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Learicks -- improve on Lear
The "newly discovered Lear poems" thread reminded me of a contest the Washington Post once ran asking for limericks that start with two lines of a Lear limerick. I think the premise is that Lear started his limericks well but didn't finish them well, throwing away his L5 to basically repeat L1. Here are a few that I wrote for that contest. They're sort of fun to write, so I thought maybe some of you would like to give it a whirl.
There was an Old Person of Chili Whose conduct was painful and silly; For dinner she’d dine On a baked porcupine, Though it left her esophagus quilly. * There was a Young Lady whose nose Was so long that it reached to her toes; When Pinnochio walked by, He said, "What's the lie I must tell if I want one of those?" * There was a Young Girl of Majorca Whose aunt was a very fast walker; But the girl would insist They instead dance the twist, For the girl was a very fast torquer. * There was an Old Person of Cadiz Who was always polite to the ladies, And although he was old, His conquests, all told, Numerically topped Warren Beatty’s. * There was an Old Person of Rheims, Who was troubled with horrible dreams; But his wife said, "I'm glad! I’m aware that sounds bad, But his snores are far worse than his screams." * There was a Young Lady of Norway, Who casually sat on a doorway; When three men mistook her For a common street hooker, They asked, “What’s the price of a four-way?” *** And for many other examples by others, here are the limericks/learicks that the Washington Post chose to publish. (Some of you may be stopped by the paywall). |
Those are lovely, Roger. I especially like torquer for talker.
OK, here's one more: There was an old man with a beard, Who said: It is just as I feared. My follicle prowess Won’t impress a mouse. That’s the rhyme that he had engineered. John |
Roger, these are great! I spent way too much time writing limericks based on popular songs a couple of weeks ago for the Washington Post’s Style Invitational, so I’ll try not to get too sucked into this… But, here’s a first attempt.
There was an Old Person whose habits, Induced him to feed upon rabbits. Said he, “Don’t say ‘yuck’; I need feet for the luck — And what monster would then waste the drab bits?” |
There was an Old Person of Hurst,
Who drank when he was not athirst From a hectoring bottle That likely as not’ll Soon cause his poor bladder to burst. |
Good ones, Coleman.
I also entered some song limericks. Let's hope we see our names next week when the results come out, but it was fun either way. |
A girl with a huge diamond neckless,
Was known to be terribly reckless. It fell down a drain At a hotel in Spain. She just laughed at its loss, which was feckless. |
Roger, thanks for starting this thread. I am stopped by the payroll, but I've read everything here, so I shall try.
There was on Old Man of the West, Who never could get any rest; So they knocked him spark out With a huge Brussels sprout They'd wrapped up in his own thermal vest. - - - There is a Young Lady whose nose Continually prospers and grows. It grew so very long, She attracted the Dong: He presented a fragrant red rose. 🌹 |
Fliss, how lovely to see the actual rose in question! These are all a lot of fun.
John |
Nice ones, Jayne and Fliss! Roger, yes, I hope to see both our names next week. Did you submit anything for tomorrow’s song parody? I sent in a few for it; we’ll see what happens tomorrow.
Also, I’ve written more limericks… There was a Young Lady of Turkey, Who wept when the weather was murky. But so far this summer Sun’s also a bummer: When melting, it’s hard to feel perky. *** There was a Young Lady of Poole, Whose soup was excessively cool. She said, “I’ll just make it A new protein shake!” It Now sells double-priced as “Ab Fuel.” *** There was an Old Man of Nepaul, From his horse had a terrible fall. He declared at a trot, “Um, ‘Round here we say ‘autumn,’ But, yes, it’s been simply banal.” |
There was a Young Lady of Ryde
Whose shoe-strings were seldom untied; But the day she went joggin’ And fell on her noggin, Her death was pronounced ‘shoe-icide.’ ** There was a Young Lady of Parma Whose conduct grew calmer and calmer; So calm, so sedate, That it spawned a debate About whether to wake or embalm her. ** There was an Old Man in a boat, Who said, 'I'm afloat, I'm afloat!' Then ironically he Was engulfed by the sea, Never to live down that quote. |
There was an Old Man with a beard,
Who said, “It is just as I feared ! — My detractors still use Bald-faced liar with Cruz, Though the rim of my mug’s disappeared.” |
There was an Old Man with a beard,
Who said, “It is just as I feared ! — The world thinks I'm mad, And even my dad Believes I should be Britney Speared." |
There was an Old Person of Cadiz
Who was always polite to all ladies; Then one sneered, “Su acento Es—sin argumento— Atroz.” He consigned her to Hades. |
There was an Old Man of Coblenz,
The length of whose legs was immense; "I vish dat I had a Much, much taller ladder," Said his tailor, "to fit you fer pents." |
There was an Old Person of Cromer
Who stood on one leg to read Homer; Then she said, “Where’s the ball That gets hit past the wall? The title must be a misnomer." |
Roger, that last one is splendid.
