ぎゃらりぃ

HNR Index

1 Wassail, wassail, to our town,
2 I saw three ships come sailing by,
3 God be here, God be there,
4 Here's tree, old apple tree,
5 If St.Paul's Day be fair and clear,
6 If Candlemas Day be fair and bright,
7 Good morrow to you, Valentine.
8 The rose is red, the violet's blue,
9 It is the day of all the year,
10 March winds and April showers

11 On the first of March
12 In beginning or in end
13 A cherry year,
14 March will search, April will try,
15 March winds and May sun
16 Once, twice, thrice,
17 Spring is showery, flowery, bowery;
18 Rain, rain, go to Spain,
19 Rain, rain, go away,
20 Blow, wind, blow!

21 When the wind blows,
22 Who first beholds the light of day
23 Here's two or three jolly boys
24 Sunshine and rain
25 April brings the primrose sweet,
26 It's raining, it's raining,
27 Rain on the green grass,
28 Alack, alack, the clouds are so black,
29 Through storm and wind,
30 If the oak is out before the ash,

31 Buttercups and daisies,
32 Good moming, Mistress and Master,
33 The fair maid who, the first of May,
34 Trip and go, heave and hoe,
35 Cut thistles in May,
36 A swarm of bees in May
37 Dancy-diddlety-poppety-pin,
38 The boughs do shake and the bells do ring,
39 I had a little nut tree,
40 Button to chin

41 This is the night of Hallowe'en
42 Up in the green orchard there is a green tree,
43 Cold and raw the north wind doth blow
44 St. Thomas's Day is past and gone,
45 Christmas is coming,
46 Christmas comes but once a year,
47 Bounce, buckram, Velvet's dear,
48 Jingle, bells! jingle, bells!
49 On Christmas Eve I turned the spit,
50 Snow, snow faster,

51 God bless the master of this house,
52 Dame, get up and bake your pies,
53 As I sat on a sunny bank
54 The first day of Christmas
55 If a rooster crows when he goes to bed
56 If the cock molt before the hen,
57 A sunshiny shower
58 Rain before seven,
59 If bees stay at home,
60 Evening red and morning gray,

61 Mackerel sky,
62 Red sky at night,
63 When clouds appear
64 When the clouds are upon the hills,
65 When the wind is in the east,
66 When the dew is on the grass,
67 Beware of an oak,
68 A storm of hail
69 As the days grow longer,
70 Comes the rain before the wind,

71 Crow on the fence,
72 Fog on the hill
73 If the evening's red and the morning gray,
74 If there be a rainbow in the eve,
75 Rainbow in the east,
76 Rainbow i' the morning,
77 I had a little dog and his name was Blue Bell,
78 Poor Dog Bright
79 Huff the talbot and our cat Tib
80 I had a dog

81 The dogs of the monks
82 Two little dogs
83 Bow, wow, wow,
84 Oh where, Oh where has my little dog gone?
85 I had a dog and his name was Dandy,
86 The little black dog ran round the house,
87 Barnaby Bright he was a sharp cur,
88 Higglety, pigglety, pop!
89 Pussy cat ate the dumplings,
90 Rindle, randle,

91 Pussy cat Mole jumped over a coal
92 Ding, dong, bell,
93 Ding dang, bell rang,
94 Pussicat, wussicat, whith a white foot,
95 Pussy cat, pussy cat,
96 Hoddley, Poddley,puddle and fogs,
97 Five little pussy cats sitting in a row,
98 Pussy at the fireside suppin' up brose.
99 Jock in the kail pot up tae the knees,
100 There once were two cats of Kilkenny,

101 Rat a tat tat, who is that?
102 Hie, hie, says Anthony,
103 Diddlety, diddlety,dumpty,
104 Dame Trot and her cat
105 I love little pussy,
106 A black-nosed kitten will slumber all day,
107 Pussy sits beside the fire,
108 Sing, sing,
109 Who's that ringing at my door bell?
110 The two gray kits,

111 Three little kittens
112 Puss came dancing out of a barn
113 Six little mice sat down to spin;
114 Three blind mice, see how they run!
115 What are you doing, my lady, my lady,
116 I saw a ship a-sailing,
117 Pretty John Watts,
118 Hickory, dickory, dock,
119 Three young rats with black felt hats,
120 There was a rat, for want of stairs,

121 Little Jack Sprat
122 Jack Sprat
123 A little pig found a fifty-dollar note,
124 Little Betty Pringle she had a pig,
125 Dickery, dickery, dare,
126 Whose little pigs are these, these, these?
127 My leamed friend and neighbor Pig,
128 Grandfa' Grig
129 As I went to Bonner,
130 There was a lady loved a swine,

131 I had a little pony,
132 I had a little bone,
133 Will you lend me your mare to ride but a mile?
134 I lost my mare in Lincoln Lane,
135 I had a little nag
136 Donkey, donkey, ol and gray,
137 Up in the North, a long way off,
138 If I had a donkey that wouldn't go,
139 Charley Warley had a cow,
140 I had a little cow and to save her,

