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" IF all the world were apple-pie, And all the sea were ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we have to drink? "
The Anatomy of Wealth Or the ABC of Every Day Life - Page 3
by James Goulton Constable - 1880 - 135 pages
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The Home Book of Verse, American and English, 1580-1918, Volume 1

American poetry - 1918 - 2030 pages
...bow and scrape, And I began to grin, — How do you do, and how do you do, And how do you do again? IF all the world were apple-pie, And all the sea were...were bread and cheese, What should we have to drink? PEASE-PUDDING hot. Pease-pudding cold, Pease-pudding in the pot, Nine days old. Some like it hot, Some...
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Speech training for children

Margaret Gray Blanton - 1919 - 286 pages
...until the lips and teeth vibrate. EXERCISE 51 IF ALL THE WORLD (for vowel and consonant position also) If all the world were apple-pie And all the sea were...ink And all the trees were bread and cheese, What would we have to drink ? Specially for training the muscles that bring the lips forward. Probable mispronunciations:...
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Children's Literature: A Textbook of Sources for Teachers and ..., Part 1923

Charles Madison Curry, Erle Elsworth Clippinger - Children - 1921 - 718 pages
...great sea, What a splish splash that would be ! 38 If all the world was apple-pie, And all the sea was ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we have for drink? 39 If I'd as much money as I could spend, I never would cry, "Old chairs to mend! Old chairs...
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First Grade Manual: A Help-book for Teachers

Emma Miller Bolenius - Readers - 1923 - 520 pages
...know where to find them. Leave them alone and they will come home Bringing their tails behind them. 10 If all the world were apple-pie, And all the sea were ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, 430 11 Peter, Peter, pumpkin-eater; Had a wife, and could n't keep her; He put her in a pumpkin shell,...
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Bobbs-Merrill Readers, Volume 2

Clara Belle Baker, Edna Dean Baker - Children's poetry - 1924 - 240 pages
...fall into the great sea, What a great splash-splash that would be! If all the world were apple pie, And all the sea were ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we have to drink? If If I'd as much money as I could spend, I never would cry, " Old chairs to mend ! Old chairs to mend...
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Memoirs of the American Folk-lore Society, Volume 18

Folklore - 1925 - 252 pages
...arranged as a round dance for eight persons. The words as sung then were : If all the world were paper, And all the sea were ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we do for drink ? (The air to which it was sung and danced was given in Playford's Dancing Master, 1651.)...
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The Poetry of Nonsense

Emile Cammaerts - Nonsense verses - 1926 - 124 pages
...unwieldy land in which amazing surprises occur: If all the world was apple-pie, And all the sea was ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we have to drink? It is the Never-never-land discovered by Peter Pan which can be disclosed only to those who, like him,...
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Educational Review, Volume 72

Education - 1926 - 338 pages
...try and find it; If there be none, never mind it. If all the world were apple-pie, And all the seas were ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we have for drink? Eat, birds, eat, and make no waste, I lie here and make no haste; If my master chance to...
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The Cambridge Book of Lesser Poets

Sir John Collings Squire - English poetry - 1927 - 496 pages
...content, my love, Till God calls you away." If all the world were paper IF all the world were paper, And all the sea were ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we do for drink? If all the world were sand-o, Oh, then what should we lack-o? If, as they say, there...
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The Quarterly Review, Volume 249

William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - English literature - 1927 - 452 pages
...some such belief, one feels, underlies our old rhyme — ' If all the land was paper, And all the seas were ink, And all the trees were bread and cheese, What should we have to drink ? ' Milk and the corn grain, in the shape of bread and cheese, are here seen to be identified, or equated,...
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