| Lawrence Lovechild - 1858 - 126 páginas
...my kitten. •*-T And hey, my kitten, my deary; Such a sweet pet as this Was neither far nor neary. Here we go up, up, up, And here we go down, down, downy; And here we go backwards and forwards, And here we go round, round, roundy. 73. TF I 'd as much money... | |
| Francis Francis - 1859 - 356 páginas
...crossed the street and plunged into the yellow-brown office, and there we will leave them. CHAPTER XL " Here we go up, up, up, and here we go down, down, down, oh !— Here we go backwards and forwards, and here we go round, round, round, oh !" THE SONG... | |
| Charlotte Mary Yonge - 1860 - 476 páginas
...me.' ' I can't help it! Oh ! the vilest thing in creation.' ' Such fun ! To be taken when well shaken. Here •we go up, up, up; and here we go down, down, down! Ha! ware fishing-rod ! This is what it is to travel. No one ever described the experiences of... | |
| Tom Hood - 1861 - 426 páginas
...and encroachments of over-education. Juvenile literature has gone as the world's see-saw goes— " Here we go up, up, up ; and here we go down, down, down !" Some time back, ladies were wont to sail along in hoops, with stomachers down to their kness,... | |
| Ellen Luscombe - 1861 - 184 páginas
...Mill. You will justly think that our walk is a practical exposition of that pleasing nursery ditty, " Here we go up, up, up, and here we go down, down, down"; and you will be confirmed and strengthened in your opinion ere we finish our perambulation.... | |
| James Hedderwick - 1863 - 806 páginas
...ecenc has no romance; to the other, no melancholy; to the third, no moral. The old nursery rhyme of Here we go up, up, up; And here we go down, down, down/ expresses, in too many cases, the whole theory and practice of our varied social existence. But... | |
| D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson - 1864 - 364 páginas
...playing a simple, a monotonous, but a terrible game. Odd and even. Heads and Tails. See-saw, Marjory Daw. Here we go up, up, up; and here we go down, down, down. If on the street a silver coin I find, Forthwith my elbow through a window goes : If Fortune... | |
| D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson - 1864 - 374 páginas
...playing a simple, a monotonous, but a terrible game. Odd and even. Heads and Tails. See-saw, Marjory Daw. Here we go up, up, up; and here we go down, down, down. If on the street a silver coin I find, Forthwith my elbow through a window goes : If Fortune... | |
| Henry Drury - 1865 - 430 páginas
...chicken, my chicken, And hey my chicken, my deary! Such a sweet pet as this Was neither far nor neary. Here we go up up up, And here we go down down downy, And here we go backwards and forwards, And here we go round round roundy. aipfieus. Then Alpheus bold,... | |
| John Frederick Boyes - 1865 - 280 páginas
...more. The two theories together constitute the grand " see-saw" theory; and the nursery lines,— " Here we go up, up, up; And here we go down, down, down!" become the true anthem of the universe. The " dereliction " is a necessary complement of the... | |
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