July 10 is Clerihew Day

Edmund Clerihew Bentley
Today is Clerihew Day, a holiday that celebrates the birthday of British author and journalist Edmund Clerihew Bentley (July 10, 1875 – March 30, 1956), who invented the purposefully silly type of rhyming verse that bears his middle name.
A clerihew consists of four lines in AA, BB rhyming couplets. (The first and second lines rhyme with each other; the third rhymes with the fourth.) According to legend, Bentley constructed the first clerihew as a schoolboy, regarding Sir Humphry Davy, a British chemist who discovered several chemical elements.
Sir Humphry Davy
 Abominated gravy.
 He lived in the odium
 Of having discovered Sodium.
To which we would like to add:
We’re not sure why Davy
 couldn’t stomach gravy.
 Was it his fault?
 Did he add too much salt?
One of our favorite clerihews comes from X.J. Kennedy’s Famous Poems Abbreviated:
Once upon a midnight dreary,
 Blue and lonesome, missed my dearie.
 Would I find her? Any hope?
 Quoth the raven six times, “Nope.”
Here’s our challenge to you, dear reader:
Why not compose a clerihew?
 If you enjoy it, write a few.
 Soon you will be called a poet
 But none will say you didn’t know it.
Have a happy Clerihew Day!
© 2025, Worldwide Weird Holidays. All rights reserved.








Leave a Reply
Want to join the discussion?Feel free to contribute!