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Sunday, March 1, 2026

Some History Of & Comments About The Song "Dig A Hole Put The Devil In" (from a Mudcat folk music discussion thread)


Edited by Azizi Powell

This pancocojams post presents comments from a Mudcat folk music discussion thread about the song "Dig A Hole Put The Devil In".

The content of this post is presented for folkloric, historical, socio-cultural, and entertainment purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to the original composers of the "Dig A Hole Put The Devil In" song. Thanks to all collectors of this song and historians who have written about this song. Thanks also to all those who are quoted in this pancocojams post.
-snip-
Leadbelly's recording "Gwine Dig A Hole Put The Devil In" is a secular extension of that religious song.

Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/03/lead-belly-dig-hole-put-devil-in-two.html for the 2026 pancocojams post "Lead Belly - "Dig A Hole Put The Devil In" (two YouTube sound files, comments, & lyrics) Complete Reprint" 

That post includes my transcription of Lead Belly's version of "Gwine Dig A Hole Put The Devil In".

Additions and corrections are welcome for that transcription.

**
Click ___ for the related pancocojams post "Eight Religious Or Non-Religious Examples Of The song "Dig A Hole Put The Devil In". 

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WARNING -  Some examples of "Dig A Hole Put The Devil In" include curse words.

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GENERAL STATEMENT ABOUT THIS SONG.
"Dig A Hole Put The Devil In" is a song that dates back to at least the 1830s England.

Today that song is usually considered a children's religious song or a children's camp song with movements that mimic some of the song's lyrics.

"Dig A Hole Put The Devil In" is also performed as a religious song for all ages of congregants, or as a non-religious song with some lyrics that are usually considered to be curse words. The most widely documented rendition of a non-religious version of "Dig A Hole Put The Devil In" was by African American folk singer Leadbelly who recorded that song between 1934 and 1943.

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SELECTED COMMENTS FROM A MUDCAT FOLK MUSIC DISCUSSION THREAD ABOUT THE SONG "DIG A HOLE PUT THE DEVIL IN"

[Pancocojams Editor's Notes: As of March 1, 2026, this Mudcat discussion thread is still open for comments.

I added these numbers for referencing purposes only.]

https://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=137600

1. Subject: Origins: Dig a hole to put the devil in

From: GUEST,Richie

Date: 04 May 11 - 02:17 PM

"Hi,

Anyone have versions of "Dig a hole to put the Devil in"?

Know where it came from? When did the expression originate?

Richie"

**
2. Subject: RE: Origins: Dig a hole to put the devil in

From: MartinRyan

Date: 04 May 11 - 02:22 PM


"
Hasn't the HBO series "The Wire" got a bluesy sig tune based on that phrase/idea?

 

Regards"

**
3. Subject: RE: Origins: Dig a hole to put the devil in

From: Steve Gardham

Date: 10 Aug 12 - 03:23 PM


"
Here's a reference from Notes and Queries 1870, sent in by James Henry Dixon, he of the ballad books in the 1840s.

'Some years ago I sent to N&Q a much better version of the lines contributed by F.S. (there must have been a previous query I've not copied) I do not, however, remember their insertion, and probably they never came to hand. My copy, which I now append, was transcribed from the fly-sheet of a Bible that belonged to a pitman who resided near Hutton-Henry, Durham. He was a Methodist. I pitched upon the quatrain while leafing through the Bible. The lines I later found were well-known in the pit villages. I believe they belong to the North of England. (Dixon wasn't a very knowledgeable scholar.)

 

'God made bees, and bees made honey;

God made man, and man made money;

Pride made the Devil, and the Devil made sin;

So God made a coal-pit to put the Devil in.'

 

I have another copy, which I took from a chalking on an engine-house door near Houghton-le-Spring.' "

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4. 
Subject: RE: Origins: Dig a hole to put the devil in

From: Steve Gardham

Date: 10 Aug 12 - 03:37 PM

 
"
Here's a version from the Journal of American Folklore April-June 1913 which was recorded from 'East Tennessee negroes in 1905'.

 

'God made de bee, and de bee made honey;

God made man, an' de man made money;

God made Satan, an' Satan made sin;

God made a hole, an' rolled Satan in.'

 

An addition is given from Kentucky negroes, 1912.

 

'Satan got mad, an' said he wouldn't stay;

God tol' Satan that he couldn't get away.' "
-snip-
Read my comment in this pancocojams post's discussion thread about the referent "Negro" and its lower case (small "n") spelling.

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5. Subject: RE: Origins: Dig a hole to put the devil in

From: GUEST,Nathan Greb

Date: 11 Jan 17 - 02:20 PM


"
God made Man Man made money God made Bees Bees made honey God made Satan Satan made sin God made a hole to put Satan in Satan said he wouldn't stay God said he would cause he couldn't get away so God made a hill sliker than glass down come Satan sliding on his ass

 

By Nathan Greb"

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6. Subject: RE: Origins: Dig a hole to put the devil in

From: Joe_F

Date: 11 Jan 17 - 02:58 PM

 

"God made Satan, Satan made sin.

God made a hot place to put Satan in.

Satan didn't like it, and he said he wouldn't stay.

He's been acting like the devil ever since that day.

          -- The Darky Sunday School"
-snip-
"Darky" is a no longer used derogatory informal referent for Black people.


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7. 
Subject: RE: Origins: Dig a hole to put the devil in

From: Jack Horntip

Date: 11 Jun 20 - 09:03 AM

 

"The Dublin Literary Gazette and National Magazine, July to December 1830. Pg 645.

'God made man, an' man made money;

God made bees, an' bees made money;

God made Satan, an' Satan made sin;

An' God made a hole to put Satan in.'

 

 

This is quoted as part of a story... so it is earlier than 1830."

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8.
Subject: RE: Origins: Dig a hole to put the devil in

From: Jack Horntip

Date: 27 Apr 25 - 07:58 AM

 

"For God made man

And man made money.

And God made bees

And bees made honey.

And God made a rabbit

And sent it through the grass

And God made a dog

For to like the rabbit's ass.

