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p\RROW i BOOK
k.
OF
Collected by
ELEANOR CLYMER
Digitized by tine Internet Arciiive in
2009
littp://www.arcliive.org/details/arrowbookoffunnyOOclym
ARROW BOOK OF
Finn/ Poems Collected by Illustrated
ELEANOR CLYMER by Doug Anderson
BOOK SERVICES
SCHOLASTIC
Published by Scholastic Book Services, a division of Scholastic Magazines,
Inc.,
New
York,
N. Y.
To
JODY
Copyright
©
1961
by Scholastic Magazines,
Inc.
All
rights
reserved.
The poems in this anthology are covered by separate copyright, as shown on pages 95 and 96. All possible care has been taken to trace the ownership of every selection included
and to make full acknowledgment for its use. If any errors have accidentally occurred, they will be corrected in subsequent editions, provided notification
is sent to the publisher. Permission to reprint these poems in any form, including public reading, must be obtained JFrom the copyright holders.
September 1966
5th printing Printed in the U.S.A.
CONTENTS Animals
— Dear
and Queer
5
Birds and beasts that never In the jungle, farm or zoo. Also quite a few that do.
Limericks
A
— Numerous and Humorous who
poet
Said,
33
discontented of verse I've invented.
felt
Five lines has
Songs
...
"A new kind
Two And
grew
I
short
hope
— Cheery
my
song, long,
and three I
may
never repent
it."
and Teary
43
Sing a song of army woes, farmers' cows in June.
Or
Want something even
daflSer?
Try another tune!
People
— Brainy and Zany Some of these folks Anywhere on land
57 you'll
never see
or sea.
—
Others are not too far away In fact, you meet them every day.
Rhymes
— Assorted
Thoughts
Oft in nonsense There does lie. More good sense Than meets the eye!
85
DEAR AND QUEER
Grizzly Bear
you ever, ever, ever meet a grizzly bear. You must never, never, never ask him where If
He
is
going,
Or what he For
if
you
is
doing;
ever, ever, dare
To stop a grizzly bear. You will never meet another
{(%A,
grizzly bear.
Eletelephony
Once
there
Who
tried to use the telephant
No! no!
Who
I
was an elephant,
mean an elephone
tried to use the telephone
(Dear me! I am not certain quite That even now I've got it right. Howe'er it was, he got his trunk Entangled in the telephunk; The more he tried to get it free, The louder buzzed the telephee ( I fear I'd better drop the song Of elephop and telephong!
—Lauba
E. Richards
The codfish lays ten thousand The homely hen lays one. The codfish never cackles To tell you what she's done.
And
so
we
eggs,
scorn the codfish,
While the hmnble hen we prize. only goes to show you That it pays to advertise.
Which
—Anon.
The Octopus Tell me,
O
Octopus,
Is those things I
marvel
If I
begs.
arms, or
at thee,
were thou,
I
is
they legs?
Octopus;
I'd call
me
Us.
—Ogden
Barnyard Cogitations
Behold the duck. It
does not cluck.
A
cluck
It
it
lacks.
quacks.
It is specially
Of a puddle
When It
it
fond
or pond.
dines or sups.
bottoms ups.
Let's think of eggs.
They have no legs. Chickens come from eggs But they have
The
legs.
plot thickens;
Eggs come from chickens. But have no legs under 'em.
What
a conundrimi!
—Ogden
Nash
Nash
Habits of the Hippopotamus'
The hippopotamus
And huge
of
is
strong
head and broad of
The hmbs on which he
rolls
bustle;
along
Are big with hippopotomuscle.
He
does not greatly care for sweets
Like ice cream, apple pie, or custard, to flavor what he eats
But takes
A
little
hippopotomustard.
The hippopotamus is true To all his principles, and
He
always
The
He
tries his
just;
best to do
things one hippopotomust.
never rides in trucks or trams,
In taxicabs or omnibuses.
And so keeps out of traflBc jams And other hippopotomusses.
—Arthur
6
Guiterman
I
I
Sometimes Think
sometimes think
I'd rather
crow
And be a rooster than to roost And be a crow. But I duimo.
A
he can roost also, Which don't seem fair when crows can't crow. Which may help some. Still I dunno. rooster
Crows should be glad
Nobody
of one thing, though;
thinks of eating crow.
While roosters they are good enough For anyone unless they're tough. There are
tough old roosters, though. And anyway a crow can't crow. So mebby roosters stand more show. It looks that way. But I dunno. lots of
—^Anon,
The
Tickle
"Who's that tickling "Me," said a small
my
Rhyme back?" said the wall.
Caterpillar. "I'm learning
To
crawl."
—Ian 9
Serraillier
—— The Gamers Complaint "Canary-birds feed on sugar and seed, Parrots have crackers to crunch;
And
as for the poodles, they tell
Have chickens and cream
me
the noodles
for their lunch.
But there's never a question About MY digestion Anything does for me! "Cats, you're aware, can repose in a chair.
Chickens can roost upon rails; Puppies are able to sleep in a stable. And oysters can slumber in pails.
But no one supposes A poor camel dozes Any place does for me!
—— — "Lambs are enclosed where it's never exposed. Coops are constructed for hens; Kittens are treated to houses well heated.
And
pigs are protected
by pens.
But a camel comes handy Whenever it's sandy Anywhere does for me! "People would laugh
you rode a giraffe, of an ox; ride on a rabbit. if
Or mounted the back It's
nobody's habit to
Or
try to bestraddle a fox.
But as for a camel, he's Ridden by families Any load does for me!
"A snake
is
as
round
as a hole in the ground.
And weasels are wavy and sleek; And no alhgator could ever be straighter Than
lizards that live in a creek,
But a camel's all lumpy And bumpy and humpy ANY shape does for me!"
—Charles
Edwaed Cabeyl
The
Little Turtle
There was a
little turtle.
He He swam in a puddle. He climbed on the rocks. lived in a box.
He snapped at a mosquito. He snapped at a flea. He snapped at a minnow. And he snapped at me. He He He
caught the mosquito. caught the flea. caught the minnow. But he didn't catch me. -Vachel Lindsay
The Frog
What
a strange bird the frog are.
When he sit he stand almost; When he jump he fly almost; When he talk he cry almost; He ain't got no sense hardly. He ain't got no tail hardly, either. He sit on what he ain't got almost.
—Anon. 12
The Answers did the world begin and how?"
"When
asked a lamb, a goat, a cow.
I
"What's
about and why?"
asked a hog as he walked by.
I
"Where I
it all
whole thing end and when?"
will the
asked a duck, a goose, a hen.
And
A
I
copied
all
the answers too,
quack, a honk, an oink, a moo.
—Robert
The
Ostrich
Is
a
Clairmont
Silly Bird
The ostrich is a silly bird. With scarcely any mind.
