/ p.223 /
Key fob & label marked 'Index'


A, B, C, and D.......
A, B, C, tumble down D.........
A carrion crow sat on an oak.......
A cat came fiddling out of a barn......
A cow and a calf.......
A diller, a dollar.......
A donkey walks on four legs.......
A duck and a drake.....
A kid, a kid, my father bought.....
A little old man and I fell out....
A little old man of Derby......
A long-tail'd pig, or a short-tail'd pig.......
A man of words and not of deeds......
A man went a hunting at Reigate......
/ p.224 /
A pie sate on a pear-tree......
A riddle, a riddle, as I suppose.....
A swarm of bees in May......
A thatcher of Thatchwood.......
A was an apple-pie......
A was an archer, and shot at a frog.....
About the bush, Willy.....
All of a row.....
An old woman was sweeping her house...
Apple-pie, pudding, and pancake......
Around the green gravel the grass grows green .....
As I was going along, long, long......
As I was going by Charing Cross.......
As I was going o'er Westminster bridge....
As I was going to sell my eggs.....
As I was going to St. Ives.......
As I was going up Pippen hill.....
As I was going up the hill......
As I was walking o'er little Moorfields.......
As I went over Lincoln-bridge......
As I went over the water.....
As I went to Bonner......
As I went through the garden gap......
As round as an apple, as deep as a cup.....
As titty mouse sat in the witty to spin.....
As Tommy Snooks and Bessy Brooks.......
At Brill on the hill......
At the siege of Belle-isle.........
Awa' birds, away......
/ p.225 /
Baby and I.........
Barnaby Bright he was a sharp cur......
Barber, barber, shave a pig......
Bah, bah, black sheep......
Bat, bat....
Bessy Bell and Mary Gray......
Betty Pringle had a little pig.....
Birds of a feather flock together....
Black we are, but much admired.......
Blow, wind, blow; and go, mill, go......
Bounce Buckram, velvet's dear......
Bryan O'Lin, and his wife, and wife's mother
Buff says Buff to all his men.....
Burnie bee, burnie bee.....
Buz, quoth the blue fly.....
Bye, baby bumpkin.....
Bye, baby bunting......
Bye, O my baby!......

Can you make me a cambric shirt......
Catch him, crow, carry him, kite.....
Charley wag......
Clap hands, clap hands....
Cock a doodle doo!........
Come, butter, come......
Come dance a jig.....
Come, let's to bed........
Congeal'd water and Cain's brother.....
Cripple Dick upon a stick.....

/ p.226 /
Cross patch.........
Cry, baby, cry.......
Cuckoo, cherry tree......
Cuckoo, cuckoo......
Curly locks, curly locks, wilt thou be mine....
Cushy cow bonny, let down thy milk.........

Daffy-down-dilly has come up to town......
Dame, what makes your ducks to die? ....
Dance, little baby, dance up high....
Dance to your daddy.....
Dance, Thumbkin, dance ....
Danty, baby, diddy ......
Darby and Joan were dressed in black .....
Deedle, deedle, dumpling, my son John .....
Dibbity, dibbity, dibbity, doe ......
Dick and Tom, Will and John ....
Dickery, dickery, dare .....
Did you see my wife .....
Ding, dong, bell .....
Ding, dong, darrow .....
Doctor Faustus was a good man ....
Doctor Foster went to Glo'ster .....
Doodledy, doodledy, doodledy, dan ....
Draw a pail of water .....
Driddlety drum, driddlety drum ....
Dusty was the coat .....

Eggs, butter, cheese, bread ...

/ p.227 /
Eighty-eight wor Kirby feight ....
Elizabeth, Elspeth, Betsy, and Bess ....
Every lady in this land ...
Eye winker .....

F for fig, J for jig ....
Feedum, fiddledum, fee ....
Fiddle-de-dee, fiddle-de-dee ....
Fiddle, liddle, lightum ...
Flour of England, fruit of Spain ....
Formed long ago, yet made to-day ...
Four and twenty tailors went to kill a snail ..

Gay go up and gay go down ....
Giles Collins he said to his old mother ..
Gilly Silly Jarter .....
Girls and boys, come out to play ....
Give me a blow, and I'll beat 'em ...
Good horses, bad horses ....
Good morning, father Francis ....
Good morrow to you, father ....
Goosey, goosey, gander ....
Go to bed first, a golden purse .....
Go to bed, Tom .....
Gray goose and gander ....
Great A, little a .....
Green cheese, yellow laces ....

