Laughing Along With A Limerick

It’s a fresh week – let’s hope it’s a good one. Here’s your new limerick challenge. Your word is

DIM

Last week’s prompt was APPLE. You came up with some amusing and also poignant limericks:

Nicola Daly:

There once was a boy called stealthy Si

Used to steal everyone’s apple pie

‘I know it’s wrong,

So I’ll sing you a song.

It’s sure to leave you with a tear in your eye.’

Cathy Cade:

Inspiration Strikes

Isaac Newton sat under a tree.

Not a sensible spot, as we’ll see,

for a ripe apple fell.

Bird droppings as well

left him in the throes of gravity.

Dawgy Daddy Responds:

Bye Pie

Nothing can prepare a biophilia feeling soul to lie

About having anything to do with baked apple pie

Nowt can compare to the feelings of this simple fact

That killing those apples is a very disrespectful act

None of the nonsense is worth the tears she cries.

Frank Hubeny:

Poisoned Apple

There once was a queen who thought she

was the loveliest queen that could be

till Snow White came along.

Though that apple was wrong,

the queen’s gone, right or wrong, thankfully.

Graeme Sandford:

An apple that fell from a tree,

was bruised but not beaten you see, 

Said old Granny Smith,

“I am more than a Myth,

and less than a Madame, tee-hee!”

Squirreljan:

“Will, just shoot the apple off his head”

“No, I don’t want my son to be dead”

But my aim was true

And it split in two

In hindsight, I wish that I had fled.

Kim Smyth:

There’s things that I can’t quite grapple

Like why I only love a green apple

The others are bland

More than I can stand

I wonder if there’s a green apple Snapple!

The Limerick Guy:

They say that an apple a day

Will keep the doctor away,

But was Eve’s apple thrill

Mankind’s poison pill?

The world today sure looks that way!

Tony:

Ode to Rimbaud,

An apple bursts in the palm of the sky,

Green as a childhood blasphemy,

The wind bites her,

And my eyes flee towards the dawn

Where the world still learns to fall.

Susan Batten:

Well, I learnt Mandarin in my youth

in a tiny, red carnival booth,

but the Chinese signs blurred

so I never was heard,

preferred Apple instead – that’s the truth.

Silly Frog’s Blog:

If the Shoe Fits

Affluent women tend to like to make a fuss.

Eve had paradise yet stole Eden from all of us.

Adam in clear hindsight,

Should have refused that “apple bite”.

What a shame that Adam was such a “wus”!

Scrambled, Not Fried:

Selection Process

Is it strawberry? Cherry? A Plum?

Or lemon meringue? (No; that’s dumb!)

You’ll try and you’ll try

but you can’t make good pie

without apples and cinnamon…(YUM!)

The Afterlove Voice:

There once was an apple so bright,

That rolled off the table one night.

It bounced with a thud,

Landed straight in the mud,

Still claiming, “I’m crisp — take a bite!”

John W. Howell:

Old Roy worked in a chapel,

As a minister he wanted to dapple,

He preached hell fire

Till the folks all did tire.

Now, he can hardly grapple an apple.

Fandango:

Bounced on Fred’s Head

There once was a fellow named Fred

Who was playing with an apple so red

It fell down to the ground

And it bounced all around

Until it finally hit Fred on the head.

Murray Clarke:

King Arthur went boldly into battle

Having eaten only a Bramley apple.

He fell on his sword

Whilst crossing a ford,

And was left up a creak without a paddle!

Pensitivity101:

The apple was shiny and red

As she pushed it towards his head…

‘Do you want a bite?’

But she held it so tight

He bit off her finger instead.

Rall:

the apple was red

she ate it in bed

the seeds made her sick

she really is thick

Writer Ravenclaw:

Five a Day

When we eat an apple a day

It is to keep the doctor away

with the rest of the five

we’ll all stay alive

and spend less time in bed.

Lou by the Sea:

An apple a day keeps the doctor away

Or so it was said back in the day

I tried this old adage

Putting apple in my sandwich

I Put on 3 stone

What more can I say?

