Bad Poetry Day: Why Writing Terrible Verse Makes You a Better Writer

This entry is part 5 of 20 in the series US Holidays
TL;DR: The third-worst poetry in the universe is written by the Vogons, so monumentally awful, per Douglas Adams, that it has been used as torture, with audiences gnawing their own legs off rather than endure a full reading. Bad poetry is funny, but writing it on purpose is also one of the best craft exercises there is. Here is why deliberately writing terrible verse makes you a better writer, for Bad Poetry Day.



The third-worst poetry in the universe is written by the Vogons. According to Douglas Adams in The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Vogon poetry is so monumentally awful that it has been used as a form of torture. See how strong verbs sharpen any writing. Audiences have been known to gnaw their own legs off rather than endure a full reading. The second-worst poetry was written by Paula Nancy Millstone Jennings of Sussex, and the very worst perished along with its creator in the destruction of the planet Earth.

Bad Poetry Day, celebrated August 18th, invites you to aim somewhere in that range.

I am not a poet. I have written over 113+ books and none of them are poetry collections. But Bad Poetry Day is one of my favorite minor holidays because it gets at something most writing advice ignores: the value of writing badly on purpose.

Why Bad Writing on Purpose Is Good Practice

Every writer carries a mental editor that evaluates sentences as they are being written. That editor is useful during revision. It is devastating during drafting. The editor says this sentence is not good enough before the sentence is finished, and the result is paralysis. The cursor blinks. The page stays empty. The writer stares.

Bad Poetry Day kills the editor. You cannot write a bad poem while worrying about quality because quality is explicitly not the point. The assignment is to write something terrible, and that permission unlocks the part of your brain that produces words without judgment.

This is the same principle behind freewriting, morning pages, and every other exercise designed to separate generation from evaluation. But Bad Poetry Day adds something those exercises lack: an audience. You are not just writing badly in private. You are sharing it. Reading it out loud. Letting other people hear the worst thing you have ever committed to language. And surviving.

For writers who struggle with perfectionism, who cannot finish drafts because nothing meets their standards, who revise the first chapter forty times and never write the second, that survival is therapeutic. The world does not end when you write something bad. Nobody dies. The only consequence is laughter, and laughter is the opposite of the paralysis that perfectionism produces.

What Makes Poetry Bad

Understanding what makes poetry bad is genuinely useful for any writer, not just poets. Bad poetry fails for the same reasons bad prose fails, and studying the failure patterns sharpens your ability to recognize them in your own work.

Forced rhyme is the most obvious. When the writer contorts meaning to land on a rhyme, the reader feels the strain. “The moon was bright that fateful night / and everything was quite all right” tells you nothing except that the writer needed something to rhyme with “night.” The rhyme is driving the content instead of the content driving the rhyme.

Cliché is the second killer. “My heart soared like an eagle” was effective exactly once. Every use after that is borrowed emotion. Bad poetry relies on phrases that have been drained of meaning through overuse. Good writing, in any form, finds the specific image that has not been used a thousand times.

Sentimentality without specificity is the third. “Love is the most beautiful feeling in the world” is bad poetry because it is abstract and universal in a way that connects with nobody. “She left her coffee on the counter and I drank it cold at noon because throwing it out felt like admitting she was gone” is specific in a way that connects with everyone. The principle is the same one that drives good fiction: concrete detail creates emotional impact. Abstract declaration does not.

These are not just poetry problems. They are writing problems. My Showing and Telling Handbook covers the difference between abstract statement and concrete detail across all forms of fiction. The lesson applies whether you are writing a sonnet or a thriller.

Famous Bad Poetry

William McGonagall is widely considered the worst poet in the English language, and he is more famous than most good poets. His “The Tay Bridge Disaster” is a masterpiece of unintentional comedy. The rhymes are forced, the meter lurches, and the emotional manipulation is so clumsy that it produces the opposite of its intended effect. He has been in print continuously since the 1800s. Quality is not the only path to immortality.

Edward Bulwer-Lytton gave us “It was a dark and stormy night,” a sentence so overwrought that an entire bad writing contest bears his name. The Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest has awarded prizes for the worst opening sentence since 1982. The entries are deliberately terrible, crafted with the same attention to structure and rhythm that good writing requires, just pointed in the opposite direction.