Handy Spandy Jack-a-dandy .....

/ p.228 /
Hark, hark ......
Hemp-seed I set ....
Here am I, little jumping Joan .....
Here comes a lusty wooer .....
Here comes a poor woman from baby-land ...
Here we come a piping .....
He that would thrive ....
Hey! diddle diddle ....
Hey diddle, dinkety, poppety, pet ...
Hey ding a ding, what shall I sing ....
Hey, dorolot, dorolot! .....
Hey, my kitten, my kitten ....
Hey, the dusty miller ....
Hic, hoc, the carrion crow ....
Hickety, pickety, my black hen ...
Hickory, dickory, dock ....
Hie, hie, says Anthony ....
Higgledy, piggledy .....
High diddle ding ....
High diddle doubt, my candle's out ....
High ding a ding, and ho ding a ding ...
Highty cock O !...
Highty, tighty, paradighty clothed in green .
Hinx, minx, the old witch winks ...
How d'ye dogs, how ....
How many days has my baby to play? .....
How many miles is it to Babylon ? ...
Hub a dub dub ....
Humpty dumpty sate on a wall ....
/ p.229 /
Hush a bye, a ba lamb.....
Hush a bye, baby, on the tree top ....
Hush baby, my doll, I pray you don't cry ....
Hush, hush, hush, hush ....
Hush thee, my babby......
Hussy, hussy, where's your horse .....
Hyder iddle diddle dell ....

I am a gold lock ....
I am a pretty wench ....
I can make diet-bread ...
I can weave diaper thick, thick, thick ....
If a body meet a body ....
If all the seas were one sea ....
If all the world was apple-pie ....
If I'd as much money as I could spend ......
If you love me, pop and fly .....
I had a little castle upon the sea-side ....
I had a little dog, and his name was Blue Bell ...
I had a little dog, and they called him Buff ...
I had a little hobby-horse, and it was well shod..
I had a little husband ...
I had a little moppet ....
I had a little nut tree, nothing would it bear ...
I had a little pony....
I have a little sister, they call her peep, peep ....
I'll buy you a tartan bonnet ...
I'll sing you a song ...
I'll tell you a story ....

/ p.230 /
I lost my mare in Lincoln lane ....
I love sixpence, pretty little sixpence.........
In Arthur's court, Tom Thumb did live...
In fir tar is......
In marble walls as white as milk....
Intery, mintery, cutery-corn ....
I sell you the key of the king's garden....
Is John Smith within?....
I went to the toad that lies under the wall..
I went up one pair of stairs....
I won't be my father's Jack ....

Jack and Jill went up the hill...
Jack be nimble ...
Jack in the pulpit, out and in ....
Jack Sprat could eat no fat ....
Jack Sprat had a cat ....
Jack Sprat's pig ....
Jim and George were two great lords ....
John Ball shot them all....
John, come sell thy fiddle ....
John Cook had a little grey mare ....
Johnny Armstrong kill'd a calf ....
Johnny shall have a new bonnet ....

King Charles walked and talked ..
King's Sutton is a pretty town ....

Lady-cow, lady-cow, fly thy way home ...

/ p.231 /
Leg over leg ....
Let us go to the wood, says this pig .
Little blue Betty lived in a den ....
Little Bo-peep has lost her sheep ....
Little boy blue, come blow up your horn ....
Little boy, pretty boy, where was you born?...
Little Dicky Dilver ....
Little General Monk ....
Little girl, little girl, where have you been?...
Little Jack Dandiprat was my first suitor ....
Little Jack Horner sat in the corner ....
Little Jack Jingle ....
Little John Jiggy Jag...
Little maid, pretty maid, whither goest thou?.
Little Mary Ester ....
Little Nancy Etticoat ....
Little Robin Red-breast ....
Little Tee Wee ....
Little Tom Dandy....
Little Tommy Tacket ....
Little Tommy Tittlemouse ....
Little Tom Tucker....

[NOTE: in pencil the '0' is modified to an '8':]
London bridge is broken down ....
Long legs, crooked thighs......

Madam, I am come to court you ....
Margery Mutton-pie, and Johnny Bopeep..
Master I have, and I am his man...
Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John....