 

-- Unidentified New York City correspondent to Alan Steyne, March 30, 1926, in the Canfield collection.

Variant referenced in the notes of Ed Cray's Erotic Muse III.

It looks like I will have to try to get a copy of the note that prompted this reply. It mentioned Billy Purvis a North Country Music Hall artiste.

It might also be significant, if my memory serves me right, that the Elliots of Birtley in Co. Durham used to sing 'Old Johnny Booker'."

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Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome.

Lead Belly - "Dig A Hole Put The Devil In" (two YouTube sound files, comments, & lyrics) Complete Reprint

Leadbelly- topic,  Sep 4, 2018

Provided to YouTube by Universal Music Group

Gwine Dig a Hole to Put the Devil In -- The Library of Congress Recordings, V. 2

℗ 1991 Rounder Records Manufactured and distributed by Concord Music Group

Released on: 1991-01-01

Auto-generated by YouTube.

[comments are turned off] 

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Edited by Azizi Powell

This pancocojams post is a complete reprint of a 2013 pancocojams post and its discussion thread comments (as of March 1, 2026). That post is still available on this pancocojams blog. 

This pancocojams post showcases two sound files of Lead Belly singing "Gonna Dig A Hole Put The Devil In". 
Leadbelly's recording "Gwine Dig A Hole Put The Devil In" is a secular extension of that religious song.

Notice the different tempos of Lead Belly's two performances of this song.

This post presents information about Leadbelly and a transcription of the lyrics for that song are also included in this post along with a transcript of  an interview about that song and some other songs that Lead Belly gave to Alan and John Lomaz. Click http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2013/12/leadellys-comments-about-shoo-fly-other.html "Lead Belly's Comments About "Shoo Fly" & Other 19th Century & Early 20th Century Dances" for the complete transcription of that interview.

This post also includes a link to a Mudcat folk discussion thread that includes several transcription attempts for Lead Belly's version of "It's Tight Like That".

This content of this post is presented for folkloric, historical, cultural, entertainment, and aesthetic purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to the unknown composer/s of this song. Thanks to Lead Belly for his musical legacy. Thanks to John and Alan Lomax and other collectors and early publishers of the songs that Lead Belly sang. Thanks to all those who are quoted in this pancocojams post and thanks to the publishers of these song files on YouTube.
-snip-
Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/03/some-history-of-comments-about-song-dig.html for the related pancocojams post "Some History Of & Comments About The Song "Dig A Hole Put The Devil In" (from a Mudcat folk music discussion thread)."

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INFORMATION ABOUT LEADBELLY
From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lead_Belly
"Huddie William Ledbetter ... January 1888[1][2] or 1889[3] – December 6, 1949),[1] better known by the stage name Lead Belly, was an American folk and blues singer notable for his strong vocals, virtuosity on the twelve-string guitar, and the folk standards he introduced, including his renditions of "In the Pines" (also known as "Where Did You Sleep Last Night?" and “Black Girl”), "Pick a Bale of Cotton", "Goodnight, Irene", "Black Betty", "Midnight Special", "Cotton Fields", and "Boll Weevil".

 Ledbetter usually played a twelve-string guitar, but he also played the piano, mandolin, harmonica, violin, and windjammer (accordion).[4] In some recordings he also used clapping or stomping to accompany his singing.

Ledbetter's songs covered a wide range of genres, including gospel music, blues, and folk music, as well as a number of topics, including women, liquor, prison life, racism, cowboys, work, sailors, cattle herding, and dancing. He also wrote songs about people in the news, such as Franklin D. Roosevelt, Adolf Hitler, Jean Harlow, Jack Johnson, the Scottsboro Boys and Howard Hughes. Ledbetter was posthumously inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1988 and the Louisiana Music Hall of Fame in 2008.

Though many releases credit him as "Leadbelly", he wrote his stage name as "Lead Belly". This is the spelling on his tombstone[5][6] and is used by the Lead Belly Foundation.[7] He did not care for the "Lead Belly" stage name and always introduced himself by his given name, Huddie Ledbetter.[8]"...

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SHOWCASE SOUND FILE #2 - Gwine Dig a Hole to Put the Devil in It (Remastered)


LeadbeLLY -Topic, .Mar 13, 2015

Provided to YouTube by The Orchard Enterprises

Gwine Dig a Hole to Put the Devil in It · Leadbelly

Selected Sides 1934-1948 (Remastered)

℗ 2013 JSP Records

Released on: 2014-03-10

[comments are turned off] 

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SUMMARY OF AND TRANSCRIPTION OF AN INTERVIEW THAT LEAD BELLY HAD WITH EITHER ALAN LOMAX OR JOHN LOMAX  FROM TWO NO LONGER AVAILABLE ONLINE SOURCES 

Source #1 
This sound file was originally embedded in this 2013 pancocojams post . That  was published on Dec 10, 2011 by sherpa285. That sound file showcases Leadbelly singing two songs " Dig a Hole & Tight Like That" [No longer available on March 1, 2026 and earlier. sherpa285 published a comment (found below) 
the 2013 postabout this song.]

Here's that summary:
"From an old vinyl 3 LP set that I bought years ago in a used record store. I've never heard either of these versions elsewhere. I believe that this is from a session with either Alan or John Lomax. Both songs are amazing. If anyone know any of the words, please post. I've been trying to figure some of them out for years."

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Source #2
From http://anthrocivitas.net/forum/showthread.php?t=1737&page=3 "American Folk Songs Of Black Origin" [This discussion thread is no longer available on March 1, 2026 and earlier.]

Magneto, 12-15-2010, 03:55 PM Post #28

"In the following conversation, recorded by Library of Congress folklorist Alan Lomax in Washington in 1940, Huddie gives us some idea of all the dancing going on at a sukey jump, circa 1900. The conversation is being recorded onto discs which contain perhaps three or four minutes each, and are spinning around at 78 revolutions per minute. There is no time for long pauses or considered answers. While the interview sounds a bit like a word association game, it does gives an impression of what the dances were like...

Lomax: Huddie, did they have any real fast numbers at these dances? Do you remember any of those?

