CONTENTS.
| Page | |
| A Apple Pie | [156] |
| A B C, Tumble down D | [286] |
| A Carrion Crow sat on an Oak | [120] |
| A Diller, a Dollar, a Ten o'Clock Scholar | [257] |
| A Farmer went Trotting upon his Grey Mare | [292] |
| A little Boy went into a Barn | [207] |
| A little Cock Sparrow sat on a Tree | [309] |
| A Man of Words and not of Deeds | [295] |
| A Man went Hunting at Reigate | [47] |
| A-milking, a-milking, my Maid | [140] |
| Apple-Pie, Pudding, and Pancake | [288] |
| As I was going along, long, long | [140] |
| As I was going up Pippin Hill | [297] |
| As I was going up Primrose Hill | [207] |
| As I was going to St. Ives | [318] |
| As I went to Bonner | [60] |
| As Tommy Snooks and Bessy Brooks | [264] |
| At the Siege of Belleisle I was there all the while | [141] |
| Away, Birds, away! | [118] |
| Baa, baa, Black Sheep (Music) | [170] |
| Barber, Barber, shave a Pig | [172] |
| Bat, Bat, come under my Hat | [241] |
| Bessy Bell and Mary Gray | [173] |
| Bless you, bless you, bonny Bee | [308] |
| Blow, Wind, blow, and go, Mill, go | [183] |
| Bow-wow-wow | [304] |
| Boys and Girls, come out to Play | [14] |
| Brow, brow, brinkie | [61] |
| Bye, Baby Bunting | [141] |
| Charley, Charley, stole the Barley | [285] |
| Come, let's to bed, says Sleepy-Head | [144] |
| Cross-Patch, draw the Latch | [223] |
| Cry, Baby, cry | [214] |
| Curly-Locks, Curly-Locks, wilt thou be mine? | [188] |
| Daffy-Down-dilly has come up to Town | [209] |
| Dame Duck's Lessons to her Ducklings | [150] |
| Dance a Baby Diddit | [141] |
| Dance to your Daddy | [180] |
| Death and Burial of poor Cock Robin | [79] |
| Deedle, deedle, Dumpling, my Son John | [228] |
| Dickery, Dickery, Dock (Music) | [256] |
| Dickery, Dickery, Dare | [58] |
| Ding, Dong, Bell | [224] |
| Ding, Dong, Darrow | [149] |
| Doctor Foster went to Glo'ster | [148] |
| Early to Bed and Early to Rise | [297] |
| Eggs, Butter, Cheese, Bread | [221] |
| Elizabeth, Elspeth, Betsy, and Bess | [286] |
| For every Evil under the Sun | [300] |
| Four and Twenty Tailors went to kill a Snail | [148] |
| Freddie in the Cherry-Tree | [111] |
| Frog he would a-wooing go | [124] |
| Frog's (The) Chorus | [222] |
| Georgie Porgie (Music) | [289] |
| Good Dobbin | [265] |
| Good King Arthur | [51] |
| Goosey, Goosey, Gander (Music) | [193] |
| Go to Bed first, a Golden Purse | [318] |
| Great A, Little A | [239] |
| Handy, Spandy, Jack-a-Dandy | [194] |
| Hark, hark, the Dogs do bark | [190] |
| Here am I, little Jumping Joan | [264] |
| Here we go up, up, up | [194] |
| He that would Thrive | [217] |
| Hey, diddle, diddle | [174] |
| Hey, my Kitten, my Kitten | [194] |
| Hickety, Pickety, my Black Hen | [230] |
| High Diddle Ding | [135] |
| High diddle doubt, my Candle's out | [169] |
| Hot Cross Buns | [52] |
| Humpty Dumpty sat on a Wall (Music) | [48] |
| Hush-a-bye, Baby | [217] |
| Hush-a-bye, Baby, lie still with thy Daddy | [294] |
| Hush Baby, my Doll, I pray you don't cry | [61] |
| If all the World were Water | [194] |
| If Wishes were Horses, Beggars would ride | [189] |
| If you are to be a Gentleman | [61] |