Pictures Imperfect Blog:

Springfield

There once was a teacher called Ms. Krabbabble.

Who with black thoughts and mood swings did grapple

Because the students would never thank her.

Nobody knew how badly she’d hanker

for appreciation, in short: an apple.

Teleportingweena:

When you have an apple quite dappable

You might want to make it real zappable

So get it nice and hot

In oven or in a stew pot

An enjoyment quite palatable.

Take a ‘napple’ cut it up

Put it in a little cup

Stick a toothpick in each piece

You don’t need a bit of grease

A fancy ‘smanchy’ way to sup.

Here’s to the apple all shiny and bright

Shine it up pretty see the stars in the light

A perfect specimen so red and round

A better fruit cannot be found

Take a bite then your mood takes flight.

John McGuiggan:

Adam he was flaccid

It was the way it ought to be

Until he bit into the apple

Offered up by Eve

what lovely lovely melons

And what a gorgeous bum as well

he was about to have a lot of fun

But was sure to go to hell

Priorhouse Blog:

The Bushboy effect is quite clear,

his blog brings much cheer.

Birds, flowers, and a Sunday chapel,

Seats and history of the Granny Smith apple,

Now, ramble on, switch gears, hope to see you there.

Therapy Bits:

Best Snack, Guaranteed!

There once was a person named Lee

Who munched apples fresh off the tree.

With a crunch and a grin,

Juice ran down to their chin—

“Best snack,” Lee declared, “guaranteed!”

Christine Mallaband-Brown:

There’s an apple for the teacher

An orange fruit for the preacher

What shall I give to my mum?

That will really please her tum?

Chocolate cherries strongly feature!

iMartist:

Eve

Temptation of an apple plump, juicy & red

Ohhh how I wish for a taste, Eve said

The Snake said, “be my guest”

And well, we all know the rest

Disappointed, Adam walked away looking quite flaccid.

Dogpaddling Through Life:

Of Apples and Accountability

They say Eve, from the forbidden tree,

picked an apple and sold it with glee,

yet the greatest deception

is in the perception

that Adam was conned in this spree.

Treehugger:

Scrumping to pluck off an apple

Up the trunk of the tree he did grapple,

The apples were plentiful,

He balanced an armful,

Dismayed, he was being watched from the chapel.

Poetisinta:

Pippin the Gnome

A gnome in an orchard quite gree,

Lived on apples, not bread in a dream,

He’d polish each tree,

Sip dew with a bee,

The sucked on the cores until they were clean.

Beneath the branches so wide,

He’d slip down the hills like a slide,

With a chuckle and crunch,

He’d stop for his lunch,

Then sleep in the shade with great pride.

The Elephant’s Trunk:

One Bad Apple

A teacher named Timothy Glass

Kept an apple to show to his class

But it sat there so long

That the smell got quite strong

Now the kids wear a heavy gas mask!

Poetry-Cabbage After Christmas:

The apple of his mother’s eyes

upon his whim the sun would rise

but as her prince there was a cost

too early found his childhood lost

chained to midnights drinking lies

Mark Fraidenburg:

There once was a wanderer, indeed

Named Johnny, who planted each seed

With an apple filled sack

He would trek down the track,

Sewing orchards for others to feed.

Olaf Sturlasson’s Poetry Corner:

An apple a day as they say

Does indeed keep the doctor away

You just need good aim

But try not to maim

The doctor; you’re keeping at bay.

Annette Rochelle-Aben:

Slur Told Him

I’ll have just a teenie-weenie, one

I mean an apple tini, son

Wait, you say I’ve had too many

That’s nuts, I’ve had barely any

You’re a real meanie, to spoil my fun.

Utahan15:

adam s apple

bob in the throat

the curse of eve nae steve

in the garden

tree who knew

they did

then out on their asses!

***

Image credit: Pinterest

19 responses to “Laughing Along With A Limerick”

  1. dim is the view

    i have of you

    see she

    made me feel alone s misery

    so to cold yo yo off and away

    both tomorrow and today!

