January/February 2016 Limerick Laughs Winner and Runners-Up

Woman standing behind Valentine boxes of chocolates and flowers
Valentine's Gifts
Frederick Sands Brunner
February 16, 1935

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F. Sands Bruner's illustration, Valentine's Gifts

This girl has a radiant smile,
And it seems she has savvy and style.
This was Valentine’s Day.
No one sent gifts her way,
So she bought them and selfied the pile.

Congratulations to contest winner Deborah Dickinson-Deacon of Amherst, New York! For her limerick describing F. Sands Brunner’s illustration, Valentine’s Gifts (above), Deborah wins $25 and our gratitude for an entertaining poem. If you’d like to enter the Limerick Laughs Contest for our next issue of The Saturday Evening Post, submit your limerick through our online entry form.

Deborah’s limerick wasn’t the only one we liked. Here are some of our other favorite contest entries, in no particular order:

For me? Well, I’m just pleased as punch.
The problem: I don’t have a hunch
Who the gift could be from.
Let’s hope not that bum —
Fred Bruner — who stuck me with lunch.

—L.J. Williams, Topeka, Kansas

Valentine gifts are such fun,
No matter how often they come.
I will save them and then
I’ll thank the young men
Just as soon as I know who they’re from.

—Alfred W. Cross, Sacramento, California

Although she’s aglow with her heart,
It really would give her a start
To know that her flower
And mini card shower
Were a last-minute thought at Walmart.

—Kevin Rorabaugh, Ellis, Kansas

Such Valentine gifts make me weep —
A card with a message that’s deep,
Some candy — what’s more,
There’re posies galore.
So where is the jewelry, you creep?

—Betty Lyons, Newton Falls, Ohio

This Valentine babe — such a cutie —
Blushed at chocolates and violets as booty.
If she’d known modern taste
To maintain a tight waist
She might have requested tofutti.

—Mia Berman, New York City, New York

His girl was utter perfection,
So he sent her a lovely confection.
She blushed chin to locks
When she opened the box
‘Cause he sent her the “lover’s selection.”

—J. Janes, Marinette, Wisconsin

Perusing the many entreaties
That came from her various sweeties,
The candy she tried
Came with one downside:
The risk of type two diabetes.

—Patrick McKeon, Pennington, New Jersey

I’ve waited all year for this day,
And I’ve only got one thing to say:
While candy is nice,
It just won’t suffice;
I’d rather go roll in the hay!

—Michelle Gordon, Airway Heights, Washington

This sweet lass had suitors of three.
There was Harry and Masters and me,
Yet I thought she was mine,
This dear sweet valentine,
Till she ran off with someone named Lee?

—Patricia Brinton, Burnsville, Minnesota

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