Nursery Rhymes

views updated May 14 2018

Nursery Rhymes

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Although popular collections of nursery rhymes were widespread from the eighteenth century on, and academic collections have been published since the nineteenth century, their academic study really began in the twentieth century. Several approaches have been taken by scholars over the past four or five generations, and these have been largely determined by the academic climate of their day. One such early tack was the expounding, or even invention, of a rhymes history trying to answer the question deriving from adult wonder about childrens lore: Where does it come from? Contemporary folklorists have been more likely to try to understand the meanings of folklore in use than to plumb its history; centuries of looking closely at the phenomena of folklore have taught them that folkloreincluding childrens rhymesis so fluid and changeable, while by dint of its orality being so undocumented in the written record, that the search for its history can at best be quixotic.

The English term nursery rhyme covers a somewhat larger group of folklore than a simple reading of the term would suggest. Although many thus-categorized rhymes are indeed used in the nursery (that is, with children under, say, four years old as audience), a much larger number of them are used by adults with somewhat older children, by children themselves no matter their age, and by adults. Nonetheless, the term nursery rhyme has great utility and has been retained by most authors.

Twentieth-century approaches to nursery rhymes have included attempts to understand variation, to read rhymes as expressions of psychosexual maturation, to show how they introduce children to the tools of language and intellectual thought, and, most recently, to see them as agents of empowerment for children and vehicles of cultural conservation. All of these approaches have attracted many authors and have been fruitful.

Despite academic findings to the contrary, it has often been claimed that earlier generations nursery rhymes were originally coded messages about political events and historical eras. Such interpretations may be seen as the folklore of folklore and most often can be dismissed as modern euhemerism. (Euhemerus was a fourth-century BCE Greek who claimed that myths of the gods were actually transformed stories about real historical people.) Euhemerist traditions about nursery rhymes have circulated, especially in the educated classes, for a hundred years, floating around like migratory legends andalso like legendslocalizing from time to time.

It is understandable that such interpretations arise. It is popularly known that much folklore is old. Interested and creative people look for ways to show how old it is. New folklore grows as easily as old folklore did, and now it finds itself an explanation of the older folklore. Folklore items have a text (their words or other formal shape), but they also often carry a more variable set of traditional beliefs and understandings as a kind of corona around the text. These secondary texts can take the form of localized legends explaining the history of the item.

The Humpty Dumpty rhyme is a good example of this process; in its euhemerist form, Humpty Dumpty has become a local legend in at least a half-dozen places, mainly in Great Britain. In Gloucester, Humpty Dumpty has come to represent a siege ramp built in 1643 by Charles Is forces to cross the River Severn and take the city from Cromwell. But the ramp, according to the euhemerist tradition, collapsed under the cavalrys weight:

Humpty Dumpty sat on the wall,
Humpty Dumpty had a great fall,
All the kings horses and all the kings men,
Couldnt put Humpty together again.

Similar readings have been attached to, among others, the English kings James I, King John, and Richard III, the last because of his hunchback (= Humpty).

Likewise Pop Goes the Weasel is interpreted as being about a piece of nineteenth-century textile equipment, or a cobblers bench. All folklore varies by text, and the different texts of this rhymecarpenters bench, vinegar bush, vinegar jug, and so onproduce different euhemerist readings. One reading has it in a pawnbrokers shop and provides a foundation legend for some Salvation Army followers. Often the rhymes own words are given as examples of now-obsolete slang that seems to prove the truth of the legend. All of these readings are attempts by modern people to connect to historical figures that which would otherwise appear to be mere childrens nonsense. But modern texts are commonly used in these attempts to come up with older readings.

Interpretations sometimes have contemporary political undertones. In early 2000, in England, Birminghams city council banned Baa Baa Black Sheep from local schools because, the council said, the history of the rhyme is offensive to black people due to the fact it originates from slavery. In fact, as the research by Peter and Iona Opie has shown, it is most likely not related to slavery, but simply an amusing, and largely nonsensical rhyme. Children, in any era, are amused by nonsense.

The euhemerist belief that Ring around the Rosie comes from one of the great plagues seems to have arisen in the 1960s, and was given greater weight by academic promulgations. The claim gained popularity in a 1961 biology textbook about rats and the plague, James Leasors The Plague and the Fire. Leasor did not consult folklorists but, based on folklore from his own relatives, assumed the rhyme was known centuries before it was. More recently, Norman Cantor, a historian of the plague, did the same in his In the Wake of the Plague (2001). There are two main regional forms of the rhyme: Ring a Ring of Rosie, which is mainly British, and Ring around the Rosie, which is mainly North American. The two traditions are not entirely separate; examination of historical texts shows a great deal of overlap. Kate Greenaways text (in her little book Mother Goose ) was the first in print, appearing in Britain in 1881. William Wells Newell published a second version in North America several years later, in an academic collection of childrens rhymes. He said it dated back to the 1790s but he does not say who his informant was, or how he knew that fact. This is Newells earliest text, using the now-British form of the first line:

Ring a ring a rosie,
A bottle full of posie,
All the girls in our town
Ring for little Josie.

Newell included another more contemporary version, probably circulating in Massachusetts in the 1880s or 1890s:

Round the ring of roses,
Pots full of posies,
The one who stoops the last 
Shall tell whom she loves the best.

This text represents very clearly a typical forfeits game with an all fall in section in the third line. The lack of plague references is apparent here, as in all the pre-twentieth century texts. Only in the mid-twentieth century do the Ashes ashes (or A tissue!) forms start to appear; such late texts are the evidence (clearly inadmissible) of being about the plague.

