Nursery Rhyme. XVI. Historical
[Taken from MS. Douce, 357, fol. 124. See Echard's 'History of England,' book iii, chap. 1.] See saw, sack-a-day; Monmouth is a pretie boy, Richmond is another, Grafton is my onely joy, And why should I these three destroy, To please a pious brother!
AI analysis available. Enable JavaScript to interact.
About this line
"[Taken from MS. Douce, 357, fol. 124. See Echard's 'History of England,' book iii, chap. 1.]..."
Unknown's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "Nursery Rhyme. XVI. Historical"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...