Volume 16 Number 1
The Brain Is Deeper Than the Sea: Sea and Spar Between, Computational Stuplimity, and Fragmentation
Abstract
The author demonstrates how we can use fragments of classical text as a heuristic to help us interpret a poem (Nick Montfort and Stephanie Strickland’s Sea and Spar Between) that is, on the face of it, quintessentially nonfragmentary because it contains over 225,000,000,000,000 stanzas.
Approaching a whole through a part of its parts
Seeking a microcosm in the waves of Sea and Spar Between
A mathematical illustration of Sea and Spar Between’s interconnectedness
1st word in VS | 2nd word in VS | 3rd word in VS | 4th word in VS | 5th word in VS | 6th word in VS | 7th word in VS | 8th word in VS | … | nth word in VS | |
1st stanza in GS | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
2nd stanza in GS | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2 | |
3rd stanza in GS | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
… | ||||||||||
nth stanza in GS | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
“Dog” frequency | “Cat” frequency | |
Text one | 2 | 2 |
Text two | 10 | 8 |
A possible objection considered and refuted through the relativity of scale
An alternative method to fulfil our “obligation toward the difficult whole.”
From the sublime to the stuplime
We do not consider that readers will often seek out particularly apt stanzas and wish to return to them. While returning to a favorite stanza is possible in our system, it may seem a curious quest . . . . For some readers, the experience of Sea and Spar Between will occur rather in the texture, operation, and journey of reading the work as it presents itself, rather than in any particular destination. Finding the free experience of reading to be better than the saving of coordinates, they will soon be “Done with the Compass – – / Done with the Chart!” [Montfort and Strickland 2013]
Narrative fails if you can’t know beginning or end, even if you do know extent. But resonance does not . . . . In the 21st century a single stanza from 225, or from 225 trillion, equally, may resonate, even with meme-like force. And this impression will vary depending on how you happen to, and/or choose to contextualize it within wider swaths or waves of reading. There can be no anticipation of an outcome, only registration of it. [Montfort and Strickland 2013]
Most of my readers will have observed a small water-insect on the surface of rivulets . . . how the little animal wins its way up against the stream, by alternate pulses of active and passive motion, now resisting the current, and now yielding to it in order to gather strength . . . . This is no unapt emblem of the mind’s self-experience in the act of thinking. [Coleridge 1975, 72]
Sea and Spar Between’s code: the questions hidden in its answers
var shortPhrase = ['circle on', 'dash on', 'let them', 'listen now', 'loop on', 'oh time', 'plunge on', 'reel on', 'roll on', 'run on', 'spool on', 'steady', 'swerve me?', 'turn on', 'wheel on', 'whirl on', 'you — too — ', 'fast-fish', 'loose-fish']; var dickinsonNoun = [ ['air', 'art', 'care', 'door', 'dust', 'each', 'ear', 'earth', 'fair', 'faith', 'fear', 'friend', 'gold', 'grace', 'grass', 'grave', 'hand', 'hill', 'house', 'joy', 'keep', 'leg', 'might', 'mind', 'morn', 'name', 'need', 'noon', 'pain', 'place', 'play', 'rest', 'rose', 'show', 'sight', 'sky', 'snow', 'star', 'thought', 'tree', 'well', 'wind', 'world', 'year'], ['again', 'alone', 'better', 'beyond', 'delight', 'dying', 'easy', 'enough', 'ever', 'father', 'flower', 'further', 'himself', 'human', 'morning', 'myself', 'power', 'purple', 'single', 'spirit', 'today'], ['another', 'paradise'], ['eternity'], ['immortality'] ]; var courseStart = ['fix upon the ', 'cut to fit the ', 'how to withstand the']; var dickinsonSyllable = ['bard', 'bead', 'bee', 'bin', 'bliss', 'blot', 'blur', 'buzz', 'curl', 'dirt', 'disk', 