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A mosquito was heard to complain -- Dr D D Perrin

Bending the theme rules again...
(Poem #801) A mosquito was heard to complain
 A mosquito was heard to complain
 That a chemist had poisoned his brain
 The cause of his sorrow
 Was paradichloro
 Diphenyltrichloroethane.
-- Dr D D Perrin
Note: paradichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane - the chemical name for DDT. (Also
  1,1'-(2,2,2-trichloroethylidene) bis(4-chloro)-benzene,
  1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)-ethane and
  p,p'-dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane depending on how you look at it.
)

Okay, so it's not by a scientist - or, at any rate, not by a scientist
willing to admit to it. [not quite true; see Ramesh's comment - m].
But no collection of science-related poems would be complete without at
least one limerick - they seem to be one of the most popular forms of
humorous verse around.

Of course, one of the reasons limericks are so popular is that they have a
relatively low entry barrier. Any fool can write a limerick - and,
inevitably, many do. Which means, naturally, that Sturgeon's Law applies in
spades, and a limerick has to be good, funny, clever or all three in order
to stand out.

Today's has achieved a reasonable measure of fame (translation: I'd actually
read it before I thought of the theme <g>), mostly for the clever way it
fits the (long) chemical name of DDT into limerick scansion - though with
some distortion (tri CHLO ro e THANE rather than TRI chloro E thane). Not to
mention the fact that 'chloro' doesn't quite rhyme with 'sorrow' (rhyne,
perhaps). Still, I like it - long chemical names have a lovely flowing
rhythm to them, and they aren't appreciated enough :).

Links:

  We've run one limerick before - it's not a form that really lends itself
  to great poetry <g>: poem #378

  If you'd really like to know about DDT:
    A picture, in living pseudocolour:
      [broken link] http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/CHEM/DDT-st.gif

    Linked to from an extensive fact sheet:
      [broken link] http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/tfacts35.html

  The theme so far: Poem #795, poem #797, poem #798, poem #800

-martin

3 comments: ( or Leave a comment )

JOEL LEIZER said...

I cannot understand the date attributed to this limerick. If Dr. D.D.Perrin claims to have written it in June 2001, he is plagerizing a limerick I heard from my organic chemistry professor , Louis Satler in 1961.

Linda Death said...

I can confirm that this poem is printed in The Penguin Book of
Limericks, 1983, E.O.Parrott (ed). It is indeed credited to Anon..
You'll find it about three quarters of the way through the section
entitled "Theory and Practice"

Linda

Anonymous said...

fl135 r g4y

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