/ p.232 /
Miss one, two, and three, could never agree....
Mistress Mary, quite contrary ...
Multiplication is vexation ....
My father and mother ...
My father he died, but I can't tell you how .....
My father he left me, just as he was able ....
My father was a Frenchman....
My lady Wind, my lady Wind....
My little old man and I fell out ....

Needles and pins, needles and pins...
Number number nine, this hoop's mine ....

Of all the gay birds that e'er I did see ...
Oh, dear, what can the matter be?....
Oh! mother, I shall be married to Mr. Punchinello....
O that I was where I would be....
O the little rusty, dusty, rusty miller ...

Old Betty Blue .......
Old Boniface he loved good cheer ...
Old Doctor Foster went to Glo'ster...
Old father Graybeard ...
Old King Cole .....
Old mother Goose ....
Old mother Hubbard...
Old mother Niddity Nod swore by the pudding-bag .....
Old mother Twitchett had but one eye ....
Old mother Widdle Waddle jumpt out of bed ....

/ p.233 /
Old woman, old woman, shall we go a shearing? ....
Once I saw a little bird ....
On Christmas eve I turn'd the spit ....
On Saturday night ....
One's none ....
One, two.....
One, two, three ....
One, two, three, four, five ....
One misty moisty morning....
One moonshiny night ....
One-ery, two-ery ....
One-ery, two-ery, hickary, hum .....
One old Oxford ox opening oysters ...
One to make ready ....
Over the water, and over the lee ..

Parson Darby wore a black gown ....
Pat-a-cake, pat-a-cake, baker's man ....

[NOTE: in pencil the '65' is crossed out and '15' written beside it:]
Pease-porridge hot, pease-porridge cold ...
Pease-pudding hot .....
Peg, Peg, with a wooden leg ...
Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled pepper ...
Peter White will ne'er go right ...
Pitty Patty Polt ...
Please to remember ....
Poor old Robinson Crusoe ......
Punch and Judy .....
Purple, yellow, red, and green ....
Pussy cat eat the dumplings .....
/ p.234 /
Pussy cat Mole ....
Pussy cat, pussy cat, where have you been ...
Pussicat, wussicat, with a white foot.....

Queen Anne, Queen Anne, you sit in the sun ...

Rain, rain, go away ....
Riddle me, riddle me, ree .....
Ride a cock-horse to Banbury-Cross ....
Ride a cock-horse to Banbury-Cross .....
Ride a cock-horse to Coventry-Cross ...
Ride, baby, ride ....
Ring me, ring me, ring me, rary ....
Robert Barnes, fellow fine ....
Robert Rowley rolled a round roll round ....
Robin and Richard were two pretty men .
Robin Hood, Robin Hood ....
Robin the Bobbin, the big-bellied Ben .
Rock-a-bye, baby, thy cradle is green ...
Round about, round about .
Rowley Poley, pudding and pie .
Rumpty-iddity, row, row, row ...
Rowsty dowt, my fire's all out ...

St. Dunstan, as the story goes ..
St. Swithin's day, if thou dost rain ...
Says t'auld man tit oak tree ......
See a pin and pick it up ....
See-saw, jack a daw ....
See-saw, Margery Daw ...

/ p.235 /
See-saw, sack a day ....
See-saw, sacradown ...
See, see! what shall I see ? ....
Shake a leg, wag a leg, when will you gang? ...
Shoe the colt ...
Sieve my lady's oatmeal ...
Simple Simon met a pieman ....
Sing a song of sixpence ...
Sing jigmijole, the pudding-bole ...
Sing, sing, what shall I sing? ...
Snail, snail, come out of your hole ...
Snail, snail, put out your horns ...
Sneel, snaul .....
Solomon Grundy ...
Some little mice sat in a barn to spin ...
Some up and some down ....
Swan swam over the sea ....

Taffy was a welshman, Taffy was a thief ...
Tell tale, tit .....
The barber shaved the mason ...
The bull's in the barn threshing the corn ...
The cat sat asleep by the side of the fire ...

[NOTE: in pen the '1' is modified to '0':]
The cock doth crow ....
The cuckoo's a fine bird ...
The first day of Christmas ...
The fox and his wife they had a great strife .
The girl in the lane ....
The king of France, and four thousand men ..
/ p.236 /
The king of France, the king of France ..
The king of France went up the hill ....
The king of France with twenty thousand men ..
The lion and the unicorn ...
The little priest of Felton ...
The man in the moon ...
The man in the moon drinks claret ....
The man in the wilderness, asked me ...
The moon nine days old ....
The north wind doth blow ....
The quaker's wife got up to bake ..

