
Rhymes for Those Who Can Neither Read Nor Run
From Bone and Sickle by Al Ridenour
January 31, 2026 · 37 min · Episode 153
About this episode
This episode explores the historical significance and unsettling nature of nursery rhymes in Gammer Gurton’s Garland, highlighting its creator Joseph Ritson and various familiar verses.
Gammer Gurton’s Garland , published in 1784, is one of the earliest collections of English nursery rhymes, and contains verses both familiar and alarmingly unsettling. Intended to be read to toddlers (i.e., “children who can neither read nor run,” according to its subtitle) and named after a fictitious Grandma (“Gammer”) Gurton, who’d be analogous to Mother Goose, the volume were assembled by the eccentric scholar Joseph Ritson, who was known for his collecting of Robin Hood ballads, vegetarianism and ultimate descent into madness. Portrait of Joseph Ritson by James Sayers, early 1800s. We begin our episode with a snippet of a 1940s’ rendition of “Froggy Went a-Courting” by cowboy singer Tex Ritter. It’s a relatively modern take on Ritson’s “The Frog and the Mouse.” But like quite a few rhymes in the collection, this one had appeared in print earlier. Already in 1611, British composer of rounds and collector of ballads, Thomas Ravenscroft, had written out both lyrics and musical notation for “The Marriage of the Frogge and the Mouse,” a song he described as a folk song or “country pastime.” While a few other rhymes in Ritson’s collection were borrowed from one of two…
People in this episode
Host: Al Ridenour
Topics covered
- nursery rhymes
- historical literature
- children's songs
- folk music
- cultural history
Keywords
- Gammer Gurton’s Garland
- nursery rhymes
- Joseph Ritson
- Tex Ritter
- folk songs
- children's literature
- historical context
Mentioned in this episode
Books & works: Gammer Gurton’s Garland, Froggy Went a-Courting, The Marriage of the Frogge and the Mouse, Tommy Thumb’s Song Book
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