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Here's a highly rhymeable upstate-NY & Penn. place-name: EE-ree. Erie County NY lies at the easternmost reach of Lake Erie and contains Buffalo, NY, which is about 100 miles northeast of the city of Erie, Pa... and of course there's the Erie Canal, which wends its way from Buffalo all the way across the state to Albany. As a girl visiting my grandparents near Rochester I enjoyed watching rivercraft move through the complex machinery of the locks. | ||
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Proofreadah, though you are a Brainiac I’d no inkling you were a Mainiac The New England ay-ah I he-ah blows fay-ah Tho wintahs, it can be a Painiac eh? | |||
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Johnny Horton In 1814 we took a little trip Along with Colonel Jackson down the mighty Mississip. We took a little bacon and we took a little beans And we caught the bloody British in the town of New Orleans. [Chorus:] We fired our guns and the British kept a'comin. There wasn't nigh as many as there was a while ago. We fired once more and they began to runnin' on Down the Mississippi to the Gulf of Mexico. We looked down the river and we see'd the British come. And there must have been a hundred of'em beatin' on the drum. They stepped so high and they made the bugles ring. We stood by our cotton bales and didn't say a thing. [Chorus] Old Hickory said we could take 'em by surprise If we didn't fire our muskets 'til we looked 'em in the eye We held our fire 'til we see'd their faces well. Then we opened up with squirrel guns and really gave 'em ... well [Chorus] Yeah, they ran through the briars and they ran through the brambles And they ran through the bushes where a rabbit couldn't go. They ran so fast that the hounds couldn't catch 'em Down the Mississippi to the Gulf of Mexico.** We fired our cannon 'til the barrel melted down. So we grabbed an alligator and we fought another round. We filled his head with cannon balls, and powdered his behind And when we touched the powder off, the gator lost his mind. [Chorus] Yeah, they ran through the briars and they ran through the brambles And they ran through the bushes where a rabbit couldn't go. They ran so fast that the hounds couldn't catch 'em Down the Mississippi to the Gulf of Mexico | |||
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<Proofreader> |
In ME, U will nevah C me Or NH, or MA, or VT, CT, I’ll pass by Since I'm just 4 RI Where U C C-shells sold by the C. You didn't answer: Is Air-ee permissible? | ||
<Proofreader> |
Took a ride on the Erie Canal With a shower-shy woman named Sal. A mile short of the locks She was down to her socks, But unscrewed since her odor was mal. | ||
<Proofreader> |
Young Miss Smith, a sous chef from New York, Is expecting a gift from the stork. And her family way Is caused, she will say, By the juice from one serving of pork. | ||
<Proofreader> |
THE CONTINUING SAGE OF JEB RAWLTAR DURING THE WAR OF 1812 Once upon a midnight dreary Poor Jeb Rawltar wandered weary On the road that led to Erie On a bum so saddle-sore Rode his horse out west of Boston Took a right, became a loston, Learned that horse-back was a most on- Comfortable way to war. Was to fight in Loo-siana As the British top banana But in Erie knew he canna Overcome this fatal flaw. So he sought a lighted tavern for a beer, he’d like to have’n Then to find a woman’s cavern Melding with her mucky maw. Down in N.O. men were fighting Shotting, stabbing, kicking, biting While Jeb in Erie was delighting At the prize that he had laid. Heard his buds in red were beaten Left New Orleans in defeat’n Railed at Rawltar for deceit’n That’s the price that Rawltar paid. So Jeb Rawltar took the blame for The last battle of the great war All because he had an ass sore And he screwed his woman pal Sad, Jeb Rawltar left for Britain, Making mew sounds like a kitten, Knowing he was in the shit’n Just for riding Erie’s canal. | ||
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Proof, in absence of any rulebook other than my own, I hairby rule Ai-ree a 2nd-rate pronunciation, as those of us raised in, around, or within even a few hundred miles of the locale speak nasty oh-so-nasal "Inland Northern American English" (shared with Chicago and Detroit). WEE say EE REE. As always, a close rhyme, when balanced by extra-cool extracurricular features such as often proferred by the elite here at Wordcraft stands as good a chance as another at winning. | |||
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CALLING ALL LIMERICKERS Gosh, I thought my in-box would be stuffed by now! You mean you folks have something else to do this weekend? Awaiting your private messages with bated breath.... | |||
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Member |
[QUOTE]Originally posted by jerry thomas: Johnny Horton In 1814 we took a little trip... Thanks for the memory, Jerry! Hadn't "heard" that one in years! | |||
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Member |
Well, so far we've got 3 limericks, 2 from Bob & 1 from Richard... I don’t know ‘bout this Limerick Game The response so far’s pretty tame The folks are ho-hum Their reaction humdrum It’s eerie—is Erie to blame? | |||
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Member |
It seems that the Yanks they are leery Of writing a rhyme about Erie. The word does though vary -- Some folks call it Erie Is this why there's rather a query? Richard English | |||
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<Proofreader> |
Our eyes are all getting bleary From looking for rhymes about Erie. It's not like Poughkeepsie Which can rhyme with "Go flip, see," So we're weary and teary, not cheery. | ||
