There was an Old Man with a nose,
Who said, “If you choose to suppose
That my nose is too long, you are certainly wrong!”
That remarkable Man with a nose.
There was a Young Person of
Smyrna,
Whose Grandmother threatened
to burn her;
But she seized on the Cat,
and said, “Granny, burn that!
You incongruous Old Woman
of Smyrna!”
There was an Old Man on a
hill,
Who seldom, if ever, stood
still;
He ran up and down in his
Grandmother’s gown,
Which adorned that Old Man
on a hill.
There was an Old Person of
Chili,
Whose conduct was painful
and silly;
He sate on the stairs, eating
apples and pears,
That imprudent Old Person
of Chili.
There was an Old Man with
a gong,
Who bumped at it all the day
long;
But they called out, “Oh,
law! you’re a horrid old bore!”
So they smashed that Old Man
with a gong.
There was an Old Man of Kilkenny,
Who never had more than a
penny;
He spent all that money in
onions and honey,
That wayward Old Man of Kilkenny.
There was an Old Man of Columbia,
Who was thirsty, and called
out for some beer;
But they brought it quite
hot, in a small copper pot,
Which disgusted that man of
Columbia.
There was an Old Man in a
tree,
Who was horribly bored by
a Bee;
When they said, “Does
it buzz?” he replied, “Yes, it does!
It’s a regular brute
of a Bee.”
There was an Old Lady of Chertsey,
Who made a remarkable curtsey;
She twirled round and round,
till she sank underground,
Which distressed all the people
of Chertsey.
There was a Young Lady whose
chin
Resembled the point of a pin;
So she had it made sharp,
and purchased a harp,
And played several tunes with
her chin.
There was an Old Man with
a flute,
A “sarpint” ran
into his boot!
But he played day and night,
till the “sarpint” took flight,
And avoided that Man with
a flute.
There was a Young Lady of
Portugal,
Whose ideas were excessively
nautical;
She climbed up a tree to examine
the sea,
But declared she would never
leave Portugal.
There was an Old Person of
Ischia,
Whose conduct grew friskier
and friskier;
He danced hornpipes and jigs,
and ate thousands of figs,
That lively Old Person of
Ischia
There was an Old Man of Vienna,
Who lived upon Tincture of
Senna;
When that did not agree, he
took Camomile Tea,
That nasty Old Man of Vienna.
[Illustraion]
There was an Old Man in a
boat,
Who said, “I’m
afloat! I’m afloat!”
When they said, “No,
you ain’t!” he was ready to faint,
That unhappy Old Man in a
boat.
There was an Old Person of
Buda,
Whose conduct grew ruder and
ruder,
Till at last with a hammer
they silenced his clamor.
By smashing that Person of
Buda.
There was an Old Man of Moldavia,
Who had the most curious behavior;
For while he was able, he
slept on a table,
That funny Old Man of Moldavia.
There was an Old Person of
Hurst,
Who drank when he was not
athirst;
When they said, “You’ll
grow fatter!” he answered “What matter?”
That globular Person of Hurst.
There was an Old Man of Madras,
Who rode on a cream-colored
Ass;
But the length of its ears
so promoted his fears,
That it killed that Old Man
of Madras.
There was an Old Person of
Dover,
Who rushed through a field
of blue clover;
But some very large Bees stung
his nose and his knees,
So he very soon went back
to Dover.
There was an Old Person of
Leeds,
Whose head was infested with
beads;
She sat on a stool and ate
gooseberry-fool,
Which agreed with that Person
of Leeds.
There was an Old Person of
Cadiz,
Who was always polite to all
ladies;
But in handing his daughter,
he fell into the water,
Which drowned that Old Person
of Cadiz.
There was an Old Man of the
Isles,
Whose face was pervaded with
smiles;
He sang “High dum
diddle,” and played on the fiddle,
That amiable Man of the Isles.
There was an Old Person of
Basing,
Whose presence of mind was
amazing;
He purchased a steed, which
he rode at full speed,
And escaped from the people
of Basing.
There was an Old Man who supposed
That the street door was partially
closed;
But some very large Rats ate
his coats and his hats,
While that futile Old Gentleman
dozed.
There was an Old Person whose
habits
Induced him to feed upon Rabbits;
When he’d eaten eighteen,
he turned perfectly green,
Upon which he relinquished
those habits.
There was an Old Man of the
West,
Who wore a pale plum-colored
vest;
When they said, “Does
it fit?” he replied, “Not a bit!”
That uneasy Old Man of the
West.
There was an Old Man of Marseilles,
Whose daughters wore bottle-green
veils:
They caught several Fish,
which they put in a dish,
And sent to their Pa at Marseilles.
