| 1. | history in doggerel verse, like Layamon's _Brut_. - from English Literature by William J. Long |
| 2. | They have told me since that I was singing some insane doggerel about "The Last Man Left Alive Hurra. - from The War of the Worlds by H. G. Wells |
| 3. | The popular ridicule of Puritanism in burlesque and doggerel is best exemplified in Butler's _Hudibras_. - from English Literature by William J. Long |
| 4. | a set of doggerel verses ridiculing his prosecutors, which Defoe, with a keen eye for advertising, scattered all over London. - from English Literature by William J. Long |
| 5. | Of all this burlesque and doggerel the most famous is Butler's _Hudibras_, a work to which we can trace many of the prejudices that still prevail against Puritanism. - from English Literature by William J. Long |
| 6. | This is the most important of the English riming chronicles, that is, history related in the form of doggerel verse, probably because poetry is more easily memorized than prose. - from English Literature by William J. Long |
| 7. | From the stage spectacle he developed the drama of human life and instead of the doggerel and bombast of our first plays he gives us the poetry of _Romeo and Juliet_ and _Midsummer Night's Dream_. - from English Literature by William J. Long |