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Home::Writing
The Lure Of The Limerick
Author : Jae Taylor
No-one knows for certain how the name of an Irish Mid-Western city came to be associated with the short, irreverent, often bawdy verses of the limerick.
Some people believe that it came from the school of poets who lived in Croom, Co. Limerick in the nineteenth century; their specialisation was short satiric verses. The genre became a fixture in Victorian times, due in no small part to the author of nonsense verse, Edward Lear.
In the history of Irish literature the town of Croom, in Co. Limerick, is celebrated as the meeting place of the 18th century Fili na Maighe, the Gaelic poets of the Maigue. This was the original birth place of ‘the Limerick’. The Maigue poets, writing in their native Irish, produced a great body of poetry, and the custom was widely adopted in other locations in Limerick City and County. Soon the neighbouring Counties of Cork, Clare and Tipperary began to pen the satirical verse.
Two anthologies on the subject, published this century, list 42 poets and Irish scholars (part-time poets) of County Limerick who were known to have composed Limericks. The themes of these early works included love-poems, drinking songs, poems on national affairs, and satires on public figures.
Two of the first, and most famous, exponents of the Limerick poem were poet and publican Sean O’ Tuama (1706-’75), and his friend Andrias MacCriath (1710-’93). O’ Tuama and MacCraith grew up together in Kilmallock, Co. Limerick and were educated in one of the many hedge schools of the time, with a traditional education incorporating Latin and Greek studies.
O’ Tuama later became a publican and word of his hospitality grew, as did the popularity of the Limerick. Poets in North Cork, Clare and Tipperary began to pen the verses. O’ Tuama and his friend fell out and as a result scathing Limerick verses were written by them to castigate the other. O’ Tuama wrote:
"I sell the best Brandy and Sherry
To make all my customers merry,
But at times their finances
Run short as it chances,
And then I feel very sad, very".
To which MacCraith replied……..
"O’Tuama! You boast yourself handy,
At selling good ale and bright Brandy
But the fact is your liquor
Makes everyone sicker,
I tell you this I your good friend, Andy".
About The Author
Jae Taylor
http://Limerick.com" target=new>Limerick.com is a popular portal website for Limerick City in Ireland. It covers all aspects of Limerick including a comprehensive resource section on Limerick Poems. You can visit the site here:
http://www.limerick.com/limericks/limericks.html" target=new>http://www.limerick.com/limericks/limericks.html
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The Lure Of The Limerick No-one knows for certain how the name of an Irish Mid-Western city came to be associated with the short, irreverent, often bawdy verses of the limerick. Some people believe that it came from the school of poets who lived in Croom, Co. ...SILLINESS: The Lure Of The Limerick, got a good one to share? Posted by: LuxFrog. Sometimes Rescue Stinks! Ann was very brave; she came up behind it with a cat carrier and managed to lure it in. It then tried to savage her through the door of the crate, bless it! Its neck was all wet and damp from where the cat had carried it in their mouth, ... The Lure Of The Limerick No-one knows for certain how the name of an Irish Mid-Western city came to be associated with the short, irreverent, often bawdy verses of the lim. THE LIMERICK MARKET To lure the jaded eye to stop and stare. And jams and pies and home baked bread And the aroma of pastries to wake the dead, And beads and books and coats and chocs And tools and mats and well-oiled locks, ... Firefox AK ... and frequent collaborator Rasmus “Tgr Lou” Kellerman on this song; a song which is as club-friendly a track as it’s possible to hear, yet maintains a somewhat tortured resonance without compromising on its dancefloor-darling lure. ... Selecting The Right Lure For Catching Crappies Well the limerick thing that seems dependable is, if they must ever caught a fish on a certain lure, that's the "Lure of Choice","the most superbly crappie lure". And, if they had a assets c incriminating evidence lifetime, ... From Letterkenny to Dublin by Way of Havana and Limerick We were heading off the next day to a cottage on the Isle of Doagh and I was drawn more by the lure of sea, sheep, and rocks than with research and revolutionaries. I was back in Dublin about a week later and spent an afternoon at the ... Roller coaster accident ... who despises his father, fight their lure to limerick another, but done they fall in love — with extremely dire consequences. ives doesn’t quite delve into beneath his character’s concrete bluster, and loren, while well-thought-of, ... Limerick This limerick was a favourite of a reverend. It's to be feared that he did not get the pun in the last line... Lots of limericks in The Lure of the Limerick, by William Stuart Baring-Gould. It goes in and out of print, but it might be ...
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