I got a kick out of Damian at A Sunday of Liberty reveling in a rhyme that seems genetically implanted in American kids, regardless of age or geography:
“Greasy,
grimy gopher guts!
Little dirty
birdie feet!”
As in any
folk tradition, variants abound. This is the version I grew up singing:
“Great gobs of greasy gopher guts,
Tiny, dirty
parakeet feet,
Big hunks of
monkey meat.”
The obvious
appeal of such lyrics is audacious, nose-thumbing grossness. No profanities but the vicar
would frown. Kids inhabit an alternate reality they learn to conceal from
grownups, especially parents. The smart ones devise idiolects unintelligible to
adults, most of whom have forgotten or sanitized memories of their own childhoods. Children
are not by nature genteel. Remember this one?:
Verse:
“Don’t shed
your eyes when worms go by,
’Cause you
might be the next to die.
They dig a
whole ’bout twelve feet deep
And throw
you in by your feet."
Chorus:
“The worms
crawl in, the worms crawl out,
The ants
play pinochle in your snout.”
Joseph
Mitchell, The New Yorker writer whose
abiding theme was death, uses a variation of this rhyme in The Bottom of the
Harbor (1959):
“The worms
crawl in,
The worms
crawl out.
They eat
your guts
And spit
them out . . .”
Besides the disgust quotient, such rhymes survive because of their rhythm and rhyme. Free verse would never do the trick. Meter, however irregular, and rhyme, no matter how ridiculous, make words a lot of fun. They feel good in the mouth. Say aloud the lines I
remembered above. Besides the playful alliteration, I like the rhyming of “parakeet
feet” and “monkey meat.” Richard Tillinghast writes in his essay “In Praise of Rhyme” (Poetry and What Is
Real, 2004):
“On the
psychic level, rhyme’s appeal must have something to do with our instinctual
taste for periodicity and return, the regular rising and setting of the sun,
the sound of two hands clapping, a pair of aces. Just now on the top branch of
the pear tree that grows over the stone wall at the foot of our garden, a male
bullfinch alighted. As I was admiring his stout bill, his watered-pink
waistcoat, his burgher’s prosperous midsection, the female flew briskly over
the wall and joined him, jostling the fellow slightly as she perched --the pair
of them like a banker and his wife settling down in their box at the theater.
That’s rhyme.”
X.J. Kennedy,
a master of rhyme, in “Lonesome George” (That Swing: Poems 2008-2016, 2017), cherishes the pure, sometimes silly sound:
“For a long
moment we bind
sympathetic looks,
we holdouts
of our kind,
like rhymed lines, printed books.”
2 comments:
The version I knew had a slight comic tinge:
'The worms crawl in, the worms crawl out.
They go in thin, they come out stout.'
"They eat your eyes, they eat your nose,
They eat the jelly between your toes."
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