIES AS TO PERFORMANCE OR MERCHANTABILITY OR ANY OTHER
WARRANTIES WHETHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED. BECAUSE OF THE VARIOUS
HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE ENVIRONMENTS INTO WHICH THIS PROGRAM MAY BE
PUT, NO WARRANTY OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE IS OFFERED.
GOOD DATA PROCESSING PROCEDURE DICTATES THAT ANY PROGRAM BE
THOROUGHLY TESTED WITH NON-CRITICAL DATA BEFORE RELYING ON IT.
THE USER MUST ASSUME THE ENTIRE RISK OF USING THE PROGRAM. ANY
LIABILITY OF THE SELLER WILL BE LIMITED EXCLUSIVELY TO PRODUCT
REPLACEMENT OR REFUND OF THE PURCHASE PRICE.
-----
PARTIAL RELEASE OF COPYRIGHT
CHATFIELD SOFTWARE, INC. HEREBY RELEASES AND ASSIGNS TO THE
REGISTERED LICENSEE THE COPYRIGHT TO ANY POEMS PRODUCED BY THE
REGISTERED LICENSEE IN COLLABORATION WITH "POETRY STAR" EXCEPT
THAT ALL "RANDOM" POEMS PRODUCED EXCLUSIVELY BY THE SOFTWARE
ITSELF WITHOUT TEXTUAL CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE USER REMAIN THE
PROPERTY OF CHATFIELD SOFTWARE, INC. AND MAY BE PUBLISHED OR SOLD
ONLY WITH WRITTEN PERMISSION FROM CHATFIELD SOFTWARE, INC.
THIS PARTIAL AND LIMITED RELEASE OF COPYRIGHT IS CONTINGENT UPON
(1) THE COPY OF THE SOFTWARE'S BEING A PROPERLY PAID AND REGIS-
TERED COPY (2) FOR WHICH THE REGISTERED LICENSEE CAN SHOW EVI-
DENCE OF REGISTRATION.
-----
IN PROTECTION OF CONSUMER'S RIGHTS:
"This program is produced by a member of the Association of
Shareware Professionals (ASP). ASP wants to make sure that the
shareware principle works for you. If you are unable to resolve
a shareware-related problem with an ASP member by contacting the
member directly, ASP may be able to help. The ASP Ombudsman can
help you resolve a dispute or a problem with an ASP member, but
does not provide technical support for members' products. Please
write to the ASP Ombudsman at 545 Grover Road, Muskegon, MI 49442
or send a CompuServe message via CompuServe Mail to ASP Ombudsman
70007,3536."
-----
CONTENTS OF DISK
A complete version of this disk contains the following files:
BLUE.SQZ README.NOW
BOOKA.ZIP READY.BAT
CELLS
CHANGE.ZIP
CLOSE.ZIP
CYN.ZIP
DOIT.ZIP
EXTERNAL
INRAC.OUT
PLACE.ZIP
POETRY.000
POETRY.COM
POETRY.ZIP
POP.COM
REGINRAC.SQZ
SECTIONS
SONNET.ZIP
STAR.BAT
STAR.DOC
STAR2.ZIP
STAR3.ZIP
STAR5.ZIP
STAR7.ZIP
STAR10.ZIP
STARRUN.SQZ
TEST.ZIP
TEST2.ZIP
VENDORS.DOC
VIDPOP.COM
After you have begun using it the disk will also contain the file
POETRY.C.
-----
INTRODUCTION
You will find POETRY STAR unlike any software you have ever used.
It is written in the Artificial Intelligence computer programming
language INRAC, which enables POETRY STAR to understand what you
write--almost as if you were using your keyboard to write notes
or instructions to another human being.
You may address the computer with questions, comments, notes,
observations, or insults whenever the "RETURN" prompt appears in
lower case letters (non-capitals), like this: "(return) >>." The
computer will attempt to give you an appropriate response--but
you should be aware that POETRY STAR is an ENTERTAINMENT disk,
and much of the fun comes from the nuttiness and irreverence of
the computer's responses to what you say.
While you are having fun with POETRY STAR you will also be learn-
ing something about poetry--but that educational aspect of the
program is secondary to the simple fun of it all. If you wish to
make a real study of poetry, we recommend that you buy a copy of
Chatfield Software's STAR ALPHA (using the 10% discount you
receive by registering as a POETRY STAR user).
If you decide to continue using POETRY STAR, please use the
registration form at the end of this documentation to remit the
$25.00 purchase price. Once you have registered you receive a
free BONUS disk for writing limericks, and you are entitled to
unlimited free technical support by calling (216) 569-3201. In
ADDITION, you benefit from a 10% discount on other Chatfield
Software products. Many thanks!