There was an Old Man of the
Wrekin,
Whose shoes made a horrible
creaking;
But they said, “Tell
us whether your shoes are of leather,
Or of what, you Old Man of
the Wrekin?”
There was a Young Lady whose
nose
Was so long that it reached
to her toes;
So she hired an Old Lady,
whose conduct was steady,
To carry that wonderful nose.
There was a Young Lady of
Norway,
Who casually sat in a doorway;
When the door squeezed her
flat, she exclaimed, “What of that?”
This courageous Young Lady
of Norway.
There was an Old Man of Apulia,
Whose conduct was very peculiar;
He fed twenty sons upon nothing
but buns,
That whimsical Man of Apulia.
There was an Old Man of Quebec,
A beetle ran over his neck;
But he cried, “With
a needle I’ll slay you, O beadle!”
That angry Old Man of Quebec.
There was a Young Lady of
Bute,
Who played on a silver-gilt
flute;
She played several jigs to
her Uncle’s white Pigs:
That amusing Young Lady of
Bute.
There was an Old Person of
Philoe,
Whose conduct was scroobious
and wily;
He rushed up a Palm when the
weather was calm,
And observed all the ruins
of Philoe.
There was an Old Man with
a poker,
Who painted his face with
red ochre.
When they said, “You
’re a Guy!” he made no reply,
But knocked them all down
with his poker.
There was an Old Person of
Prague,
Who was suddenly seized with
the plague;
But they gave him some butter,
which caused him to mutter,
And cured that Old Person
of Prague.
There was an Old Man of Peru,
Who watched his wife making
a stew;
But once, by mistake, in a
stove she did bake
That unfortunate Man of Peru.
There was an Old Man of the
North,
Who fell into a basin of broth;
But a laudable cook fished
him out with a hook,
Which saved that Old Man of
the North.
There was an Old Person of
Troy,
Whose drink was warm brandy
and soy,
Which he took with a spoon,
by the light of the moon,
In sight of the city of Troy.
There was an Old Person of
Mold,
Who shrank from sensations
of cold;
So he purchased some muffs,
some furs, and some fluffs,
And wrapped himself well from
the cold.
There was an Old Person of
Tring,
Who embellished his nose with
a ring;
He gazed at the moon every
evening in June,
That ecstatic Old Person of
Tring.
There was an Old Man of Nepaul,
From his horse had a terrible
fall;
But, though split quite in
two, with some very strong glue
They mended that man of Nepaul.
There was an Old Man of the
Nile,
Who sharpened his nails with
a file,
Till he cut off his thumbs,
and said calmly, “This comes
Of sharpening one’s
nails with a file!”
There was an Old Man of th’
Abruzzi,
So blind that he couldn’t
his foot see;
When they said, “That’s
your toe,” he replied, “Is it so?”
That doubtful Old Man of th’
Abruzzi.
There was an Old Man of Calcutta,
Who perpetually ate bread
and butter;
Till a great bit of muffin,
on which he was stuffing,
Choked that horrid Old Man
of Calcutta.
There was an Old Person of
Rhodes,
Who strongly objected to toads;
He paid several cousins to
catch them by dozens,
That futile Old Person of
Rhodes.
There was an Old Man of the
South,
Who had an immoderate mouth;
But in swallowing a dish that
was quite full of Fish,
He was choked, that Old Man
of the South.
There was an Old Man of Melrose,
Who walked on the tips of
his toes;
But they said, “It ain’t
pleasant to see you at present,
You stupid Old Man of Melrose.”
There was an Old Man of the
Dee,
Who was sadly annoyed by a
Flea;
When he said, “I will
scratch it!” they gave him a hatchet,
Which grieved that Old Man
of the Dee.
There was a Young Lady of
Lucca,
Whose lovers completely forsook
her;
She ran up a tree, and said
“Fiddle-de-dee!”
Which embarrassed the people
of Lucca.
There was an Old Man of Coblenz,
The length of whose legs was
immense;
He went with one prance from
Turkey to France,
That surprising Old Man of
Coblenz.
There was an Old Man of Bohemia,
Whose daughter was christened
Euphemia;
But one day, to his grief,
she married a thief,
Which grieved that Old Man
of Bohemia.
There was an Old Man of Corfu,
Who never knew what he should
do;
So he rushed up and down,
till the sun made him brown,
That bewildered Old Man of
Corfu.
There was an Old Man of Vesuvius,
Who studied the works of Vitruvius;
When the flames burnt his
book, to drinking he took,
That morbid Old Man of Vesuvius.
There was an Old Man of Dundee,
Who frequented the top of
a tree;
When disturbed by the Crows,
he abruptly arose,
And exclaimed, “I’ll
return to Dundee!”