Ledbetter: They'd pick 'em up.

Lomax: When they'd do the hoedown and. . .

Ledbetter: They'd pick 'em up, you know, they'd have some fast ones when they'd just go, like, "Green Corn, Come Along Charlie," "Gonna Dig a Hole to Put the Devil In," and, "Tight Like That," sometimes they'd holler, say, "Tight like this!"
[They are both talking at once through here.]

Lomax: What did they mean by that Huddie, really? I mean, tell us confidentially what they mean by "tight like that."

[Lomax may have been fishing for some sexual innuendo, but Huddie wasnt playing along, perhaps realizing there was nothing confidential about this interview.]

Ledbetter: "Tight like that" means when you got your partner, grab and hug her tight, and keep her going, but when it comes time the boy grab his partner, he grab her and giving her a hug, he says, "Tight like this, it was tight like this, but now it's tight like this." And the boys'd be jumping on "Tight like that."

Lomax: What were some of the dance steps, Huddie, when they were playing some of these fast tunes?

Ledbetter: Well, ain't no dance steps you could do but "breakdown," and that's a fast number. You can't dance no tap dance, I don't think, a fast breakdown number, course you might, but that's where all the tap dances [Huddie is talking very fast, as though he's afraid of being interrupted] . . . all the tap dances come from the old "buck and wing" what they used to do. Well, the breakdown dance, nobody do 'em now, but I don't guess nobody know nothing about it very much, but me, and I do the breakdown. When you do it you got to do it real fast, and when you breakdown you ain't tapping, you just working your legs. Now, a long time ago my grandfather, great-grandfather, say, "you ain't dancing til you cross your legs." So I guess now, nobody dancing because they don't cross their legs hardly ever. But when you do that old breakdown, and wing down, and green corn and that old ground shovel and, uh . . .

Lomax: What about "knocking the pigeon wing?"

Ledbetter: . . . pigeon wing and . . .

Lomax: . . . cutting the back step?

Ledbetter: . . . cutting the short dog, well, you got to cross your legs.

Lomax: Huddie, play us one of those tunes, something like "Gonna Dig a Hole to Put the Devil In," and tell us what it means, too, you know.

Ledbetter: "Gonna Dig a Hole to Put the Devil In" - long years ago, that was when they see the boss coming, you know? And the boys would see the boss coming, well, they didn't like him, you know, but they'd be together, nothing but negroes all piled up there together. When they'd see him coming, they'd say, "Well, we're gonna dig a hole to put the devil in," boy they'd start a-jumping. [plays "Gonna dig a hole. . ." with very fast accompaniment on guitar.]"...
-snip-
Click http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2013/12/leadellys-comments-about-shoo-fly-other.html for the full transcript Library of Congress transcript of that interview.

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LYRICS: GWINE DIG A HOLE PUT THE DEVIL IN
(as sung by Lead Belly in the 1940 interview with Alan Lomax) This recording occurs at 2:07- 3:37 of the [no longer available sound file that was originally given in this pancocojams post.)

[WARNING- This song includes words that can be considered cursing.]

"Yeeee! They go down a hollerin to one another.

Yeee hoo!

Gwine* dig a hole put the devil in
Gwine dig a hole put the devil in
Gwine dig a hole
Gwine dig a hole
Letta dig a hole**
Letta dig a hole**

Yee ha! They all clappin and shoutin. The devil comin now. He don't know what it's all about, but they do.

Gwine dig a hole
Gwine dig a hole
Let me dig a hole to put the devil in
Let me dig a hole
Let the devil in
Let the devil in

Then they start

Gimme little bit of dram***
Little bit of dram
Little bit of dram
Little bit of dram

When the boss is gone they startin

I don't give a damn
Don't give a damn
Don't give a damn
Don't give a damn
Don't give a damn
I don't give a damn.

Yee Hoo!

I dig a hole put the devil in
I dig a hole
I dig a hole
I dig a hole
I dig a hole and put the devil in

Wake Jake days a breakin
Peas in the pot
and the hoe cakes' bakin
Gwine dig a hole
Gwine dig a hole
I dig a hole
I dig a hole

I don't give a damn
Don't give a damn
Don't give a damn
Don't give a damn
Don't give a damn
I don't give a damn."
-snip-
Transcription by Azizi Powell. Additions and corrections are welcome.

*Gwin"e is a no longer used Southern regional (USA) dialectic word which means "gonna".

**This word sounds like "pole" but I think that Lead Belly meant "hole".

***dram - a portion of an alcoholic drink

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PANCOCOJAMS EDITOR COMMENTS ABOUT "DIG A HOLE PUT THE DEVIL IN" [revised on December 12, 2013]
In that 1940 recorded interview Lead Belly shared how "Gonna Dig A Hole Put The Devil In" was sung by "negroes" who saw their "boss" coming. ("Negroes" is no longer used as a referent for Black Americans and even before that referent was retired, many Black people and other people considered it offensive to spell that word with a small "n". Lead Belly said that this song was sung this way "a long time ago". I'm not sure if "the boss" here means the slave master or the person who was in charge of men who were working post-slavery.)

In my opinion, Lead Belly's recollection of how "Gonna Dig A Hole" was sung demonstrates how Black people masked their true feelings about their life situations in front of White people while they insulted them in coded form right in front of White people's faces. Combining the religious song "Dig A Hole Put The Devil In" with a familiar fiddler song "Give The Fiddler A Dram" masked the fact that the workers considered "the boss" to be "the devil". Notice that after the boss leaves, the song changes to the defiant verse "I don't give a damn". Also, notice how Lead Belly says that the boss didn't understand that the "dig a hole" song was sung as an insult. "They all clappin and shoutin. The devil comin now. He don't know what it's all about, but they do."

It's interesting that the White folklorist Alan Lomax doesn't appear to have caught the hidden purpose of those lyrics as sung by those men, and the defiant nature of their "don't give a damn" lines.