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Concocting a rhyme about Eerie’s Not easy the way that it varies. I had to contrive it And sent Bethree5 it Along with a few Hail Marys. | |||
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I haven't submitted a poem - I've tried, but I can't seem to flow 'em. I fully admit There are words that would fit, The problem is that I don't know 'em. ------------------------ If your rhubarb is forwards, bend it backwards. | |||
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Member |
Composing the limericks for Erie, I thought we would find ourselves weary Because we’re such nerds, Eschewing all words Which rhyme easy: of these we are leary Yet now it's becoming quite cleary The problem's with bleary old Erie. It snows or it's cloudy The people are dowdy When you think on't you lose all your cheery. So I guess I will soon call it quits Tho I've only got five limericks, it's no fun pulling teeth: Sat. night I'll bequeath The next place-name to one that shows wits. | |||
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<Proofreader> |
Stanley, Here's what you have to do. First you find a ridiculous word Then another that's just as absurd String another in line See? You're doing just fine 'Fore you know it, a lim has occurred. | ||
<Proofreader> |
A defendant on trial in Erie Whose alibi left the judge leery, Heard: "Your story's absurd; I do not trust your word. Be glad you declined trial by jeery." | ||
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That defendant subsequently hears As the day of his trial date nears In the city of Erie They can't find a jury For he's peerless and thus has no peers. | |||
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Member |
New Zealanders clearly have said That their nation is known as NZ. This odd aberration In pronunciation Shows where language freedom has led. | |||
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<Proofreader> |
I am getting a little bit weary And feeling a bit au contraire. Will there soon be a vote On the limericks we wrote? Or will banks foreclose limerick game Erie? | ||
Member |
Stanley is drunk, but he's trying To find a rhyme, such as "implying". The reality is That he's totally pissed, So he's sorry he can't be complying. ------------------------ If your rhubarb is forwards, bend it backwards. | |||
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Member |
I need to stop doing that. ------------------------ If your rhubarb is forwards, bend it backwards. | |||
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It could be that they’re so enthrallin’ That bethree can’t pick, and she’s stallin’ On choosin’ an Erie, Or else they’re so dreary That into a stupor she’s fallen. ................***.................. Like cats in the night we were callin’, Like babes needin’ food we were squallin’. Oh, bethree, sweet dearie, Your silence is eerie, I hope nothing bad has befallen. | |||
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Junior Member |
As has already been said, I'm from the isles of NZ. But what mystifies me is, how can it be N-Zee is more commonly read | |||
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Member |
Well I'm not from the isles of N-Zee I'm from England, well lucky old me But it has to be said That here we'd say N-Zed It's the US where they fail to agree. "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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<Proofreader> |
In the States, we pronounce it N-Zee That's something on which we agree You can call it N-Zed But I'll leave it unsaid, That our English is betterer than thee. | ||
Member |
Said a person from Sault Ste Marie "I'm just glad I'm not from NZ. For I might say N-Zed But my face would turn red And people would criticize me." | |||
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Proofreader's looking forlorn It's obvious now how he's torn Between NZee and NZed He feels he's been led To compare his English to yourn. | |||
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<Proofreader> |
PLEASE DO NOT READ THE FOLLOWING LIMERICK UNLESS YOU ARE A DEGENERATE PERVERT! My wife and I just can’t agree On a name for my thing (where I pee) She says, “It’s not a prick; It’s too small for a dick. That's a wee wee-wee waving at me.” Fancy meeting YOU here. | ||
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Now I'm not trying here to be leery But I'll raise, if I may, one small query. These sexual issues Of erectile tissues -- What have they to do with Lake Erie? Richard English | |||
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<Proofreader> |
OK, we've found the first one. | ||
Member |
Well, Stella, you got it right both ways. First something bad happened-- basically a bad bout of my #1 son's autoimmune disease, unfortunately colliding with Thanksgiving-- he's doing better & all the stress put me in a stupor for sure!! (Feel free if I fall asleep at the switch again, anybody, to PM me. I generally eyeball the daily email.) Meanwhile you patient Wordcraft Limerickers, like Ole Man River, jes keep rollin out those limericks. Impressive! I especially love Proofreader & Richard's most recent exchange. Here were the entries PM'd, plus an extra from me (not counted): ERIE BOBHALE I was worn out and weary and bleary As I entered the outskirts of Erie, Though not through the pace Of my race to the place But my lunch which was rather too beery. There's a brothel that's downtown in Erie, Where the women, though willing and cheery, Took one look at me And said, "There's a fee, That's double the normal charge dearie!" RICHARD ENGLISH