Repetition sometimes works in poetry, but rarely in prose. The musical provocateur John Cage once wrote a lecture in which a single page was repeated fourteen times, with the refrain "If anybody is sleep let him go to sleep" (Cage, 1961). Midway through, the artist Jean Reynal stood up and screamed, "John, I dearly love you, but I can't bear another minute. Gary F. Marcus
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John Cage was one of the great experimentalists of the twentieth century. John Cage was an American composer, music theorist, writer, and artist. He also created 4'33" in 1952 with the idea being to play repeated notes with no change in rhythm or tempo for five minutes, just to see how people would react. His idea was that people would get bored but everyone would stand up at the end and applaud him for his efforts.

However, everyone just sat there with their eyes closed in silence without moving a muscle. So John Cage decided not to bother writing the score for his piece again.

Source: Guitar Zero: The New Musician And The Science Of Learning

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  1. Repetition sometimes works in poetry, but rarely in prose. The musical provocateur John Cage once wrote a lecture in which a single page was repeated fourteen times, with the refrain "If anybody is sleep let him go to sleep" (Cage, 1961). Midway through, the artist...

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