***
DEALERS AND OTHER VENDORS: Please print the file "VEND.ORS" for a
vendors' agreement form. YOU MAY NOT SELL "POETRY STAR" VERSION
1.1 without completing this form! (ASP vendors exempt.)
The UNREGISTERED examination version of POETRY STAR 1.1 may be
GIVEN away freely. Restrictions apply only to selling copies for
compensation.
***
GETTING STARTED WITH POETRY STAR
Getting started with POETRY STAR is a cinch. You simply turn on
or reboot your IBM-compatible computer and type "STAR" (without
the quotation marks) at the DOS prompt ( > ).
Once you have used POETRY STAR you really won't have much use for
this printed guide, because POETRY STAR can tell you everything
you need to know. When in doubt, ask for the "menu." HOW do you
ask for the menu? The same way you'd ask for it in a restaurant:
in plain English.
In an emergency, you can exit POETRY STAR by typing "x" at any
prompt. However, we strongly urge you to exit through the
menu--to avoid cluttering your disk with fragments or lost clus-
ters.
USING THE PROGRAM
You may proceed through the program at your own pace. Just be
sure that you enter your name in EXACTLY the same way each time
you return, including any punctuation. POETRY STAR uses its
ability to recognize names (or subtle variations in them) to find
the place where the disk's owner left off. (So be advised: if you
lend your disk to someone else, you will lose your place in the
program!)
SOME NICE EXTRA FEATURES
POETRY STAR maintains a complete transcript of each of your
sessions with the program. To read everything you have just
done, at the end of your session you may read the transcript on
your screen by using the command "type inrac.out" (no quotation
marks) at the DOS prompt (or you may print the transcript by
typing "type inrac.out >prn"). The transcript file may also be
picked up on your word processor as a text file; you may rename
it and save it if you wish. NOTE: The transcript file inrac.out
is destroyed and restarted each time you reboot POETRY STAR!
You will note that the selections offered on the menu get a
little richer as you move on through POETRY STAR. Feel free to
sample the choices whenever you wish.
POETRY STAR keeps your place in the program as long as you con-
tinue to use the same name each time you restart. (The last
user's name is conveniently provided for you on the title
screen.)
PROBLEMS?
We only know of two problems you might have in using POETRY STAR.
If you fail to reboot the computer after using other programs,
the POETRY STAR program may abort when you attempt to "talk" to
the computer or ask questions; POETRY STAR will not operate
properly with "TSR" (terminate and stay resident) programs still
resident; rebooting is a way of avoiding that problem (unless
your hard disk always boots with a DOS shell resident--in which
case you can boot from your "A" drive using a blank "system disk"
[see your DOS manual]).
If your disk is full the program may abort for that reason. Both
of these problems result in a "PC Error" message. Always reboot
before running POETRY STAR.
If your disk is "full" without any visible reason (you don't seem
to have too many files), try using your DOS disk's "chkdsk" pro-
gram to discover whether fragments of files are creating "gar-
bage" on your disk; if so, the DOS manual contains instructions
on getting rid of fragments and lost clusters. Try always to
exit POETRY STAR through the menu--to avoid leaving open files.
WHAT'S ON THIS CRAZY DISK, ANYWAY?
Here's an overview of what you can expect to encounter on the
POETRY STAR adventure:
Obviously, you first get a title screen (and a couple of wacky
warnings that POETRY STAR is a bit bizarre).
Next you get a poem written by the computer (these poems are
always different!).
Next you are asked for your name:
PS: Please tell me your name.
(It's urgent that you use this format: "Jane Doe," not
just your first or last name!)
User: Jim Smith
PS: Thanks, Jim. Have you been here on Poetry Star
before, Jim?
User: No
PS: I'm L. Dudley Smidge III. (Friends call me Spike.)
I'll be your guide throughout your trip in this zoo.
I'll try to be unobjectionable.
What brings you here, Jim?
User: I was just wondering what this is all about.
PS: "I was just wondering what this is all about"?
Wondering what this is all about! My goodness!
Do you have any questions about anything?
User: What kind of questions should I have?
PS: Have you asked your mother? I can't help you now.
Let's go, baby!
(O you dear flesh!)
(RETURN)
>>
POETRY STAR and the user next begin collaborating on a free verse
poem:
PS: IT CAN BE INTIMIDATING to be told, "Write a line of
poetry." You need to be aware that a line of ANY
WRITING can be a line of "poetry," for the task of the
poet is to build effects from sometimes very ordinary
language.
SO, when you're asked to write a line of poetry, you
should feel free to write anything at all.
Please write a line of poetry.
User: Death looms in the dark sky behind the old barn
PS: That's fine. (Bring me a glass of water, Jake!)
Here's a line from me:
and if the mountain rolls then all of fair wisdom will
fly forever.
This program is, among other things, a demonstration of
ways in which artificial intelligence can be used in
poetry instruction and poetry writing.
