Notes and Queries, Number 46, September 14, 1850 by Various
page 22 of 66 (33%)
page 22 of 66 (33%)
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MINOR QUERIES. _The Spider and the Fly._--Can any of your readers, gentle or simple, senile or juvenile, inform me, through the medium of your useful and agreeable periodical, in what collection of nursery rhymes a poem called, I think, "The Spider and Fly," occurs, and if procurable, where? The lines I allude to consisted, to the best of my recollection, of a dialogue between a fly and a spider, and began thus:-- {246} _Fly_. Spider, spider, what do you spin? _Spider_. Mainsails for a man-of war. _Fly_. Spider, spider, 'tis too thin. Tell me truly, what 'tis for. _Spider_. 'Tis for curtains for the king, When he lies in his state bed. _Fly_. Spider, 'tis too mean a thing, Tell me why your toils you spread. &c. &c. &c. There were other stanzas, I believe, but these are all I can remember. My notion is, that the verses in question form part of a collection of nursery songs and rhymes by Charles Lamb, published many years ago, but now quite out of print. This, however, is a mere surmise on my part, and has no better foundation than the vein of humour, sprightliness, and originality, obvious enough in the above extract, which we find running through and adorning all he wrote. "Nihil quod tetigit non ornavit." S.J. |
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