From the “What-on-earth-was-that-in-aid-of?’
files…
Okay. How many of those
reading haven’t heard of Hickory Dickory
Dock?
Yep. I thought so.
I recited/sang it ad
infinitum/ad nauseam when I was a youngster.
I kid you not.
I loved it!
Even though I really
couldn’t understand it.
We’re talking about a
little mouse running repeatedly up a clock, then, when said clock strikes the
hours of: one, two, three, etc., the mouse runs down.
First of all, doesn’t that
mouse have anything better to do? I mean I’ve heard of clock-watching, but isn’t
this taking it to a whole new level?
And there’s the ‘repeating
an action and expecting a different result’.
Isn’t that the very
definition of insanity?
Well that was my
understanding.
What are your thoughts?
Yes, I know it’s a mouse.
And yes, I know they have very small brains and really can’t be held
accountable for their actions.
Pretty poor excuse.
And what is it hoping to
find at the clock top? A spectacular view?
Because, let’s face it, if
the views aren’t stellar, I’m not climbing anything!
And a view would have to
be truly spectacular to tempt one to at-tempt a possibly perilous and certainly
sweaty and laborious climb more than once! Right?
I just had a thought. Mice
will go almost anywhere if there’s food involved. (I am totally with them on
this…) What if there’s food up there?
I mean, what if that’s
where the clock keeps his lunch?
Go with me on this.
It would be safe (well,
discounting the whole ‘recurring mouse’ erm…thingy.)
Think about it. Mr. H D Clock
assumes (reasonably) that, barring someone actually seeing him put his lunch
there, no one would ever guess. Makes total sense.
Okay, okay. Clocks don’t pack
a lunch. And they’d certainly be frowned upon if they ever stopped to actually…you
know…eat.
And then the lack of
internal organs.
So we’re stuck with a
little mouse who decides every hour (on the hour) to run up a clock. Then,
frightened by the chimes, runs down again.
I think we need a do-over
(Oops. Not a 27!):
Hickory Dickory Dock,
Two Mice ran up the clock.
The clock struck one.
The other ran away…
I admit, I’m totally with
the clock on this one.
Seriously:
The rhyme is thought to
have originated as a counting-out rhyme. Cumbric shepherds in the
nineteenth century used the numbers Hevera (8), Devera (9)
and Dick (10).
Also:
The Exeter Cathedral astronomical
clock has a small hole in the door below the face for the resident cat to
hunt mice.
Take that, Mr. Mouse!
Each month Karen, Mimi or I choose a number between 12 and 50 and the others craft a post using that number of words one or multiple times.
This month’s number is: 27
It was chosen by Karen of Baking in a Tornado!
Now go and see what my friends have created!
I probably repeated this one a million times too, never stopping to ponder the reason. Now . . . I'll be trying to come up with scenarios in my head all day . . .
ReplyDeleteThis was always just another of those silly rhymes you say to pass the time. Your version works nicely.
ReplyDeleteMaybe the mouse was trying to break a Guinness Book of World Records records for times spent running up and down a clock. Did anyone care to ask the mouse why? I bet not.
ReplyDelete