Haiku
Limerick
  • Poetry from Japan.
  • Consists of seventeen syllables arranged in three lines.
  • The first line had five syllables, the second has seven, and the third has five.
  • The poet generally describes a fleeting moment in nature; usually something he has observed and that has moved him.
  • Through the haiku's simple image or series of images, the poet tries to arouse in the reader the same sensation that he has experienced.




Example:

The lightning flashes!
And slashing through the darkness,
A night-heron's screech.

Bashó
  • Light or humorous verse
  • Generally, every limerick has five lines: three long lines (the first, second, and fifth) that rhyme with each other, and two short lines (the third and the fourth) that rhyme.
  • The purpose of most limericks is to make the reader laugh.


Example:

A bull- voiced young fellow of Pawling
Competes in the meets for hog-calling;
The people applaud,
And the judges are awed,
But the hogs find it simply appalling.

Morris Bishop

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