The Frog and the Crow of Ennow.—In answer to M. (Vol. ii., p. 136.), I send you the edition of "the frog and the crow" which I have been familiar with since childhood. I can give you no history of it, save that it is tolerably well known in Lancashire, and that the point consists in giving a scream over the last "oh!" which invariably, if well done, elicits a start even in those who are familiar with the rhyme, and know what to expect.
The Frog and the Crow.
"There was a jolly fat frog lived in the river Swimmo,
And there was a comely black crow lived on the
river Brimmo;
Come on shore, come on shore, said the crow to the
frog, and then, oh;
No, you'll bite me, no, you'll bite me, said the frog
to the crow again, oh.
"But there is sweet music on yonder green hill, oh,