Old Man's Nursery Rhyme

written by


« Reload image

I.

  In the jolly winters
  Of the long-ago,
  It was not so cold as now--
  O! No! No!
  Then, as I remember,
  Snowballs, to eat,
  Were as good as apples now,
  And every bit as sweet!

II.

  In the jolly winters
  Of the dead-and-gone,
  Bub was warm as summer,
  With his red mitts on,--
  Just in his little waist-
  And-pants all together,
  Who ever heard him growl
  About cold weather?

III.

  In the jolly winters of the long-ago--
  Was it _half_ so cold as now?
  O! No! No!
  Who caught his death o' cold,
  Making prints of men
  Flat-backed in snow that now's
  Twice as cold again?

IV.

  In the jolly winters
  Of the dead-and-gone,
  Startin' out rabbit-hunting
  Early as the dawn,--
  Who ever froze his fingers,
  Ears, heels, or toes,--
  Or'd a cared if he had?
  Nobody knows!

V.

  Nights by the kitchen-stove,
  Shelling white and red
  Corn in the skillet, and
  Sleepin' four abed!
  Ah! the jolly winters
  Of the long-ago!
  We were not so old as now--
  O! No! No!

© James Whitcomb Riley