There was an Old Lady whose
folly
Induced her to sit in a holly;
Whereon, by a thorn her dress
being torn,
She quickly became melancholy.
There was an Old Man on some
rocks,
Who shut his Wife up in a
box:
When she said, “Let
me out,” he exclaimed, “Without doubt
You will pass all your life
in that box.”
There was an Old Person of
Rheims,
Who was troubled with horrible
dreams;
So to keep him awake they
fed him with cake,
Which amused that Old Person
of Rheims.
There was an Old Man of Leghorn,
The smallest that ever was
born;
But quickly snapt up he was
once by a Puppy,
Who devoured that Old Man
of Leghorn.
There was an Old Man in a
pew,
Whose waistcoat was spotted
with blue;
But he tore it in pieces,
to give to his Nieces,
That cheerful Old Man in a
pew.
There was an Old Man of Jamaica,
Who suddenly married a Quaker;
But she cried out, “Oh,
lack! I have married a black!”
Which distressed that Old
Man of Jamaica.
There was an Old Man who said,
“How
Shall I flee from this horrible
Cow?
I will sit on this stile,
and continue to smile,
Which may soften the heart
of that Cow.”
There was a Young Lady of
Troy,
Whom several large flies did
annoy;
Some she killed with a thump,
some she drowned at the pump,
And some she took with her
to Troy.
There was a Young Lady of
Hull,
Who was chased by a virulent
Bull;
But she seized on a spade,
and called out, “Who’s afraid?”
Which distracted that virulent
Bull.
There was an Old Person of
Dutton,
Whose head was as small as
a button;
So to make it look big he
purchased a wig,
And rapidly rushed about Dutton.
There was an Old Man who said,
“Hush!
I perceive a young bird in
this bush!”
When they said, “Is
it small?” he replied, “Not at all;
It is four times as big as
the bush!”
There was a Young Lady of
Russia,
Who screamed so that no one
could hush her;
Her screams were extreme, no
one heard such a scream
As was screamed by that Lady
of Russia.
There was a Young Lady of
Tyre,
Who swept the loud chords
of a lyre;
At the sound of each sweep
she enraptured the deep,
And enchanted the city of
Tyre.
There was an Old Person of
Bangor,
Whose face was distorted with
anger;
He tore off his boots, and
subsisted on roots,
That borascible Person of
Bangor.
There was an Old Man of the
East,
Who gave all his children
a feast;
But they all ate so much,
and their conduct was such,
That it killed that Old Man
of the East.
There was an Old Man of the
Coast,
Who placidly sat on a post;
But when it was cold he relinquished
his hold,
And called for some hot buttered
toast.
There was an Old Man of Kamschatka,
Who possessed a remarkably
fat Cur;
His gait and his waddle were
held as a model
To all the fat dogs in Kamschatka.
There was an Old Person of
Gretna,
Who rushed down the crater
of Etna;
When they said, “Is
it hot?” he replied, “No, it’s not!”
That mendacious Old Person
of Gretna.
There was an Old Man with
a beard,
Who sat on a Horse when he
reared;
But they said, “Never
mind! you will fall off behind,
You propitious Old Man with
a beard!”
There was an Old Man of Berlin,
Whose form was uncommonly
thin;
Till he once, by mistake,
was mixed up in a cake,
So they baked that Old Man
of Berlin.
There was an Old Man of the
West,
Who never could get any rest;
So they set him to spin on
his nose and his chin,
Which cured that Old Man of
the West.
There was an Old Person of
Cheadle
Was put in the stocks by the
Beadle
For stealing some pigs, some
coats, and some wigs,
That horrible person of Cheadle.
There was an Old Person of
Anerley,
Whose conduct was strange
and unmannerly;
He rushed down the Strand
with a Pig in each hand,
But returned in the evening
to Anerley.
There was a Young Lady of
Wales,
Who caught a large Fish without
scales;
When she lifted her hook,
she exclaimed, “Only look!”
That ecstatic Young Lady of
Wales.
There was a Young Lady of
Welling,
Whose praise all the world
was a-telling;
She played on the harp, and
caught several Carp,
That accomplished Young Lady
of Welling.
There was an Old Person of
Tartary,
Who divided his jugular artery;
But he screeched to his Wife,
and she said, “Oh, my life!
Your death will be felt by
all Tartary!”
There was an Old Man of Whitehaven,
Who danced a quadrille with
a Raven;
But they said, “It’s
absurd to encourage this bird!”
So they smashed that Old Man
of Whitehaven.
There was a Young Lady of
Sweden,
Who went by the slow train
to Weedon;
When they cried, “Weedon
Station!” she made no observation,
But thought she should go
back to Sweden.