141 There was a little man and he had a little cow,
142 Cushy cow, bonny, let down thy milk,
143 Mary had a little lamb,
144 Dear Sensibility, O la!
145 Baa, baa, black sheep,
146 I bought a dozen new-laid eggs,
147 I went up the high hill,
148 Hickety, Pickety, my black hen,
149 Hen: Cock, cock, cock, cock,
150 Cock: Lock the dairy door,

151 Chook, chook, chook, chook,
152 Oh, my pretty cock, oh, my handsome cock,
153 Cackle, cackle, Mother Goose,
154 Gray goose and gander,
155 Bow-wow, says the dog,
156 Hay is for horses,
157 I had a cat and the cat pleased me,
158 The cock's on the wood pile
159 The winds they did blow,
160 Up and down the City Road,

161 A fox jumped up one winter's night,
162 Once I saw a little bird
163 There were two birds sat on a stone,
164 Mary had a pretty bird,
165 The cuckoo is a merry bird,
166 The cuckoo comes in April,
167 Cuckoo, cuckoo, what do you do?
168 Pigeons and crows, take care of your toes,
169 I had two pigeons bright and gay,
170 The dove says, Coo, coo,

171 Curr dhoo, curr dhoo,
172 Little Poll Parrot
173 The north wind doth blow,
174 Pit, pat, well-a-day,
175 The robin and the wren,
176 Robinets and Jenny Wrens
177 The robin and the redbreast,
178 Little Robin Redbreast
179 Little Bob Robin,
180 Who killed Cock Robin?

181 Little Robin Redbreast
182 Little Robin Redbreast,
183 Littde Robin Redbreast sat up on a tree,
184 In the greenhouse lives a wren,
185 There were two wrens upon a tree,
186 Jenny Wren fell sick
187 Cock Robin got up early
188 As little Jenny Wren
189 It was on a merry time,
190 Jenny Wren last week was wed,

191 Sing a song of six pence,
192 Of all the gay birds that e'er I did see,
193 In an oak there lived an owl,
194 The brown owl sits in the ivy-bush,
195 A carrion crow sat on an oak,
196 A little cock sparrow sat on a green tree,
197 I'll sing you a song,
198 Magpie, magpie, flutter and flee,
199 I saw eight magpies in a tree,
200 Bat, bat, come under my hat,

201 There was once a fish.
202 Snail, snail,
203 Snail, snail,
204 A frog he would a-wooing go,
205 There was a frog lived in a well,
206 There was a jolly frog in the river did swim, O!
207 I'm a little butterfly
208 Bless you, bless you, burnie-bee,
209 Ipsey Wipsey spider
210 Fiddle-de-dee, fiddle-de-dee,

211 Buzz, quoth the blue fly,
212 Millery, millery, dustipole,
213 Lady bird, lady bird,
214 Sleep, baby, sleep,
215 Hush-a-bye baby,
216 Hush-a-bye, baby, On the tree top,
217 Hush thee, my babby,
218 Hush-a-bye a baa lamb,
219 Hush-a-bye, baby,
220 I'll buy you a tartan bonnet,

221 Rock-a-bye, baby,
222 The little lady lairdie
223 Lay doon yer little heidie
224 Rock-a-boo babby, babbies is bonny,
225 Hush, little baby, don't say a word,
226 Hushie ba, burdie beeton,
227 Bee baw bunting,
228 Bye, baby bunting,
229 Bye, bye, baby bunting,
230 Hush-a-bye, baby, they're gone to milk,

231 Father's gone a-flailing,
232 Bye, baby bumpkin,
233 Golden slumbers kiss your eyes,
234 Hush-a-ba birdie, croon, croon,
235 Hush, my baby, do not cry,
236 Baby, baby, naughty baby,
237 Bring Daddy home
238 Clap hands, Daddy comes
239 Clap hands, clap hands,
240 Clap hands, Daddy's coming

241 Weave the diape tick-a-tick tick,
242 Dance to your daddy,
243 Diddle-me-diddle-me-dandy-O!
244 Come dance a jig
245 Hey diddle diddle,
246 Dance a baby diddy,
247 How many days has my baby to play?
248 Dance, little baby, dance up high:
249 Hey, my kitten, my kitten,
250 See-saw, down in my lap,

251 Catch him, crow! Carrry him, kite!
252 Head bumper,
253 Ring the bell,
254 Knock at the doorie,
255 Brow, brow, brenty,
256 Here sits the Lord Mayor,
257 Bo peeper,
258 Brow Bender,
259 Eye winker,
260 Toe, trip and go,

261 Dance, Thumbkin, dance,
262 Thumb bold,
263 Thumb he,
264 Tom Thumbkin,
265 Tommy Tibule,
266 Thumbikin, Thumbikin, broke the barn,
267 Little Pig,
268 This pig got in the barn,
269 This little pig said, I want some corn.
270 Let's go to the wood, says this pig,

271 This little pig had a rub-a-dub,
272 This little pig went to market,
273 Toe Tipe,
274 See-saw, Margery Daw,
275 The pettitoes are little feet,
276 John Smith, fellow fine,
277 Robert Barnes, fellow fine,
278 Is John Smith within?
279 Hob, shoe, hob; hob, shoe, hob;
280 Apple pie, apple pie;