That said, it's important to clarify that, in contrast to some Black militants in the late 1960s and 1970s's use of "the devil" as a referent for a White person, it appears to me that in Lead Belly's recollections of that song, the boss was equated with the devil, not because of his race, but because of his role as a boss (or a owner of slaves).
-snip-
Click http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2013/12/lead-bellys-and-several-other-versions.html for another pancocojams posts that includes this Lead Belly version of "Gonna Dig A Hole".

Click http://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=126852
for a Mudcat folk discussion thread that includes several transcription attempts for Lead Belly's version of "It's Tight Like That".

Also, click http://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=137600 "Origins: Dig a hole to put the devil in" for a Mudcat discussion thread that documents that the "dig a hole, put the devil in" line was known in England. That discussion thread includes other songs that contain that "dig a hole" line.

"Stomping the devil on his head" is a related saying that is closely associated with the Pentecostal denomination. People who are "shouting" (doing the holy dance) are said to be "stomping the devil in his head".

Click http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2012/06/its-tight-like-that-videos-lyrics-part.html for a pancocojams post on "It's Tight Like That" (Videos & Lyrics) Part I: Georgia Tom & Tampa Red (1928)

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DISCUSSION THREAD COMMENTS FROM THE 2013 PANCOCOJAMS POST
  1. Ms. Powell, thanks again for using my video upload to shed some light on the lyrics. I've been wondering about some of these lines for 15 years now! I heard Huddie Ledbetter for the first time when I was 23 and just out of the service. The hair stood up on the back of my neck, and I listened to very little else for about a year.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Your welcome. sherpa285.

      I was came upon these lyrics after learning about the saying "stomp on the devil's head" and then the saying "dig a hole put the devil in". I was thrilled to first find via "my friend" Google Search that Library of Congress transcript that Magneto had posted in 2010 on that amthrocivitas forum, and then the sound file that you had uploaded to YouTube in 2011. That sound file was a real gift. I was hoping to find one on YouTube but didn't think I would.

      I believe that much more attention should be given to Lead Belly's comments about the songs "Dig a Hole" with its "give the fiddler a dram/don't give a damn" lines. That recording should be studied and appreciated not just for aesthetic and entertainment reasons, but also because of what those songs sung the way Lead Belly shared reveals about African Americans in that place and time.

      Delete
  2. I'm not an expert, I'm no historian and please don't quote me on this..
    But as it was once explained to me, when the chain gang saw the boss coming the main verse would start. As he walked down the line, the lyrics would change. I'd heard the change as both "gimme a dream," and also "fiddler down." When the boss was totally out of earshot, the cadence went down the line as "don't give a damn," till it came all the way down and back to "gonna dig a hole."
    But that's the magic of folklore. No one knows the truth, but everyone loves a legend.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks for sharing that anecdotal story, General Ennui.

      I appreciate it and who knows, it could be true. But even if it isn't true, it points to the spirit of those (these?) times and situations, and how Black people had (have?) to act differently in front of those who have power over us.


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Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome

Saturday, February 28, 2026

Part II Of "Down By The Banks Of The Hanky Panky" Listed By States (from the discussion thread of a 2021 pancocojams post)

Edited by Azizi Powell

This is Part II of a 2026 two part pancocojams series that presents an alphabetized list of  visitor comments that are published in the discussion threads for two 2021 pancocojams posts about "Down By The banks Of The Hanky Panky" recreational rhymes that include commenters' mention of the state they lived when they first chanted that rhyme.


All of these examples are from a ten page Mudcat discussion thread* that I started in 2006 when I was a member of that online international folk music forum.

https://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=94034&messages=454&page=1.

Part II of that 2021 pancocojams series only features examples of those rhymes from commenters in the United States who lived in states whose name begin with "K-Z". However, the discussion thread for that 2021 post includes all of the comments in which commenters mention the name of the state where they lived when they first chanted their example of "Down By The Banks Of The Hanky Panky".

For some reason, the discussion thread for the second post in that 2021 pancocojams series has many more visitor comments than the first 2021 post. As is the case with Part I of that 2021 series, that discussion thread includes example with a geographic reference regardless of the fact that the post's focus is only on states with names beginning with K-Z.  

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Click https://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2026/02/part-i-of-list-by-states-of-visitor.html for Part I of this 2026 pancocojams series. 
That post presents an alphabetized list of all of the visitor comments that are published in the discussion thread for Part I of that 2021 pancocojams series.

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Although I acknowledged each visitor comment, only a few of my comments from the discussion threads for both of these 2021 pancocojams posts are included in this 2026 pancocojams series. 

Any new visitor comments to either of these two 2021 pancocojams posts will be added to their 2026 alphabetized list.

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The content of this post is presented for folkloric, socio-cultural, and recreational purposes.

All copyrights remain with their owners.

Thanks to all those who are quoted in these posts.

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A, B

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C, D

California

Unknown August 27, 2021 at 2:57 PM
"
Here in California, I knew one that went...

Down by the banks of the Hanky Panky

Where Bullfrogs jump from bank to banky

Singing eepp oop, soda pop

Froggy fell asleep and he went kerplop!"

**

Anonymous October 27, 2021 at 4:20 PM
"
I'm from coastal southern California, USA, and back in like 2004 we sang it like

Down by the banks of the hanky panky where the bull forgs jump from bank to banky with an eep ops soda(or sodi) pop one little froggy went kerplop."

**

Reply
Unknown October 27, 2021 at 4:22 PM

"Bull frogs*"

**
Anonymous, February 4, 2026 at 3:01 AM
"
Northern California: Down by the banks of the hanky panky, where the bullfrogs jump from bank to banky, eeps opps soda pops, froggy hits a lily pad and goes kerplop, I pledge allegiance to the flag, justin bieber makes me gag … I can’t remember the rest but I do know ‘coca cola came to town, pepsi cola shot him down, Dr. Pepper fixed him up, now we all drink 7 up, 7 up got the flu, now we all drink Mountain Dew, Mountain Dew fell off the Mountain, now we’re drinking from a fountain, fountain broke so now we’re drinking plain old coke’ but that might be its own thing."

