“Bounce, rhyme, and a wink—five lines built for punch.”
| Title | Author | Type of Poem |
|---|---|---|
| Book Of Nonsense Limerick 39. | Edward Lear | Limerick |
| Book Of Nonsense Limerick 71. | Edward Lear | Limerick |
| Book Of Nonsense Limerick 87. | Edward Lear | Limerick |
| Brutal Mary. | Edwin C. Ranck | Limerick |
| Cecily Parsley | Helen Beatrix Potter | Limerick |
| Company Manners | James Whitcomb Riley | Limerick |
| Dance A Ba | Walter Crane | Limerick |
| Dinah. | Richard Hunter | Limerick |
| Finland | Robert von Ranke Graves | Limerick |
| he Scorpion | Hilaire Belloc | Limerick |
A limerick is a five-line poem known for its jaunty rhythm, playful tone, and a punchline twist. It’s built for humor—often sly, sometimes downright silly.
Common characteristics of limericks:
AABBA—the first, second, and fifth lines rhyme; the shorter third and fourth lines rhyme with each other.
The best limericks land like a good toast: quick, musical, and clinched by a memorable last line.