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         Bently Edmund Clerihew:     more detail
  1. BIOGRAPHY FOR BEGINNERS: BEING A COLLECTION OF MISCELLANEOUS EXAMPLES FOR THE USE OF THE UPPER FORMS. With 40 diagrams by G. K . Chesterton by Edmund Clerihew. Bently, 1925
  2. No-nonse-nse: Limericks (invented in Ireland c. 1765), meta-fours (invented during the non-summer of 1985 in Lower Stodgedale) and Clerihews (invented in 1890 by Edmund Clerihew Bently) by Jonathan Williams, 1993

41. Bentley, E. C. (Edmund Clerihew), 1875-1956 - MobileBooks, 20000+ E-books For Mo
Bentley, EC (edmund clerihew), 18751956. Choose an e-Book to download to your mobile / cell phone. Trent s Last Case (Bentley, EC (edmund clerihew),
http://www.mobilebooks.org/?author=a968

42. The Online Books Page: E. C. Bentley (Bentley, E. C. (Edmund Clerihew), 1875-195
Bentley, EC (edmund clerihew), 18751956 Trent s Last Case (Gutenberg text). Help with reading books Report a bad link Suggest a new listing
http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book/lookupname?key=Bentley, E. C. (

43. Edmund Clerihew ('E.C.') Bentley (1875-1956), Writer
National Portrait Gallery, list of portraits for edmund clerihew ( EC ) Bentley including edmund clerihew ( EC ) Bentley by Hugh Goldwin Riviere,
http://www.npg.org.uk/live/search/person.asp?LinkID=mp00383

44. Bentley, Edmund Clerihew
Bentley, edmund clerihew. Encyclopaedia Search. Click a letter for the index. A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
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Bentley, Edmund Clerihew
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Bentley, Edmund Clerihew
Biography for Beginners (1905) and then in More Biography (1929). He was also the author of the classic detective story (1913), introducing a new naturalistic style that replaced Sherlock Holmesian romanticism. It was followed by (1936), in which he collaborated with H Warner Allen, and Trent Intervenes (1938), a volume of short stories.
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45. Clerihews
This light verse form was created in 1890 by edmund clerihew Bentley (1875 1956). edmund clerihew Bentley, The meaning of the poet Gay
http://www.erp.oissel.onac.org/anglais/clerihew.htm
themes topics CLERIHEWS WHAT ARE CLERIHEWS? A clerihew is a humorous pseudo-biographical quatrain, rhymed as two couplets. This light verse form was created in 1890 by Edmund Clerihew Bentley (1875- 1956). Bentley, who is mainly remembered for his classic detective story Trent's Last Case, first started writing clerihews with his friend, G.K. Chesterton, as a diversion from school work. The first collection of clerihews was published in 1905, and soon the verse form was named after the author's name. HOW TO WRITE CLERIHEWS? Keep in mind the clerihew form and pattern
a) quatrain (four lines) b) rhymed as two couplets : aabb
c) name of the subject usually ends the first line (or, less often, the second line) a Sir Humphrey Davy ( name first
a Abominated gravy.
b He lived in the odium
b Of having discovered sodium. Here are some examples of clerihews. Whose bio is it? E. C. Bentley
Mused while he ought to have studied intently;
It was this muse
That inspired clerihews. Michael Curl James Joyce
Had an unusually loud voice;

46. Does The Clerihew Live? : July 2007 : Christopher Howse : UK : Telegraph Blogs
Today is clerihew Day, being the birthday of edmund clerihew Bentley (18751956). edmund clerihew Bentley, was wont to Create truncated
http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/ukcorrespondents/christopherhowse/july07/clerihew.h
Where am I? Search
Christopher Howse
on language
Christopher Howse writes leaders and features and reviews for The Daily Telegraph, which he joined in 1996 as obituaries editor. His Saturday column, Sacred Mysteries, is on religion. He lives in Westminster. Technorati Profile
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Does the Clerihew live?
Posted by Christopher Howse on 10 Jul 2007  at 21:30 
Tags:  Karl Marx Clerihew Day Edmund Clerihew Bentley Sir Humphrey Davey ... Baseless Biography Today is Clerihew Day , being the birthday of Edmund Clerihew Bentley (1875-1956). He was 16 when he invented the verse form celebrated as the Clerihew.
Karl Marx: Wanted - a Clerihew for our times  His first example ran: Sir Humphrey Davy
Abominated gravy.

