Saturday, 13 August 2011

There was an old man from Blackpool…

By Ashley Lister

My father was a music hall comedian. I’m not saying his material was bad but, on the night variety died, his act was held for questioning.

Actually, that’s unfair.

He was very good at making people laugh. I remember his last words to me. “Don’t turn the machine off. Please. Please, for the love of God. I’m sure I’ll recover. I don’t want to die.” How we all chuckled.

But I’m not sure if it’s because of father’s influence that I’ve developed my lifelong passion for humour.

“Do I make you laugh?” I asked my wife.

“Not when you’ve got your clothes on,” she replied.

I think that’s what she said. It’s difficult to tell what someone’s saying when they’ve always got a pie in their mouth. Not that I’m saying my wife’s fat, but her patronus is a cake. (A mysognistic northern joke there for all the Harry Potter fans reading this. Talk about aiming at a niche market).

Humour is such a personal thing that it’s probably encoded in our DNA. Freud talked about humour in terms of the tendentious and the innocent, although why we listen to a German talking about humour is a mystery to me. It’s like listening to a Frenchman talk about bravery, or a Canadian sing about irony, or a Spaniard talk about compassion for animals… (Have I offended enough stereotypes yet with this postmodern humour?)

In poetry the form most commonly associated with humour is the limerick. And, whilst Shaun was singing the praises of Edward Lear at the start of this week, I have to admit I find him annoying. (Lear not Shaun. I think Shaun is perfectly lovely). Too often Lear’s final rhymes merely reiterate the sentiment expressed in the opening line. Here’s an example:

There was an Old Man of the Wrekin
Whose shoes made a horrible creaking
But they said, 'Tell us whether,
Your shoes are of leather,
Or of what, you Old Man of the Wrekin?'

To me, the final line in this Lear limerick seems like a weak conclusion to a potentially stylish verse. Lear could have had the final rhyme of squeakin’, leakin’, Peking or a myriad other alternative rhymes that would be superior to the reiteration of the Old Man of Wrekin.

However, rather than write a limerick to conclude this post, I’d like to see regular readers contributing limericks in the comments box below. For those who are unsure how to start, I’d suggest you begin with the words:

There was an old man from Blackpool…

11 comments:

  1. Is that the laughing clown from the Pleasure Beach? It disturbs me, with it's sinister laughing for no reason.

    Oh ok I'll give one a go.

    There was an old man from Blackpool,
    who thought he'd be terribly cool,
    he bought a new hoody
    for him and his buddy
    now the police are terribly cruel


    Its awful but it's not easy this writing limericks lark is it?

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  2. Clive wrote one too and asked me to post it

    There was an old man from blackpool
    Who attended the local word pool
    His book were all rude
    As Ashley's no prude
    And features a stud called Raoul

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  4. Ash, Dave and I were giggling our socks off at your post - Les Dawson/Bob Monkhouse would be so proud ;)

    We have both had a pop at this. Here is Dave's limerick:

    There was an old man from Blackpool
    Whose mule could stand on a stool
    It soon came to pass
    That his mule was an ass
    Who sent hate mail to Jimmy Saville's estate.

    And mine:

    There was an old man from Blackpool
    Spent his formative years at a church school
    Thought himself quite unharmed
    Though he's frequent alarmed
    By the thought of a priest spitting gruel.

    It's a shame the next event is family friendly isn't it? :)

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  5. There was an old man from Blackpool
    That nobody thought to be a fool
    He proved them all wrong
    It's already a song
    How all he could do was to drool

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  6. I am genuinely loving these. Thank you for completing this blog post.

    Below is my attempt...

    There was an old man from Blackpool
    Who was blessed with an enormous-

    NO. I'll try again.

    There was an old man from Blackpool
    Who blogged on weekends as a rule.
    He made sexist jokes
    Which were laughed at by blokes
    And he thought all the comments were cool!

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  7. Patronus a cake??? Oh, that's GENIUS! *Jealous!!*

    I'm so stealing this...

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  8. one from Jamie...

    There was an old man from Blackpool
    who enjoyed a swim at the pool
    He wore very tight trunks
    Showing every inch of his junk
    Thus exposing his family jewels

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  9. Another from Jamie:

    There was an old man from Blackpool
    When he danced in the nude his sack drooped
    His balls were so hairy
    and he admits, quite unfairly
    He tea-bagged your faced as you snoozed

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  10. Lindsay - Yes it's the creepy Pleasure Beach clown. I think it looks really sinister in that pic. I enjoyed your topical limerick. And please thank Clive for his contribution. Tell him to enrol on one of my classes in September :-)

    Lisa - Love the vulgarity of your limerick. And I'm thrilled that you got Jamie to do one. You were right. It is his forte.

    Vicky & Dave - The Jimmy Saville line is still creasing me. The imagery of a priest spitting gruel is likely to haunt my nightmares :-)

    Tommi - love it.

    Jo - feel free to steal the patronus line. That's how I got that line ;-)

    Jamie - I'm lost for words. Your limerick really is that good.

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