281 Shoe a little horse,
282 Shoe the colt, shoe the colt,
283 An old maid, an old maid,
284 Tickly, tickly, on your knee,
285 If you are a gentleman,
286 The man in the mune is makig shune,
287 Round about, round about, here sits the hare,
288 Round about, round about,
289 Round and round the garden
290 From here to there

291 Here is the church, and there is the steeple;
292 Here are the lady's knives and forks,
293 Handy dandy
294 Nievie nievie nick nack,
295 Two little dicky birds,
296 My father was a Frenchman,
297 Put your finger in Foxy's hole,
298 Bo-peep,
299 Pease porridge hot,
300 Dingle dingle doosey,

301 Good morning, Father Francis.
302 Upon a cock-horse to market I'll trot,
303 Trit trot to market to buy a penny doll;
304 A trot, and a canter, a gallop, and over,
305 To market, to market,
306 To market, tomarket,
307 To market, tomarket, a gallop, a trot,
308 Hie to the market, Jenny come trot,
309 Gee up, Neddy, to the fair;
310 Donkey, Donkey, do not bray,

311 Ride a cock-horse to Banbury Cross,
312 Ride a cock-horse
313 Ride a cock-horse to Banbury Cross,
314 Ride away, ride away,
315 A robin and a robin's son
316 Come up, my horse, to Budleigh Fair;
317 I had a little hobby horse, it was well shod,
318 From Wibbleton to Wobbleton is fifteen miles,
319 Richard Dick upon a stick,
320 A famer went trotting upon his gray mare,

321 This is the way the ladies ride,
322 Chick! my naggie,
323 Rigadoon, rigadoon, now let him fly,
324 Leg over leg,
325 Old Famer Giles,
326 American jump, American jump,
327 Round about, round about, applety pie,
328 Round about, round about,
329 Sally go round the sun,
330 Round about the rosebush,

331 Ring-a-ring o'roses,
332 A ring, a rig o'roses,
333 Here we go round ring by ring,
334 Now we dance looby, looby, looby,
335 Here we go dancng jingo-ring.
336 Red stockings, blue stockings,
337 March, march, head erect,
338 Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
339 Bell horses, bell horses,
340 One to make ready,

341 One for money,
342 See-saw, Margery Daw,
343 See-saw, Margery Daw,
344 See-saw, sack a day;
345 See-saw, sacradown,
346 I'm the king of the castle,
347 I' Willie Wastle,
348 A duck and a drake,
349 Ring the bells, ring!
350 Hogs in the garden, catch 'em, Towser;

351 I am Queen Anne, of whom 'tis said
352 Lady Queen Anne she sits in the sun,
353 Green cheese, yellow laces,
354 London Bridge is broken down,
355 Gay go up and gay go down,
356 A nut and a kernel,
357 Little Tom Tittlemouse
358 Cock a doodle doo!
359 Tit, tat, toe,
360 Hey, dorolot, dorolot!

361 I'll sing you a song,
362 Follow my Bangalorey Man;
363 My mother and your mother
364 Die, pussy, die,
365 Blind man, blind man,
366 Darby and Joan were dressed in black,
367 Here comes a lusty wooer,
368 I've a glove in my hand,
369 Cuckoo, cuckoo, cherry tree,
370 Here's a poor widow from Babylon,

371 A dis, a dis, a green grass,
372 Polly put the kettle on,
373 Sally, Sally Waters,
374 Jenny come tie my,
375 Draw a pail of water
376 When I was a little boy
377 Fishy, fishy in the brook,
378 Fishes swim in water clear,
379 Little lad, little lad,
380 There was a little boy went into a barn,

381 I had a little moppet,
382 Jack and Gye
383 O all you little blackey tops,
384 Pick, crow, pick, and have no fear,
385 Little Boy Blue,
386 Charlie Wag
387 Cbarley, Charley,
388 Tom, Tom, the piper's son,
389 Nauty Pauty Jack-a-Dandy
390 Tom tied a kettle to the tail of a cat,

391 William and Mary,
392 Cry, baby, cry,
393 Cry-baby, cry,
394 Can you keep a secret?
395 Spit cat, spit,
396 My mill grinds pepper and spice;
397 Cross-patch,
398 Cross my heart and hope to die,
399 Piss a bed,
400 Fool, fool, april fool,

401 I went to the toad that lies under the wall,
402 Tom Brown's two little Indian boys;
403 I'll tell my own daddy,
404 Ten little Injuns standin' in a line,
405 Ten little Injuns went out to dine;
406 Little Jack Homer
407 Little Jack Homer
408 Little Miss Muffet
409 Jack and Jill
410 There was a little boy and a little girl,

411 Goosey, goosey gander,
412 Little Betty Blue
413 Little Bo-peep has lost her sheep,
414 Here am I,
415 Mary, Mary, quite contrary,
416 Gilly Silly Jarter,
417 When I was a little girl,
418 When I was young I used to go
419 My mother said
420 The girl in the lane,

