As often as not, in fact far too often, you sit yourself before your computer screen, in complete command, hoping to finish that play you’ve been writing, or complete the book you are working on.
You write a line, and then nothing. You stare at the screen, but nothing happens. You procrastinate. Perhaps write another sentence, and then nothing. Procrastination is the evil that haunts so many of us.
They say you should only write what you know about. Perhaps I should write a book on Procrastination! Somehow, I don’t think I’d finish it.
During periods of procrastination, you might well search the net for inspiration. There are a few exceptional talents out there that seek to help you get over it.
One such is Ester Chilton, a talented children’s author who gives a substantial proportion of her time trying to encourage other writers or would-be writers.
She offers an editing service and runs courses on different genres of writing skills
And each week, she runs several writing challenges, including her “Laugh along with a Limerick” challenge. She suggests a prompt and asks her readers, including me, to write a limerick using her prompt.
The poor woman has no concept of procrastination. If it was me, I’d have given it all up years ago. Sure, it can be rewarding, but the work involved must in the end, become something of a chore, what with having to read a hundred or so limericks of varying quality and continuing to respond positively to each and every submission.
God bless her!
What follows is some of my offerings to her limerick challenge. Most of it is doggerel, but it’s quite good fun and keeps your mind ticking over!
They are not, my offerings, in any particular order, be it date or otherwise, but if I’m not writing my play then at least I’m writing something even if it’s doggerel
I somewhat doubt that I will be nominated for the Nobel limerick prize, although I may be in the running for the Nobel procrastination prize.
My recurring fear is that Ester might propose, as a prompt, the word procrastination. If she does that, then I’m finished. I’ll never complete it.
Prompt: sneez
The Seven crackhead dwarves
Dopey sold dope that he got
From the Doc
It’s what made Happy happy,
and let Sleepy sleep
It turned Bashful quite brazen
And Grumpy nice to meet
Sneezy stopped his sneezing
And as for snow white
The seven crackhead dwarves
Just couldn’t give a Shiite.
Prompt: Bread.
Bread and Roses sang the mill girls
As they left the factory gates
We march for Bread and Roses
And an increased hourly rate
Bread for our hunger
Roses for our souls
Wages for our labour
Flowers for our toil.
Prompt: spell
For a Dyslexic in Poland
It is the right place to be
For they abuse the alphabet
all the way from a to zee
Unpronounceable place names
Impossible to spell
Gdansk to Szczecin
The spellings are piekto
And piekto means hell
Prompt: rich
A kilted Scotsman called Jock
Had a wee fish and chip shop
His batter was crispy and rich
Be it on Haddock or cod
Saveloys or hake
Mars bars and Snickers
Pizza or kippers
Even on Cadbury’s flakes
Prompt: Bread
From Hadrian’s Wall to Yorkshire
It’s bacon butties yer’ll get
After that
It’s cobs and baps
All the way to the Watford Gap
And then
It’s bacon rolls
Bagels and Baguettes
But what we have in common
Is the love of bacon and bread.
Prompt: Rich
For Wales, Rich?
For Wales?
Cunning and devious
you’ll make
a skillful minister of State
How well you betray
But from my cell here I say
For Wales, Rich
Really?
For Wales?
Prompt: funny
Woger, the colonel of the wegiment
Had an embarrassing speech impediment
On the King’s parade
He was required to say
The woyal wegiment of wifles, wight turn!
From the King we learn
From subsequent testimony
He thought it odd and widiculosly funny.
Prompt: Shower
A titled lady from the shires
was overcome
with erotic desires
She wished to dance in the pouring rain
To shower naked with her chosen flame
He of course, was up for it
and his gamekeeper’s suit he quickly stripped
pale and naked without a suit
But still wearing his Wellington boots
Prompt: Fell
There was a chap called William
Whose second name was Tell
He fell for a comely maiden
Selling apples near the well
He put an apple on her head
And shot his bolt
and instead
of hitting the apple on the maiden’s head
He shot the maiden and she fell down dead.
