Form: Tailgaters
The Tailgater is a rhymed couplet that begins with a well-known line of poetry and concludes with a witty come-back of your own making.
Number of Lines: 2
Rules:
Below you will find three first lines from well-known poetry, write a witty response for each.
Rhyme Scheme:
A rhymed couplet means two lines of poetry and the last words in each line must rhyme.
Choices for the poets to make this week: Write a rhymed witty response to each of these:
1. I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree,
(The Lake Isle of Innisfree, W. B. Yeats)
2. O, to have a little house!
(An Old Woman of the Roads by Padraic Colum)
3. Between my finger and my thumb
(Digging by Seamus Heaney)
Examples:
What?
Twas brillig and the slithy toves
what this means only Carroll knows.
Santa’s Surprise
Twas the night before Christmas and all through the house
Mrs. Jones was tongue-lashing her drunken spouse.
Disagreement
Jack Spratt could eat no fat
because his wife would start a spat.
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