He often runs so very fast, He leaves himself behind. And when he gets there, has And hang about till night.
to stand
Without a blessed thing to do Until he comes in sight.
—Mary l.*^
E.
Wilkens Freeman
Was
There Once
a Puffin
Oh, there once was a Puffin Just the shape of a muffin, And he hved on an island In the bright
blue sea!
He
ate
little fishes,
That were most delicious. And he had them for supper And he
had them for tea.
But
He
this
poor
little Puffin.
couldn't play nothin',
For he hadn't anybody
To play
with at
all.
So he sat on his island, And he cried for awhile, and
He felt And he
very lonely.
felt
very small.
14
Then along came
And
they said, "If
You can have
tlie fishes.
you wishes,
us for playmates.
Instead of for tea!"
So they now play together. In all sorts of weather,
And
the Puffin eats pancakes.
Like you
and like
me.
—Florence
Page Jaques
Partners
There was an ox, there was a flea; She was as small as small can be, And he was large, but gentle he; He ploughed, while on his ear sat
A
little
bird looked on.
Quoth
she.
he:
you doing, my little flea?" She said: "We plough the fields. You That is our job the ox and me."
"What
are
see.
—
—J.\IME 15
CaSTIEI.LO
That Cat
The
comes
cat that
to
my window
sill
When the moon looks cold and the night He comes in a frenzied state alone With a
And And
that stands like a pine tree cone,
tail
says: "I I
think
My whiskers I
I
have finished my evening lark, can hear a hound dog bark.
are froze 'nd stuck to
do wish you'd git up and let That cat gits in.
But
if
is still-
me
my chin, in."
in the solitude of the night
He doesn't appear to be feeling right, And rises and stretches and seeks the floor, And some remote corner he would explore. And doesn't feel satisfied just because There's no good spot for to sharpen his claws.
And meows and Beyond the
least
canters uneasy about
shadow
of
That cat gits
any doubt
out.
—Ben King 16
—— The Reason
The reason
for the Pelican
for the
peHcan
Is dijfficult to see;
His beak
Than
clearly larger
is
there's
any need to be.
It's
not to bail a boat with
He
doesn't
own
a boat.
Yet everywhere he takes himself
He
has that beak to
It's
not to keep his wife in
His wife has got one,
tote.
too.
It's
not a scoop for eating soup.
It's
not an extra shoe.
It isn't
And It's
quite for anything.
yet you realize
really quite a splendid
In quite a splendid
size.
—^JOHN KC,.^))
17
beak
ClAKDI
Bees, Bothered by Bold Bears, Behave Badly
"Your honey or your life!" says the bold burglar bear, As he climbs up the tree where the bees have their lair. "Burglars! Burglars!"
"Sharpen up your
The
hum. brothers! Tighten up yoi
tree begins to
stings,
wings, brothers!
"Beat the alarm on the big brass drum!
"Watch
yourself, bear, for
here
we come!"
Then the big black bees buzz out from their lair, With sharp stings ready zoom down on the bear. "Ouch! Ouch! Ouch! Don't be so rough!" He slithers down the tree, squalling, "Hey,
let ir
be!" Bawling,
"Keep your old honey. Horrid "I'm going home, for
sticky stuff!
I've
had enough!"
—Walter
18
R.
Broo
Ants, Although Admirable,
Are Awfully Aggravating
The busy ant works hard all day
And never stops to rest or play. He carries things ten times his size. And never grumbles, whines or cries. And even climbing flower stalks. He always runs, he never walks. He loves his work, he never tires. And never puffs, pants or perspires. Yet though I
am
I
praise his boundless
—Walter
Song
Week
for Thrift
As soon As a squirrel Has gathered Its
A
bin
full,
hunter
Stands ready
To pepper Its skin full
— Mildred
vim
not really fond of him.
Weston
R. Brooks
The
The Is I
firefly's
Firefly
flame
something for which science has no name. can think of nothing eerier
Than
flying
around with an unidentified glow on a
person's posteerier.
— Ogden
The Unfortunate
Nash
Giraffe
There was once a giraffe who said, "What Do I want with my tea strong or hot? For my throat's such a length
The
And
is
tea loses
its
cold ere
it
strength,
reaches the spot."
—Oliver
20
Herfobd
The
Sloth
In moving slow he has no Peer. You ask him something in his ear;
He
thinks about
And
for a Year;
Word down (unUke a bird)
then, before he says a
There, upside
He
it
will assimie that
you have Heard
A
most Ex-as-per-at-ing Lug. But should you call his manner Smug, He'll sigh and give his Branch a Hug;
Then Still
off
again to Sleep he goes;
swaying gently by
his Toes,
And you must know he knows he knows.
—Theodore
21
Roethke
The Hippopotamus I shoot the
With
Hippopotamus
bullets
made
of platinum,
Because if I use leaden ones His hide is sure to flatten 'em.
—HiLAIRE
BeLLOC
The Purple Cow I
never saw a Purple Cow, I
But
never hope to see one. I
I'd
can
tell
rather
you, anyhow, see than
be one! -Gelett Buegess
After Reading Mr. Burgess
I
never saw a Purple Cow, I
never hope to see one;
But from the milk we're getting now. There certainly must be one.
—^Anon. 22
— Undersea
Beneath the waters Green and cool The mermaids keep
A
swimming
school.
The oysters trot; The lobsters prance; The dolphins come To join the dance. But the
Who
jellyfish
are rather small
Can't seem to learn
The
steps at
all.
— Maechette
Chute
The Flea
And
bounding You cannot tell the he from she. The sexes look alike, you see; But she can tell and so can he. here's the happy,
—Roland 23
flea
Young
The Duck and Said the
Duck
"Good Over the
gracious!
As
My
if
I
I
how you hop
and the water you never would stop!
too.
a bore in this nasty pond,
long to go out in the world beyond;
wish
I
could hop like you,"
Said the
Duck
"Please give
Said the "I
to the Kangaroo,
fields,
life is
And
the Kangaroo
me
to the
Kangaroo.
a ride on your back,"
Duck
Kangaroo: and say nothing but 'Quack'
to the
would sit quite still, The whole of the long day through;
And we'd go Over
to the Dee,
and the
Jelly
Bo Lee,
the land, and over the sea.
Please take
Said the
me for a ride!
Duck
oh, do,"
to the Kangaroo.
Said the Kangaroo to the Duck, "This requires some
Perhaps, on the whole,
And Which Your
little reflection. it
might bring
me
luck;
there seems but one objection; is, if you'll let me speak so bold,
feet are unpleasantly
wet and
cold.
And would probably give me the rooMatiz," said the Kangaroo.
24
Said the Duck, "As I
I sat
on the
rocks,
have thought over that completely;
And I bought four pairs of worsted Which fit my web-feet neatly;
socks.