421 Hey diddle dout,
422 Little Miss Donnet
423 Polly, Dolly, Kate and Molly,
424 There was a little girl, and she had a little curl
425 Little Miss Lily, you're dread fully silly
426 Little Polly Flinders
427 Lucky Locket lost her pocket,
428 Can you wash your father's shirt
429 Boys and girls come out to play,
430 Lazy deuks that sit i' the coal-neuks,

431 Wash the dishes, wipe the dishes,
432 Hey ding a ding,
433 Manners in the dining-room,
434 To sleep easy all night,
435 God bless our meat,
436 My dear, do you know,
437 The white doves at on the castle wall,
438 I'll tell you a story
439 There was an old crow
440 Little Tee-Wee,

441 There was an old woman lived under some stairs,
442 John Cook had a little gray mare,
443 I had a little cow,
444 Good night, God bless you,
445 Go to bed, Tom,
446 Good night, sweet repose,
447 Go to bed first,
448 Diddle, diddle, dumpling, my son John,
449 Wag a leg, Wag a leg,
450 The doggies went to the mill,

451 Down with the lambs,
452 Up the wooden hill
453 He that lies at the stock,
454 Little man in coal pit
455 Wee Willie Winkie runs through the town,
456 Now I lay me down to sleep,
457 God bless this house from thatch to floor,
458 Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
459 I see the moon,
460 Moon, moon,

461 Star light, Star bright,
462 Twinkle, twinkle, little star,
463 What did I dream? I do not know;
464 A wake, arise,
465 He that would thrive
466 The cock crows in the morn
467 Go to bed late,
468 Warm hands, warm,
469 One, two, three, four,
470 One's none,

471 One, two, three, four, five,
472 1, 2,
473 A gaping wide-mouthed waddling frog.
474 One old Oxford ox opening oysters;
475 One, two, three, four, five, six, seven,
476 One, two, three, four, five, six, seven,
477 One, two, three,
478 Soldier brave, Sailor true,
479 Army, Navy,
480 Army, Navy,

481 Alaird, a lord,
482 Lady,
483 This year,
484 Coach,
485 Gold,
486 Silk,
487 Big box,
488 Boots,
489 Church,
490 Big house,

491 A gift, a ghost,
492 One-ery, two-ery,
493 I sent a letter to my love
494 One-ery, two-ery, tickery, seven,
495 One-ery, two-ery, ickery, A\nn,
496 Intery, mintery, cutery, corn,
497 One-erum, two-erum,
498 Inter, mitzy, titzy, tool,
499 Hickety, pickety, i-silicity,
500 Eena, meena, mina, mo,

501 Eeny, weeny, winey, wo,
502 Eenie, meenie, mackeracka,
503 Eenity, feenity, fickety, feg,
504 Ah, ra, chickera,
505 Ala, mala, mink, monk,
506 X shall stand for play mates Ten;
507 When V and I together meet,
508 William the Conqueror, ten sixty-six,
509 Columbus sailed the ocean blue,
510 The Spanish Armada met its fate,

511 In sixteen hundred and sixty-six,
512 A, B, C, D, E, F, G,
513 Great A, little a,
514 A, B, C and D,
515 A was an archer, who shot at a frog;
516 A was an Apple pie,
517 A was an angler,
518 A for the ape, that we saw at the fair;
519 Great A was alamned at B's bad behavior,
520 Thirty days hath September,

521 Solomon Gmndy,
522 A diller, a dollar,
523 Rock, rock, bubbly jock,
524 To bed, to bed,
525 Sluggardy-guise, Sluggardy-guise,
526 Willy boy, Willy boy,
527 Georgie Porgie, Pudding and pie,
528 We're all jolly boys,
529 Little boy, Pretty boy, Where was you born?
530 When I was a little boy

531 I won't be my father's Jack,
532 The moon shines bright,
533 My father died a month ago
534 My fatherhe died, but I can't tell you how,
535 My father left me three acres of land,
536 Sing jigmijole, the pudding bowl,
537 Master I have, and I am his man,
538 Rumpty-iddity, row, row, row,
539 Little Tommy Tucker
540 Little Tommy Tittle mouse

541 There was an old man, and he lived in a wood;
542 We will go to the wood, says Robin to Bobbin,
543 What care I how black I be?
544 Mirror, mirror, tell me,
545 I am a pretty wench,
546 Trip upon trenchers, and dance upon dishes,
547 Bessy Bell and Mary Gray,
548 Ickle ockle, blue bockle,
549 Little pretty Nancy girl,
550 Up hill and down dale,

551 Little Blue Betty lived in a den,
552 Margery Mutton-pie
553 Dingty diddlety,
554 Hannah Bantry,
555 Elsie Marley is grown so fine,
556 Here's Sulky Sue;
557 Miss One, Two, and Three
558 Blow the fire, black smith,
559 Cheese and bread for gentlemen,
560 Pretty maid, Pretty maid,