**
Anonymous July 11, 2022 at 12:02 PM
"
My Cousin has recently told me about the version they play at her school: Down by the banks of the Hanky Panky,

Where the bull frogs jump from bank to banky,

With a hip, hop, Soda pop! Fall down and go KERPLOP! I pledge allegiance to the flag, when justin Bieber makes me mad. Coca Cola stinks. Now I’m drinking Seven Up!,Seven Up gave me the flu. Now let’s drink Mountain Dew! Mountain Dew Fell of the mountain. Now I’m drinking from the fountain, the fountain broke, now I’m drinking plain old Diet Coke. Tarzan swung from a rubberBand, Fell down and got a tan. Now he’s taking a bath, What color was it?"

**
Reply
"
Anonymous, July 24, 2022 at 5:33 PM

She lives in Danville CA. The date would be sometime in the 2010s. And it is a group hand game. When they reach the “what color was it” who ever it lands on has to spell a color"

**
Anonymous, September 11, 2022 at 9:49 PM
"
In elementary school in Orange County, California around 2006 we sang:

"Down by the banks of the Hanky Panky

Where the bullfrog jumps from bank to bank-y

Eeps Opps, Soda Pops

He missed a lily and he went ker-plop”

I believe “eeps opps” was sometimes substituted for “he hops”. I also remember thinking “he missed a lily” was “hey Mr. Willy” and maybe even hearing some kids say “hey Mr. Willy with a cherry on top” for the last line.

There was also a second verse that was either sung at my school or my friend’s school, also in Orange County CA, that had a different melody where the first and third lines had the same melody as one another and the second line was almost identical as well, but went down in pitch for the last 3 words, and then the final line was sang to the same melody as the final line in the original song (“he missed a lily…”):

“Here comes Noah, walkin’ in the dark

Stepped on a hammer and built the Ark

Here come the animals two by two

Hippopotamus and kangaroo, wooh!” "

**
Reply
Anonymous, September 11, 2022 at 9:51 PM
"
Was a circle sitting hand slap game with the two person hand tug of war death match at the end"

**
Anonymous, October 23, 2023 at 4:05 PM
"
dude, I am also from OC and remember a sort of mix of these versions? I remember sometime around third grade (like 2008ish) learning that after "and he went kerplop" to add "with a cherry on top / here come the animals two by two / hippopotamus and kangaroo." I never heard the two preceding lines about Noah or the hammer though!"

****
Colorado

Anonymous, November 28, 2023 at 11:56 PM
"
This is the version that I remember playing in Denver, Colorado from the 2010s:

Down by the banks of the hanky banky

Where the bullfrogs jump from bank to banky

With a heaps hops, over the tops

And lands on a lilly pad with a kerplops

 

I pledge allegiance to the flag

that Justin Bieber makes me gag

Coca-Cola has caffeine

and now we're talking Billie Jeans

Billie Jeans went out of style

Now lets sit and talk a while

 

There's a party round the corner

wont you please, please come

Bring your own cappuccino

and your own chewing gum

What is your boyfriends name

(The person who it landed on would say someone's name)

__ loves __ yadda yadda yadda

__ loves __ yadda yadda yadda

O-U-T spells you are out!

 

Sometimes we would just do the first part, or just the last part, depending on who we were playing with."

****
E, F


Florida 

Anonymous, May 14, 2021 at 10:38 PM
"
ooh i have onee

West coast of Florida, around 2012

Down by the river from the hanky panky where the bullfrog jumps from bank to banks saying E I O U your mother stinks and so do you say ping pong ding dog went to school with nothing on teacher said that's not fair go on some underwear."

** 

Anonymous, May 28, 2023 at 2:59 PM
"
Central Florida here I don’t know if I fully remember this all but this is what I do remember

Down by river and the hanky pank

The bullfrogs jump from bank to bank sayin

E I O U your momma stinks and so do you

So ding dong ping pong

Your daddy looks like king kong

Tell your teacher what to wear

Polka dotted underwear

Not to big

Not to small

Just the size of city hall

City Hall

Coca-Cola no caffeine

Now we’re talking Billie Jean

Billie Jean blew out of sight

Now we’re talkin dynamite

Dynamite blew up the school

Now we’re talkin pretty cool

Pretty cool

10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1"

**
Anonymous, November 4, 2023 at 4:13 PM
"
In Florida this is what I remember.

Down by the banks of the hanky pankyWhere the bullfrog jumps from bank to bank

Say E I O U

Your momma stinks and so do you,

So ding dong ping pong ,

Your daddy smells like King Kong

 

Ask your teacher what she wears,

Polka-dotted underwear,

Not too big, not too small,

Just the size of city hall

 

Micheal Jackson came to townCoca-Cola brought him downDr Pepper brought him upNow we're talkin' 7-Up7-Up has no caffeineNow we're talkin' billy jeanBilly Jean was out of sight

Now we’re talking dynamite

10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1

BOOM!

 

If I remember correctly it was super common to make a verse for it and bring it to school and if everyone liked it, we would adopt it as the best one. The ask your teacher what she wears section was not made at my school, but it was a Central Florida (Orlando) chant. We sat in a circle with palms facing up, one hand on top of a neighbors palm, and one hand palm up against the back of the other neighbors hand. The hand on top of your neighbors would get clapped and then your hand would go across your body to clap the persons hand that was on top of your own. If your hand was clapped on “BOOM” you were out, if you pulled your hand away and they clapped their own hand, they were out. The point of the song is to not know ahead of time who is going to get the BOOM!"

****
G, H

**** 

I, J

Illinois

Anonymous,September 25, 2022 at 2:10 AM
"
Illinois around 1997

 

Ronald-Fonald hanky panky

booya booya hanky panky

fee fi fo fum

listen to the music play

on my radio while eating cheerios

mickey mouse built a house

donald duck messed it up

who will pay the consequences

Y-O-U spells you!"

**
Anonymous, November 28, 2023 at 8:56 PM
"
Grew up in Northern Illinois, the state-line area between Wisconsin and Illinois. We always did the following:

“Down by the banks of the Hanky Panky, where the bullfrogs jump from bank to banky, singing eeps, ipes, Opes, Ohps, me sock-a-dilly and a ding dang dong!”