47. To Edmund Clerihew Bentley, The Man Who Knew Too Much By Gilbert K. Chesterton -
Full searchable online etext of The Man Who Knew Too Much by Chesterton at LiteratureClassics.com. Also available are essays, papers, links and resources.
http://www.literatureclassics.com/etexts/324/1983/
Start your day with a thought-provoking quote from the world's greatest thinkers and writers. Sign up to The Daily Muse for free.
To Edmund Clerihew Bentley The Man Who Knew Too Much by Gilbert K. Chesterton
TO EDMUND CLERIHEW BENTLEY, THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH by Gilbert K. Chesterton
An eText from LiteratureClassics.com.
A cloud was on the mind of men, and wailing went the weather,
Yea, a sick cloud upon the soul when we were boys together.
Science announced nonentity and art admired decay;
The world was old and ended: but you and I were gay;
Round us in antic order their crippled vices came
Lust that had lost its laughter, fear that had lost its shame.
Like the white lock of Whistler, that lit our aimless gloom, Men showed their own white feather as proudly as a plume. Life was a fly that faded, and death a drone that stung; The world was very old indeed when you and I were young. They twisted even decent sin to shapes not to be named: Men were ashamed of honour; but we were not ashamed. Weak if we were and foolish, not thus we failed, not thus; When that black Baal blocked the heavens he had no hymns from us Children we wereour forts of sand were even as weak as eve

48. Excite España - Arts - Literature - Authors - B - Bentley, Edmund Clerihew
Translate this page clerihews from Biography for Beginners Guarder edmund clerihew Bentley s trademark biographical doggerel rhymes. http//www.theotherpages.org/poems/be.
http://www.excite.es/directory/Arts/Literature/Authors/B/Bentley,_Edmund_Clerihe
Excite Mail MIX Excite A-Z all channels Directorio Horoscopo Hoy Info Juegos MIX Postales Rutas Sitemap Tiempo Traducir Viajes Web Web Noticias Noticias Directorio en toda la Red powered by Ask.com et("sr1","1"); Directorio Arts Literature Authors ... B Bentley, Edmund Clerihew
The Clerihew

2 sitios web en Bentley, Edmund Clerihew
Clerihews from Biography for Beginners
Guarder Edmund Clerihew Bentley''s trademark biographical doggerel rhymes. http://www.theotherpages.org/poems/be... Guarder E-text at Project Gutenberg. http://www.gutenberg.net/browse/BIBRE... Sugerir un sitio web Open Directory Project Excite A-Z ... Excite USA

49. Sir Humphrey Davy Abominated Gravy
edmund clerihew Bentley (18751956) wrote detective fiction, and at the age of 16, I imagine a bit bored in school, developed the verse form named after him
http://www.schoenml.org/112fp/clerihew.htm
These pages contain three sonnets with links to worksheet about them. (The last is a link to some basic information about sonnets.)
Sir Humphrey Davy
Abominated gravy.
He lived in the odium
Of having discovered sodium.
A Clerihew by E. Clerihew Bentley, age 16, in science class Edmund Clerihew Bentley (1875-1956) wrote detective fiction, and at the age of 16, I imagine a bit bored in school, developed the verse form named after him - the clerihew. G. K. Chesterton, Bentley's friend from childhood, helps popularize the form. Bentley collected Clerihews into his 1905 Biography For Beginners, (illustrated by Chesterton) in which he explained the concept of the book with a Clerihew variant: The Art of Biography
Is different from Geography.
Geography is about Maps,
But Biography is about Chaps.
Following this publication, CLERIHEW became a recognized form of verse. Because it uses a proper name at the end of the first line (or sometimes second), it is pseudo-biographical, usually with the emphasis on the "pseudo. " Michael Curl offers this Clerihew on the form's inventor: E. C. Bentley

50. The Complete Clerihews By E.C. Bentley
Not a crime novel, but another dimension to edmund clerihew Bentley, edmund clerihew Bentley was an English novelist and inventor of form of verse known
http://www.brighton-webs.co.uk/books/book.aspx?ID=784445971

51. ScienceDirect - Drug Discovery Today : Brief Biographies*1
One person who singlehandedly turned the brief biography into an art form was edmund clerihew Bentley (1875–1956), the inventor of the clerihew,
http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1359644604031186
Athens/Institution Login Not Registered? User Name: Password: Remember me on this computer Forgotten password? Home Browse My Settings ... Help Quick Search Title, abstract, keywords Author e.g. j s smith Journal/book title Volume Issue Page Drug Discovery Today
Volume 9, Issue 19
, 1 October 2004, Pages 824-825
Abstract
Full Text + Links PDF (132 K) Related Articles in ScienceDirect The new generation of patch clamp equipment
Drug Discovery Today