And of course the Vogons. Adams understood that truly bad poetry requires commitment. The Vogon poet does not know his poetry is bad. He believes it is magnificent. That gap between the creator’s perception and the audience’s experience is comedy, but it is also a warning: every writer has blind spots, and the conviction that your work is brilliant does not make it so. Beta readers exist for a reason. My Beta Reader Handbook covers how to get honest feedback that reveals what you cannot see yourself.

How to Celebrate Bad Poetry Day

Write a poem. Make it terrible. Read it to someone.

If you want structure, try these approaches. Write a love poem using only corporate jargon. Write a nature poem where every rhyme is forced. Write an epic poem about something mundane like doing laundry or waiting in line at the DMV. Write a poem in the style of a Vogon: pompous, bloated, and completely certain of its own genius.

The exercise works because it requires the same skills good writing requires, just deployed differently. You still need rhythm, word choice, structure, and an awareness of audience expectation. You are just aiming to miss the target instead of hit it, and aiming to miss requires knowing exactly where the target is.

Bad Poetry Day is August 18th. Write something awful. Share it with someone. Let the inner editor take the day off. Then go back to your real work tomorrow with the knowledge that writing badly did not destroy you, and the freedom that comes from knowing that.

For writers developing their craft, my writing handbooks cover every element of fiction and nonfiction. For one-on-one guidance, book coaching is available. Start with a conversation.

Bad Poetry Day FAQ

When is Bad Poetry Day?
Bad Poetry Day is August 18th every year. It celebrates the value of writing badly on purpose, embracing imperfection, and silencing the inner editor that prevents writers from producing work.
How does writing bad poetry help writers improve?
Writing badly on purpose separates the generation of words from the evaluation of words. The mental editor that causes paralysis during drafting is silenced when quality is explicitly not the goal. The experience of writing something terrible, sharing it, and surviving teaches writers that imperfect work is not catastrophic, which reduces the perfectionism that prevents finishing drafts.
What makes poetry bad?
Three primary failures: forced rhyme where meaning is contorted to land on a sound, cliché where borrowed phrases replace original observation, and sentimentality without specificity where abstract statements about emotion replace concrete detail that creates emotion. These same failures plague prose fiction, making the study of bad poetry useful for any writer in any form.
What is Vogon poetry?
Vogon poetry is a fictional form from Douglas Adams’ The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, described as the third-worst poetry in the universe. It has been used as a form of torture, with audiences gnawing their own legs off rather than endure a full reading. The comedy comes from the Vogon poet’s absolute conviction that his work is brilliant, which serves as a useful warning about every writer’s blind spots.

📝 Disclaimer

The views and opinions expressed in this blog post are solely those of Richard Lowe and are based on personal experience and research. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as professional legal, financial, accounting, or business advice. Always consult with qualified professionals before making important business or legal decisions. Richard Lowe is not a lawyer, accountant, or licensed professional advisor, and this content does not establish any professional relationship.

13 Responses

  1. It’s so interesting how works can be hated by one generation and loved by another. And vice versa. And, yes, even bad works can be celebrated!

  2. I just checked out your blog post on Bad Poetry Day, and I have to say, it’s a delightful read! I never knew there was a day dedicated to celebrating “bad” poetry, but your lighthearted take on it is both fun and educational. Thanks for sharing your insights and the chuckles!

  3. Such a fun and relatable read! Your Bad Poetry Day post captures the essence of the poet’s journey through various emotions. It’s witty and heartfelt, making it an enjoyable exploration of the poetic soul. Keep sharing your creative insights! 📝🥳

  4. Maybe I haven’t read a lot of poems, because all I know are poetry with rhymes. But as time goes by, modern ways of writing and literature become more diverse and creative, I guess we should not limit ourselves to the old-style poems that we used to read. I would love to listen to what many creative poets message for us.

  5. Oohhhh….I have always wondered why there was so much criticism of the word “nevermore” in Eddy’s classic poem. Thanks for that hint as well as the knowledge on bad poetry day.

  6. This is my first time hearing of a bad poetry day. I found this interesting & I like how you explained everything. I will have to find some poems with examples of this.

  7. I love poetry. I remember taking a poetry class in college, and it was one of my favorites. It was really interesting to read about flaws in poetry and I enjoyed reading the examples.

  8. Poems are very powerful when it comes to meaning. But go wrong when not organized well. I love poems and good u shared this

  9. Poetry has never been on my list of favorite things to read – especially in school and college. I do like the idea that each bad poem is symbolic of the trials, errors, and lessons we all face in life.

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