The Queen of Hearts ...
The rose is red, the grass is green ....
The sow came in with the saddle ....
The tailor of Bicester ....
The white dove sat on the castle wall...
There once was a gentleman grand ..
There was a crooked man, and he went a crooked mile ....
There was a frog liv'd in a well ...
There was a girl in our towne ...
There was a jolly miller ...
There was a king and he had three daughters ...
There was a king met a king ....
There was a lady all skin and bone ...
There was a little boy and a little girl ...
There was a little guinea-pig ....
There was a little maid and she was afraid ...
There was a little man ...
There was a little nobby colt ....

/ p.237 /
There was a little one-eyed gunner ...
There was a little pretty lad ..
There was a man in our toone ..
There was a man made a thing ...
There was a man of Newington ...
There was a man who had no eyes ...
There was a monkey climb'd up a tree ....
There was an old crow ....
There was an old man ...
There was an old man who liv'd in a wood ...
There was an old man who lived in Middle Row ...
There was an old man of Tobago ...
There was an old woman ...
There was an old woman ....
There was an old woman ....
There was an old woman, and what do you think
There was an old woman as I've heard tell ...
There was an old woman called Nothing-at-all ....
There was an old woman had nothing .....
There was an old woman had three sons ...
There was an old woman, her name it was Peg....
There was an old woman in Surrey....
There was an old woman of Leeds ....
There was an old woman of Norwich ...
There was an old woman sat spinning...
There was an old woman toss'd up in a basket..
There was an old woman who lived in a shoe...
There was an owl lived in an oak...
There was a piper, he'd a cow.....
/ p.238 /
There was a rat for want of stairs...
There were three jovial Welshman....
There were three sisters in a hall ..
There were two birds sat on a stone ...
There were two blackbirds ..
They that wash on Monday..
Thirty days hath September ....
Thirty white horses upon a red hill..
This is the house that Jack built....
This is the key of the kingdom....
This pig went to market...
Thomas a Tattamus took two T's ...
Three blind mice, see how they run...
Three children sliding on the ice..
Three wise men of Gotham...
Thumbikin, Thumbikin, broke the barn..
Tiddle liddle lightum...
Tip, top, tower ....
To market, to market ..
To market, to market, a gallop, a trot...
To market, to market, to buy a fat pig...
To market ride the gentlemen ...
To make your candles last for a' ....
Tom Browne's two little Indian boys...
Tom he was a piper's son ...
Tom shall have a new bonnet ...
Tom, Tom, the piper's son ...
Tommy Trot, a man of law ...
Trip, trap, over the grass ...
/ p.239 /
Trip upon trenchers and dance upon dishes ...
'Twas the twenty-ninth of May ...
Twelve huntsmen with horns and hounds...
Twelve pears hanging high ....
Two broken tradesmen ...
Two legs sat upon three legs ...

Up hill and down dale ..
Up street and down street ...

Wash hands, wash ..
We are three brethren out of Spain ....
We make no spare ....
We're all dry with drinking on't ...
We're all in the dumps ...
What are little boys made of ...
What care I how black I be ...
What do they call you ...
What is the rhyme for porringer ...
What shoe-maker makes shoes without leather .
What's the news of the day ....
When a twister a twisting, will twist him a twist
When good king Arthur ruled this land .
When I was a little boy, I had but little wit ..
When I was a little boy, my mammy kept me in..
When I went up sandy hill...
When Jacky's a very good boy...
When the wind is in the east ..

/ p.240 /
Where have you been all the day ....
[NOTE: the '5' is overwritten with a '6']
Whiskum, whaskum.
Who comes here?...
Who goes round my house this night ...
Who is going round my sheepfold.....
Whoop, whoop, and hollow...
William and Mary, George and Anne ...
Willy boy, Willy boy, where are you going ..
[NOTE: the '1' is overwritten with a '2']
Wooley Foster has gone to sea ....

145
p.146
132
191
100
110
104
8
100
p.200
65


The rhymes contained in the 'Supplement', also numbered from pages 205-236, are not included in the index of the 4th edition.