Who Grabbed My Gorge
In January 2009, I wrote a very short (one page) Python poetry generator that creates a limitless nature poem each time it is run. I wrote this generator, “Taroko Gorge,” mostly at Taroko Gorge National Park in Taiwan, finishing it on the plane afterwards. I later ported it to JavaScript so that it could be easily run in a Web browser.
It seems the gorge goes ever ever on. The code from “Taroko Gorge” and the form it defines have been appropriated a few times. Here are five poetry generators that use the code from that project and replace my text with different, and often much more extensive, language:
“Tokyo Garage” by Scott Rettberg, 2009. [Output from "Tokyo Garage" read aloud by a pedantic machinima clown.]
“Gorge” by J. R. Carpenter, 2010. [Announcement of "Gorge."] [Output appears in J. R. Carpenter's GENERATION[S], Traumawien: 2010.]
“Along the Briny Beach” by J. R. Carpenter, 2011. [Announcement of "Along the Briny Beach."]
“Toy Garbage” by Talan Memmott, 2011.
“Yoko Engorged” by Eric Snodgrass. 2011. [Announcement of "Yoko Engorged."]







Wonderful! Gorge-ous! There’s this one as well: Whisper Wire: http://luckysoap.com/generations/whisperwire.html
Oops! I should have known I’d left something out. Thanks for that one, and for reminding me about it.
[...] poem uses Nick Montfort’s streamlined and nimble Taroko Gorge code (a JavaScript port of a poetry generator originally written as a 1k Python program). All I [...]
[...] Montfort wrote the poetry generator Taroko Gorge in January 2009. Since then, others have appropriated his code and made their own “gorges.” As part of the experimental [...]
Another remix of Taroko Gorge for the taking: Takei, George.
[...] creation. Written in Python and ported into JavaScript for the web, it’s inspired a series of imitations (which Montfort hilariously strikes out in his hyperlinks to on the right margin of the [...]