PRACTISING SONG.

Ri-tum tiddy-iddy, ri-tum-tum!

Here I must sit for an hour and strum:

Practising is good for a good little girl,

It makes her nose straight, and it makes her hair curl.

Ri-tum tiddy-iddy, ri-tum-ti!

Bang on the low notes and twiddle on the high.

Whether it’s a jig or the Dead March in Saul,

I sometimes often feel as if I didn’t care at all.

Ri-tum tiddy-iddy, ri-tum-tee!

I don’t mind the whole or the half-note, you see!

It’s the sixteenth and the quarter that confuse my mother’s daughter,

And the thirty-second, really, is too dreadful to be taught her.

Ri-tum tiddy-iddy, ri-tum-to!

I shall never, never, never learn the minor scale, I know.

It’s gloomier and doomier than puppy dogs a-howling,

And what’s the use of practising such melancholy yowling?

But—ri-tum tiddy-iddy, ri-tum-tum!

Still I work away with my drum, drum, drum.

For practising is good for a good little girl:

It makes her nose straight and it makes her hair curl.[A]

[A] This last line is not true, little girls; but it is hard, you know, to find good reasons for practising.