A lad came down from our town, To view this woundy city, And take a peep at all the tips, Who look so mighty pretty. Yankee Doodle, mind the dance, Step it off so neatly, To the pretty girls advance, Smack their lippees sweetly. He saw the pretty girls, I vags, As Broadway street he stood in, Tied up as tight in cotton bags As mother's Indian pudding. Yankee Doodlemusic strike, Dancing now our trade is; Did you ever see the like, Pudding-bags on ladies. He saw the pretty gentlemen, You'll see them every street in, With little jackets o'er their coats, And leather bags their feet in. Yankee Doodlepantaloons Grow so high before, sir, They've quarrel'd with the waistcoats all, And turn'd them out of door, sir. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...PLANKED WHITEFISH by CARL SANDBURG TO A DEAD MAN by CARL SANDBURG THE ANGEL, FR. SONGS OF EXPERIENCE by WILLIAM BLAKE FAUST: SCENE 1. PROLOGUE IN HEAVEN by JOHANN WOLFGANG VON GOETHE TOM'S GARLAND: UPON THE UNEMPLOYED by GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS FIRST FIG by EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY THE TROOPS by SIEGFRIED SASSOON ODES: BOOK 2: ODE 13. TO AUTHOR OF MEMOIRS OF HOUSE OF BRANDENBURGH by MARK AKENSIDE |