I was working away down in Erie. I was footloose and feeling most cheery. My young lady client I found was "compliant" So much that I'm feeling quite weary! JERRY THOMAS Once upon a midnight Erie People, feeling sad and weary, Had some discourse with a craven Whom they aptly called The Raven. Tale rejected -- far too dreary. STELLA I hear if you’re ever near Erie The driving is dreadfully dreary Cos, queerly, great fat Flying beetles will Splat! On your windscreen and make it all smeary. ----------------------- BETHREE5 (Not for Contest) Upstaters know better, and feary A winter trek anywhere neary The county of Erie Tho we claim when beery We got there first in ’95* (like Peary) *The Buffalonian (buffalonian.com/history): 38” of snow fell in 24 hrs Dec 9/10 1995 ------------------------------------------ The entries are all clever & most parse & some are even dirty, too! Congratulations to all. I choose Stella's because of this goofy couplet in the center, ya gotta love it: Cos, queerly, great fat Flying beetles will Splat! Apologies all for spacing out for so long. Will try not to do that again. | |||
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Oh bethree, I really hope your son is better. You’re amazing the way you keep up your good humour - it must have been a very stressful time for you all. Thanks for picking my limerick. I’m proud to have won this round as I think the others were very deserving, particularly on smut factor. I know it’s getting busy for everyone. Do you all want another competition or leave it till after Christmas? | |||
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<Proofreader> |
OK, I know mine were bad, but to totally ignore me? I guess somoething went wrong with my Morse code equipment when I sent mine to Bethree so I'm putting them in here, just so you can see what you missed. I’m to marry sweet Mary McCrary From an upstate New York town named Erie. So for now my worst job Is consoling poor Bob And the guys who all know I’m a fairy. ‘Twas a spooky cold night, dark and dreary In the upstate canal town of Erie. Ghosts and goblins about Made the kids laugh and shout On a Halloween night -- Oh, so scary! There’s an eerie old aerie in Erie With a project peculiar by Peary. It’s a door with no stairs To catch guests unawares So they’ll slide out of sight on their reary. Once a guest at the aerie in Erie For a rear-downward ride didn’t care. He Had a shyster re-hash His court case for cold cash. Poor Peary paid off the unwary. So Peary, perturbed, in his aerie Asked the Feds for a bail out in Erie They said, “Want a million?” He satd, “How’s a billion.” “Take a bunch.” Which made Peary quite cheery. | ||
Member |
Oh, Proofreader, a thousand apologies!! I don't know what's going on (& never will as I'm hopelessly low-tech) but for some strange reason neither of your PM's came through on my email. I think this happened once before, but I could have avoided the omission by double-checking the PM files before finishing the poast. I can't believe after over a year on this forum I still can't use the PM feature consistently. Chalk it up to, well, sheer incompetence plus a dash of nincompoopitude. Yes, if I have acquired a rep of any sort in my time at Wordcraft, >sigh<, that pretty much sums it up. For the record, dear Proof-"Ole Man River" You're not by a long shot chopped liver Your limericks keep roll- in' along as a whole Epic song in jest you do deliver. | |||
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<Proofreader> |
Once upon a midnight dreary While I pondered, weak and weary, Trying to compose a rhyme For a limerick contest (Erie) I sat in my attic aerie Making up a rhyming crime. How’d I know Bethree would cross it Off her list, in basket toss it Like a reeking piece of slime. Did my limericks give her pause? It May be reference to the closset Where the guy spent too much time. Now I’m down to rhyming “moss.” It Means I end this line with “floss.” It Also ends this line with “mime.” Have a catnip toy, cat paws it; Listening to wife’s nightly snores, it Makes the end here less than prime. I don’t blame Bethree but Mista Bill Gates and his Windows Vista-- Cursed piece of crap I use. I would take his glasses, twista Knot so his nose gets a blista -- Elder billionaire abuse. | ||
<Proofreader> |
Bethree, Sent PM this AM. Any sign of it? I may have to change my semaphore system. | ||
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Quoth the person from Sault Ste Marie, "I hope you will listen to me: Research so far yields (From W. C. Fields) Get away, kid. You're bothering me." | |||
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Proof, gotcher PM, dja get mine? Came into my ebox just fine I'm told it's a virus Sil Valley won't hirus For system repair I use twine... | |||
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Member |
Jerry, either that's over my head Or without some more caf I'm half-dead The locks at S S Marie Outrank the Canal Erie But wherefore the old comic's 'drop dead'? | |||
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<Proofreader> |
If a PM you sent on ro me It is one I have failed to see I have no idear When it may appear Not BC, BCE, or AD | ||
Member |
When judging my output, B3, There's no secret between you and me. Don't ask "wherefore" or "whence." It's utter nonsense. That's the theme of my Limericks, you see. | |||
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<Proofreader> |
A rearie, a beast quite contrary Escaped from his home on the prairie And was forced off a cliff. Said his keeper, named Biff: "It's a long way to tip a rearie." I won't take credit for this. I heard something similar a long time ago. | ||