Prompt: Just
It just is not just
That my sister has such an enormous bust
While mine are flat
No valleys, peaks, or undulations
And I must stuff my bra with augmentations
My lack of bust is just not just
Prompt: Weigh
Weigh the anchor
Trim the sails
We’re bound for the high seas
hunting for whales
There’ll be barrels of whale oil
and blubber to boil
There’ll be liver for breakfast
And whale steaks for tea
set sail for the ocean
to harvest the sea
Prompt: Bread
The Noble Marie Antoinette,
before she lost her head,
was famous not for the things she did,
But for the things she said.
Oh, she exclaimed, for goodness’ sake,
If there’s no more bread to eat,
Then let the mob eat cake.
Prompt: Built
There was a chap called Hadrian
who built himself a wall
80 miles from coast to coast
And over 10 feet tall
He built it for protection
to keep the Scottish clans at bay
It didn’t work in Roman times
And it doesn’t work today.
Prompt: Crazy
There’s no crazy paving in the gardens of Broadmoor
Despite the inmates’ cravings
The paths are straight and sure.
The paths they lead to nowhere
And double back again
They’re designed to stop the inmates
from discovering they’re insane.
Prompt: cells
She sells seashells on the seashore
It’s illegal said the beadle
To sell seashells on the shore
They’re dangerous and bacterial
And from my cells you’ll sell no more
No more seashells on the seashore.
Prompt: Rock
An old retired seadog called Adrian
Who was by birth a Gibraltarian
retired and resided on the Rock
He was once a seafaring man
Who enjoyed a bar of marzipan
But daily missed most, in fact a lot
His Royal Navy tot.
Prompt: follow
He hired a private detective
To track and follow his spouse
He caught her in flagrante
inside another man’s house
Oh! the hurt and the trauma
Oh! the trouble and strife
It was made much worse to discover
that the detective ran off with his wife.
Prompt: Dust
Being dyslectic means often that I dust cannot spell
But dust because of thet
does not mean I am a pratt
I can express myself quite well
As long as I don’t have to writ it down and spell.
Those teachers that mock me and call me thick
The bastards
They mek mi sic.
Prompt: Litter
A South African exile in London got a litter
It was to tell him his cat was getting better
Six delightful kittens had been born into her litter
And that’s why his South African mother wrote the litter
Prompt: Snacks
Hollywood has rejected my script
They have suggested I must be insane
who? They mocked
would watch a movie
entitled “Snacks on a Plane”
Prompt: Scale
The descending scale of the notes that he wrote,
da da da dum
da da da dum
Would eventually become
Via the BBC
notes for Europe’s oppressed
to arise and resist
Their darkest days of tyranny.
Prompt: sliegh
The children will not see me
But they’ll know that I passed by
For I drank that glass of sherry, gave their carrots to my reindeer, and scoffed that nice mince pie
They might hear my sleigh bells ringing and think it’s all a dream
But when they wake and see the toys
I leave for all the girls and boys
They’ll know that I have been
I drank a little sherry, in fact, quite a few
And at the next house, another one too
There was brandy at the big house
And lots of mince pies
I got a little tipsy as I rode across the skies
I got stopped
by the snow cops
It only took a minute
I’m in jail now
for driving my sleigh
while well above the limit.
Prompt: Boring
Is it rue
Your heart’s not moved
By Poetry
That you cannot raise a smile
For the wit
Of a Limerick
That you yawn at the sweet words
Of a song you may have heard?
How absurd
It makes you very vey boring.
Prompt: Shopping
Ah! The joy of Christmas shopping
Fortnum and Mason
Selfridges
John Lewis
Harrods
And Liberty
with all the Christmas lights to see
If only I had the money
But for me
It’s Aldi and the pound shop
And home on the bus for tea.
Prompt: holly
Molly and Polly
requested of Holly
she get them a brolly
to shelter their trolley
laden with mince pies in their prime
the brooly was faulyt
and Molly and Polly and Holly
realised the folly
of relying on repetative rhymes
Prompt: Door
Down beside the river Thames
There lived a door mouse whose name was James
A peripatetic nomadic mouse
He moved around from house to house
He carried with him his entire hoard
Of cheddar and stilton
On a mouse cheese board
🙂
🙂
There’s a lifetime’s experience gone into these! I see military, Union matters, legal matters, and Gibraltar. Nicely done!