A golden ptreasury of dino-rhymes for ptiny ptots
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Your support makes all the difference.MANY parents are worried that the traditional world of childhood (books, dolls, teddy bears) seems to have no connection with the new high-gloss kids' world of dinosaurs, computer games and technology. Worry not, I tell them: by sheer coincidence I have been putting together a book of nursery rhymes. But these are nursery rhymes with a difference. They all celebrate the wonderful world of dinosaurs. Try this one, for starters:
Mary had a stegosaur
To which she was so kind
Wherever little Mary went
She had a giant behind.
One day she took her pet to school
And it ate up her class.
Oh, what a shock poor Mary got
She thought it just ate grass]
Quite a traditional one, that, though not as traditional as this one, which seems to have Victorian overtones, down to the final pun:
Dinah found some jawbones
Took them to the sawbones
The doctor said, 'Oh please,
Where did you find these?'
'There's plenty more,' young Dinah
said,
'In a pit behind the shed.'
So she went and got some more.
Can you guess what Dinah saw?
Here is another favourite poem from The Independent Book of Dinosaur Nursery Rhymes, soon to be a classic:
Behold the diplodocus
And his amazing girth
He is so wide
He cannot hide
Behind anything on earth.
So when his fellow saurians
Come out for hide and seek,
They only mock
The diplodoc
And his outsize physique.
'You silly walking motorway]'
Is what they say to him.
You can't disguise
Your awful size]'
No wonder he looks grim.
He knows that he can never
Fully be concealed
And that one tip
Of the silly old dip
Will always be revealed.
Poor old diplodocus
And his gargantuan feet.
Within a year,
I very much fear,
He may be obsolete.
Feel strong enough for more? OK, then, here we go with my personal favourite:
I'm a stegosaurus,
I'm all made of bone.
This bit here
Is my left ear
And this is a mobile phone.
Yes, it's not all armour plating
That's bolted on to me.
My upper deck
Is quite high tech
With fossil gadgetry.
I'm eighty feet of hardware
Fully computerised
Whenever I leap,
A little bleep
Keeps my brain advised.
I've got a spiky backbone.
But do you know its use?
Is it there
To hold some air
Or even orange juice?
No, it's my back-up system
It's full of megabytes;
And each time I jump
A tiny bump
Turns on my flashing lights.
I roam the ancient landscape
All I do is roam -
And when dusk falls
I make a few calls
To say I'll soon be home.
I have a lovely dwelling
On a new estate
The style is classic
Neo-Jurassic -
And I'm always home by eight . . .
Well, that goes on for several hundred more verses of suburban Triassic life, but you get the idea. As a final taster, here's a little verse that centres on the perenially fascinating spelling of pterodactyl:
See the little pterrapin,
And see the home that he lives in
When you're packed into a shell,
You keep quite warm, but oh - the
smell]
When winter comes and the wind
blows keen
He wraps his feet in pterylene
And longs to be back home in Burma
Or anywhere hot on Pterra Firma
But at least inside his plated home
He's free from war and shell and bomb
And never gets his knickers in a twist
When blown up by a pterrorist]
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