The Limerist by Michael Nolan
A tall tale about Tommy O'Brien, who was so enamoured of limericks he could express himself no other way. Image generated with OpenAI My father told me about Tommy O'Brien. It was late one night and he'd been sitting in the dark in the kitchen, filling himself with whiskey, the Pierian springs of his wit. When the spirit was with and in him, he was the best of storytellers. He waved me to sit down and he slopped me a glass. Then he began. I can't say even half of what he said is true, but I'd like to think all of it is. Maybe Tommy's charm for me is only of that night, one of those rare times I could actually talk with my father; the sobriety of the day silenced us both, him in his hard world of hands and me in my books. I have, on more than one occasion, tried to look up Tommy in the Encyclopedia of Newfoundland and Labrador , hoping that one time I'd find what I know I hadn't missed, and renew that silenced voice. Tommy, I heard, was born about a hundr...