And, to keep out the cold, I've brought a cloak, And every day a cigar I'll smoke; All to follow
Love
my own
dear true
of a Kangaroo."
Said the Kangaroo, "I'm ready, All in the moonlight pale;
But
to balance
And
me well,
dear Duck,
quite at the end of
sit
steady.
my tail."
So away they went with a hop and a bound; And they hopped the whole world three times round.
And who so happy, oh! who, As the Duck and the Kangaroo.
—Edward Leab
25
— The
Snail's
Dream
A
snail who had a way, it seems, Of dreaming very curious dreams, Once dreamt he was youll never The Lightning Limited Express.
—
guess!
— Oliver
Herford
The Panther
The panther
Hke a leopard. Except it hasn't been peppered, Should you behold a panther crouch. Prepare to say Ouch. Better yet,
is
if
called
by a panther,
Don't anther.
— Ogden
Nash
—— Ode
My tail But
is
it's
In length
to the Pig:
not impressive elegant and neat. it's
not excessive
I can't cinrl it
But
it's
His Tail
round
my feet
awfully expressive,
And its weight is not excessive. And I don't think it's conceit, Or
foolishly possessive
If I state
with some aggressiveit's the final master touch
ness that
That makes a pig complete.
—Walter R.
Twinkle, Twinkle,
Little
Brooks
Bat!
Twinkle, twinkle, Httle bat!
How
I
wonder what you're
at?
Up
above the world you fly. Like a tea-tray in the sky.
—Lewis
27
Carroll
envy you, oh lightning bug, You worry not a bit. For when you see a traffic cop You know your tailhght's Ht. I
-Anon.
To a Centipede and His Hundred Legs
A
centipede was happy quite.
Until a frog in fun Said, "Pray,
which leg comes
after
which?"
This raised her mind to such a pitch.
She lay distracted Considering
in the ditch,
how to run.
—Anon. 28
Diet of Robins
To
say that woiins are edible
Will seem to you incredible.
For you to eat a measuring worm, take more courage and determ
Would
ination that to take a dive
i
nto a clump of poison ivy.
Yet robins eat them every day;
They smack their beaks and shout Hooray! They gobble them with joy and pride And do not seem upset inside.
The moral here
is
plain to see:
What pleases you does not please me; What pleases me to you is hateful. And for this fact we should be grateful.
—Walter R.
Brooks
Reply from a Robin
are edible may seem to you incredible, most emphatically assert That hardly any dishes are more filling or deliciouser Than angleworms pulled freshly from the dirt.
To say that worms
And
yet
I
—Walter 29
R. Brooks
—
Bed-Time Story
Once
there
was a spaniel
By the name And a pig,
And
of Daniel,
a pussy,
Gussie
She chased a mouse, Klaus;
And
a squirrel,
Errol,
And
a white she-bear,
Claire,
30
And
a Scotch
lion,
Ian,
And
a very fierce shark,
Mark. You'll agree,
They were
my
dear.
rather a queer
Assortment
Of temperament and deportment.
And
yet.
My pet. In spite of their diversities.
And
perversities
Both zoological
And
ideological.
They
gathered together
all
when
One
day,
Was
especially frightful,
It
the weather
and decided
wasn't safe to stay divided
Any
longer, and that they should. For their common good, (Rather than risk another calamity) Try amity.
And
that's the
way
there began to
Plan they christened
"And did they "I'll tell
live
you the
a
UNITED FAUNA.
happily ever
rest
dawn
after.
Daddy?"
tomorrow. Good night, dear."
— Melville 31
Cane
The
— —Python
Principal Part of a
The principal part of a python As anyone plainly can see Is
the part that begins in the middle
And
goes both ways indefinitely.
The trouble Whether it's
no one can
is,
tail, sir,
tell
you
or nose
simply begins in the middle And grows and grows and grows. It
I
If
think the python might like
it
someone who knows could decide
When
he wriggles along through the jungle Which end is getting the ride. doing the pushing Wherever the python goes? Is it tail that is
Or does
tail just
hang there
While he wriggles along on
resting his nose?
Don't you think the python might like If someone who knows would decide
When
it
he wriggles along through the jungle
Which end
is
getting the ride?
»•
32
NUMEROUS AND HUMOROUS
There was an old
Who
man
Two
owls and a hen
Four
larks
Have
with a beard,
said, "It is just as I feared!
and a wren,
all built their
nests in
my
beard!'
—Edward 33
Leab
woman named
There was a young
Whose speed was much She
set out
Bright,
faster than hght,
one day
In a relative way,
And
returned on the previous night. -Axon.
There was a young
man from Quebec,
Who
snow
was buried
When they He rephed,
in
said,
"Yes,
But they don't
to his neck.
"Are you friz?" I is.
call this
cold in Quebec."
—Anon.
There was a young maid who Can't If I
I
said,
my ear with my my mind to
look in
give
I'm sure
"Why
eye?
it,
I
can do
You never can
it.
tell till
you
try."
-Anon.
34
There was a young fanner of Leeds Who swallowed six packets of seeds. soon came to pass He was covered with grass,
It
And he
couldn't
sit
down
for the weeds.
—^Anon.
An
epicure, dining at Crewe,
Found
quite a large
mouse
in his stew.
Said the waiter, "Don't shout,
Or wave it about. Or the rest will be wanting
one, too!"
—^Anon.
There once was a boy of Baghdad,
An inquisitive sort of He said, "I will see If
a lad.
a sting has a bee."
And he
very soon found that
it
had.
-Anon.
35
There was once a young lady of Ryde Who ate a green apple and died; The apple fermented Inside the lamented,
And made
cider inside her inside. -Anon.
There was a young lady of Niger Who smiled as she rode on a tiger; They returned from the ride
With the lady
And
inside,
the smile on the face of the tiger.
—Anon.
A
cheerful old bear at the zoo
Could always
find something to do.
When it bored him to go On a walk to and fro, He reversed it, and walked fro and to.
—Anon. 36
man so He never knew when he was He went to a party. And ate just as hearty
There was a young
As
if
benighted, sHghted.
he'd been really invited.
—Anon.
There was a young man of St. Bees Who was stung on the arm by a wasp. When they asked, "Does it hurt?"
He But
I
replied, "No,
thought
it
all
doesn't,
the time 'twas a hornet."
—^W.
S.
Gilbert
There was a young man of Devizes Whose ears were of different sizes; The one that was small Was of no use at all. But the other won several prizes.
—^Anon. 37
There was a young man of Heme Bay, Who was making explosives one day; But he dropped his cigar
gunpowder jar. There ivas a young man In the
of
Heme
Bay.
—Anon.
There was a young
man
of
Bengal
Who
went to a fancy-dress ball. He went just for fun Dressed up as a bun, And a dog ate him up in the
hall.
—Anon.
A
housewife called out with a frown,
When
surprised
by some
callers
from town,
"In a minute or less
—
on a dress But she slipped on the I'll
slip
stairs
and came down. -Anon.