John |
There was an Old Man on a hill,
Who seldom, if ever, stood still; So they put him to sleep On the back of a sheep With the help of a powerful pill. - - - There was a Young Person of Smyrna, Whose Grandmother threatened to burn her; But she said, 'Goodness' sake!', As she brandished a snake, And Gran fled, for the snake was much sterner. |
There was an Old Man of Kamschatka
Who possessed a remarkable fat cur. On Christmas it ate All the goose on its plate, On Hanukkah all of the latke. ** There was an Old Man with a flute, A sarpint ran into his boot; He asked the Pied Piper To cast out the viper But the Piper did not give a toot. |
There was an Old Person of Spain
Who hated all trouble and pain; His answer? Sangría. “It's the best panacea," He paused between sips to explain. |
One more before bed (it's coming up to 1am here) :-)
There was an Old Man with a gong Who bumped at it all the day long; So they took it away, But the very next day He burst into deafening plainsong. |
Fliss, your latest offering reminds me a bit of this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VjA6bA1qtfQ Cheers, John |
Well, that's ideal, John; thank you <(:-)
Couple more: There was an Old Man in a tree, Who was horribly bored by a bee; So they gave it some bells, To play sweet bagatelles, And the Man became buzzy with glee. - - - There was a young Lady of Dorking, Who bought a large bonnet for walking; But a gust of air blew And with shrieks up she flew As some well-to-do waxwings came florking. - - - I'm getting worse, aren't I? <(:-) |
[double post]
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It's fun, isn't it? Lear gives us a head start with two lines, and we just have to do three.
I also did the man who was bored by the bee: There was an Old Man in a tree Who was horribly bored by a Bee; You could hear the man moan, “Oh that Bee’s such a drone! And he bumbles his dull repartee!” |
There was a Young Lady of Clare
Who was sadly pursued by a bear; As she ran, she said, "Blame me For copying Amy Winehouse's beehive-shaped hair!" ** There was an Old Man of the Wrekin Whose shoes made a horrible creaking. They were decent for walking But hampered his stalking And thoroughly bollixed his sneaking. |
Yes, Roger; nice to have a head start with a poem :-)
Two before bed: There was an Old Man of the West, Who wore a pale plum-coloured vest; When they said, 'You look odd!' He just smiled with a nod And proceeded to eat it with zest. - - - There was a Young Lady whose eyes, Were unique as to colour and size, Being the shade of fine rain And as big as her brain So she worked for the government spies. |
There was a Young Lady whose bonnet,
Came untied when the birds sate upon it. An enthused rooster, which cock Had watched Alfred Hitchock, Cried, “Hey, don’t just sit there, doggone it!” |
Trying one with the newly discovered limerick…
There was an old man on a bicycle Whose nose was adorned with an icicle. Seems he’d misheard a tot Who’d declared, “Frozen’s not The best thing in the world since the tricycle.” |
There was an Old Person of China,
Whose daughters were Jiska and Dinah... Damn it, falsehoods like these Disrespect the Chinese! Doubly so, if they have a vagina! |
Brilliant, Julie :-)
Two more: There was an Old Man of Moldavia, Who had the most curious behaviour; He got up on his roof And he shouted, 'Woof, woof! 'I am Lord Dog, your furious Saviour!' - - - There was an Old Man of Madras, Who rode on a cream-coloured ass; But it gave such a cough That the Old Man fell off And was trampled right there in the grass. |
There was an old man at a Station,
Who made a promiscuous oration; Now there's not just Faux News, But Faux Weather, to choose For such foaming-mouthed disinformation. |
:)
My mother encourages me in the next attempt: There was an Old Person of Chili. Whose conduct was painful and silly; He struck a long match Rather close to some thatch, Setting fire to the roof of one Willy. |
There was an Old Person of Philae
Whose conduct was scroobius and wily; Folks asked, “What is ‘scroobius’? Its meaning is dubious.” “Why ask if you know?” he said drily. ** There was an Old Man with a nose Who said, 'If you choose to suppose I pilfered this snoot off A reindeer named Rudolph, You won’t be surprised that it glows.” ** There was a Young Lady of Troy Whom several large flies did annoy; "They're coming, of course, From that filthy old horse, A gift from that jilted Greek boy." ** There was an Old Person of Ems Who casually fell in the Thames, Which is fitting and normal. One must, though, go formal When dropping in at the PM's. |
I had to try...
There was an Old Man with a beard, Who said, 'It is just as I feared!– When I drink my pea soup I'm quite cloaked in green gloop And my wife says, "Good God, you look weird!"' - - - There was a Young Lady of Ryde, Whose shoe-strings were seldom untied; Fastening left shoe and right In a knot so damned tight She could spread her legs just one inch wide. |
There was an Old Man in a pew,
Whose waistcoat was spotted with blue; UV’ed DNA Fluoresces that way, So the cops brought him in, PDQ. |
There was an Old Man with a nose,
Who said, "If you choose to suppose, That I use it to smell, You are plenty wrong, gal. For the truth is, I use it to pose." |
Fliss, do "smell" and "gal" rhyme in your neck of the woods? They don't in mine. Any number of tweaks possible, such as
There was an Old Man with a nose, Who said, "If you choose to suppose That I use it to smell, You have not chosen well For the truth is, I use it to pose." I like your fifth line, but if you want to be raunchier in the great limerick tradition, how about "For I use it to pick and to pose"? |
There was an Old Man of Kilkenny,
Who never had more than a penny. He said, “There’s no shortage Of coins, per reportage — But I sure as hell can’t find any.” |
I can't read and I can't write, but that don't really ma'err
because I comes from Gloucestershire and I can drive a trac'err. Yes, Roger; here in Glos, 'gal' = 'gell'. There was an Old Man with a nose, Who said, "If you choose to suppose, It's my handsomest thing, Well, you're wrong. Let us sing Of my fifty-foot hardwearing hose!" Fliss shrieks and rushes out of her own poem. |
Hose? Is there some problem with the man's trousers?
John |
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