Rhymes for the nursery By the authors of "Original Poems" [i.e. Ann Taylor]. Twenty-seventeenth edition |
Another little Boy.
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Rhymes for the nursery | ||
Another little Boy.
I'm a little husbandman,
Work and labour hard I can:
I'm as happy all the day
At my work, as if 'twere play:
Tho' I've nothing fine to wear,
Yet for that I do not care.
Work and labour hard I can:
I'm as happy all the day
At my work, as if 'twere play:
Tho' I've nothing fine to wear,
Yet for that I do not care.
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When to work I go along,
Singing loud my morning song,
With my wallet at my back,
Or my waggon-whip to smack;
Oh! I am as happy then,
As the idle gentlemen.
Singing loud my morning song,
With my wallet at my back,
Or my waggon-whip to smack;
Oh! I am as happy then,
As the idle gentlemen.
I've a hearty appetite,
And I soundly sleep at night.
Down I lie content, and say,
“I've been useful all the day:
I'd rather be a plough-boy, than
A useless little gentleman.”
And I soundly sleep at night.
Down I lie content, and say,
“I've been useful all the day:
I'd rather be a plough-boy, than
A useless little gentleman.”
Rhymes for the nursery | ||