38
There was a young fellow of Perth, Who was born on the day of his birth;
He was married, they say. On his wife's wedding day, And he died when he quitted
the earth.
—Anon.
A
maiden caught stealing a dahlia. Said, "Oh, you shan't tell on me, shahha?" But the florist was hot.
And he
said,
They'll send
"Like as not
you
to
jail,
you bad gaWia.'
—Anon.
There was a young fellow named Hall,
Who
fell in
the spring in the
fall;
'Twould have been a sad thing If he had died in the spring, But he didn't ^he died in the fall.
—
—^Anon. 39
The
bottle of
Was
perfume that WiUie sent
highly displeasing to Millicent;
Her thanks were so cold, They quarrelled, I'm told, Through that silly scent Willy
sent Millicent. -Anon.
There was an old man of Tarentum, Who gnashed his false teeth till he bent 'em.
When
they asked him the cost
Of what he had
He
lost.
replied, "I can't say, for I rent 'em."
—Anon.
A
sleeper from the
Amazon
Put nighties of his gra'mazon
The reason that He was too fat To get his own pajamazon.
—Anon. 40
I
wish that
my room
much
I don't so
had a
floor;
care for a door.
But this walking around Without touching the ground Is getting to be quite a bore!
—Gelett
Burgess
There was an old man of Blackheath, Who sat on his set of false teeth. Said he, with a
start,
"O Lord,
my
I've bitten
bless
heart!
myself underneath!"
—Anon.
A
flea
Were
and a
fly in
a flue
imprisoned, so what could they do?
Said the
fly,
Said the
flea,
"Let us "Let us
flee," fly,"
So they flew through a flaw in the
flue.
—^Anon.
41
A mouse
in
her room
woke Miss Dowd,
She was frightened and screamed very loud, Then a happy thought hit her
To She
scare
sat
up
oflF
in
the critter,
bed and meowed.
One day
—Anon.
went out to the Zoo, For I wanted to see the old Gnu, But the old Gnu was dead I
And the new Gnu they said Was too new a new Gnu to view.
—Anon.
As a beauty I am not a star, There are others more handsome, by But my face I don't mind it For I am behind it,
far.
—
It's
the people in front get the
jar!
—Anthony 42
Euwer
CHEERY AND TEARY
The Animal
Fair
I went to the animal fair, The birds and the beasts were there. The big baboon, by the hght of the moon, Was combing his auburn hair. The monkey, he got drunk,
And
on the elephant's trunk. The elephant sneezed and fell on his knees. And what became of the monk, the monk? sat
-Anon.
43
Clementine
In a cavern, in a canyon
Excavating for a mine,
Dwelt a miner,
And
his
forty-niner,
daughter Clementine.
Light she was and like a
And
her shoes were
fairy,
number
nine,
Herring boxes, without topses Sandals were for Clementine.
Drove she ducklings to the water. Every morning, just at nine. Hit her foot against a sphnter, Fell into the foaming brine.
Ruby
above the water, Blowing bubbles soft and fine, Alas for me! I was no swimmer, So
lips
I lost
my
Clementine.
Oh, my darling, oh, my darling, Oh, my darling Clementine, You are lost and gone forever. Dreadful sorry, Clementine.
—Anon.
44
Oh! Susanna! I
come from Alabama, with my banjo on my knee;
I'm going to Louisiana, It
rained
The sun
all
my
night the day
so hot
I
true love for to see.
I left,
the weather
was so dry; you cry.
froze to death. Susanna, don't
Oh! Susanna! Don't you cry for me; I've come from Alabama with my banjo on
my
knee.
had a dream the other night when everything was still; thought I saw Susanna a-coming down the hill. The buckwheat cake was in her mouth, the tear was in
I I
her eye; Says
I,
"I'm coming from the South, Susanna, don't you
cry.
Oh! Susanna! Don't you cry for me; For I've come from Alabama with my banjo on
my knee.
—Stephen
C. Foster
45
— The Duke
of
Plaza-Toro
In enterprise of martial kind,
when
there
was any
fight-
ing,
He
led his regiment from behind
(
he found
it
less excit-
ing).
But when away fore,
regiment ran, his place was at the
his
Oh
That celebrated, cultivated. Underrated nobleman.
The Duke In the
first
of Plaza-Toro!
and foremost
You always found
flight, ha, ha!
that knight, ha, ha!
That celebrated, cultivated, Underrated nobleman,
The Duke
When,
to
of Plaza-Toro!
evade destruction's hand, to hide they
all
pro-
he
did.
ceeded,
No He
soldier in that gallant
band hid
half as well as
lay concealed throughout the war,
and
so preserved
his gore. Oh! That unaffected, undetected, well-connected warrior.
The Duke
of Plaza-Toro!
In every doughty deed, ha, ha!
He
always took the lead, ha, ha!
That unaffected, undetected, well-connected warrior,
The Duke
of Plaza-Toro!
46
when
told that they
would
all
be shot unless they
left
the service.
That hero hesitated
He
not, so
sent his resignation
in,
marvelous his nerve the
first
is.
of all his corps,
Oh!
That very knowing, overflowing, easygoing Paladin, The Duke of Plaza-Toro!
To men
of grosser clay, ha, ha!
He
always showed the way, ha, ha! That very knowing, overflowing, easygoing Paladin,
The Duke
of Plaza-Toro!
47
—^W.
S.
Gilbert
Down
in
Arkansas
Farmer Jones he had a hen,
Down
in Arkansas.
Sold that hen to
Down From
my
Brother Ben,
in Arkansas.
made
a pair of pants he
a nest,
Told that hen to do her best. And she hatched out a coat and
Down
Ben and me we had
Down About
vest,
in Arkansas.
a cow,
in Arkansas.
that
cow we had
a row,
Down in Arkansas. "Now half that cow is To
fix it
I killed
mine," Ben up how hard I tried. my half and his half died,
Down I
had a
I
in Arkansas.
gal
Down
and her name was
Lil,
in Arkansas.
loved that gal and
Down
cried.
I
love her
still,
in Arkansas.
Her eyes were blue and her hair was She was so cross-eyed for a fact,
When she cried the tears Down in Arkansas.
48
ran
down
black.
her back,
— Had a funny weddin' down our way, Down in Arkansas. A man named Oats and a gal named Hay,
Down
in Arkansas.
And
as they went down the aisle you The organ played in a minor key, Oh what will the harvest be?
Down
in Arkansas.
They
see.
—Anon.
Strolled the Lanes Together
They strolled the lanes together. The sky was studded with stars;
He walked her to the pasture gate And lifted for her the bars. She raised her brown eyes to him There was nothing between them now; For he was the farmer's hired man,
And
she a Jersey cow.