561 Around the green gravel the grass grows green,
562 My maid Mary,
563 Good night, fair yarrow,
564 If you find even ash, or four-leaved clover,
565 It's a sure sign and a true,
566 If you stub your toe,
567 Make a rhyme, make a rhyme,
568 This knot I knit,
569 O good St. Faith, be kind tonight,
570 St. Simon and Jude, on you I intrude,

571 Luna, every woman's friend,
572 On Friday night I go backward to bed,
573 One leaf for fame, one leaf for wealth,
574 One I love,
575 He loves me,
576 If I am to marry rich,
577 If you love me, love me true,
578 I love my love with an A, because he's Agreeable.
579 Johnny shall have a new bonnet,
580 My true love lives far from me,

581 Pemmy was a pretty girl,
582 Whistle, daughter, whistle,
583 There is a girl of our town,
584 There was a little maid, and she was afraid
585 Oh! cruel was the press-gang
586 Oh, mother, I shall be married to Mr. Punchinello,
587 What are little boys made of?
588 Roses are red,
589 The rose is red, the rose is white.
590 As I was going up Pippen Hill,

591 Down by the river
592 A bird in the air, a fish in the sea.
593 O the little rusty dusty miller,
594 My mother sent me for some water,
595 Willy, Willy Wilkin,
596 As Tommy Snooks and Bessy Brooks
597 A pretty little girl in a round-eared cap
598 A cow and a calf,
599 Sukey, you shall be my wife
600 Little maid, pretty maid,

601 Curly locks, Curly locks,
602 Little Jack Dandy-prat
603 Bobby Shaftoe's gone to sea,
604 Over the water and over the lea,
605 Up street and down street,
606 On Saturday night shall be my care
607 Heigh ho! my heart is low,
608 Where are you going to, my pretty maid?
609 Lavender's blue, diddle, diddle,
610 In love be I, fifth button high,

611 Clap hands, clap hands,
612 O dear, what can the matter be?
613 Where have you been all the day, Billy boy, Billy boy?
614 When shall we be married,
615 Oh, soldier, soldier, will you marry me,
616 I love thee, Betty,
617 There was a little man,
618 Can you make me a cambric shirt,
619 We are three brethren out of Spain,
620 Oh, madam, I will give you the keys of Canterbury,

621 Madam, I am come to court you,
622 Young Roger came tapping at Dolly's window,
623 It rains, it hails, it batters, it blows,
624 Heighho! who's above?
625 Little John Jiggy Jag,
626 Little Blue Ben, who lives in the glen,
627 Oh, rare Harry Parry,
628 My little Pink,
629 Far from home across the sea
630 We are all a dry,

631 Now what do you think
632 A pint nor a quart won't grieve me,
633 I married a wife by the light of the moon,
634 I married a wife on Sunday,
635 I went to the sea,
636 Charley Barley, butter and eggs,
637 Did you see my wife, did you see, did you see,
638 Little Dicky Dilver
639 Once in my life I married a wife,
640 Robin he married a wife in the West,

641 I had a little hen*, the prettiest ever seen,
642 Brave news is come to town,
643 Henry was a worthy king,
644 Something old, something new,
645 Married in white, you have chosen just right,
646 Married when the year is new,
647 When February birds do mate,
648 lf you wed when March winds blow,
649 Marry in April when you can,
650 Marry in the month of May,

651 Marry when June roses grow,
652 Those who in July are wed,
653 Whoever wed in August be,
654 Marry in September's shine,
655 If in Octobcr you do marry,
656 If you wed in bleak November,
657 When December's snows fall fast.
658 Monday alone,
659 Happy is the bride that the sun shines on;
660 First a daughter, then a son,

661 First a son, and then a daughter,
662 Rock a cradle empty,
663 Shortest to marry,
664 I love sixpence, jolly little sixpence,
665 On Saturday night I lost my wife,
666 Nose, nose,
667 What's the news ot the day,
668 Tommy kept a chandler's shop,
669 Cobbler, cobbler, mend my shoe,
670 Father Short came down the lane;

671 A long-tailed pig,
672 Piping hot, smoking hot,
673 Hot cross buns! Hot cross buns!
674 Hot cross buns, hot cross buns;
675 Smiling girls, rosy boys,
676 Buttons, a farthing a pair,
677 Sweep, sweep,
678 Some up and some down,
679 Punch and Judy
680 I'll sing you a song,

681 If I'd as much money as I could spend,
682 If I'd as much money
683 Here's Finiky Hawkes,
684 Here's a large one for the lady,
685 Here I am with my rabbits
686 Come all you young ladies and make no delay-
687 Get ready your money and come to me,
688 If a man who turnips cries,
689 Twist about, turn about,
690 Doodledy, doodledy, doodledy, dan,

691 Tom, he was a piper's son,
692 As I was going up the hill,
693 Terence McDiddler,
694 Jacky, Come give me thy fiddle,
695 Hey diddle dinkety, poppety, pet,
696 Four and twenty tailors
697 The tailor of Bicester,
698 Hyder iddle diddle dell,
699 Hark, hark,
700 Barber, barber, shave a pig,

701 The barber shaved the mason,
702 There was a jolly miller once,
703 Pat-a-cake, pat-a-cake, baker's man,
704 Come, butter, come,
705 Milk-man, milk-man, where have you been?
706 There were three cooks of Colebrook,
707 Rub-a-dub, dub,
708 Little General Monk
709 Parson Darby wore a black gown
710 Who comes here?

