The Internet giant Google has developed a new AI program that can help users compose poetry.
According to the Phys.org website, Google's engineers fed the program named Verse by Verse, tens of thousands of words of the world's greatest poets, emulating the grammar and style of the grandmasters of poetry.
Users are asked to write a first line for a poem, and then to select from 22 poets registered in the program. Verse by Verse then generates additional lines of verse, with suggestions from each of the selected poets.
The program allows the user to select a poetic form: quatrain, couplet, or free verse, then to choose a rhythm pattern to determine which lines of the poem must rhyme.
The website quoted Google engineer Dave Uthus saying: "The system was trained to have a general semantic understanding of what lines of verse would best follow a previous line of verse. So even if you write on topics not commonly seen in classic poetry, the system will try its best to make suggestions that are relevant."