—Anon. 49
Poor Old Lady
Poor old lady, she swallowed a fly. I don't know why she swallowed a fly. Poor old lady,
I
think she'll die.
Poor old lady, she swallowed a spider. It squirmed and wriggled and turned inside her. She swallowed the spider to catch the fly. I don't know why she swallowed a fly. Poor old lady,
I
think she'll die.
Poor old lady, she swallowed a bird. How absurd! She swallowed a biid.
She swallowed the bird to catch the spider, She swallowed the spider to catch the fly, I don't know why she swallowed a fly.
Poor old lady,
I
think she'll die.
50
Poor old lady, she swallowed a cat. Think of that! She swallowed a cat.
She swallowed the cat to catch the bird, She swallowed the bird to catch the spider, She swallowed the spider to catch the fly, I don't know why she swallowed a fly. Poor old lady,
I
think she'll die.
Poor old lady, she swallowed a dog. She went the whole hog when she swallowed the dog.
She swallowed the dog to catch the cat. She swallowed the cat to catch the bird. She swallowed the bird to catch the spider. She swallowed the spider to catch the fly. I
don't
know why
Poor old lady,
I
she swallowed a
fly.
think she'll die.
Poor old lady, she swallowed a cow. I don't know how she swallowed a cow.
She swallowed a cow to catch the dog. She swallowed the dog to catch the cat. She swallowed the cat to catch the bird. She swallowed the bird to catch the spider. She swallowed the spider to catch the fly. I don't know why she swallowed a fly. Poor old lady, I think she'll die. Poor old ladv, she swallowed a horse. She died, of course.
51
—Anon.
Gee, But
I
Want
to
The coffee that they They say is mighty It's
good
And
it
Go Home^
give us, fine,
and bruises. Hke iodine.
for cuts tastes
want no more of army Gee, but I want to go home!
I
don't
The crackers that they They say are mighty One fell off a table,
And
give us. fine.
killed a pal of mine.
want no more of army Gee, but I want to go home! I
life,
don't
life.
The clothes that they give us, They say are mighty fine. Me and my buddy Can both fit into mine. want no more of army Gee, but I want to go home! I don't
52
life.
They
treat us all like
And make They
give us
And I
don't
monkeys.
us stand in line, fifty dollars
a
week
take back forty-nine.
want no more of army I want to go home!
life,
Gee, but
The girls at the service club, They say are mighty fine, Most are over eighty
And
the rest are under nine.
want no more of army Gee, but I want to go home! I
don't
life,
—Anon.
53
The Walloping Window Blind
A
capital ship for an ocean trip
Was The Walloping Window Blind; No gale that blew dismayed her crew Or troubled the captain's mind. The man at the wheel was taught to Contempt for the wildest blow.
And
it
often appeared,
That he'd been
in his
when
feel
the weather
had
cleared,
bunk below.
The boatswain's mate was very
sedate.
Yet fond of amusement, too;
And he played hopscotch with
the starboard watch
While the captain tickled the crew. And the gunner we had was apparently mad. For he sat on the after-rail,
And
fired salutes
with the captain's boots.
In the teeth of the booming gale.
The captain
And
On
sat in a
commodore's
hat,
dined, in a royal way,
toasted pigs and pickles and figs
And gummery bread, each day. But the cook was Dutch, and behaved For the food that he gave the crew
Was
as such;
mmiber of tons of hot-cross buns. Chopped up with sugar and glue. a
54
And we
all felt
ill
as mariners will,
On a diet that's cheap and rude; And we shivered and shook as we dipped
the cook
In a tub of his gluesome food.
Then
nautical pride
And we
we
laid aside,
cast the vessel ashore
On the GuUiby Isles, where the Poohpooh And the Anagazanders roar. Composed
smiles.
was that favored land, And trimmed with cinnamon straws; And pink and blue was the pleasing hue Of the Tickletoeteaser's claws. of sand
And we sat on the edge of a sandy ledge And shot at the whistling bee; And the Binnacle bats wore waterproof hats As they danced
On rubagub
We
fed,
in the sounding sea.
bark, from
till
we
all
Uncommonly shrunk
Came by from
dawn
to dark,
had grown
—when a Chinese junk
the torriby zone.
She was stubby and square, but we didn't much care. And we cheerily put to sea; And we left the crew of the junk to chew The bark of the rubagub tree. —Charles Edward Carryl
55
Went
to the river, couldn't get across,
an old gray hoss,
Paid
five dollars for
Hoss
wouldn't pull so I traded for a bull. traded for a dollar.
Bull wouldn't holler so
I
Dollar wouldn't pass so
I
Grass wouldn't grow so
Hoe wouldn't
dig so
I
Pig wouldn't squeal so
Wheel wouldn't run
threw
I
it
on the
grass.
traded for a hoe.
traded for a pig. I
traded for a wheel.
so I traded for a gun.
Gun
wouldn't shoot so I traded for a boot. Boot wouldn't fit so I thought I'd better quit. So I quit.
—Anon.
Mules
On
mules we find two legs behind, And two we find before, We stand behind before we find What the two behind be for.
When
we're behind the two behind
We find what these be for. So stand before the two behind, Behind the two before.
—Anon.
56
BRAINY AND ZANY
Thoughts on Talkers
Some people
talk in a telephone
And some people talk in a hall; Some people talk in a whisper, And some people talk in a drawl; And some people talk-and-talk-and-talk-and-talk-andtalk
And
never say anything at
all.
—Walter 57
R.
Brooks
Antonio
a
Antonio, Antonio,
Was tired of living alonio. He thought he would woo Miss Lissamy Lou, Miss Lissamy Lucy Molonio. Antonio, Antonio,
Rode
off
on his polo-ponio.
He found
the fair
maid
In a bowery shade, A-sitting
and knitting
alonio.
Antonio, Antonio,
you will be my ownio, love you true. And I'll buy for you,
Said, "If I'll
An
icery creamery conio!"
"Oh, nonio, Antonio! You're far too bleak and bonio!
And
all
You
singular
Is that
^.
that
you
I
wish.
fish.
will quickly begonio.'
Antonio, Antonio,
He
uttered a dismal moanio;
Then ran
and hid (Or I'm told that he did) off
In the Antarctical Zonio. -Laura E. Richards
58
Grandpa Dropped His Glasses
Grandpa dropped
once
his glasses
In a pot of dye,
And when he put them on He saw a purple sky.
again
Purple birds were rising up From a purple hill,
Men were
grinding purple cider
At a purple
mill.
Purple Adeline was playing
With
a purple doll,
Little purple dragonflies
Were crawling up the wall. And at the supper table
He
got crazy as a loon
From
eating purple apple dumplings
With a purple spoon.
—Leroy
A
doctor
fell in
And broke
Jackson
a deep well
his collar bone.
The Moral: Doctor, mind
And
F.
the sick
leave the well alone.
