Holiday Clerihews
A first for me on this poetic form
Here is my first shot at composing Clerihews which was a English poetic form that was invented by Edmund Clerihew Bentley.
- A four line poem or stanza.
- Rhyme scheme: aabb
- First line is a person’s full name.
- The final three lines sum up the person named in the first line in a funny way.
- Vary the rhyming line lengths.

Tom Turkey,
a bird quite perky,
squawked as a winner,
When ham was served for dinner.

The Pilgrims
Sailed the high seas so bold,
And boy, were they very cold,
Came across land to claim,
And began a feast with no shame.

Santa Claus,
A man who evokes joy,
with bestowing gifts of toys,
he travels the vast sky,
powered by a milk and cookie sugar high.

Mrs. Claus,
A woman of mystery
and very little history,
stands in Santa’s shadow,
like the perfect politician’s wife for the show.

Frosty The Snowman
Made from silvery snow,
and specks of poop from flying crows
was truly aghast
when a playful dog pissed on him fast.

Ebenezer Scrooge
A man who lived for greed,
who’s done some nasty deeds,
will leave this world with a wail,
as he awakens to a fiery jail.
🎄🎅🏻🤶🏻 🎄🎅🏻🤶🏻 🎄🎅🏻🤶🏻 🎄🎅🏻🤶🏻 🎄🎅🏻🤶🏻 🎄🎅🏻🤶🏻
Happy Thanksgiving & enjoy the beginning of the Christmas Holidays!




Comments (7)
Love the yse of creativity. Adding the pictures made it a more interesting read.
Hehehehehhe these were so fun and made me chuckle!
Interesting
Wonderful work, Daphne!!! They are all excellent poems. I especially enjoyed Tom Turkey and had a good chuckle about the ham dinner!
This is a very interesting poetic form that you’ve introduced us to. I don’t know if I’ll ever give it a try, but you seem to have pulled it off very well and added a sprinkle of holiday cheer and cheekiness to it that make these poems very enjoyable to read. I especially liked ones like Tom Turkey, Mrs. Claus, and Ebenezer Scrooge.
Never heard of Clerihews. The ones you wrote were cute like Frosty and Mrs. Claus.
Very nice! I've never tried this form! Thanks for the lesson and the delightful poems. I'm bookmarking this one! :)