When the Goonies first discover the treasure map they ask Mouth (the only member of the group fluent in Spanish) to translate the Spanish writing on the map to English so they can all understand it. He does, reading aloud the instructions on how to locate the treasure. What he reads is in common rhyming stanzas. Although it is unlikely that Mouth (someone who, the movie has previously shown, is prone to make translation mistakes even under non-poetic, non-rhyming circumstances) would be able to translate the text into English and spontaneously maintain its rhyme, it is not impossible. Many talented translators of rhyming non-English poetry have managed to maintain the rhyming even after the poetry was translated into English; one famous twentieth-century example is Richard Wilbur's acclaimed work as a translator of the seventeenth century comedies by the French playwright Molière, which still rhyme and maintain their cleverness in Wilbur's translations.