—Anon. 59
—
—
Old Quin Queeribus
Old Quin Queeribus—
He loved his garden so, He wouldn't have a rake
A
around,
shovel or a hoe.
For each potato's eyes he bought Fine spectacles of gold,
And
mufflers for the corn, to keep
Its ears
On
from getting
cold.
every head of lettuce green
What do you think of that? And every head of cabbage, too. He tied a garden hat. Old Quin Queeribus
He loved his garden so. He couldn't eat his growing He only let them grow!
—Nancy
60
things.
Byrd Turner
The Optimist
The
optimist
fell
ten stories,
each window bar
And at He shouted "Doing
to the folks inside:
all
right so far!"
—Anon.
\&i Queen's Song
Nobody ever tells me; Nobody lets me know. Wars are fought and groceries bought And people come and go, But what is the use of being a Queen To sit in a marble hall If
nobody
tells
Any-thing at I
want
to
know
you anything, anything, all?
all
the gossip
That all the courtiers know, ^ Who had a fight and stayed out all night And who has a brand new beau. But you sit on a throne and you're all alone And if anyone comes to call They simply won't tell you anything, anything, Any-thing at all.
—Walter 61
R.
Brooks
—— — Father William
"You are
old,
"And your
And
man
said,
become very white;
yet you incessantly stand on your head
Do you "In
Father William," the young
hair has
my
think at your age,
it is
right?"
youth," Father William replied to his son,
"I feared
it
might injure the brain;
But now that I'm perfectly sure I do it again and again."
I
have none.
Why,
"You are
old," said the youth, "as I
And have grown most uncommonly
mentioned before.
fat.
Yet you turned a back somersault in at the door Pray,
"In
what
my
the reason of that?"
youth," said the sage, as he shook his gray locks,
"I kept all
By
is
my
limbs very supple
the use of this ointment
Allow
me
to sell
—one
you a couple?"
^\o^v^ r>A^^>#%-(^?>^
62
shilling the
box
— "You are
—
old," said the youth,
"and your jaws are too
weak For anything tougher than
suet;
Yet you finished the goose, with the bones and the beak Pray,
how
my
"In
did you
manage
to
do
it?"
youth," said his father, "I took to the law.
And argued each case with my wife; And the muscular strength which it gave Has
lasted the rest of
my
to
my jaw
life."
"You are
old," said the youth; "one would hardly suppose That your eye was as steady as ever; Yet you balanced an eel on the end of your nose What made you so awfully clever?"
"I
have answered three questions, and that
Said his father, "don't give yourself
Do you Be
off,
think or
I'll
I
can
listen all
day
is
enough,"
airs!
to such stuff?
kick you downstairs.
—Lewis 63
Carroll
The Hazards
A
green
On
chemist
little
a green
of Science
little
day
Mixed some green
little
In a green
little
way.
The green
little
grasses
Now
tenderly
wave
O'er the green
Green
little
chemicals
little
chemist's
grave.
—Anon.
The Ingenious
A
little
Went
old
man
Old
Little
Man
of the sea
out in a boat for a
sail:
The water came in Almost up to his chin And he had nothing with which But
this little old
Just
drew out
And
a hole with
man
to bail.
of the sea
his jackknife so stout, its
blade
In the bottom he made,
So that
all
of the water ran out.
—John 64
Bennett
The Daughter
of the Farrier
The daughter
of the famer Could find no one to marry Because she said She would not wed
A man who The
could not carry her.
foolish girl
And had
her.
was wrong enough,
to wait quite long enough;
For as she sat She grew so fat That nobody was strong enough!
—^Anon.
The Perfect Reactionary
was sitting in my chair I knew the bottom wasn't there, Nor legs nor back, but I just sat.
As
I
Ignoring
little
things like that.
—Hughes 65
Mearns
Daddy
Fell into the
Pond
Everyone grumbled. The sky was gray. We had nothing to do and nothing to say. We were nearing the end of a dismal day, And there seemed to be nothing beyond,
THEN Daddy
fell into
the pond!
And everyone's face grew merry and bright, And Timothy danced for sheer delight. "Give me the camera, quick, oh quick! He's crawling out of the duckweed." Click!
Then the gardener suddenly slapped
his knee.
And doubled up, shaking silently. And the ducks all quacked as if they were daft And it sounded as if the old drake laughed. Oh, there wasn't a thing that didn't respond
WHEN Daddy
fell into
the pond!
—Alfred
66
Noyes
—
To
the Terrestrial Globe
By a
Miserable Wretch
Roll on, thou ball, roll on!
Through pathless realms
of space
Roll on!
What What What What
though I'm in a sorry case? though I cannot meet my bills? though I suffer toothache's ills? though I swallow countless pills? Never you mind! Roll on!
Roll on, thou ball, roll on!
Through
seas of inky air
Roll on! It's
true I've got no shirts to wear;
It's
true
It's
true
my butcher's bill my prospects all
But don't
let that unsettle
is
due;
look blue you.
Never you mind! Roll on! [It rolls on.]
—W. 67
S.
Gilbert
The Revolving Door
This
is
the horrible tale of Paul
MacGregor James D. Cuthbert
Hall,
Who
day
left his
To go In
home one
to work,
manner
winter's
and on way was strange and weird his
that
Mysteriously disappeared.
He left no clue, he left no trace, He seemed to vanish into space.
Now
listen to the fate of
Paul
MacGregor James D. Cuthbert
He
Hall.
worked, did James, as shipping clerk
For Parkinson, McBaine & Burke, in their store on North Broadway Sold dry goods in a retail way.
Who And
at the entrance to their store
There was a large revolving door Through which passed all who went to work For Parkinson, McBaine & Burke. 68
upon
this day,
accursed of
fate,
MacGregor James, arriving late Dashed headlong madly toward the
store,
And plmiged in through the spinning door. Around about it twirled and whirled And Paul was twisted, curled and hurled, And mashed, and crashed, and dashed and bashed. As round and round it spun and flashed. At times it nearly stopped, and then It
straightway started up again.
"I fear that
I'll
be
late for
work.
Parkinson, McBaine & Burke Will be distressed and grieved," thought Paul
And
MacGregor James D. Cuthbert
Hall.
He raised his voice in frantic cry, And tried to hail the passers-by. He tried in vain to call a cop. But
still
And And
so
the door refused to stop.
he spins and whirls about,
struggles
madly
to get out.
While friends, heartbroken, search for Paul MacGregor James D. Cuthbert Hall.
—Newman
69
Levy
— Rub-a-dub-dub, Three men in a tub, And how do you think they got there?
The butcher, the baker, The candlestick maker, They all jumped out of a rotten potater 'Twas enough to make a man stare!
—Anon.
