15 The Found Poetry Project

AI artwork: man in a forest, trees and birds, he is singing
AI Midjourey

SING

I decided to leave.
Disappear with a dry biscuit
and freedom.

Stick my head in a nightgale wilderness,
and burst by throat
in song.

Oh god, my secrets.


Images are copyright and not to used without permission, which I willingly give when asked, and when not for commercial use. (found on pgs 32-34) Wounded by Love, The Life and Wisdom of St Porphyrious, First published in English 2005. ISBN 978-960-7120-19-9. A concise explanation of Found Poetry and Dadaism can be read at Found Poetry

16 responses to “15 The Found Poetry Project”

  1. How is found poetry different from erasure poetry?

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    1. That’s like how is an orange different from a fruit. 🥰 Erasure is a form of found poetry. There’s remix; inverted where you mine backwards in the source; numerical where you count words or lines or paragraphs; there’s also taking pages and cutting them up, shuffling and rearranging them. It’s endless. It’s all about creating new poems from existing text.

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    1. It just takes me somewhere else.

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  2. Oh, yes!

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  3. ‘Burst by throat in song’! What a great way to describe freedom, Misky. 🙂
    I’m going to do one of these… in November, after the Hallowe’en posts have finished. Definitely!

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    1. Start thinking about your source book as it makes a huge difference in the result. A friend of mine is using The Haunting of Hill House as her source material. She’s using the erasure technique using an overlay layer. Pop over to https://wetweatherspring.wordpress.com/2023/10/14/finding-hill-house-14/ and see what marvels can be done.

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      1. So the words stay in the order they appear on the page? That makes it more interesting! Thanks, Misky. I’ve just checked out that post… I’m now more keen to get started!

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        1. Erasure remains in sequence but there’s also remix, where you can shuffle words or phrases around. Remix is easier, often more reader-friendly but I like sequences more. It’s a good challenge.

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          1. I think I like the challenge of sequences…

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  4. Sort of like Mosaic poetry, then? 🙂 I can barely pull off straight-on poetry without mixing and matching!
    https://rolandyeomans.blogspot.com/2023/10/to-inherit-your-own-past.html

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    1. Not quite, Roland. 🥰 A mosaic rhyme is a type of feminine or dactylic rhyme that occurs when a polysyllabic word rhymes with two or more words. When one or two short words, such as “know” and “it,” are pieced together to rhyme with a single word, such as “poet,” it is called a mosaic rhyme, sometimes also called a compound rhyme.

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