Show Tftl VERY CROSS BOY PeaIwd Endicott Wlnthrop Browne Lived on Beacon street in Boston towneo With a lineage almost as long as your arm An ancestry rIch wIth colonial charm And In the face of all this we arc quite at aloHa 0 account for his being so dreadfully cross > ut wrong foot first out of bed each morn w t privately think thats the way he was Ae I born f ft ala boy would come with a scowling face sf nd begin to find fault at his usual pace IS bath was too hot or tho room too i cold F ¼ nd all through his dressing hed fume and scold V s 0 the dining room with a frown he r carne I nd nothing could suit him was very plain r ills oatmeal was dry or he milk tooL too-L cold M butter too hard or the bread too old t S 11 his pictured ancC3torslooked stonily I down 0 e I thIs hopeful scion of the house of Browne nd when he went out I tell it with IelJuay 1 ai shame I1d h1UIi cott Winthrop Ho spoke very rudely to Nurse Mary tho Water and Browne lane Kicked the He Splashed in the wlJter and kicked up Up the snow Snow And walked roughshod over high and loW And the frown on his face was a sight to see ill fact he behaved most sbocIdnglo Of dldldreii l to play with he found but I few O Though e he walked the length of the ave o For the little ones all with a stare and V J frown Said Lets run uay from that crosspatch cross-patch Browne 5 ee Till his nurse losing patience home they 1 1 went t And te Imapas study Peabody was sent 7 And his iJltliel very gravely said Boys th1t wont be pleasant must go to bed J And the Frowr So he had spoiled his pleasure IDs Face Vas It And ot his hilay t Anti ended his day In this shameful way Eight to See o C O the sorrIest boy In Boston townc Was Peabody Endicott 1Vlnthrop Browne And now my deal when you count the loss Doe it ever pay for being cross 4 I N t iii tJL ThiLSX d Ancestors Look Jed J-ed Stonily Down o to Bed |