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Mother Goose Nursery Rhymes: Volume 1 book cover

Mother Goose Nursery Rhymes: Volume 1

by BoingyBooks Classics
🏢 BoingyBooks 📄 10 pages
Ten beloved nursery rhymes from The Real Mother Goose (1916), illustrated by Blanche Fisher Wright. This interactive read-along edition features the original public domain illustrations paired with word-by-word bouncing text.

Rhymes in this volume:
1. Little Bo-Peep
2. Little Boy Blue
3. Rain
4. The Clock
5. Winter
6. Fingers And Toes
7. A Seasonable Song
8. Dame Trot And Her Cat
9. Three Children On The Ice
10. Cross Patch

Historical Origins:

Little Bo-Peep — First recorded around 1805. 'Bo-peep' referred to a peek-a-boo game from the 16th century, referenced by Shakespeare in King Lear. May also allude to the punishment pillory.

Little Boy Blue — First published in Tommy Thumb's Song Book (1744). The boy was attributed to Cardinal Thomas Wolsey, Henry VIII's Lord Chancellor, who was the son of an Ipswich butcher.

Rain — An ancient weather charm. Children have chanted rain-banishing verses across Europe for centuries, reflecting a folk belief that spoken words could influence the weather.

The Clock — A teaching rhyme from 18th-century England, when household clocks became common. Used to help children learn to tell time through verse.

Winter — A seasonal folk verse capturing English countryside winters. Part of the oral tradition mothers recited during long cold evenings by the fire.

Fingers And Toes — A counting rhyme teaching toddlers numbers using their own body, a tradition dating back centuries across European cultures.

A Seasonable Song — A street vendor's cry turned nursery rhyme. London's streets were filled with such cries as sellers hawked hot pease and other seasonal foods.

Dame Trot And Her Cat — First printed in 1803, though the character was known a century earlier, appearing in Pills to Purge Melancholy (1706). A close cousin to Old Mother Hubbard.

Three Children On The Ice — A cautionary tale warning about frozen ponds, reflecting a real danger in pre-modern England where drowning through ice was a leading cause of childhood winter deaths.

Cross Patch — First published in Mother Goose's Melody (c.1765). 'Crosspatch' meant a cranky person; 'patch' was an old word for fool, from the haphazard patches worn by court jesters.

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About the Author

BoingyBooks Classics

BoingyBooks Classics brings timeless children's stories to life with interactive read-along technology. Each book features word-by-word bouncing ball animation synchronized to professional AI narration, helping young readers follow along and build reading skills.
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