Anna Elise, she jumped with surprise; The surprise was so quick, it played her a trick; The trick was so rare, she jumped in a chair; The chair was so frail, she jumped in a pail; The pail was so wet, she jimiped in a net; The net was so small, she jumped on the ball; The ball was so round, she jumped on the ground;
And
ever since she's been turning around.
—Anon.
The
Difference
'Twixt optimist and pessimist
The difference is droll: The optimist sees the doughnut; The pessimist sees the hole.
—^Anon. 70
The
Blind
Men
and the Elephant
men of Hindostan, To learning much inclined, It
was
six
Who
went to see the elephant, (Though all of them were blind); That each by observation Might satisfy his mind.
The
approached the elephant. And happening to fall Against his broad and sturdy side. At once began to bawl, "Bless me, it seems the elephant Is
first
very like a wall." 71
The
second, feeling of his tusk,
Cried, "Ho!
What have we
here
So very round and smooth and sharp?
To me
mighty clear This wonder of an elephant Is
'tis
very like a spear."
The
third
approached the animal.
And happening
to take
The squirming trunk within Then boldly up and spake; "I see," Is
his hands.
quoth he, "the elephant
very like a snake."
The fourth
And
felt
stretched out his eager hand about the knee,
"What most
mighty beast is like Is mighty plain," quoth he; " 'Tis clear enough the elephant Is
this
very like a tree."
72
The
fifth
who chanced
to
touch the ear
"Even the blindest man
Said,
Can tell what this resembles most; Deny the fact who can, This marvel of an elephant Is
very like a fan."
The sixth no sooner had begun About the beast to grope Than, seizing on the swinging That fell within his scope,
tail
"I see," cried he, "the elephant Is
very like a rope."
And
so these
men
of Hindostan
Disputed loud and long.
Each
of his
own
opinion
Exceeding stiff and strong. Though each was partly in the And all were in the wrong!
right.
-John Godfrey Saxe
73
The Akond
Who
or
of
Swat
why, or which, or what. Is
Is
he
tall
Does he
the
Akond
of
SWAT?
or short, or dark or fair? sit
on a
stool or a sofa or chair, or
SQUAT,
The Akond he wise or foolish, young or old? Does he drink his soup and his coffee
of
Swat?
Is
cold, or
The Akond
HOT, of
Swat?
Does he wear a turban, a fez, or a hat? Does he sleep on a mattress, a bed, or a mat, or a COT, The Akond of Swat?
When
he writes a copy in round-hand size, cross his T's and finish liis I's with a
Does he
DOT,
The Akond
74
of
Swat?
Do
his
Or do
him extremely well? whenever they can, rebel, or PLOT, At the Akond of Swat?
people they,
like
he catches them then, either old or young. Does he have them chopped in pieces or hung, or SHOT, The Akond of Swat? If
To amuse
his
mind do
his
Pictures, or anyone's last
people show him
new poem,
WHAT,
or
For the Akond of Swat? At night
Do
if
he suddenly screams and wakes.
they bring him only a few small cakes, or a
LOT,
For the Akond of Swat?
Does he wear a white
And
tie it
neat in a
tie
bow
when he
dines with friends,
with ends, or a
KNOT,
The Akond
of Swat?
Does he teach his subjects to roast and bake? Does he sail about on an inland lake, in a YACHT, The Akond of Swat? Someone, or nobody, knows I wot Who or which or why or what Is the
Akond of Swat!
—Edward Leab
75
Bones
Said Mr. Smith, "I really cannot Tell you, Dr. Jones,
The most I
think
peculiar pain I'm in it's
in
my
bones."
Said Dr. Jones, "Oh, Mr. Smith, That's nothing. Without doubt
We have It is to
He
a simple cure for that; take
them
laid forthwith
out."
poor Mr. Smith
Close-clamped upon the
table,
And, cold as stone, took out As fast as he was able.
And Smith
said,
his
bones
"Thank you, thank
you, thank you."
And wished him a good day; And with his parcel 'neath his ann He slowly moved away.
—Walter
76
de la
Mabe
A
Tragic Story
There lived a sage in days of yore, And he a handsome pigtail wore; And wondered much, and sorrowed more. Because it hung behind him.
He mused upon this curious case, And swore he'd change the pigtail's And have it hanging at his face,
place,
Not dangling there behind him. Says he, "The mystery I've found 111 turn me round" he turned him round,
—
But
still it
hung behind him.
Then round and round, and out and All
day the puzzled sage did
In vain
The
—
it
in.
spin;
mattered not a pin hung behind him.
pigtail
And right and left, and roundabout. And up and down and in and out. He turned; but still the pigtail stout Hung steadily behind him. And though his And though he
eflForts
twist
never slack,
and
twirl
and
tack,
Alas! Still faithful to his back.
The
pigtail
hangs behind him.
—Adelbert von Translated by
Chamisso
William Makepeace Thackeray 77.
Arithmetic
Arithmetic
is
where numbers
fly
Uke pigeons in and out
of your head.
you how many you lose or win if you know how many you had before you lost or won.
Arithmetic
Arithmetic
—or
tells
is
seven eleven
five six
all
bundle of
good children go
to
heaven
sticks.
numbers you squeeze from your head to your hand to your pencil to your paper till you get
Arithmetic
is
the answer.
where the answer is right and everything and you can look out of the window and see the blue sky or the answer is wrong and you have to start all over and try again and see how it comes
Arithmetic is
is
nice
—
out this time. If
you take a number and double it and double it again and then double it a few more times, the number gets bigger and bigger and goes higher and higher and only arithmetic can tell you what the number is when you decide to quit doubling. 78
Arithmetic
is
where you have
to multiply
—and
you
carry the multiplication table in your head and
hope you won't
lose
it.
If
you have two animal crackers, one good and one bad, and you eat one and a striped zebra with streaks all over him eats the other, how many animal crackers will you have if somebody offers you five six seven and you say No no no and you say Nay nay nay and you say Nix nix nix?
If
you ask your mother for one fried egg for breakfast and she gives you two fried eggs and you eat both of them, who is better in arithmetic, you or your mother?
—Carl
79
Sandburg
To
{Encountered the
a
Human
in
Museum
of Natural History
It's
hard to think,
Albeit true,
That without flesh I'd be hke you.
And harder still To think, old pal, That one of these Fine days I shall.
—Richard
Armour
80
Skeleton
Jonathan Bing Does Arithmetic
When Jonathan Bing was young, they He slipped his school and ran away; Sat in the
And never
now
meadow and
say.
twiddled his thumbs
learnt spelling or
grammar
or sums.
you tell him, "Add one to two," "Explain what you mean," he'll answer you, "Do you mean 2-morrow or that's 2 bad? And what sort of 1 do you want me to add? So
if
"For there's
1 that
was
first
when
the race was
1,
( For he ran 2 fast for the rest to run ) But if 2 had 1 when the race was through, I'd say yoiu* answer was 1 by 2."