In building a line of poetry to go with your (Jim's)
line of poetry above, I produced a line based on your
use of the word "sky."
(RETURN)
>>
Now let's consider something else--
(RETURN)
>>
the quality of the poetry.
(RETURN)
>>
"Wisdom" is an abstraction. You use the abstraction
"death" --It is generally better to avoid abstractions in poetry.
A clear noun like "drugstore" or "forests" is better
than words like "justice" or "pleasure," which describe
phenomena that exist in the MIND, not tangibly in the
WORLD.
Yet we shouldn't feel we need to ELIMINATE abstractions
--just be wary of them (Ezra Pound said, "Go in fear of
abstractions").
We'll say more about quality as we go along.
(RETURN)
>>
Let's look at our "poem" again:
Death looms in the dark sky behind the old barn
and if the mountain rolls then all of fair wisdom will
fly forever
(RETURN)
>>
Please write a THIRD line which makes the first two fit
together a little better. You may have to be pretty
agile!
POETRY STAR and the user continue to work on their poem.
Before very long, POETRY STAR pauses to say a little about the AI
language INRAC--and tosses in another of its own poems for good
measure. Then POETRY STAR and the user proceed in their collabo-
ration.
PS: NOW FOR A CHANGE OF PACE, we'll set aside the poem
for a moment while I tell you a little about Artificial
Intelligence, as it functions in the computer language
INRAC (the language in which this program is written).
(RETURN)
>>
The INRAC language not only produces random poetry like
the poem you saw at the beginning and like this one:
RANDOMNESS IN SUMMER NATURAL
Alone again. A deep diner
wobbles on the dawn
of sorrow and truth.
Your eyes.
By the black diner unlikely
bays imagine the past.
(return)
>>
User: Did you write that yourself?
PS: Do you really want to know more about me personal-
ly?
User: I guess so.
PS: I have one kidney, but it's a big one.
(RETURN)
>>
PS: Ideally, this program will be able to interpret
anything you write. You may speak to the computer in
complete sentences.
You may address the computer directly whenever you see
"(return)" written in lower case (uncapitalized) let-
ters. For example, you might want to ask the computer
for help, or to change programs, or to let you quit
temporarily, etc. AT THE PLACES DESCRIBED above, all
you need to do is talk to the computer as if it were a
real person.
(return)
>>
Please respond in complete sentences.
Jim, what is your philosophy of life?
User: Gee! I guess I try to stay balanced, and treat
other people decently.
PS: When an improved outlook always worships unknowable
truth, then any father makes me want to mourn. Exis-
tentialism. Hm. I think Queen Victoria thinks pretty
much the way you do. My mother, too.
"Gee." Okay. But "I guess I try to stay balanced"?
I'd like to know more.
Once Julius Caesar was talking to Queen Victoria, and
he said: "I love howling with silence. Nothing in
philosophy can surpass it!"
(RETURN)
>>
Well, then, here is our poem so far:
Death looms in the dark sky behind the old barn
and if the mountain rolls then all of fair wisdom will
flourish forever
the sun will gather itself at the far edge and roll up
the sky
Tell me, Jim, what kind of music do you enjoy best?
User: I like all music--if it's done well.
PS: If you say so. Why did the little moron cloud the
theatre?
User: Beats me.
PS: Is that fair? Well, here's a fourth line for you:
Someone is climbing and the path is becoming dead
Here's the poem so far:
Death looms in the dark sky behind the old barn
and if the mountain rolls then all of fair wisdom will
flourish forever
the sun will gather itself at the far edge and roll up
the sky
Someone is climbing and the path is becoming dead
(return)
>>
User: That's getting morbid.
PS: Help me, Jim; can you rephrase that as a question?
User: Don't you think the poem is starting to get
morbid now?
PS: Do you really want to know more about me personal-
ly?
User: No!
PS: I don't blame you.
Much of the writing of "free verse" or "open" verse
involves the ability to adjust one's new conceptions
for lines to what has already been written.
Try to write a fifth line which is consistent with what
has gone before and which CONCLUDES A SENTENCE (using a
period, a question mark, or an exclamation point).
User: the stones are weary and the pebbles have ceased
to sing
PS: Death looms in the dark sky behind the old barn
and if the mountain rolls then all of fair wisdom will
flourish forever
the sun will gather itself at the far edge and roll up
the sky
Someone is climbing and the path is becoming dead
the stones are weary and the pebbles have ceased to
sing
(return)
>>
USER: What happens now?
PS: We can talk about life, sex, philosophy, or even
death (not to mention poetry), but "What happens now?"
I don't know, Jim!
(By the way, it is possible to rewrite ANY line by
asking for the Line Editor at the menu or at any lower
case "(return)" prompt.)
NOW see what you can write as a SEVENTH line after my
sixth one! (Beats me.)