In the late twentieth and into the twenty-first century, the rhyme grew in symbolic value, giving a human face to plagues. HIV-AIDS groups in the United States used the rhyme to bring attention to the need for research into AIDS and support for HIV+ people. Rock musician Dave Matthews used it in his popular song Gravedigger to indicate how disillusioned a child is when she learns her childhood song is about death. In an interview in Rolling Stone in February 2004, he said, Its the classic of classics about dying. Not just for activists and artists, it had become a symbol of plague, of death, disease, and the corruption of flesh.

Childrens folklore is a rich area for contemporary scholarly study partly because it continues to pick up traditions and generate symbols. But symbol is not history. The history of Ring around the Rosie is much shorter than the plague interpretation would have it. The symbols are modern, not old, folklorebut they also show nursery rhymes to be living, contemporary culture.

SEE ALSO Children; Death and Dying; Ethnology and Folklore

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Bauman, Richard. 1982. Ethnography of Childrens Folklore. In Children in and out of School: Ethnography and Education, eds. Perry Gilmore and Allan A. Glatthorn, 172186. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press.

Bronner, Simon J. 1990. Left to Their Own Devices: Interpreting American Childrens Folklore as an Adaptation to Aging. Southern Folklore 47: 101115.

Crystal, David. 1998. Language Play. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Dundes, Alan. 1980. Projection in Folklore: A Plea for Psychoanalytic Semiotics. In his Interpreting Folklore, 3361. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

Fine, Gary Alan. 1980. Children and Their Culture: Exploring Newells Paradox. Western Folklore 39 (3): 170183.

Gomme, Alice Bertha. 18941898. The Traditional Games of England, Scotland, and Ireland. 2 vols. London: David Nutt.

Greenaway, Kate. 1881. Mother Goose. London: Warne.

Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, Barbara, ed. 1976. Speech Play: Research and Resources for Studying Linguistic Creativity. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.

Mechling, Jay. 1986. Childrens Folklore. In Folk Groups and Folklore Genres, ed. Elliott Oring, 91120. Logan: Utah State University Press.

Newell, William Wells. 1883. Games and Songs of American Children. New York: Harper.

Opie, Iona, and Peter Opie. 1959. The Lore and Language of Schoolchildren. Oxford: Clarendon.

Opie, Iona, and Peter Opie, eds. 1997. The Oxford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes. Rev. ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Sutton-Smith, Brian. 1970. Psychology of Children: The Triviality Barrier. Western Folklore 29 (1): 18.

Sutton-Smith, Brian. 1984. The Origins of Fictions and the Fictions of Origins. In Text, Play, and Story: The Construction and Reconstruction of Self and Society, ed. Edward Bruner, 117132. Washington, DC: American Ethnological Society.

Widdowson, John D. A. 1977. If You Dont Be Good: Verbal Social Control in Newfoundland. ISER Study 21. St. Johns: Memorial University of Newfoundland.

Zumwalt, Rosemary Lévy. 1999. The Complexity of Childrens Folklore. In Childrens Folklore: A Source Book, ed. Brian Sutton-Smith et al, 2347. Logan: Utah State University Press.

Philip Hiscock

nursery rhymes

views updated May 18 2018

nursery rhymes are one of the more enduring forms of oral culture. Although taken for granted, some of them are of considerable longevity, dating from the 17th cent. or earlier. The origins of these rhymes vary enormously. Some lie in riddles, others in singing games. Many, however, originated from printed ballads and song books, genres which were firmly established by 1700, while others can be traced back to plays or folk-songs.

It has been suggested that many of these rhymes originally referred to historical events or personalities, although attempts to prove such arguments in individual cases are rarely convincing. There is a risk of over-interpretation: the analysis of nursery rhymes in John Bettenden Ker's An Essay on the Archaeology of Popular English Phrases and Nursery Rhymes, published in three volumes between 1834 and 1840, is, according to one modern authority, ‘probably the most extraordinary example of misdirected labour in the history of English letters’ which has ‘given delight to students of mania ever since’. Sometimes historical origins to nursery rhymes can be traced: thus ‘Ring o' Roses’ may refer to the plague of the 17th cent., while ‘The Grand Old Duke of York’ was almost certainly Frederick Augustus, son of George III, who led a less than successful campaign against the French in the Low Countries in 1793–5.

Most connections are hard to sustain. Thus there is no way of proving the early 18th-cent. notion that Old King Cole can be identified with the mythical founder of Colchester. The ‘fine lady’ riding her horse to Banbury Cross (a structure destroyed by the local puritans around 1600) has been variously identified as Queen Elizabeth I, Lady Godiva (there is a version of the rhyme referring to Coventry Cross), and the traveller Celia Fiennes (1662–1741), ‘Fiennes’ being corrupted as ‘fine’. Such identifications are highly speculative.

It is far more profitable to use these rhymes, and the publications in which they were collected, as evidence of changing attitudes towards children and childhood. That so many of them had their origins in the ‘adult’ milieux of the theatre and the song book before coming to the nursery is suggestive of a certain relationship between the adult world and that of children, while the proliferation of nursery rhyme books around the middle of the 18th cent. supports the suggestion that new sensibilities towards children were developing then. This is a contentious area, and tracing changes in sensibility is always difficult. But the content and illustrations in books of nursery rhymes (the first of any substance published in 1744) would repay serious investigation, and would throw much illumination on the history of childhood.

J. A. Sharpe

nursery rhyme

views updated May 23 2018

nurs·er·y rhyme • n. a simple traditional song or poem for children.

nursery rhyme

views updated Jun 08 2018

nursery rhyme a simple traditional song or poem for children. The term is first recorded in 1816, and probably derives from the title of Ann and Jane Taylor's Rhymes for the Nursery of 1806.

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