**
Anonymous, March 8, 2024 at 1:54 AM
"
I’ve not seen the version I know anywhere on the internet, or even anything close to it lol. I learned it at a summer camp somewhere, I’m from Chicago so I’m pretty sure it was in the Midwest somewhere, maybe Wisconsin or Michigan? Not really sure. But anyway, here’s the version I know:

Down by the banks of the hanky hanky

Where the bullfrogs jump from bank to banky

Saying eeps, opps, scudop dubop, skiddle diddle kerplop

Mickey Mouse, built a house, Donald Duck, messed it up

Now who will pay the consequences

Y-o-u says you. Are. Out!

 

And now that song is gonna be stuck in my head for days lol"

** 

Reply
Anonymous, March 8, 2024 at 1:55 AM
"
Little typo: hanky banky, not hanky hanky"

****
Indiana

Anonymous,February 8, 2023 at 1:20 PM
"
From Middle Indiana early 2000s

 

Down by the banks of the Hanky Panky

where the bull frog jumped from bank to banky

with a eeps, ips, ops, ups

whose got the rhyme of the, Kerplop

Pepsi, cola, ginger ale

ginger ale, ginger ale

ginger ale, ginger ale

pepsi, cola, ginger ale

seven up, seven up! SEVEN UP!

you're out!"


****
K, L

Kansas

Anonymous, September 6, 2021 at 10:43 PM
"
In Topeka, Kansas in the early to mid '90s, we sang:

 

Down by the banks of the hanky panky,

Where the bullfrog jumps from bank to banks,

With an eep eep, ipe ipe, ope ope, ump ump,

Knee slap a dilly and a kerplop"

****
Kentucky

Anonymous, November 15, 2022 at 6:49 PM
"
Louisville, KY

The one I know is a mishmash of others, but I haven't yet seen the dynamite line or the repeated first section anywhere else.

 

"Down by the banks of the hanky pank where the bullfrog jumps from bank to bank

Singin eeps ipes oaps oops

Skittle dittle kernel pop

I pledge allegiance to the flag

Micheal Jackson makes me gag

Coca-Cola has caffeine

Now we're talking jelly beans

Jelly beans are out of sight

Now we're talking dynamite

Dynamite is so much fun

Now we're talking

Down by the banks of the hanky pank where the bullfrog jumps from bank to bank singin eeps ipes oops skittle dittle kernel stop"

**

Reply

[In response to my questions about when this was performed and how it was performed]

Anonymous, November 18, 2022 at 1:32 AM
"
Sometime between 2014 and 2018. It was an elimination game similar to hot potato, but instead of a potato you'd slap the next person's hand."

****
Louisiana 

Anonymous, February 28, 2023 at 11:27 PM
"
Hi! I wanted to put the version I learned in middle school (around 3rd grade I would say) in the early 2010s around the New Orleans area:

Down by the river bank a hanky panky where the bullfrogs jump from bank to bank. I said a A-E-I-O-U bamboo. Johnny broke a bottle and he blamed it on Sue. Sue told ma. Ma told pa. And Johnny got a whipping so ha ha ha. He jumped so high, he touched the sky, and he didn’t come back until the 4th of July. I pledge allegiance to the flag. Micheal Jackson makes me mad. Coca Cola burns my butt, now I’m drinking 7-up. 7-up has too much caffeine, now I’m drinking gasoline. Gasoline is made for cars, now I’m eating candy bars. Candy bars have too much fat, now I drive a Cadillac. Cadillacs are way too cool, so now. you. are. a. big. fat. fool.

I honestly have forgotten the last part with the sodas, but I do know for a fact that the rhyme had something to do with Mountain Dew being too cool instead of the Cadillac, but I forgot the rhyme for it. What I do know is that all of those other ones are correct, I just forget the bridge from Cadillac to Mountain Dew…"

 
****
M, N

Michigan

Anonymous, November 28, 2023 at 11:52 PM
"
Grew up in Lansing MI, this is our version

Down by the bank of the hanky panky,Where the bullfrogs jump from bank to banky,To the Hip Hop Shirley Pop,I pledge allegience to the flag,that Michael Jackson makes me gag,Coca-Cola burnt his butt, Now he's drinking Seven-Up Seven-Up has no caffeine, So Now he's drinking gasoline Gasoline is out of sight,So Now he's drinking Sprite Spell it!S-P-R-I-T-E!"


****
Missouri

Anonymous, January 19, 2024 at 11:05 PM
"
ours (st louis mo) went something like this

Down by the Banks of the hanky panky where bullfrogs jump from bank to bank

say fee fi fo fun mi say mi say ding dang dong

I pledge allegiance to the flag, micheal jackson is my dad

(don't remember this line)

cocoa cola fizzes up, now we're talking seven up

seven up has no caffeine, now we're talking jelly beans

jelly beans went out of sight, now we're talking dynamite

dynamite blew up the school, now we're talking really cool

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

tarzan the monkey man swinging from a rubber band

he slips he falls he breaks his eyeballs

(idk this line)

then someone would pick a number and we would go over that many people

then the person it was going to land on could attempt to yank out their hand"

**

Anonymous, September 2, 2023 at 8:27 PM
I'm from Liberty, Missouri, and I grew up with the exact same game as the north Missouri one listed here. I was playing it probably around 2011-2015 range?"

**
Reply
Azizi Powell, September 3, 2023 at 12:29 AM
"
Thanks, Anonymous for sharing that information. I appreciate it.

That version, #2 in the Missouri section, was "from 1993 or so" and has these words:

"Down by the banks of the hanky panky

where the bullfrogs jump from bank to banky

saying e a-poppa, i a-poppa, o a-poppa, POW"
-snip-
It's interesting that the version you played around 2011-2015 has the same words as the 1993 version.

I looked up Liberty, Missouri and learned that it is a suburb of Kansas City, Missouri. I also read that Kansas City, Missouri is on Missouri's western edge. So it's interesting that that version of "Down By The Banks Of The Hanky Panky" from north Missouri is the same as the one from west Missouri.