711 There was an old soldier of Bister,
712 Corporal Tim
713 Here's Corporal Bull
714 Come here to me, my merry, merry men,
715 Drunk or sober, go to-bed Tom,
716 Oh, Pillykin, Willykin, Winky Wee!
717 Spin, Dame, spin,
718 I do not like thee, Doctor Fell,
719 Doctor Foster went to Gloucester
720 Doctor Foster is a good man,

721 Old Doctor Foster
722 Tommy Trot, a man of law,
723 Three wise men of Gotham
724 Mrs. Mason bought a basin,
725 It costs littleGossip her income for shoes,
726 Daffy-down-dilly is new come to town,
727 Mr. East gave a feast;
728 Mr. Ibister, and Betsy his sister,
729 Peter, Peter, pumpkin eater,
730 Up at Piccadilly oh!

731 Johnny Armstrong killed a calf,
732 Fire! Fire! said the town crier;
733 Oh, what have you got for dinner, Mrs Bond?
734 What's in the cupboard?
735 There was a little woman,
736 Jeremiah Obadiah puff, puff, puff.
737 Jeremiah, blow the fire,
738 Simple Simon met a pieman,
739 A, I was going to sell my eggs,
740 There was a crooked man,

741 Peter White will ne'er go right;
742 Jack Sprat could eat no fat,
743 Robin and Richard
744 Robin the Bobbin, the big-bellied Ben,
745 Robbin and Bobbin、
746 Robin-a-bobbin
747 All of a row,
748 There was a little one eyed gunner,
749 Jerry Hall,
750 Little Tommy Tacket

751 Jimmy the Mowdy
752 Sandy Kildandy,
753 William McTrimbletoe,
754 Hector Protector was dressed all in green;
755 Gregory Griggs, Gregory Griggs,
756 Johnnie Norrie
757 Tweedledum and tweedledee
758 There were three jovial Welshman,
759 Taffy was a Welshman,
760 Taffy was born

761 Little Johnny Morgan,
762 As I went by a dyer's door,
763 Yankee Doodle came to town,
764 Tommy O'Linn was a Scotsman born,
765 Bryan O'Lynn and his wife and wife's mother,
766 Mother and Father and Uncle Dick
767 Mollie, my sister and I fell out,
768 Moll-in-the-Wad and I felI out.
769 If I had gold in goupins,
770 How do you do, neighbor?

771 As I went up the Brandy hill,
772 Andy Pandy, fine and dandy,
773 In a cottage in Fife
774 Upon Paul's steeple stands a tree
775 Barney Bodkin broke his nose,
776 Sandy he belongs to the mill,
777 There was a man of Thessaly
778 As I was going to Banbury,
779 The little priest of Felton,
780 There was a man and he had nought,

781 There was a man lived in the moon, lived in the moon,
782 The Man in the Moon was caught in a trap
783 The man in the moon drinks claret,
784 The man in the moon
785 John Bull, John Bull,
786 Flying-man, Flying-man,
787 As I went up the apple tree,
788 As a little fat man of Bombay
789 There are men in the village of Erith
790 A knight of Cales, and a gentleman of Wales,

791 A man went hunting at Reigate,
792 At Islington a fair they hold,
793 At Brill on the hill
794 There was a lady al1 skin and bone;
795 I went to Noke
796 King's Sutton is a pretty town,
797 How many miles to Babylon?
798 When I was young and in my prime,
799 Says t'auld man tit oak tree,
800 It's once I courted as pretty a lass,

801 There was an old man in a velvet coat,
802 A little old man of Derby,
803 It's raining, it's pouring,
804 The cat sat asleep by the side of the fire,
805 My little old man and I fell out,
806 There was an old man who lived in Middle Row,
807 One misty, moisty morning,
808 There was an old man,
809 Old Boniface he loved good cheer,
810 There was an old man of Tobago,

811 Who are you? A dirty old man
812 Goosey, goosey gander,
813 There was a little man, and he had a little gun,
814 Open the door and let me through!
815 The giant Jim, great giant grim,
816 Fee, fi, fo, fum,
817 Give a thing, take a thing,
818 Old Father of the Pye,
819 Chan-wan,the good old man,
820 There was an old couple, and they were poor,

821 Old Abram Brown is dead and gone,
822 There was an old woman who lived in a shoe,
823 There was a wee bit wifie,
824 There was an old woman tossed up in a basket,
825 There was an old woman
826 There was an old woman,
827 Old Mother Shuttle
828 There was an old woman called Nothing-at-all,
829 There was an old woman
830 There was an old woman

831 There was an old woman
832 There was an old woman
833 There was an old woman, her name was Peg;
834 Old Mother Niddity Nod
835 Old woman, old woman,
836 There was an old woman sat spinning;
837 An old woman went to market and bought a pig;
838 There was an old man came over the lea,
839 The old woman must stand
840 Old Mother Widdle Waddle jumped out of bed,

