TO market, to market, a gallop, a trot, |
| To buy some meat to put in the pot; |
| Five cents a quarter, ten cents a side, |
| If it hadn't been killed, it must have died. |
A DILLER, a dollar, |
| A ten o'clock scholar, |
| What makes you come so soon? |
| You used to come at ten o'clock, |
| But now you come at noon. |
| YANKEE Doodle went to town |
| Upon a little pony; |
| He stuck a feather in his hat, |
| And called it Macaroni. |
THE lion and the unicorn |
| Were fighting for the crown; |
| The lion beat the unicorn |
| All round about the town. |
| Some gave them white bread, |
| And some gave them brown; |
| Some gave them plum-cake, |
| And sent them out of town. |
| OLD King Cole was a merry old soul, |
| And a merry old soul was he; |
| And he called for his pipe, |
| And he called for his bowl, |
| And he called for his fiddlers three. |
| And every fiddler, he had a fine fiddle, |
| And a very fine fiddle had he; |
| "Tweedle dee, tweedle dee," said the fiddlers: |
| "Oh, there's none so rare as can compare |
| With King Cole and his fiddlers three." |
ROWLEY Powley, pudding and pie, |
| Kissed the girls and made them cry; |
| When the girls come out to play |
| Rowley Powley runs away. |
| F for a fig, I for a jig, and N for knuckle-bones, I for John the waterman, and S for sack of stones. |