Best wishes!"

****
New Jersey

Anonymous,February 24, 2023 at 12:17 PM
"
Long Branch, NJ

Down by the bank with the hanky pank, where bull frogs jumps from bank to bank, hee pa hee pa pa skittle dittie cornul pop. I pledge allligence to the flag. Micheal Jackson makes me made. Coca-cola has caffeine now I’m drinking gasoline, gasolines bad for you now I’m drinking mountain dew, mountain dew fell off the mountain. Down by the banks with the hanky pank where bull frog jumps from bank to bank. Saying hee pa hee pa pa skittle. Ditties. Cornal. POP"

**
Anonymous, May 3, 2023 at 12:48 AM
"I grew up in South Jersey in the late 2000’s-early 2010’s on this version of the song:

Down by the banks of the hanky pank,

where the bullfrogs jump from bank to bank,goin’ eep, op, eep-op-op,

skittle dittle kernel POP

I pledge allegiance to the flag,

Michael Jackson makes me gag

Coca Cola screwed me up,

Now I’m drinkin’ 7-up

7-up had no caffeine, now I’m drinkin’ gasoline

Gasoline gave me the flu, now I’m drinkin’ Mountain Dew

Mountain Dew fell off the mountain, now I’m drinkin’ from the fountain

Fountain broke, now I’m drinkin’ PLAIN! OLD! DI-ET COKE!!!"

**
Anonymous, May 17, 2023 at 12:45 AM
"
So odd to know there's so many variations. Makes you wonder the original. Fellow NJ residents (on the article) got it pretty close to what I grew up with. Central Jersey shore if you were curious where mine is from. (I hope I remember this right... there was a few lyrics that were different depending on who you played with)

"Down by the banks with the hanky panky

Where the bullfrogs jumped from bank to bank

Saying eep, opp,

eep opp opp

Skittle diddle kernal pop

I pledge allegiance to the flag

Michael Jackson makes me gag

Coca-Cola has caffeine

Now I'm drinking gasoline

Gasoline ran out of fuel

Now I'm drinking Mountain Dew

Mountain Dew fell off the mountain

Now I'm drinking from the fountain

Finally the fountain broke

Now I'm drinking plane old diet coke"

**
Reply
Azizi Powell, May 17, 2023 at 12:00 PM
"
Hello, Anonymous. Thanks for sharing your version of "Down By The Banks Of The Hanky Panky" and thanks for including whee you learned it.

Click http://pancocojams.blogspot.com/2012/05/song-sources-for-down-by-banks-of-hanky.html for information about the main song sources for this LARGE family of rhymes."

**
Anonymous, December 11, 2023 at 7:57 PM
"
Thank you! I was searching this whole thread for the exact one I remember and this was it! I was in elementary school in the 2000s in central Jersey"

**
Reply
Azizi Powell, December 12, 2023 at 7:26 AM
"
You're welcome, Anonymous.

Btw, I'm from South Jersey (Atlantic City) and I don't remember this "Down By The Banks Of The Hanky Panky" song or rhyme when I was growing up there in the 1950s to the mid 1960s.

From my informal research, some schools in the USA introduced children to Pete Seeger's "Foolish Frog" version of from 1955 to the 1970s or early 1980s. The "Hanky Panky" children rhyme didn't become widespread in the USA until the mid 1980s.

Best wishes!"

**

Anonymous, November 8, 2023 at 11:07 AM
"
Hi Azizi,

I’m from the Lacey/Toms River area of Central Jersey/Jersey Shore and this was the variety we sang at the Toms River YMCA summer camp between 2003-2007 (when I was 7-11). A lot of kids learned it there similar to this, but we had variations there too:


“Down by the banks of the hanky panky

Where the bullfrogs jump from bank to bank

Saying eep, pop, eep, pop pop

Skiddle diddle kernel pop!

I pledge allegiance to the flag

Michael Jackson makes me gag

Coca Cola messed me up

Now I’m drinking 7-Up

7-Up has no caffeine

Now I’m drinking gasoline

Gasoline ran out of fuel (or: gave me the flu) (or: isn’t good for you)

Now I’m drinking Mountain Dew

Mountain Dew fell off the mountain

Now I’m drinking from a fountain

The fountain broken

So now I’m drinking plain old coke”

 

Sometimes we had a verse in there like:

“7-Up has no caffeine

Now we’re talking jelly beans

Jelly beans are out of style

Now we’ve been talking for a while”

 

And a verse with Sprite also that I forget.

Also we had little add-ons like counting down and stuff, with clapping I think? “10, 9, 8, 7…”

 

There were tons of nursery rhymes & folklore we had at the YMCA. One that originates in the NY/NJ area as long as 30+ years ago is the clapping game “Bo Bo Ski Watten Tatten”:

 

“Bo Bo Ski Watten Tatten

Eh eh, eh eh boom boom boom

Bo Bo Ski Watten Tatten

Eh eh, eh eh boom boom boom

 

Itty bitty Watten Tatten,

Bo Bo Ski Watten Tatten

Bo Bo Ski Watten Tatten

Freeze!” and sometimes there’d be stuff after this.

 

We also had the “Miss Mary Mack” rhyme, Bloody Mary shenanigans where we’d make someone stand in the bathroom in the dark & sing Bloody Mary to scare them (they did it to me during a thunder storm when all the lights when out!), and “Miss Susie” which was sung the normal way but then had various inappropriate lyrics at the end.

 

Kids made really vulgar versions of all these at camp lol.

 

Thanks for making this site & preserving all our rhymes! ❤️
- S"

****

North Carolina

Anonymous, September 29, 2022 at 11:48 PM
"
So delightful to read these!

the one we played in central NC in the early 2000s went like this!

