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OK time to find a winner, hopefully someone who'll pick a much better town. Sorry about that - it was much harder than I thought it would be, not to rhyme of course just to get a plausible story out of them. Here are those stories: Regards Greg | ||
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Wow! There are a lot. This is what I call a vote! | |||
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Can we vote for our own? Richard English | |||
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On the odd occasion that I actually liked my own limerick the best I have abstained from voting, but nobody can tell who voted for what and if you honestly think yours is the best one, I can't see why not. Regards Greg | |||
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There's no reason why not, I agree. It's against my principles to vote for my own, but that's just I. If, however, you decide not to vote for your own, I have a suggestion. Vote for mine! | |||
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<Proofreader> |
Coober fled from his crime, yes, indeed, To the desert’s the place where he fleed. He consumed H2O Till at last he let go And that monument’s where Coober Pee’d. | ||
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I think I can declare this Poll now, as we rarely get more than 8 votes, and one of the ones with 1 vote would have to poll another 2 to tie with the current leader. What say the rest of you? Regards Greg | |||
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I say sock it to us, Greg. | |||
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Go for it! Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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Richard English has returned to the Limerick Game with a bang. He is the clear winner with 3 votes. The other limericks were written by: 1 - Richard 2 - Me 3 - Bethree 4 - Michael 5 - Kalleh 6 - Me 7 - Michael 8 - Proof 9 - Stella 10 - Arnie 11 - Stella 12 - Me Now comes the part I'm really not looking forward to - providing some commentary. 1 - Simple topical and rhythmically perfect. 2 - I was rapt with my "who agreed 'e" rhyme and had two cracks at trying to make it work but couldn't quite finish it off, but I'm glad somebody liked it. 3 - As good a story as we got I think. I voted for it right at the end, because it was only after writing this up that I decided which one I liked best. 4 - Not a bad story - very scary imagery. 5 - Great research on the town, but indeedy looked like it was there just for the sake of the rhyme. 6 - My second crack at the same rhyme, but the first one was better. 7 - This one lost me I'm afraid. One of 3 to bring in the new internet buzzword borrowed from German - uber to rhyme with Coober. 8 - Not bad, but there's nobody here like that, I reckon we've got more dole bludgers per capita than anywhere else in the world. 9 - I would have liked this one better if Big Edie was the L2 rhyme rather than unheedy. 10 - Another uber one. Almost as scary imagery as mains-wired balls. 11 - I quite liked this one, especially the triple alliteration in L2. 12 - My favourite of my own 3. Sorry but that's the best I can do. Those of you who prefer a more technical critique are welcome to add your comments. Take it away Richard. Regards Greg | |||
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I loved #2, Greg, and voted for it. I had to push the envelope to make the first line work, but once I did, it was a winner! [Edited for clarity]This message has been edited. Last edited by: Kalleh, | |||
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I'm not sure what's so scary, unless it's the thought of my grandmother having been a prostitute. I hasten to add that both ladies were in fact of the highest moral rectitude who would have been scandalised by such a suggestion. Anyway, neither of them ever went abroad. I claim poetic licence. Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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I on the other hand can fully understand the scary imagery in the mains-wired balls limerick. Perhaps this was why it garnered 'null points'. That's a shame, because I really liked this one, even if it was my own (and I can't say the same about limerick 7). Perhaps if I'd written L5 as seed-y, the punchline would have been more obvious? On the other hand, perhaps (as Kalleh said after the last game) I need to realise that my taste in limericks is just different than everyone else's - although associating this limerick with my taste in general is maybe not such a smart thing to do | |||
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I hate to admit that I did miss the seed-y pun, Michael. It was a good limerick too and I might've been swayed if I'd recognised it. Richard's was a worthy winner though, combining all the elements in a credible story. As usual I went through eliminating for niggling things to whittle the list down. In general, unless a limerick is brilliant in every other way, I probably won't be tempted to vote for near rhymes like "lead me" and "succeed me" but I know that they don't bother everyone (that's the beauty of the group vote). The use of made up names as rhymes came under fire a couple of rounds ago - actually, to me, if you're gonna use them it's preferable not to put them in the rhyming position if possible. BTW "unheedy" is a real word (if archaic). | |||
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Not your Grandma so much Arnie, but any Grandma still working in that capacity is scary imagery to me. As a consequence I was torn between voting for yours or Michael's scary imagery, until I did my write-up and went for another one completely. My apologies to both of you. Regards Greg | |||
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It was. | |||
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