There was an Old Person of
Chester,
Whom several small children
did pester;
They threw some large stones,
which broke most of his bones,
And displeased that Old Person
of Chester.
There was an Old Man of the
Cape,
Who possessed a large Barbary
Ape;
Till the Ape, one dark night,
set the house all alight,
Which burned that Old Man
of the Cape.
There was an Old Person of
Burton,
Whose answers were rather
uncertain;
When they said, “How
d’ ye do?” he replied, “Who are you?”
That distressing Old Person
of Burton.
There was an Old Person of
Ems
Who casually fell in the Thames;
And when he was found, they
said he was drowned,
That unlucky Old Person of
Ems.
There was a Young Girl of
Majorca,
Whose Aunt was a very fast
walker;
She walked seventy miles,
and leaped fifteen stiles,
Which astonished that Girl
of Majorca.
There was a Young Lady of
Poole,
Whose soup was excessively
cool;
So she put it to boil by the
aid of some oil,
That ingenious Young Lady
of Poole.
There was an Old Lady of Prague,
Whose language was horribly
vague;
When they said, “Are
these caps?” she answered, “Perhaps!”
That oracular Lady of Prague.
There was a Young Lady of
Parma,
Whose conduct grew calmer
and calmer:
When they said, “Are
you dumb?” she merely said, “Hum!”
That provoking Young Lady
of Parma.
There was an Old Person of
Sparta,
Who had twenty-five sons and
one “darter;”
He fed them on Snails, and
weighed them in scales,
That wonderful Person of Sparta.
There was an Old Man on whose
nose
Most birds of the air could
repose;
But they all flew away at
the closing of day,
Which relieved that Old Man
and his nose.
There was a Young Lady of
Turkey,
Who wept when the weather
was murky;
When the day turned out fine,
she ceased to repine,
That capricious Young Lady
of Turkey.
There was an Old Man of Aosta
Who possessed a large Cow,
but he lost her;
But they said, “Don’t
you see she has run up a tree,
You invidious Old Man of Aosta?”
There was a Young Person of
Crete,
Whose toilette was far from
complete;
She dressed in a sack spickle-speckled
with black,
That ombliferous Person of
Crete.
There was a Young Lady of
Clare,
Who was madly pursued by a
Bear;
When she found she was tired,
she abruptly expired,
That unfortunate Lady of Clare.
There was a Young Lady of
Dorking,
Who bought a large bonnet
for walking;
But its color and size so
bedazzled her eyes,
That she very soon went back
to Dorking.
There was an Old Man of Cape
Horn,
Who wished he had never been
born;
So he sat on a Chair till
he died of despair,
That dolorous Man of Cape
Horn.
There was an old Person of
Cromer,
Who stood on one leg to read
Homer;
When he found he grew stiff,
he jumped over the cliff,
Which concluded that Person
of Cromer.
There was an Old Man of the
Hague,
Whose ideas were excessively
vague;
He built a balloon to examine
the moon,
That deluded Old Man of the
Hague.
There was an Old Person of
Spain,
Who hated all trouble and
pain;
So he sate on a chair with
his feet in the air,
That umbrageous Old Person
of Spain.
There was an Old Man who said,
“Well!
Will nobody answer
this bell?
I have pulled day and night,
till my hair has grown white,
But nobody answers this bell!”
There was an Old Man with
an Owl,
Who continued to bother and
howl;
He sat on a rail, and imbibed
bitter ale,
Which refreshed that Old Man
and his Owl.
There was an Old Man in a
casement,
Who held up his hands in amazement;
When they said, “Sir,
you’ll fall!” he replied, “Not at
all!”
That incipient Old Man in
a casement.
There was an Old Person of
Ewell,
Who chiefly subsisted on gruel;
But to make it more nice,
he inserted some Mice,
Which refreshed that Old Person
of Ewell.
There was an Old Man of Peru.
Who never knew what he should
do;
So he tore off his hair, and
behaved like a bear,
That intrinsic Old Man of
Peru.
There was an Old Man with
a beard,
Who said, “It is just
as I feared!
Two Owls and a Hen, four Larks
and a Wren,
Have all built their nests
in my beard.”
There was a Young Lady whose
eyes
Were unique as to color and
size;
When she opened them wide,
people all turned aside,
And started away in surprise.
There was a Young Lady of
Ryde,
Whose shoe-strings were seldom
untied;
She purchased some clogs,
and some small spotty Dogs,
And frequently walked about
Ryde.
There was a Young Lady whose
bonnet
Came untied when the birds
sate upon it;
But she said, “I don’t
care! all the birds in the air
Are welcome to sit on my bonnet!”