Down by the banks of the hanky pankyWhere the bullfrogs jump from bank to bank-yWith a a-e-I-o-u bang bang bangMicheal Jordan came to town

Coca-Cola brought him down

Dr Pepper brought him upNow we're talkin' 7-Up7-Up has no caffeineNow we're talkin' billy jeanBilly Jean walked down the street singing do ah diddy diddy dum diddy do

Singing do ah diddy diddy dum diddy do"

**
Anonymous, May 20, 2023 at 11:47 AM
"
We used to sing this everywhere in summer camp in the mountains of NC

Down by the river by the hanky Panky

Where the Bull frogs jump from bank to bank

Said e i yo no

Mama said so yo

Tell the teacher what to wear

Poco dotted underwear

Not to big not to small

Just the size of city hall

Coco cola shake it up now we’re talking 7-up

7-up has no caffeine now we’re talking Billy Jean

Billy Jean got in a fight now we’re talking dynamite

Dynamite blew up the school now we’re talking pretty cool

5,4,3,2,1

Explosion BOOM"

**

Anonymous, November 27, 2023 at 10:44 PM
"
Oh my gosh reading this thread was so fun! I’m an NC native in Chatham County and pretty much all the ones they said I’ve heard generalizations of. The one I can remember from my elementary school 2007-2011 was:

Down by the river by the hanky Panky

Where the bullfrogs jumped from bank to bank

I said east side west side

East side west side

Dilly dang dong!

*then whoever got slapped was out and we’d keep going with*

Dr Pepper came to town

7up shot him down

7up has no caffeine

Now we’re drinking gasoline

Gasoline is bad for you

Now we’re drinking Mountain dew

Mountain dew fell off a mountain

Now we’re drinking from a fountain

the fountain broke, don’t you choke!

now we're drinking plain. old. coke."

****
 O,P

Oregon

Anonymous, July 24, 2021 at 9:22 PM
"
Oregon, USA. Early 2010s

Down by the banks of the hankity panks

Where the bullfrogs jump from bank to bank

With an eeps, ipes, opes, opps

She's got the lily with the big kerplops

**
Reply
 
Anonymous, July 24, 2021 at 9:32 PM

https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=10155213459672846

This is the only other example I can find with those exact lyrics.

There are only a couple other examples that I found:

https://www.ci.oswego.or.us/eln/2016/01/27/toddler-time-1-27-16-rain/

https://digitalcommons.wou.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1234&context=honors_theses

 

Both are also from Oregon, but the first link has a different last line and the second link mentions the hankity-panks but doesn't list out the full lyrics."

****
Q,R

****
S,T

Texas 

Lucy Adams, December 15, 2022 at 9:49 PM
"
I'm from Texas and we always sang:

Down by the river of the hanky panky

where the bullfrogs jump from bank to bank

saying eeps ipes ohpes ups!

Chili willi ding dong

Your breath smells like king kong

Coca cola fills you up

Now you're drinking 7 up

7 up has no caffeine

Now you're drinking gasoline

Gasoline was made for cars

Now you're eating candy bars

Candy bars have too much fat

Now you're getting way too fat!

 

In our version the person would try to pull their hand away before they got slapped and if the other person accidentally hit their own hand, they would be out"

****

U,V

Anonymous, February 2, 2023 at 11:26 PM
"
From Utah 80's/90's:

Down by the banks of the Hanky Panky

Where the bullfrog jumps from bank to banky

Singing ee ee ii ii oh oh oo oo

Oops slap a dilly and a bar roo"

**

Amia, November 24, 2023 at 10:19 PM
"
hello, i'm from utah and wanted to share the variation i learned in girl scouts ! unfortunately i don't know the actual lyrics to the last half of the song, only what it sounds like it was saying, and i haven't been able to find anyone else posting a variation like this online.

"down by the banks of the hanky panky, where the bullfrogs jump from bank to banky, saying ee ee ah ah oh oh oo" is the part i know for sure, then after that it's something like "boom slap-a-dilly with a ba-roo on you" but i dont actually know what it says, that's just what it sounds like."

****
Virginia 

Anonymous, December 22, 2022 at 11:18 AM
"
So I'm in southern VA and this is how I always heard it....

Down by the banks of the hanky panky where the bullfrog jumps from bank to bank with an eeps ieps op opps

Isabella ding dong I pledge aliegence to the flag Michel Jackson makes me gag

Coca-Cola burning up now we're drinking 7 up 7 up has no caffeine now we are drinking gasoline. Gasoline ran out of fuel now we are drinking mtn dew. Mtn dew fell off the mountain now we're drinking from a fountain fountain broke now we're drinking plain old coke"

**
Anonymous, February 26, 2023 at 9:50 PM
"
This is the version I learned at a Girl Scout camp in Virginia in about 2010!

Down by the banks of the hanky panky

Where the bullfrogs jump from bank to banky

Said-a eas, ice, ohss, oos

Listen to the big bull frog (drawn out)

 

I pledge allegiance to the flag

Justin Bieber makes me gag

Pepsi-cola's burning up,

now we're drinking 7-up

7-up has no caffeine,

now we're drinking gasoline

gasoline is bad for you,

now we're drinking mountain dew

mountain dew fell off a mountain,

now we're drinking from a fountain

the fountain broke and now we're drinking

plain, old, coke"

****
W,X

Washington [state]

Anonymous, May 27, 2025 at 8:01 AM
"
Mine from Washington which is the full version goes like

Down by the banks of the hanky Pankys

Where the bullfrog jumps from bank to bank

Saying eeps ieps ops ups one fell in and went

Ket plop

I pledge allegiance to the flag Justin Bieber makes me gag seven up I’ve got the flu

now I’m drinking Mountain Dew

Mountain Dew fell of the mountain

Now im drinking from a fountain

Fountain broke

Now I’m drinking plain old coke

There’s a place on mars where the babies shoot your cars

And the men where bikinis

And the women drink martinis

Ever step you take is enough to kill a snake

When the snake is dead you put mustered on its head

When the mustered dried you put diamonds in its eyes

When the diamonds break it is 1968

Mickey Mouse built a house

Donald Duck fixed it up

Mirror mirror on the wall who’s the fairest of the all

Y

O

U"

****
Y, .Z

****
This concludes Part II of this two part pancocojams series.

Thanks for visiting pancocojams.

Visitor comments are welcome.