"Oh Jonathan Bing, you haven't the trick Of doing a sum in arithmetic." "Oh give me a chance, just one more try," Says Jonathan Bing with a tear in his eye.
"Very well, Jonathan, try once more. a hundred and seventy-four." "A hundred, and seventy-four," says he,
Add up
—
"Why
that's a great
age for a person to be!"
—Beatrice
81
Curtis
Brown
My!
He
rocked the boat,
Did Ezra Shank; These bubbles mark o o o o o o o
where Ezra
sank.
—Axon-.
Horse
The
&
Rider
rider
Is fat
As that ( Or wider (
) '
In torso
Of course The horse Is more so
—Wey
(
Robinson
82
The
As
Little
Man Who Wasn't
There
was going up the stair met a man who wasn't there!
I
I
He I
wasn't there again today! wish,
I
wish he'd stay away!
—Hughes
Mearns
The Modern Hiawatha
He
killed the noble Mudjokivis,
With the skin he made him mittens, Made them with the fur side inside, Made them with the skin side outside. He, to get the warm side inside, Put the inside skin side outside; He, to get the cold side outside,
warm side why he put
Put the That's
Why he Why he
fur side inside.
the fur side inside.
put the skin side outside. turned them inside outside.
—George A.
83
Stroxg
Logical English
I said,
And
"This horse,
sir,
you shoe?"
will
soon the horse was shod.
sir, will you do?" dod! was deed And soon the
I said,
"This deed,
I said,
"This
At once the I said,
And
stick, sir, will
stick
"This coat,
you break?'
he broke. sir,
will
you make?"
soon the coat he moke!
—Anon.
What
a Coincidence!
most peculiar But something we should praise, That almost all our famous men I
think
it
Were born on
holidays.
—Anon.
84
ASSORTED THOUGHTS
Song
Pop
of the Pop-Bottlers
bottles pop-bottles
In pop shops;
The
pop-bottles
Pop
bottles
Poor Pop drops.
When Pop
drops pop-bottles.
Pop-bottles plop! Pop-bottle-tops topple!
Pop mops
slop!
Stop! Pop'll drop bottle! Stop, Pop, stop!
When Pop
bottles pop-bottles.
Pop-bottles pop!
—Morris
Bishop
85
— Ode
O
O Pole, O
Pole,
to the
North Pole
glorious Pole!
To you I sing this song. Where bedtime comes but once Since the nights are Yes, the nights are six
And
six
months
long.
my
long,
dears,
the days are the same, you see.
So breakfast and supper each
And
a year,
months
last
a week.
dinner sometimes three.
and lunch, and we sometimes munch Occasional snacks between Such mountains of candies and cakes and pies Have never before been seen.
Then
there's tea
Let the wild winds howl about the Pole Let the snowflakes swirl and swoop; We're snug and warm and safe from harm
And We'll
they're bringing in the soup.
sit
at the table as long as we're able,
We'll rise and stretch, and then. Since there's nothing to do but gobble and chew.
We'll
sit
right
down
again.
We'll tuck our napkins under our chins
To keep our
waistcoats neat,
And then we'll eat and eat and eat And eat and eat and eat.
—^Walter 86
R. Brooks
The Onion *
'Tis
very sad," the onion said.
And heaved
a Httle sigh. I
have
making people
cry."
'The only faculty Is
—C.
C.
Wabd
The Months
January snov^, February flowy, March blowy; April showery, May flowery, June bowery; July
moppy, August croppy, September poppy;
October breezy, November wheezy, December freezy. -Richard B. Sheridan
never dare to walk across A bridge I could not see.
I'd
For quite afraid of I fear that I
falling
oflF
should be!
—Gelett 87
Burgess
stately Verse
Mary goes far out to sea, By wayward breezes fanned, can you tell me? I'd like to know
If
—
where would Maryland?
Just
If
Tenny went high up
And
in air
looked o'er land and
lea,
Looked here and there and everywhere, Pray what would Tennessee? I
looked out of the
Saw Orry on
window and
the lawn;
He's not there now, and Just
Two
who
can
tell
where has Oregon?
girls
were quarreling one day tools, and so
With garden I said,
And
A
"My
dears, let
Mary
rake
just let Idaho."
mine lived in a flat With half a dozen boys; When he fell ill I asked him why. friend of
He An
said: "I'm Illinois."
English lady had a steed.
She called him 'Ighland Bay. She rode for exercise, and thus
Rhode
Island every day. -Anon.
88
Routine
No
matter what
Some
we
A poet puts To wash
and who, must do:
are
duties everyone
aside his wreath
his face
And even Earls Must comb their
and brush
his teeth.
curls.
And even Kings Have underthings.
—Arthub 89
Gutterman
Otherwise
There must be magic, Otherwise,
How
could day turn to night?
And how
could sailboats,
Otherwise,
Go sailing out of sight? And how could peanuts. Otherwise,
Be covered up
so tight? -AiLEEN Fisher
The Microbes
Two
microbes sat on a pantry shelf
And watched, with
expressions
pained,
The milkmaid's
And both "Our
stunts;
said at once,
relations are going to
be
strained."
— Anon. 90
The wind
riz
And
then
it
The
rain friz
And
then
blew,
it
snew.
Spring has sprung,
The grass has riz. I wonder where The flowers is. Spring has sprung. Fall has feU,
Winter's here
And
it's
cold as heck.
—^Anon.
Peas I
eat
my
peas with honey,
done it all my life. makes them taste quite funny, But it keeps them on the knife. I've
It
—^Anon. 91
I'm glad the sky is painted blue; And the earth is painted green;
And All
such a
lot of nice fresh air
sandwiched
in
between.
—Anon. Song I
A
of the
think that
Open Road
I shall
never see
billboard lovely as a tree.
Indeed, unless the billboards I'll never see a tree at all.
—Ogden
92
fall
Nash
EpiTAWS Gone But Not Forgotten This troubled world
The
flu is at
And many
Who
is
sighing now.
the door;
folks are
dying
now
never died before.
—Anon.
93
On
Moore
Leslie
Here lies what's left Of Leslie Moore No Les
No
more.
On
a Dentist
Stranger, approach this spot with gravity:
John Brown
is filling
On
his last cavity.
John Bun
Here lies John Bun; He was killed by a gun. His name was not Bun, but Wood; But Wood would not rhyme with gun, and Bun would.
Here
lies
the
body
of Jonathan
Pound,
Who was lost at sea and never found.
—Anon. Beneath this stone a lump of clay Lies Uncle Peter Daniels,
Who
too early in the
Took
off his
month
of
May,
winter flannels.
—Anon. 94
/^
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SCHOLASTIC
There
was
Who
a
young
never
felt
Then he took At
the
poems
a
lad
A^
W@®||^
from Bombay
merry or gay.
good look
in this
book
And he laughed for the rest
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