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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: LEO-LOB |
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LIMERICK , a name which has been adopted to distinguish Roman boundary till the empire fell. The southern part was a certain form of verse which began to be cultivated in the middle different. The upper Rhine and upper Danube are easily of the 19th century. A limerick is a kind of burlesque epigram, crossed. The frontier which they form is inconveniently long, written in five lines. In its earlier form it had two rhymes, enclosing an acute-angled wedge of foreign territorythe modern the word which closed the first or second line being usually Baden and Wurttemberg. The German populations of these employed at the end of the fifth, but in later varieties different lands seem in Roman times to have been scanty, and Roman rhyming words are employed.. There is much uncertainty as subjects from the modern Alsace
series of advances began which gradually invitation is repeated, " Will you come up to Limerick ? " closed up the acute angle, or at least rendered it obtuse.Unfortunately, the specimen quoted in the New Eng. Diet. is not The first advance came about 74, when what is now Baden only not identical with, but does not resemble Lear's. Whatever was invaded and in part annexed and a road carried from the be the derivation of the name, however, it is now universally Roman base on the upper Rhine, Strassburg, to the Danube used to describe a set of verses formed on this model, with the just above Ulm. The point of the angle was broken off. The variations in rhyme noted above: second advance was made by Domitian about A.D. 83. He " There was an old man who said ' Hush! pushed out from Moguntiacum, extended the Roman territory I perceive a young bird in that bush
When they said, 'Is it small? ' limited and defended frontier with numerous blockhouses along He replied, Not at all! it and larger forts in the rear. Among the blockhouses was one It is five times the size of the bush
The invention, or at least the earliest general use of this form, well-known Saalburg fort on the Taunus near Homburg. This advance necessitated a third movement
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The best English account will be found in H. F. Pelham's essay in Trans. of the Royal Hist. Soc. vol. 2o, reprinted in his Collected Papers, pp. 178-211 (Oxford, 1910), where the German authorities are fully cited. (F. _J. H.) End of Article: LIMERICK If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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