Nicholas Noyes was also known for his doggerel verse.
In the 1950s, a plan to shorten the official name of the lake inspired a poem of doggerel verse which concludes:
A doggerel verse warning others to not follow the executed person's example, to avoid their fate, was another common feature.
In a moment he had fashioned some doggerel verse: "I'll be bored, without a sword," he said.
He discovered an ancient manuscript in Glastonbury's library with a doggerel verse which no one understands.
He murmured some doggerel verse in a singsong: "Make those front three like he, thee, and me."
He has composed several poems outlining his beliefs, all of which are written in doggerel verse.
Stevenson wrote some humorous doggerel verse recording their encounter.
The confusion and conflicting accounts led to the following doggerel verse:
In the later 1670s he became delusional, and wrote a volume Lucida intervalla (1679) of doggerel verse, by which he is now remembered.