Knife & Fork, Like My Peaches & Shake My Tree (1944) and more
Peter A. McGraw
pmcgraw at LINFIELD.EDU
Tue Feb 15 16:30:44 UTC 2005
--On Tuesday, February 15, 2005 1:24 AM -0500 Bapopik at AOL.COM wrote:
> Sam, Sam,
> The dirty man,
> Washed his face in a frying-pan,
> Combed his hair with the back of a chair,
> And danced with the toothache in the air.
>
> My son John is a nice old man,
> Washed his face in a frying-pan,
> Combed his hair with a wagon-wheel,
> And died with the toothache in his heel.
What are these verses, exactly, and the others quoted? Some sound like
children's rhymes, but I know part of the second version of this one as
part of the song Old Dan Tucker. I only remember that Old Dan Tucker
combed his hair with a wagon wheel, and as I understood it at the time,
died with a toothpick in his heel. He probably washed his face in a frying
pan, but I wouldn't swear to it this many years later. The chorus was:
Git out the way, Old Dan Tucker,
(repeat 2x)
You're too late to git your supper.
Peter Mc.
*****************************************************************
Peter A. McGraw Linfield College McMinnville, Oregon
******************* pmcgraw at linfield.edu ************************
More information about the Ads-l
mailing list