| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 816.1 |  | STAR::CAMUSO | alphabits | Mon Oct 30 1995 20:19 | 11 | 
|  | 
RE: <<< Note 816.0 by NETCAD::WIEBE "Garth Wiebe" >>>
	That's pretty much what I remember about it, though I cannot
	remember from whom.  The pockets full of posies were to help offset
	the stench emitted by the victims.  All though your verse says
	"Ashes, ashes," I remember hearing "Achoo, achoo," as the victim
	would succumb after a sneezing fit.
	TonyC
 | 
| 816.2 |  | CNTROL::JENNISON | Revive us, Oh Lord | Tue Oct 31 1995 09:27 | 7 | 
|  |     
    	I believe it was from the smallpox epidemic, and that the
    	ashes, ashes referred to the burning of the dead bodies (too
    	many to bury ?)
    
    	Karen
    
 | 
| 816.3 | I never knew! | ASDG::HORTERT |  | Tue Oct 31 1995 09:38 | 8 | 
|  |     Gosh, that is awful. I never knew! All those years as  child singing the
    song in the playground. I doubt my parents even knew what they were
    teaching us.  Why would anyone want to make a childrens song out of
    something so morbid?  To this day I don't understand the Rock-a-bye
    baby song!  Gosh I feel so ignorant! Now you're gonna tell me there's
    no Santa too huh? (Just kidding)
    
    Rose
 | 
| 816.4 |  | ICTHUS::YUILLE | He must increase - I must decrease | Tue Oct 31 1995 09:51 | 9 | 
|  | � Gosh I feel so ignorant! Now you're gonna tell me there's no Santa too
� huh? (Just kidding) 
    
Phew, Rose, I'm glad you were just kidding!!!!  As if we would be that mean!
							;-)
								Andrew
 | 
| 816.5 | Bubonic Plague? | YIELD::BARBIERI |  | Tue Oct 31 1995 10:21 | 3 | 
|  |       For some reason, I thought it was the bubonic plague.
    
      Perhaps because it seems to be the most famous one.
 | 
| 816.6 |  | ACIS03::LEECH | Dia do bheatha. | Tue Oct 31 1995 11:54 | 1 | 
|  |     I thought it had to do with the Bubonic Plague in Europe. 
 | 
| 816.7 |  | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Tue Oct 31 1995 12:00 | 7 | 
|  |     I didn't realize that this nursery rhyme had such morbid beginnings
    either.  Hmmmm and come think of it, why must the baby fall down?
    And why did that spider scare miss muffett?  And did pumpkin eater lose
    his wife because he was fat?  That's really sad too.  Come to think of
    it, Mother Goose, sounds like Mother horror when you think about it...
    and the old witch who ate kids in the woods... brrrr, shiver me
    timbers!
 | 
| 816.8 |  | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Tue Oct 31 1995 12:46 | 3 | 
|  | Mother Goose was political satire.  It was about real people of the time.
/john
 | 
| 816.9 |  | STAR::CAMUSO | alphabits | Tue Oct 31 1995 13:01 | 12 | 
|  | 
	A few years back some good friends gave us a copy of "Christian
	Mother Goose."  I haven't read it in a while, so I don't know how
	I would look at it today, but I do remember one that made my wife
	and I laugh.
		Hickory, dickory, dock.
		The church mouse ran up the clock,
		The clock struck ten,
		The mouse said, "Amen!"
		Hickory, dickory, dock.
		
 | 
| 816.10 |  | LILCPX::THELLEN | Ron Thellen, DTN 522-2952 | Tue Oct 31 1995 13:29 | 21 | 
|  | >     <<< Note 816.7 by JULIET::MORALES_NA "Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze" >>>
>    Mother Goose, sounds like Mother horror when you think about it...
>    and the old witch who ate kids in the woods... brrrr, shiver me
>    timbers!
    I heard just recently that Mother Goose didn't actually write the
    rhymes.  In fact, Mother Goose wasn't her real name.  She merely made a
    collection of rhymes and after her death a family member found the
    collection and had them published as Mother Goose's nursery rhymes.
    Here is a variation of one mentioned earlier:
	Hickory, Dickory, Dock
	Three mice ran up the clock
	The clock struck one...
	and the other two escaped with minor injuries!
    Ron
 | 
| 816.11 |  | OUTSRC::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Oct 31 1995 13:52 | 1 | 
|  |     I always heard it was the Bubonic Plague as well.
 | 
| 816.12 | The Three Little Pigs | YIELD::BARBIERI |  | Tue Oct 31 1995 14:03 | 16 | 
|  |       Hi,
    
        Isn't the three little pigs a neat story with Christian 
        applications.  I mean, here we are, laden with sinful
        flesh so we could consider ourselves unclean in a way.
    
        So we have choices to make.  Build out of straw or wood
        or brick.  Surely, the house built of brick is built on
        the rock.
    
        Then when the wolf unleashes the storm, we find which 
        house stands.
    
        Oh, come to think of it, the other two little pigs went
        to the brick house.  I guess it doesn't make sense that
        way!
 | 
| 816.13 |  | PAULKM::WEISS | For I am determined to know nothing, except... | Tue Oct 31 1995 14:10 | 6 | 
|  | I think that's only in the cleaned-up version of the story.  I think in the
original, the wolf ate the two other little pigs.
They didn't hesitate making stories grim and gruesome back then.
Paul
 | 
| 816.14 |  | CNTROL::JENNISON | Revive us, Oh Lord | Tue Oct 31 1995 14:17 | 4 | 
|  |     
    	You're right, it was bubonic plague.  I was just testing you all.
    	You passed ;-)
    
 | 
| 816.15 |  | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Tue Oct 31 1995 14:39 | 6 | 
|  |     Okay let's see, uhm... what is behind this rhyme?
    
    3,6,9 the goose drank wine
    the monkey chewed tobacca on a streetcar line
    the line broke and the monkey got choked
    and they all went heaven in a little row boat!
 | 
| 816.16 | Red or White? | ASDG::HORTERT |  | Tue Oct 31 1995 15:23 | 8 | 
|  |     Well you got me on that one.  Never heard of it before. 
    What kind of wine went with the goose, red or white? Haha
    
    I think I'm going to start paying more attention to the songs I sing
    to my kids.  At least I know the christians songs are nothing to
    worry about.
    
    
 | 
| 816.17 |  | RDGENG::YERKESS | bring me sunshine in your smile | Wed Nov 01 1995 04:50 | 11 | 
|  | RE .15
	Nancy,
	Is it clapping hands, or kissing a soldier?.
	Sorry, don't know what's behind this rhyme
	but I did enjoy dancing to this song on Saturday.
	Phil. 
 | 
| 816.18 | Just a simple cold...honest ! | DPPSYS::FYFE | I have much more to tell you... | Wed Nov 01 1995 05:28 | 15 | 
|  |     
    
    	It's not "ashes, ashes,
    		  we all fall down"
    
    	It's "atishoo, atishoo,
    	      we all fall down"
    
    	'atishoo' - as in to sneeze.
    
    	Sneezing was the first signs of the bubonic plague.
    
    	Peace,
    
    		Tom
 | 
| 816.19 | It Must Have Been Blanche! | YIELD::BARBIERI |  | Wed Nov 01 1995 08:52 | 8 | 
|  |       re: .15
    
      I think Blanche Dubois sang this near the end of 'A Streetcar
      Named Desire' after she lost all her marbles!!
    
      Well, I tried!!!
    
    						Tony
 |