    Liked by 3 people

  2. There once was a fellow named Jim,

    Who was the icon for proper and prim.

    One day he left home,

    Without his black comb.

    Which made his bright light fade to dim.

    Liked by 6 people

    1. Nicely done – and quick!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I saw the post early. 😁

        Like

  3. nikidaly70 Avatar
    nikidaly70

    I’m sitting with the lights turned right down dim
    So you can’t see that my haircut looks rather grim
    She first rubbed my head with a hessian sack
    Then took a bread knife and started to hack
    She told me it’s her ‘special’ wash and trim!

    Liked by 4 people

  4. squirreljan Avatar
    squirreljan

    Old Maude liked to sea swim in the dark

    That way she could make her unique mark

    Bathing in the nuddy

    She’s no fuddy duddy

    Oh no, it’s too dim, what’s that? A shark!

    Liked by 3 people

  5. dutifullydeer6ab803ea0e Avatar
    dutifullydeer6ab803ea0e

    Hello Esther,

    Here’s a limerick for this week on “dim”:

    “The light was exceptionally dim, so I couldn’t tell if he was trim, for he might have been lumpy or leaden or dumpy. To suit me, he had to be slim.”

    Best regards,

    Susan

    Liked by 4 people

  6. Now at https://cathy-cade.com/2026/02/16/coming-first/

    Gus was a little bit slow,
    not the brightest bulb in the light show.
    But their jibes he ignored,
    ‘cos when at the darts board
    he beat all his mates.
    Then he would glow.

    Liked by 4 people

  7. There once was an athlete named Jim
    Whose peers were convinced was quite dim.
    But what they didn’t know
    Is the sound, like a crow
    Was when Jim sang a hymn in the gym.

    Liked by 3 people

  8. Deep Thoughts On Dim Light

    The dim light wasn’t bright as was right.
    Were it bright I would dim it at night,
    but it’s day, as we say
    when dark night goes away,
    when the sun that’s not dim is quite bright.

    Liked by 3 people

  9. When he went down on a knee and proposed
    Her true feelings were clearly exposed
    Her expression was grim
    He knew his prospects looked dim…
    And it was apparent that he had been hosed.

    “He got hosed” is a common American slang expression meaning someone was cheated, swindled, treated unfairly, or put in a difficult position. It implies being taken advantage of, such as through fake expressions of affection or broken promises.

    Failed/Broken: It can describe a situation that went wrong.

    In Trouble: Used to describe being in a difficult, helpless spot. – Google AI Overview

    Liked by 3 people

  10. Bonsoir Esther,

    In the dim light of the evening, the world seems kinder.
    Edges soften, certainties loosen, and even sorrow lowers its voice.
    A dim room does not hide the truth; it reveals another way of seeing.
    What is too bright often blinds us, but what is dim invites us to look longer, to feel deeper.

    There are dim memories that ache like distant music,
    dim hopes that refuse to die,
    and dim stars that guide lost travelers better than blazing suns.

    Perhaps we are not meant to shine endlessly.
    Perhaps we are meant, sometimes, to glow softly,
    dim, but alive.

    A bientôt.

    Liked by 2 people

  11. No Dim Lims Aloud | SCRAMBLED, NOT FRIED

    Dim Limericks aren’t what I write
    (I try to give readers some light).
    But once in a while
    I smile at their smile
    and I’m pleased to be losing the fight
    .

    Liked by 2 people

  12. In the dim of the night he looked high
    Saw a star explode in the sky
    A Super Nova he’d seen
    Which was bright green!
    They called it the “snotty lime pie!”

    (hard to find an original name got an astronomical phenomenon)

    Liked by 2 people

  13. “for an astronomical….”

    Like

  14. There once was a poet of note,

    Name of Hopkins – here’s what he wrote:

    Light’s “a-dazzle dim”

    (It made sense to him)

    So whatever it is floats your boat.

    Liked by 1 person

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