Why a limerick?
Personalized limericks stand the test of time. And they are an affordable way to give something unique in today's age.

Why us?
Well, our resident limericist is world-renowned and has won the All-Limerick National Poetry Slam. His work can be found at www.dailylimerick.net

What is a limerick you ask?
It is an English verse form consisting of five anapaestic lines rhyming aabba, the third and fourth lines having to stresses and the others three. Early examples, notably those of Edward Lear in his book of Nonsense (1846), use the same rhyming word at the end of the first and last lines, but most modern limericks avoid such repetition.

The limerick is almost always a self-contained, humorous poem, and usually plays on rhymes involving the names of people or places. First found in the 1820s, it was popularized by Lear, and soon became a favourite form for the witty obcenities of anonymous versifiers.