Yahoo Web Search

Search results

      • ‘Green Grow the Rushes, O’ is a seventeen-line nursery rhyme that’s usually structured within one stanza. The lines vary in length, ranging from five syllables up to around ten.
      poemanalysis.com/nursery-rhyme/green-grow-the-rushes-o/
  1. People also ask

  2. ‘Green Grow the Rushes, O’ is a seventeen-line nursery rhyme that’s usually structured within one stanza. The lines vary in length, ranging from five syllables up to around ten. The poem does not follow a specific rhyme scheme either, although there are several different end rhymes.

    • Female
    • October 9, 1995
    • Poetry Analyst And Editor
  3. Green Grow the Rushes, O (alternatively "Ho" or "Oh") (also known as "The Twelve Prophets", "The Carol of the Twelve Numbers", "The Teaching Song", "The Dilly Song", or "The Ten Commandments"), is an English folk song (Roud #133). It is sometimes sung as a Christmas carol. It often takes the form of antiphon, where one voice calls and is ...

  4. Seven for the seven stars in the sky, and. Six for the six proud walkers, Five for the symbols at your door, and. Four for the gospel-makers, Three, three arrivals! Two, two lily-white boys. Clothed all in green, O. One is one, and all alone, And ever more shall be so.

  5. Five for the symbols at your door, Four for the Gospel makers, Three, three, the rivals, Two, two, lily-white boys, Clothed all in green, O. One is one and all alone. And evermore shall be so. I'll sing you seven, O. Green grow the rushes, O.

  6. Jun 23, 2024 · Also known as The Twelve Prophets, The Carol of the Twelve Numbers, The Teaching Song, The Dilly Song, or The Ten Commandments: English folk song (Roud #133) often sung as a Christmas carol. It is not to be confused with the poem by Robert Burns, "Green Grow the Rashes, O". Versions of Green Grow the Rushes, O include: "The Dilly Song" in A ...

  7. Celtic Woman. Lyrics: Robert Burns - Scottish poet and lyricist (25 Jan 1759 – 21 July 1796). Earliest date of circulation: 1794 - also known as Green Grow The Rashes (title by Burns). Brief: The happiest and most joyful times a man experiences in his life are those spent in the company of a woman or lassie.

  8. Green grow the rushes, O. The sweetest hours that e´er I spent. Are spent among the lassies, O. The worldly race may riches chase. And riches still may fly them, O. And though at last they catch them fast. Their hearts can ne´er enjoy them, O. Chorus. Give me a cannie hour at e´en.