Death looms in the dark sky behind the old barn
and if the mountain rolls then all of fair wisdom will
flourish forever
the sun will gather itself at the far edge and roll up
the sky
Someone is climbing and the path is becoming dead
the stones are weary and the pebbles have ceased to
sing
Beats me.
Line Seven:
>>
User: why these dire things happen
(RETURN)
>>
PS: You have now written all but one line of an eight-line
free verse poem that looks like this:
Death looms in the dark sky behind the old barn
and if the mountain rolls then all of fair wisdom will
flourish forever
the sun will gather itself at the far edge and roll up the sky
Someone is climbing and the path is becoming dead
the stones are weary and the pebbles have ceased to
sing
Beats me.
why these dire things happen
Now it's time to write your eighth line! Go ahead:
>>
User: but life sure is fun anyway
Death looms in the dark sky behind the old barn
and if the mountain rolls then all of fair wisdom will
flourish forever
the sun will gather itself at the far edge and roll up
the sky
Someone is climbing and the path is becoming dead
the stones are weary and the pebbles have ceased to
sing
Beats me.
why these dire things happen
but life sure is fun anyway
(return)
>>
Here's the MENU. What do you want to do now?
----------------------- MENU ---------------------
---------------------- CONTINUE PRESENT POEM ----------
---------------------- HELP --------------------------
---------------------- LINE EDITOR ------------------
---------------------- SONNET ---------------------
---------------------- RESTART ----------------------
---------------------- WRITE A RANDOM POEM ----------
---------------------- QUIT -----------------------
You may choose at the prompt (you can always restart
this program but choose "continue" if you simply want
to move on).
In the case, the user chooses to continue. They finish their
"poem," and then the user chooses from a later, somewhat larger
menu to explore "new wild stuff."
They then go through a number of demonstrations and exercises,
some involving the Maylay prosody the "pantoum," the Welsh proso-
dy "cynghanned," syllabics, an invented form using one's tele-
phone number, and finally a quick introduction to the sonnet.
PS: Here's a bizarre program for a few hundred million
Italian sonnets.
Hale Chatfield designed this one summer on a yellow
legal pad when he didn't have anything really important
to do.
It consists of four Italian (or "Petrarchan") sonnets
which have interchangeable lines (any of the four
"first lines" can go with any of the four "second
lines"--etc.). It's basically useless, really.
(RETURN)
>>
The chances that you can encounter the identical poem
again number hundreds of millions to one:*
I was half dozing when a cardinal caught my eye
framed half by hope, half by a maple tree;
a force presided that appeared to be
paid honor to, whatever arcs we fly,
--as if to leave sufficient chance to try:
where some ideas work to set us free
(my love for you and yours for me;
sea, season, clouds, and sky).
All winter long two pairs of cardinals came
to make another meaning, clean the slate
to open for the world and to be known;
at some points everything's the same,
luminous in feather though infatuate
in darkness, ineluctable as stone.
* And the odds that you'll see that same sentence again
are only a hair better!
(RETURN)
>>
Well, Jim Smith, that's about it.
(RETURN)
>>
Except that here is a new random poem written by the
computer:
You are the pleasure in all wisdom,
The very belly of the fogs.
You are a crystal of peace--
My cheer,
My curious silence.
(RETURN)
>>
From here on you are free to choose whatever you want
to do from the menu.
It was fun taking you on this little tour of POETRY
STAR!
****
Other Chatfield Software products include:
BUDDY: A Tutorial Companion to Your Word Processor $22.50 (Eight
lessons in writing better using a word processor. Interactive AI
disk.)
POETRY TUTOR $39.95 (Seven programs for writing poetry. Available
for MACs and Apple II Series, as well as IBM-compatibles.)
POETRY WORKOUT $39.95 (a children's version of POETRY TUTOR--for
Apple II series computers only).
STAR ALPHA $59.95 (An amazing Artificial Intelligence college
level poetry course on disk.)
Plus packages on chemistry and developmental psychology.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
"POETRY STAR" 1.1 REGISTRATION FORM
By completing this form you receive a FREE BONUS disk and become
eligible for update information and for prize contests offered
by Chatfield Software, Inc. You also become eligible to
receive a 10% discount on other Chatfield Software
products--and free support (216-569-3201)!
Please send your check or money order for $25.00 along with this
form to:
Chatfield Software, Inc.
P.O. Box 115
Hiram, OH 44234
You may also charge the $25.00 to your VISA or MasterCard by
providing your card number:______________________________
and the expiration date:___________________ and by providing
your signature here:_____________________________________.
Name:_____________________________________________________.
Address:__________________________________________________.
City & State:_____________________________________________.
ZIP:________________ Today's date:________________.
Disk size: ___5 1/4" ___3 1/2"
Where did you obtain this software?
__________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________.
Thank you! You'll be hearing from us!