'doll', 'drum', 'fern', 'film', 'folk', 'germ', 'hive', 'hood', 'husk', 'jay', 'pink', 'plot', 'spun', 'toll', 'web']; var melvilleSyllable = ['ash', 'bag', 'buck', 'bull', 'bunk', 'cane', 'chap', 'chop', 'clam', 'cock', 'cone', 'dash', 'dock', 'edge', 'eel', 'fin', 'goat', 'hag', 'hawk', 'hook', 'hoop', 'horn', 'howl', 'iron', 'jack', 'jaw', 'kick', 'kin', 'lime', 'loon', 'lurk', 'milk', 'net', 'pike', 'rag', 'rail', 'ram', 'sack', 'salt', 'tool']; var dickinsonLessLess = [ ['art', 'base', 'blame', 'crumb', 'cure', 'date', 'death', 'drought', 'fail', 'flesh', 'floor', 'foot', 'frame', 'fruit', 'goal', 'grasp', 'guile', 'guilt', 'hue', 'key', 'league', 'list', 'need', 'note', 'pang', 'pause', 'phrase', 'pier', 'plash', 'price', 'shame', 'shape', 'sight', 'sound', 'star', 'stem', 'stint', 'stir', 'stop', 'swerve', 'tale', 'taste', 'thread', 'worth'], ['arrest', 'blanket', 'concern', 'costume', 'cypher', 'degree', 'desire', 'dower', 'efface', 'enchant', 'escape', 'fashion', 'flavor', 'honor', 'kinsman', 'marrow', 'perceive', 'perturb', 'plummet', 'postpone', 'recall', 'record', 'reduce', 'repeal', 'report', 'retrieve', 'tenant'], ['latitude', 'retriever'] ]; var upVerb = ['bask', 'chime', 'dance', 'go', 'leave', 'move', 'rise', 'sing', 'speak', 'step', 'turn', 'walk']; var butBeginning = ['but', 'for', 'then']; var butEnding = ['earth', 'sea', 'sky', 'sun']; var nailedEnding = ['coffin', 'deck', 'desk', 'groove', 'mast', 'spar', 'pole', 'plank', 'rail', 'room', 'sash'];
function exclaimLine(n) { var a, b = n % twoSyllable.length; n = Math.floor(n / twoSyllable.length); a = n % threeToFiveSyllable.length; return threeToFiveSyllable[a] + '! ' + twoSyllable[b] + '!'; }
// The function nailedLine() produces a line beginning "nailed to the ..." // In Moby-Dick, Ahab nails a doubloon to the mast, offering it as a reward // to the one who sees the white whale first. This line template is meant to // semantically mirror an extended attempt to find axial support, both by the // reader of our poem and within Melville's novel, where being "at sea" // involves trying to locate a moral compass, trying to track down a quarry, // trying to control the crew through bribery, and using the mast itself as // a pointer to the stars in 19th-century navigation.
// The array variable shortPhrase contains short phrases, almost all of // which are taken from Melville's Moby-Dick: var shortPhrase = ['circle on', 'dash on', 'let them', 'listen now', 'loop on', 'oh time', 'plunge on', 'reel on', 'roll on', 'run on', 'spool on', 'steady', 'swerve me?', 'turn on', 'wheel on', 'whirl on', 'you — too — ', 'fast-fish', 'loose-fish'];
// The array variable dickinsonNoun contains common nouns from Dickinson's // poems. We judged these nouns as common using a frequency analysis of the // words in the poems.
var dickinsonSyllable = ['bard', 'bead', 'bee', 'bin', 'bliss', 'blot', 'blur', 'buzz', 'curl', 'dirt', 'disk', 'doll', 'drum', 'fern', 'film', 'folk', 'germ', 'hive', 'hood', 'husk', 'jay', 'pink', 'plot', 'spun', 'toll', 'web'];
Conclusion
[5]// If someone were to replace our words and phrases with new texts, a // generator with a similar appearance and similar functioning, but with a // new vocabulary, would be defined. That is, it is practically possible to // create a new generator, a remix or appropriation of this one, by // replacing only the data in this section. If this is done and the code // is not otherwise modified, the system will assemble language in the same // way, but it will work on different language.
[6]// The most useful critique is a new // constitution of elements. On one level, a reconfiguration of a source // code file to add comments — by the original creator or by a critic — // accomplishes this task. But in another, and likely more novel, way, // computational poetics and the code developed out of its practice // produce a widely distributed new constitution.