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I'd also noted that at no time in the rally had Clerihew been mentioned.
There had not been even one indirect reference to Clerihew in any of the four rallies.
Reading a pre-war book, I came across a reference to a 'clerihew,' which seems to be a kind of poem.
The form was invented by and is named after Edmund Clerihew Bentley.
A clerihew has the following properties:
Another contemporary and friend from schooldays was Edmund Bentley, inventor of the clerihew.
A form of humorous verse named after Edmund Clerihew Bentley, who initiated it.
Nikita Khrushchev, bodiless as loose chaff, within a narrow clerihew there's room at last to bury you.
When this clerihew was published in 1905, "Was not fond of" was replaced by "Abominated".
So far as I could discover, Clerihew hadn't come up with a rhyme against Carlisimo.
March 30 - Edmund Clerihew Bentley, English inventor (b. 1875)
Terse Verse The clerihew is an even tighter form than the limerick - almost as tight, in fact, as a haiku.
Clerihews were invented by Edmund Clerihew Bentley (1875-1956).
Since Clerihew hadn't announced any rallies, and had stated that his campaign would be person-to-person, it was unlikely I'd be headed back south.
National Portrait Gallery Nicholas Clerihew Bentley (1953 photograph)
His first published collection of poetry, titled Biography for Beginners (1905), popularized the clerihew form; it was followed by two other collections, in 1929 and 1939.
It must have worked because Clerihew had defeated Mize in the Laborite Republican primary.
I prefer Clerihews and this is the very first one, by Edmund Clerihew Bentley (aged 16!)
Bentley's friend, G. K. Chesterton, was also a practitioner of the clerihew and one of the sources of its popularity.
Among contemporary writers, the satirist Craig Brown has made considerable use of the clerihew in his columns for The Daily Telegraph.
Chesterton himself wrote clerihews and illustrated his friend's first published collection of poetry, Biography for Beginners (1905), which popularized the clerihew form.
Nicholas Clerihew Bentley was born in Britain on 14 June 1907, at Highgate in London.
The unbalanced and unpolished poetic meter and line length parody the limerick, and the clerihew in form also parodies the eulogy.
Auden included Stifter in his poem "Academic Graffiti" as one of the celebrities, literary and otherwise, captured in a clerihew:
Edmund Clerihew Bentley wrote flippantly: "Martin Tupper / Sang for his supper.