Found poetry
Found poetry is the rearrangment of words or phrases taken randomly from other sources (example: clipped newspaper headlines, bits of advertising copy, handwritten cards pulled from a hat) in a manner that gives the rearranged words a completely new meaning.A classic example was found in a physics text:
- "And yet no force, however great,
- can stretch a cord, however fine,
- into a horizontal line
- that shall be absolutely straight.ÃÂÃÂ
In 2003, the press and various online communities decided they had found poetry in the speeches and news briefings of Donald Rumsfeld; this example, The Unknown being the most often cited:
- The Unknown
- As we know,
- There are known knowns.
- There are things we know we know.
- We also know
- There are known unknowns.
- That is to say
- We know there are some things
- We do not know.
- But there are also unknown unknowns,
- The ones we don't know
- We don't know.
- Donald Rumsfeld, Feb. 12, 2002, Department of Defense news briefing
External Links
- Poetry of Donald Rumsfeld at Slate magazine