841 There dwelt an old woman at Exeter,
842 There was an old woman had three cows,
843 There was an old woman had three sons,
844 There was an old woman of Gloucester,
845 There was an old woman of Harrow,
846 There was an old woman of Leeds,
847 There was an old woman of Nonwich,
848 There was an old woman of Surrey,
849 There was an old woman and she went one,
850 A famous old woman was Madam McBight,

851 Old Mother Hubbard
852 Old Mother Goose,
853 High diddle ding, did you hear the bells ring?
854 As I was going by Charing Cross,
855 Old Sir Simon the king,
856 Old King Cole
857 Little King Pippin
858 When good King Arthur ruled this land,
859 What is the rhyme for porringer?
860 Good Queen Bess was a glorious dame,

861 The king of France, the king of France, with forty thousand men,
862 Oh, were I King of France,
863 Hokey, pokey, whisky, thum,
864 At the siege of Belle Isle
865 The Queen of Hearts
866 The King of Spades
867 St. Dunstan, as the story goes,
868 Robin Hood, Robin Hood,
869 Poor old Robinson Crusoe!
870 Little Tommy Thumb,

871 Patience is a virtue,
872 One thing at a time
873 Say well and do well
874 Good, better, best;
875 One, two, whatever you do,
876 A boy that is good
877 When land is gone and money spent,
878 When Jacky's a good boy,
879 For want of a nail
880 A pullet in the pen

881 Laugh before it's light,
882 Of a little take a little,
883 Speak when you're spoken to,
884 Hold up your head,
885 Come when you're called,
886 Be always in time,
887 A man of words and not of deeds
888 A wise old owl sat in an oak,
889 If you gently stroke a nettle,
890 Willful waste brings woeful want

891 Hearts, like doorr, will ope with ease
892 All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy;
893 A whistling girl and a crowing hen
894 The more rain, the more rest,
895 Of all the sayings in this world
896 Tommy's tears and Mary's fear,
897 Birds of a feather flock together,
898 A hedge between
899 In time of prosperity, friends will be plenty,
900 What can't be cured

901 Whatever happens twice
902 For every evil under the sun,
903 If wishes were horses
904 To make your candles last for aye,
905 Nature requires five,
906 Wear you a hat or wear you a crown,
907 Speak of a person, and he will appear,
908 Dimple in your chin,
909 Specks on the fingers,
910 If you've got a mole above your chin,

911 Blue eye beauty,
912 Beware of that man be he friend or brother
913 Little head, little wit,
914 Those dressed in blue
915 Touch blue,
916 If your nose itches,
917 If you are not handsome at twenty,
918 Step in a hole,
919 He who is born on New Year's morn
920 He who is bom on Easter morn

921 Cut them on Monday, you cut them for health;
922 If you sneeze on Monday, you sneeze for danger;
923 They that wash on Monday
924 Monday's child is fair of face,
925 Yellow stones on Sunday,
926 This is silver Saturday,
927 Friday's a day that will have its trick,
928 A Friday night's dream on a Saturday told,
929 Dreams at night are the devil's delight,
930 Dreams of fruit out of season,

931 If you sit on the table,
932 Drop a spoon,
933 An apple a day
934 Who sets an apple tree may live to see its end,
935 If you wish to live and thrive,
936 One white foot, buy him,
937 Up a hill hurry me not,
938 A woman, a spaniel, and a walnut tree,
939 If you your ears would keep from jeers,
940 If you your lips would keep from slips

941 St, Valentine, that's to lovers kind,
942 Three holy men went out walking,
943 What comes out of a chimney?
944 Money, money, come to me,
945 God made the bees
946 A riddle, a riddle,
947 Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall,
948 Humpty Dumpty sat on a spoon,
949 Humpy Dumpty went to town,
950 As I went through the garden gap,

951 Congealed water and Cain's brother,
952 A water there is I must pass,
953 Higher than a house,
954 Old Mother Twitchett has but one eye,
955 Arthur O'Bower has broken his band,
956 Two bodies have I,
957 Long legs, crooked thighs,
958 Brothers and sisters have I none,
959 The fiddler and his wife,
960 The parson, his wife,

961 Elizabeth, Elspeth, Betsy, and Bess,
962 If Dick's father is John's son,
963 There were three sisters in a hall,
964 Noah of old three babies had,
965 When I was taken from the fair body,
966 I have a little sister, they call her Peep-Peep,
967 I have a little sister
968 Two brothers we are,
969 Two legs sat upon three legs
970 Highty, tighty, paradighty,

971 Hitty Pitty within the wall,
972 Formed long ago, yet made today,
973 I'm called by the name of a man,
974 White bird featherless
975 Little bird of paradise,
976 Hick-a-more, Hack-a-more,
977 What God never sees,
978 Climb by rope
979 Dreaming of apples on a wall,
980 From house to house he goes,

981 I'm in ev'ry one's way,
982 Into my house came neighbor John,
983 Lives in winter,
984 Over the water,
985 Round the house and round the house,
986 The calf, the goose, the bee,
987 The children of Holland
988 There was a girl in our town,
989 There was a king met a king
990 There was a man who had no eyes,