The new generation of patch clamp equipment
Drug Discovery Today Volume 9, Issue 14 July 2004 Page 593
Rainer Netzer
Abstract
Full Text + Links PDF (106 K) On the long road to drug discovery ...
Trends in Pharmacological Sciences

On the long road to drug discovery
Trends in Pharmacological Sciences Volume 23, Issue 3 1 March 2002 Page 147 Michaela Schmidtke Abstract Full Text + Links PDF (111 K) Monitor ... Drug Discovery Today Drug Discovery Today Volume 10, Issue 17 1 September 2005 Page 1201 Andrew D. Westwell Abstract Full Text + Links PDF (308 K) Metabolic menages a trois: what does it mean for drug d... ... Drug Discovery Today Drug Discovery Today Volume 9, Issue 14

52. Clerihews In The News
What s a clerihew? It s a bit of rhyming doggerel invented by edmund clerihew Bentley (18751956). In its traditional form, it s a four-line verse made up
http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/wordgame/wg825.htm
CLERIHEWS IN THE NEWS
This contest is now closed. But enjoy! (Click here to go directly to the winning entries.)
W hat's a clerihew? It's a bit of rhyming doggerel invented by Edmund Clerihew Bentley (1875-1956). In its traditional form, it's a four-line verse made up of two rhyming couplets, and its purpose is to offer a satiric or ridiculous biography of a famous person. Here are three of Bentley's own clerihews: Sir Humphrey Davy
Detested gravy.
He lived in the odium
Of having discovered sodium. George the Third
Ought never to have occurred.
One can only wonder
At so grotesque a blunder. Sir Christopher Wren
Said, "I'm going to dine with some men.
If anyone calls,
Say I'm designing St. Paul's." You may have noticed that the meter in these examples is irregular. It's *supposed* to be, see, for comic effectwhich is good news for all us metrical klutzes! In a clerihew, all notions of scansion are gleefully torpedoed! Now, we want you to submit an original clerihew in the traditional style, but we want you to concentrate on a more up-to-date celebrity. Let's limit our subjects to people who've been in the news from, say, 1975 to the present. We won't be too strict about this. But we'd like these clerihews to be topical. For example: Tom Hanks
Has accounts in fifty banks.

53. Clerihew By ~poetic-forms On DeviantART
The clerihew is a form of comic verse invented by edmund clerihew Bentley, and championed by his friend, the novelist Gilbert Keith Chesterton.
http://www.deviantart.com/deviation/29184261/
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Clerihew by ~ poetic-forms
Categories Literature Prose ... Essays The Clerihew is a form of comic verse invented by Edmund Clerihew Bentley, and championed by his friend, the novelist Gilbert Keith Chesterton. It consists of four lines of irregular length, rhymed AABB, or two uneven couplets, if you prefer to think of it that way.
Clerihews are almost always biographical, and the first line usually consists solely of the subject's name, perhaps the most famous example being:

54. Reviews Of Clerihew Books--William H. Wiatt
That’s a clerihew—a humorous “biography” in two couplets—by the inventor of the genre, edmund clerihew Bentley (18751956). Henry Taylor, a Pulitzer Prize
http://www.ddaze.com/04LVResource/vWiatt.htm
William H. Wiatt on Clerihews William H. Wiatt is a writer, collector, and connoiseur of clerihews. In these reviews, originally published in the Bloomington Herald Times , he discusses clerihew books by Henry Taylor and Phyllis Oder Henry Taylor, Brief Candles , with illustrations by Heather Alexander. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2000.
John Stuart Mill,
By a mighty effort of will,
Overcame his natural bonhomie
And wrote Principles of Political Economy
That’s a clerihew—a humorous “biography” in two couplets—by the inventor of the genre, Edmund Clerihew Bentley (1875-1956). Henry Taylor, a Pulitzer Prize winning poet, following the tradition established by Bentley, W. H. Auden, and Paul Horgan, offers us 101 clerihews, his Brief Candles
Unlike limericks, which are written by anybody (mostly by old “Anon.”) about everyman (“There was a young man from …”) and to everybody, clerihews are written by literati, about particular persons, and to a narrow, educated audience. Auden identifies that audience in calling his clerihews “academic graffiti.” They tend, in short, to be “in jokes”; if you don’t know who the subject (e.g., John Stuart Mill) is, you may well miss the point.
In Brief Candles , Henry Taylor chooses primarily literary figures—British poets laureate, suicidal poets, literary theorists, critics and linguists, and book reviewers. But some well-read readers may have trouble identifying these seven worthies, all subjects of clerihews in

