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  This week: A Laugh A LimerickEdited by: eyestar~*   More Newsletters By This Editor
  
 
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 1. About this Newsletter
 2. A Word from our Sponsor
 3. Letter from the Editor
 4. Editor's Picks
 5. A Word from Writing.Com
 6. Ask & Answer
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 |  Limericks 
 
  If you like to laugh or at least smile, Limericks may be just what you need to put a shine in your day! They are just FUN! 
 A limerick is simple, short poem with bawdy or nonsensical themes. It can be traced back to the 14th century in Ireland and England and may have originated in the Irish County of Limerick. It's origin is still debated. It was a form that was easy to write and remember in the times of oral traditions and they were often repeated in pubs and taverns by beggars and lower classes of the 15th -17th centuries. It might be said some of the poets were drunkards and so the poems were often bawdy or dirty for more cultured society.
  They made people laugh as they made fun of life. 
 Some experts think that the only true limericks are the obscene and bawdy ones and yet the form itself was made popular in its less crude form.
 
 
 "The limerick packs laughs anatomicalInto space that is quite economical.
 But the good ones I've seen
 So seldom are clean
 And the clean ones so seldom are comical."
 
 
  Edward Lear wrote 212 limericks, 72 of which were published in his Book Of Nonsense in 1846 after Punch magazine had published examples of his poems. It was he who gave popularity to the form. Many of them were popular with children. 
 
 "There was an old man with a beardwho said it is just as I feared
 two owls and a hen
 four larks and a wren
 have all built nests in my beard."
 Lear
 
 
 Limerick form was often used in nursery rhymes like Mother Goose Classics.
 
 
 "Hickory Dickory Dockthe mouse ran up the clock
 the clock struck one
 and down he did run
 Hickory dickory dock."
 
 
  Many writers like Kipling, Lewis Carrol, Ogden Nash, Alfred Lord Tennyson and of course, Shakespeare enjoyed writing limericks.  In 1564, Shakespeare used the form in King Lear and Othello. The Irish, with their love for poetry, made it their own. 
 
 "There was a young man from Killarneywho was chockfull of what is called blarney
 He would sit in a stile
 and tell lies by the mile
 would this dreadful young man of Killarney."
 ~Lear
 
 
  In 1880 the first use of the name Limerick referring to a short funny lyric was used in a New Brunswick newspaper that went with the tune of the parlour game, "Will (or Won't) you come up to Limerick?" 
 In 1898 the term 'Limerick" was officially termed in the New England Dictionary but the form is much older.
 
 
  The Format 
 This fun to read form has 5 lines with anapaestic meter (da da DUM)
 From historic samples: Lines 1, 2, 5 have 7-10 syllables and rhyme with one another
 Lines 3 and 4 have 5-7 syllables and rhyme with each other
 
 The most common tradition in syllabication though is 8, 8, 5, 5, 8  or 9, 9, 6 ,6, 9.
  
 
  Limericks also have a twist that may occur with the last line, serving to evoke more laughter. Many show instances of assonance, alliteration and even internal rhyme or a word play. Getting a laugh is the purpose!
  
 Many of the popular Limericks like Lear's  "Man from Killarney" above, did not necessarily use the punch line as the humour. They use a variant of the first line in the final line and the humour is in the tension between the meaning and its lack. This style creates a circle and adds to the nonsensical effect. Others have the twist line at the end.
 
 
 "There was a young lady named Harris,Whom nothing could ever embarrass,
 Till the bath salts one day
 In the tub where she lay
 Turned out to be plaster of Paris"
 
 Themes in Limericks are varied now as well, from the bawdy insult, to the scientific!
   
 
 "When astronomers shared Earth was lowlynot Heaven;s sweet center most holy
 Philosophers grumbled
 at theories crumbled
 As one said, "I wish someone had Ptolemy."
 
 I was amazed to find out that Leigh Mercer (1993-1977}, a word play and math expert, even created a parody of limerick using math equations--with the numbers!
  Check it out here!  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leigh_Mercer 
 
  Summary 
 So... 5 lines of fun
 AAbbA rhyme, 9,9,6,6,9 syllable counts
 a twist or nonsense image to make us laugh.
 Add some word play or wizardry to flow for fun.
 Simple, short, comment and play!
 
 "Have fun and laugh.
  
 
  A limerick should brighten your day
 Be witty, perceptive and gay.
 A neat little verse
 Will do nothing worse
 Than banish your bad blues away!
 
 Hey, why not add a line here:
  
 
 
 
 
 
  Cool sources I for these funny finds: 
 If you like a light bawdy Irish good time:
 http://st-patricks-day.com/irish-jokes/aboutireland_jokes_bawdy_irish_limericks-...
 
 http://www.webexhibits.org/poetry/explore_famous_limerick_examples.html
 http://pun.me/pages/funny-limericks.php
 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limerick_(poetry)
 
 History bits:
 http://www.thehypertexts.com/The%20Best%20Limericks%20of%20All%20Time.htm
 
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 |  Wow! Here is a Limerick Line up for Laughs!  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Contest:
 
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 Have an opinion on what you've read here today? Then send the Editor feedback! Find an item that you think would be perfect for showcasing here? Submit it for consideration in the newsletter!
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 |  Now, your challenge and I will join you as I am no comic. My little study showed me that maybe even I could have a little fun here.
 It is the Ides of March so you have til March 20 to write a limerick and send it in the response box.
 I will gift a Celtic Spirit Mb to the one that makes me laugh the most and get it highlighted in a newsletter too.
 
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