991 There was a man rode through our town,
992 There was a thing a full month old
993 Twelve pears hanging high,
994 Higgledy-piggledy here we lie,
995 See, see, what shall I see?
996 Every lady in this land
997 King Charles the First walked and talked
998 I saw a pack of cards gnawing a bone
999 I saw a fishpond all on fire
1000 I saw a peacock with a fiery tail

1001 Make three-fourths of a cross,
1002 Little Billy Breek
1003 Black I am and much admired,
1004 Black within, and red without,
1005 Purple, yellow, red, and green,
1006 Clothed in yellow, red, and green,
1007 Tall and thin,
1008 Flour of England, fruit of Spain,
1009 In Spring I look gay,
1010 Around the rick, around the rick,

1011 I went to the wood and I got it;
1012 Hoddy doddy,
1013 A house full, a hole full,
1014 Thirty white horses
1015 The land was white,
1016 Goes through the mud,
1017 Four stiff-standers,
1018 LittIe Nancy Etticoat,
1019 I went to the town
1020 I have seen you where you never were,

1021 Patches and patches
1022 Tell me, ladies, if you can,
1023 This being's most despised by man,
1024 Without a bridle or a saddle.
1025 A little girl
1026 As I was going to St. Ives,
1027 As I was going o'er London Bridge,
1028 As I was going o'er London Bridge,
1029 As I was going o'er yon moor of moss,
1030 As I was a-walking on Westminster Bridge,

1031 As I was walking in a field of wheat,
1032 I saw a fight the other day;
1033 As round as a biscuit,
1034 As round as a butter bowl,
1035 As round as a marble,
1036 As round as a saucer,
1037 As soft as silk,
1038 As white as milk,
1039 As round as an apple,
1040 In marble walls as white as milk,

1041 Infir taris,
1042 Apple pie, pudding, and pancakes,
1043 Pease porridge hot, pease porridge cold,
1044 A twister of twists once twisted a twist,
1045 When a Twister a-twisting will twist him a twist,
1046 Betty Botter bought some butter,
1047 Careful Katie cooked a crisp and crinkly cabbage;
1048 My grand mother sent me a new-fashioned three cornered cambric country-cut handkerchief
1049 Three crooked cripples went throogh Cripplegate,
1050 My dame hath a lame tame crane,

1051 Three gray geese in a green field grazing,
1052 I need not your needles, they're needess to me,
1053 Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled pepper;
1054 Robert Rowley rolled a round roll round,
1055 Round and round the rugged rock
1056 She sells sea-shells on the sea shore;
1057 Swan swam over the sea,
1058 The Leith police dismisseth us,
1059 Moses supposes his toeses are roses,
1060 A thatcher of Thatchwood went to Thatchet a-thatching;

1061 Theophilus Thistledown, the successful thistle sifter,
1062 Timothy Titus took two ties
1063 Vinegar, veal and venison,
1064 How much wood would a woodchuck chuck
1065 There was a man,
1066 As I was going along, long, long,
1067 Adam and Eve and Pinch-me
1068 1. I am a gold lock.
1069 1. I one it.
1070 1. I went up one pair of stairs.

1071 I sell you the key of the king's garden.
1072 This is the house that Jack built.
1073 When I was a lad as big as my Dad,
1074 Anna Elise
1075 Anna Maria she sat on the fire;
1076 This is the key of the kingdom:
1077 What's in there?
1078 As I went over the water,
1079 As I was walking o'er little Moorfields,
1080 Said Noble Aaron to Aaron Barron,

1081 As I walked by myself
1082 I went into my grandmother's garden
1083 Needles and ribbons and packets of pins,
1084 There were two blind men went to see
1085 The greedy man is he who sits
1086 Alas! alas! for Miss Mackay!
1087 His angle rod was made of a sturdy oak,
1088 As I went by my little pig-sty,
1089 The rose is red, the grass is green,
1090 A famous old lady had three sticks,

1091 Hey diddle, diddle,
1092 The sow came in with the saddle,
1093 Baby and I
1094 When I was a little boy
1095 I had a little brother.
1096 My son John is a nice old man,
1097 The man in the wilderness asked me,
1098 Peter Prim! Peter Prim!
1099 If ifs and an's were pots and pans,
1100 If all the world was paper,

1101 If all the world was apple pie
1102 If all the seas were one sea,
1103 Where hae ye been a' the day,
1104 As I was going to Derby
1105 The lion and the unicorn
1106 Mother, may I go out to swim?
1107 Father, may I go to war?
1108 Three children sliding on the ice,
1109 There was a little guinea-pig,
1110 Oh, the brave old Duke of York,

1111 There was a monkey climbed a tree,
1112 A farthing rush-light's very small,
1113 Oh that I were
1114 I would, if I could,
1115 Don't Care didn't care,
1116 We are all in the dumps,
1117 When I was a little boy
1118 As foolish as monkeys till twenty and more,


ぎゃらりぃ


Bower Mother Goose