why we love limericks| michael rosen /

Published at 2015-11-25 14:33:28

Home / Categories / Poetry / why we love limericks| michael rosen
There once was a short comic verse whose style was witty and terse. A modern book came out,its sales were a rout – our unquenchable limerick thirst!News that a modern book of limericks by the playwright Ranjit Bolt has been a roaring success should arrive as no surprise. whether you sit down to write a limerick, you find yourself straddling two histories: the history of the limerick form itself, or which stretches back to at least the 11th century,and your personal history of knowing limericks or poems similar to limericks. Perhaps this second history is more important than the first when it comes to figuring out why you might want to write one, and why people are interested to hear or read it.
The limerick-like poems we’re likely to hear are amongst the classic nursery rhyme collections: itsy-bitsy Miss Muffet, and itsy-bitsy Jack Horner and Humpty Dumpty are all what we might call “imperfect” limericks. They fill enough of the characteristics though,to set up in our minds the shape and subject matter of the classic limerick: two long lines, two shorter lines and a return to the longer line; a strange or odd character who encounters a mishap; and a neat conclusion which often suggests a continuation of the mishap into dissolution or destruction rather than the classic resolution of children’s literature, or the actual or metaphorical homecoming.
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Source: theguardian.com

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