Some Clerihews
William Makepeace Thackeray
Would have adored a frozen daiquiri,
But swallowed down his gin
Without dwelling on what might have been.
Oscar Wilde
Was most unjustly reviled:
Merely for loving his neighbor
He got two years' hard labor.
Arthur Hugh Clough
Wrote a lot of stuff,
But whether it was any good at all
I can't recall.
John Dryden
Never looked for a hole to hide in.
Did he run away from MacFlecknoe?
Heck, no.
Allen Tate
Was a victim of fate;
But let it be said,
So were the Confederate dead.
Said Charles Baudelaire
To Jeanne Duval, "Ma chére,
There have been rumors
That you don't wear bloomers."
Marianne Moore
Was prim and rather dour,
Not at all the sort of poetess
You might interest in coitus.
Paul Gauguin
Was a ladies' man.
He loved them in Tahiti and Provence.
Honi soit qui mal y pense.
Friedrich Nietzsche
Was a very strange crietzsche:
He dreamt of mounting a little wench
And screaming "Ãœbermensch!"
Charles Bukowski
Could never find his housekey,
But being a total souse,
He was lucky just to find his house.
Lawrence of Arabia
Had little interest in labia.
No, his idea of joy
Was a slender brown Bedouin boy.
George Herbert, John Donne—
You could pick either one.
And what about Sir Philip Sydney?
He wrote some good poems, didney?
Robert Mezey
From
Collected Poems: 1952-1999,
University of Arkansas Press, ©
2000.
Reprinted by permission of the author. |