WHEN I'm going to town of a morning, Every day I meet Three little girls with grace adorning The long, grey aisle of a London street (The Saints be kind to their class-ward feet), And I don't know what their names may be, Never a one of all the three, So we'll call them A and B and C. And A's as slim as a willow, And B's as nice as a bun, And C's as pretty as sixpence, And how shall the story run? They go in orchard, apple-green dresses (Best of Pomona's hues), They wear the sun in their pig-tailed tresses, They wear the wind in their walking shoes; You wouldn't know which of the three to choose. Each of them fresh as an April day, Each of them bright as a roundelay, Each of them, C and B and A. And A's the grace of a princess, And B's as sweet as a rose, And C, she's pretty as sixpence, And that's how the story goes! Now that's as far as my knowledge reaches, Fancy finds the end, "Sugar and spice" for all and each is Always there when it's "Let's pretend"; So 'tis settled that Fate's to send Sugar and spice to all the three (Letting them know it comes from me), Each of them, A and B and C. And A shall marry a marquis, And B shall marry a squire, And C (who's pretty as sixpence) Whomever her dreams desire! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...EPISTLE TO AUGUSTA by GEORGE GORDON BYRON IMPRESSION by EDMUND WILLIAM GOSSE SPRING by GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS SING-SONG; A NURSERY RHYME BOOK: 114 by CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI THE GREAT FIGURE by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS |