The Nursery Rhymes of England - novelonlinefull.com
You’re read light novel The Nursery Rhymes of England Part 20 online at NovelOnlineFull.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit NovelOnlineFull.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
Yet things break in and steal the gold.
CCIV.
[A horse-sh.o.e.r.]
What shoe-maker makes shoes without leather, With all the four elements put together?
Fire and water, earth and air; Ev'ry customer has two pair.
CCV.
[Currants.]
Higgledy piggledy Here we lie, Pick'd and pluck'd, And put in a pie.
My first is snapping, snarling, growling, My second's industrious, romping, and prowling.
Higgledy piggledy Here we lie, Pick'd and pluck'd, And put in a pie.
CCVI.
Thomas a Tattamus took two Ts, To tie two tups to two tall trees, To frighten the terrible Thomas a Tattamus!
Tell me how many Ts there are in all THAT.
CCVII.
[The man had one eye, and the tree two apples upon it.]
There was a man who had no eyes, He went abroad to view the skies; He saw a tree with apples on it, He took no apples off, yet left no apples on it.
CCVIII.
[Cleopatra.]
The moon nine days old, The next sign to cancer; Pat rat without a tail;-- And now, sir, for your answer,
CCIX.
[A candle.]
Little Nancy Etticoat, In a white petticoat, And a red nose; The longer she stands, The shorter she grows.
CCX.
[Pair of tongs.]
Long legs, crooked thighs, Little head and no eyes.
CCXI.
[From MS. Sloane, 1489, fol. 16, written in the time of Charles I.]
There were three sisters in a hall, There came a knight amongst them all; Good morrow, aunt, to the one, Good morrow, aunt, to the other, Good morrow, gentlewoman, to the third, If you were my aunt, As the other two be, I would say good morrow, Then, aunts, all three.
CCXII.
[Isabel.]
Congeal'd water and Cain's brother, That was my lover's name, and no other.
CCXIII.
[Teeth and Gums.]
Thirty white horses upon a red hill, Now they tramp, now they champ, now they stand still.
CCXIV.
[Coals.]
Black we are, but much admired; Men seek for us till they are tired.
We tire the horse, but comfort man Tell me this riddle if you can.
CCXV.
[A Star.]
Higher than a house, higher than a tree; Oh, whatever can that be?
CCXVI.
[An Egg.]
Humpty dumpty sate on a wall, Humpty dumpty had a great fall; Three score men and three score more Cannot place Humpty Dumpty as he was before.
CCXVII.
[The allusion to Oliver Cromwell satisfactorily fixes the date of the riddle to belong to the seventeenth century. The answer is, a rainbow.]