55. Clerihews
What we know is, “E. clerihew” is edmund clerihew Bentley (1875 – 1956) the inventor of the form. G.K.C. is short for Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1874 – 1936)
http://www.bikwil.com/Vintage47/Hurrah-for-Clerihew.html
Hurrah for the Clerihew
[ Issue 47 ]
Hurrah for the Clerihew
Bet Briggs has fallen victim to Clerihew Mania. Hence her urge to celebrate the verse-form by concocting some of her own. Ten of em.
Print This Issue

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Hurrah for the Clerihew — Bet Briggs
The year 2005 marks the 100th anniversary of the launching of the clerihew into the literary landscape. Like a comic comet it appeared in 1905 in a publication named Biography for Beginners , by “E. Clerihew”, with illustrations by G.K.C. (Now that’s enough
intriguing stuff
for any literary sleuth,
no matter how long in the tooth!) What we know is, “E. Clerihew” is Edmund Clerihew Bentley (1875 – 1956) the inventor of the form. G.K.C. is short for Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1874 – 1936). He was Bentley’s contemporary, collaborator, best friend and no mean poet himself. He described the clerihew as “the severe and stately form of free verse . . .”, and wrote a clerihew or two as well, twenty-two little gems, in fact, which can be found in G.K. Chesterton Collected Nonsense and Light Verse

56. Www.alphadictionary.com * Alpha Agora Language Discussion Board - View Topic - C
The form was invented by and is named after edmund clerihew Bentley. As a student, Bentley invented the clerihew on Humphry Davy during his studies,
http://www.alphadictionary.com/bb/viewtopic.php?p=19286

57. BBC - H2g2 - Clerihews
The clerihew, a short humorous biographical poem, is named after the English detective novelist, edmund clerihew Bentley (1875 1956), who is credited with
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A505577
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Edited Guide Entry SEARCH h2g2 Advanced Search New visitors: Returning members: BBC Homepage The Guide to Life The Universe and Everything 3. Everything Arts and Entertainment The Arts ... Poetry Created: 12th January 2001 Clerihews Contact Us Like this page? Send it to a friend! The clerihew, a short humorous biographical poem, is named after the English detective novelist, Edmund Clerihew Bentley (1875 - 1956), who is credited with creating the style. A clerihew has four lines of two rhyming couplets (aabb) with no fixed metre. The first line is almost always the name of the person the poem is about. An early example of the clerihew is the following one, written by the then 16-year-old Bentley, at school during a particularly boring chemistry lesson. Sir Humphrey Davy Abominated gravy. He lived in the odium Of having discovered sodium.

58. World Wide Words: Clerihew
The curious form of comic verse called the clerihew comes indirectly from an The first, which edmund Bentley is said to have composed during a boring
http://www.worldwidewords.org/weirdwords/ww-cle1.htm
Jump to content HOME PAGE Weird Words SECTION INDEX PREVIOUS PAGE NEXT PAGE Other sections ARTICLES REVIEWS TOPICAL WORDS TURNS OF PHRASE Finding things GENERAL INDEXES SEARCH THE WHOLE SITE SURPRISE ME! Support pages ABOUT THE AUTHOR CONTACT THE AUTHOR OTHER WORDS SITES PRONUNCIATION GUIDE ... WEEKLY NEWSLETTER My recent books GALLIMAUFRY POSH OLOGIES AND ISMS CLERIHEW A form of whimsically biographical comic verse. Biography for Beginners , which Bentley published in 1905 under the name of E. Clerihew. Sir Humphry Davy
Abominated gravy.
He lived in the odium
Of having discovered sodium. Clerihew Another example: Sir Christopher Wren
If anyone calls
Someone who creates clerihews is a clerihewer , an appropriate term for a person who hacks such lines out of the living language. SHARE THIS ARTICLE Contact the author if you want to reproduce this piece, but first see our advice page , which also has notes about linking. Your comments and corrections are welcome. Page created 6 Jul 2002 New and updated pages Cad Reticule Naff Decimate ... Crimping Most visited pages Huckleberry Cockles of your heart In like Flynn Snollygoster ... Irish twins Some random picks Acronychal State of the art Cheat-bread Mesmerise ... Cachinnatory

59. Merriam-Webster Online
My favorite of edmund C. Bentley s clerihews is the following What I like about edmund clerihew Bentley (18751956) was an English writer whose book
http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/mwwodarch.pl?Dec.01.2006

60. Blink Public Library: Open Directory Bookmarks:Bently,_Edmund_Clerihew
edmund clerihew Bentley Selected Works, *, 1051 PM. clerihews by English Journalist edmund clerihew Bentley, the inventor of the form.
http://220.110.130.53/go?page=Public&args=3&arg0=dir&arg1=1&arg2=5391282/5391300

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