Thursday, May 12, 2016

Limericks and Thanks to the New York Times

There was an old man in a tree,Whose whiskers were lovely to see;But the birds of the air,Pluck’d them perfectly bare,To make themselves nests on that tree.
That might sound a bit like Dr. Seuss, but it was written by the British painter and poet Edward Lear, who popularized limerick poems in his “Book of Nonsense” (1846).
Photo
A drawing of Edward Lear, right, with one of his characters.CreditUniversal History Archive/UIG, via Getty Images
He was born on this day in 1812, which is why today is Limerick Day.
The limerick’s name has been traced to France, where an 18th-century Irish Brigade was serving.
The men returned with a song, “Will You Come Up to Limerick?” — an Irish city and county. The chorus may have developed into what became the limerick form, some scholars say.
Lear had been hired to paint an aristocrat’s private menagerie and he came up with his poems to amuse the children in the household. He said he got the idea from an old nursery rhyme.
The five-line poems have an AABBA rhyme scheme, meaning the first, second, and last lines rhyme, as do the third and fourth lines.
The first and second lines introduce a character, activity or setting while the third and fourth lines are generally shorter to intensify the punch line.
The last line, of course, should be amusing.

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