WHEN I was a lad and so was my dad I came out of a bean swad; The bean swad it was too full And I jumped into a roaring bull; The roaring bull it was too fat And I jumped into a gentleman's hat; The gentleman's hat it was too fine So I jumped into a bottle of wine; The bottle of wine it was too clear So I jumped into a barrel of beer; The barrel of beer it was too thick So I jumped out on an oak stick; The oak stick began to crack And I jumped onto a horse's back; The horse's back began to bend So I jumped down by a turkey hen; The turkey hen began to lay And I got an egg that day for my tay. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE BLACK RIDERS: 56 by STEPHEN CRANE EPITAPH ON S.P., A CHILD OF QUEEN ELIZABETH'S CHAPEL by BEN JONSON A LEGEND OF BREGENZ by ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTER CRADLE SONG (TO A TUNE OF BLAKE'S): 1 by ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE THE OLD COUPLE by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON SONGS IN ABSENCE: 2 by ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH THE UNKNOWN COUNTRY by DINAH MARIA MULOCK CRAIK HUNTING SONG, FR. THE MARRIAGE-HATER MATCH'D by THOMAS D'URFEY |