| I had a little Dog, they called him Buff | [119] |
| I had a little Hen, the prettiest ever seen | [208] |
| I had a little Hobby-Horse | [221] |
| I had a little Husband no bigger than my Thumb | [192] |
| I had a little Pony | [195] |
| I have a little Sister they call her Peep, Peep | [192] |
| I'll tell you a Story | [231] |
| I love Sixpence | [232] |
| I love little Pussy | [290] |
| I saw a Ship a-sailing | [129] |
| Is John Smith within? | [153] |
| Jack and Jill went up the Hill (Music) | [212] |
| Jack be Nimble | [183] |
| Jack Sprat could eat no Fat | [60] |
| Jack Sprat had a Cat | [119] |
| Jack Sprat's Pig | [308] |
| Jacky, come give me thy Fiddle | [257] |
| Jenny shall have a new Bonnet | [305] |
| John Cook he had a little Grey Mare | [153] |
| John Gilpin | [266] |
| Ladybird, Ladybird | [261] |
| Leg over Leg | [261] |
| "Let us go to the Woods," says this Pig | [304] |
| Little Betty Blue | [294] |
| Little Blue Betty lived in a Lane | [123] |
| Little Bo-Peep (Music) | [312] |
| Little Boy Blue | [136] |
| Little Boy, pretty Boy, where were you born? | [173] |
| Little Girl, little Girl, where have you been? | [180] |
| Little Jack Horner (Music) | [80] |
| Little Miss Muffett | [263] |
| Little Nancy Etticote | [123] |
| Little Polly Flinders | [239] |
| Little Robin Redbreast sat upon a Rail | [149] |
| Little Tommy Tittlemouse | [195] |
| Little Tom Tucker (Music) | [146] |
| Margery Mutton-Pie and Johnny Bo-Peep | [188] |
| Marriage of Cock Robin and Jenny Wren | [84] |
| Mary had a pretty Bird | [122] |
| Mary, Mary, quite contrary | [148] |
| Molly, my Sister, and I fell out | [59] |
| Mr. Isbister and Betsy his Sister | [311] |
| Multiplication is Vexation | [209] |
| My Lady Wind, my Lady Wind | [303] |
| My little Old Man and I fell out | [288] |
| Needles and Pins, Needles and Pins | [300] |
| Nievie, Nievie, Nicknack | [306] |
| Nursery Rhyme Alphabet | [226] |
| Oh, Mother, I'm to be Married to Mr. Punchinello | [306] |
| Oh, the Rusty, Dusty, Rusty Miller | [168] |
| Old Father Grey Beard | [140] |
| Old King Cole | [154] |
| Old Mother Goose | [9] |
| Old Mother Hubbard | [64] |
| Old Mother Widdle-Waddle | [206] |
| Old Woman, Old Woman, shall we go a-Shearing? | [298] |
| One misty, moisty Morning | [228] |
| One, Two, buckle my Shoe | [191] |
| One, Two, Three | [219] |
| One, Two, Three, Four, Five | [261] |
| Pat-a-cake, pat-a-cake, Baker's Man | [299] |
| Pease Pudding Hot | [188] |
| Peter White will ne'er go right | [217] |
| Pit, pat, well-a-day! | [149] |
| Pitty Patty Polt | [61] |
| Please to remember the Fifth of November | [260] |
| Poor Dog Bright | [296] |
| Poor old Robinson Crusoe | [240] |
| Pussy Cat ate the Dumplings | [299] |
| Pussy Cat, Pussy Cat, where have you been? | [195] |
| Pussy sits beside the Fire | [168] |
| Queen Anne, Queen Anne, she sits in the Sun | [180] |
| Rain, Rain, go away | [309] |
| Rain, Rain, go to Spain | [307] |
| Ride a Cock-Horse | [184] |
| Robin and Richard were two pretty Men | [183] |
| See a Pin and pick it up | [259] |
| See-saw, Margery Daw | [178] |
