There once was a man from Nantucket

"There once was a man from Nantucket" is the opening line for many limericks. The popularity of this this literary trope can be attributed to the way the name of the island of Nantucket lends itself easily to humorous rhymes and puns, particularly ribald ones. In the many vulgar versions, the mythopoeic protagonist is typically portrayed as a well-hung, hypersexualized persona.

History
The earliest published version appeared in 1902 in the Princeton Tiger:


 * There once was a man from Nantucket
 * Who kept all his cash in a bucket.
 * But his daughter, named Nan,
 * Ran away with a man
 * And as for the bucket, Nantucket.

Other publications seized upon the "Nantucket" motif, spawning many sequels. Of these, perhaps the two most famous appeared, respectively, in the Chicago Tribune and the New York Press:


 * But he followed the pair to Pawtucket,
 * The man and the girl with the bucket;
 * And he said to the man,
 * He was welcome to Nan,
 * But as for the bucket, Pawtucket.


 * Then the pair followed Pa to Manhasset,
 * Where he still held the cash as an asset;
 * But Nan and the man
 * Stole the money and ran,
 * And as for the bucket, Manhasset.

Obscene versions
The many ribald versions of the limerick are the basis for its lasting popularity. Many variations on the theme are possible because of the ease of rhyming Nantucket with certain vulgar phrases. The following example comes from Immortalia: An Anthology of American Ballads, Sailors' Songs, Cowboy Songs, College Songs, Parodies, Limericks, and other humorous verses and doggerel, published in 1927.


 * There once was a man from Nantucket
 * Whose dick was so long he could suck it.
 * And he said with a grin
 * As he wiped off his chin,
 * "If my ear were a cunt, I would fuck it."

In popular culture
The poem has become a staple of American humor, both as an iconic example of dirty poetry and as a joking example of fine art, whose vulgarity and simple form provides an unexpected contrast to an expected refinement.

A few examples: In Woody Allen's 1966 film What's Up, Tiger Lily?, the protagonist Phil Moskowitz reads the opening line of "ancient erotic poetry": "There once was a man from Nantucket". In Steven Soderbergh's 2002 film Solaris, the male protagonist tries to impress his girlfriend with his knowledge of poet Dylan Thomas, but when she asks him for his favorite poem he comes up with "the one he is most famous for, which starts, um, 'There once was a young man from Nantucket'". On the television show Laverne and Shirley, Laverne often started the poem, but was always stopped after the first line.

In his Below the Beltway column of July 11, 2010 for the Washington Post Magazine, humor writer Gene Weingarten recast this limerick as an Elizabethan Sonnet.