LIMERICKS
Limerick: A popular form in children’s verse, the limerick is often comical, nonsensical, and sometimes even lewd. Composed of five lines, the limerick adheres to a strict rhyme scheme and bouncy rhythm, making it easy to memorize. Typically, the first two lines rhyme with each other, the third and fourth rhyme together, and the fifth line either repeats the first line or rhymes with it. The stress pattern is 1.) - / - - / - - / 2.) - / - - / - - / 3.) - / - - / 4.) - / - - / 5.) - / - - / - - /
Apple to Apple Limerick
Green apple said to the red
I love that cute stem on your head
I wish it were mine
it would make me look fine
but mine is unsightly instead
Timidly Yellow spoke up
I'm a humble and petrified pup
Your colors are scary
I have to be wary
I'm afraid I'll end up in a cup
Red, who was fancy and proud
spoke unnecessarily loud
I know I'm the best
and he pumped out his breast
trying to prove he was aptly endowed
Then bi-color started to speak
in a tone neither haughty nor meek
pride, fear or browbeaten
We all will be eaten
there are none of us grossly unique
CINDERFELLA
In a quaint little fairy tale city
Lived a cinder-faced boy and his kitty
His stepfather beat him
his stepbrothers would cheat him
without even one ounce of pity
Every day was the same as the last
warned to finish his household chores fast
so he washed and he mopped
and never once stopped
till the hours of daylight had passed
After scrounging for something to eat
the boy and his cat would retreat
to his space in the attic
which was never traumatic
peeking down at the cobblestone street
One particular night as he spied
he saw danger and loudly he cried
"Get out of the way!"
as a single horse sleigh
and an old man did nearly collide
The old man was grateful indeed
that he'd escaped the horrific stampede
He said to the boy
I will gladly employ
anything that you think you might need
The little lad humble and kind
shook his head as he smiled and declined
I simply ask that
your gift go to my cat
that is of course, if you don't mind
Thus the cat and the old man conversed
and from that day the boy's life reversed
He was not reprimanded
No longer commanded
for his dad and stepbrothers were cursed
For a wizard was strolling one night
when a horse and sleigh gave him a fright
He was alerted in time
by a boy, face of grime
who thought more of his cat than his plight
So a moral comes out of this tale
that if hard work and kindness prevail
There may come a day
that your actions will pay
so upon your cat highly regale