| See, see, what shall I see? | [195] |
| Simple Simon (Music) | [112] |
| Sing a Song of Sixpence (Music) | [234] |
| Snail, Snail, come out of your Hole | [141] |
| Snail, Snail, come put out your Horn | [189] |
| Solomon Grundy | [59] |
| Some little Mice sat in a Barn | [320] |
| Swan, Swan, over the Sea | [228] |
| Taffy was a Welshman | [291] |
| The Barber shaved the Mason | [63] |
| The Cat sat asleep by the side of the Fire | [264] |
| The Cock doth Crow | [119] |
| The Cuckoo's a bonny Bird | [298] |
| The Fox and the Farmer | [186] |
| The great Brown Owl | [145] |
| The House that Jack built | [196] |
| The King of France went up the Hill | [119] |
| The Lion and the Unicorn were fighting for the Crown | [172] |
| The Man in the Moon | [149] |
| The North Wind doth blow | [241] |
| The Old Woman and her Pig | [242] |
| The Old Woman must stand at the Tub, Tub, Tub | [229] |
| The Queen of Hearts | [210] |
| There was a Crooked Man | [169] |
| There was a Fat Man of Bombay | [233] |
| There was a Jolly Miller | [56] |
| There was a little Man and he had a little Gun | [209] |
| There was a Monkey climbed up a Tree | [82] |
| There was an Old Crow | [223] |
| There was an Old Man of Tobago | [262] |
| There was an Old Woman, and what do you think? | [319] |
| There was an Old Woman as I've heard tell | [134] |
| There was an Old Woman called Nothing-at-all | [220] |
| There was an Old Woman lived under a Hill | [139] |
| There was an Old Woman tossed up in a Basket | [181] |
| There was an Old Woman who lived in a Shoe | [218] |
| There was an Owl lived in an Oak | [50] |
| There was a Rat, for want of Stairs | [188] |
| There were Three Crows sat ona Stone | [211] |
| The Robin Redbreasts | [138] |
| The Rose is Red, the Violet's Blue | [310] |
| The Turtle Dove's Nest | [215] |
| The Waves on the Sea-shore | [83] |
| The Wonderful Derby Ram | [302] |
| The Young Linnets | [176] |
| This is the way the Ladies go | [261] |
| Thomas a Tattamus took two T's | [172] |
| Three Children sliding on the Ice | [301] |
| Three Straws on a Staff | [209] |
| Three Wise Men of Gotham | [135] |
| To make your Candles last for aye | [144] |
| To Market, to Market, a gallop, a trot | [288] |
| To Market, to Market, to buy a Fat Pig | [52] |
| Tommy kept a Chandler's Shop | [258] |
| Tom Thumb's Alphabet | [15] |
| Tom, Tom, the Piper's Son (Music) | [130] |
| Twinkle, twinkle, little Star | [284] |
| Two Legs sat upon Three Legs | [206] |
| Up Hill and down Dale | [287] |
| Up Hill, spare me | [307] |
| Valentine, oh, Valentine | [311] |
| Walrus (The) and the Carpenter | [42] |
| We are all in the Dumps | [139] |
| We'll go a-shooting | [310] |
| What's the News of the Day? | [223] |
| When I was a Bachelor, I lived by myself | [182] |
| When Little Fred went to Bed | [308] |
| When the Wind is in the East | [214] |
| Where are you going to, my pretty Maid? | [62] |
| Who Stole the Bird's Nest? | [53] |
| Willy Boy, Willy Boy, where are you going? | [118] |
| Young Lambs to sell, Young Lambs to sell | [142] |
| You shall have an Apple | [294] |
MOTHER GOOSE'S NURSERY RHYMES.
OLD MOTHER GOOSE.