Today's poems [3.6.20] Vote for the poem that you really like by checking a box next to it. Then press the VOTE button to submit your votes. Also, links to poem categories and "Email Friend" will open in a new window, so as not to interrupt your poem reading.
There was a young fellow from Lees Who handled his tool with great ease. This continual friction Made his sex a mere fiction, But the callus hangs down to his knees.
There was a young peasant named Gorse Who fell madly in love with his horse. Said his wife, "You rapscallion, That horse is a stallion--- This constitutes grounds for divorce."
Said an old taxidermist in Burrell, As he skillfully mounted a squirrel, "This excess of tail is Obstructive to phallus; One's much better off with a girl."
A widow whose singular vice Was to keep her late husband on ice Said, "It's been hard since I lost him--- I'll never defrost him! Cold comfort, but cheap at the price,"
There was a young cowboy named Gary Who was morbidly anxious to marry, But he found the defection Of any erection A difficuly factor to parry.
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