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Nursery Rhyme. CCCCLXXIV. Love And Matrimony.

Topics: classic

[This nursery song may probably commemorate a part of Tom Thumb's history, extant in a Little Danish work, treating of 'Swain Tomling, a man no bigger than a thumb, who would be    married to a woman three ells and three quarters long.' See Mr. Thoms' Preface to 'Tom & Lincoln,' p. xi.]         I had a little husband,             No bigger than my thumb;         I put him in a pint pot,             And there I bid him drum.         I bought a little horse,             That galloped up and down;         I bridled him, and saddled him,             And sent him out of town.         I gave him some garters,             To garter up his hose,         And a little handkerchief,             To wipe his pretty nose.

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"[This nursery song may probably commemorate a part of Tom Thumb's history, extant in a Little Danish work, treating of 'Swain Tomling, a man no bigger than a thumb, who would be    married to a woman three ells and three quarters long.' See Mr. Thoms' Preface to 'Tom & Lincoln,' p. xi.]..."

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