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The Anti-Confederate Song" (Come near at your peril, Canadian wolf) - J. W. McGrath "Aunt Martha's Sheep" - Dick Nolan and Ellis Coles "The Badger Drive" - John V. Devine "The Banks of Newfoundland" - Francis Forbes "The Cliffs of Baccalieu" - Jack Withers "The CN Bus" - Tom Cahill "Cod Liver Oil" - Johnny Burke "Come Closer East Coaster ...
A Hole in One = Fix & Foxi and their friends play against Professor Knox's golf computer managing to bust it. Pumping Pumpkins = Fix & Foxi thwart Lupo's cheating attempts to win the pumpkin contest. Monkey See, Monkey Do = Fix & Foxi get an escaped zoo monkey to the circus rather than back to the zoo.
Another song with a reportedly secret meaning is "Now Let Me Fly" [3] which references the biblical story of Ezekiel's Wheels. [4] The song talks mostly of a promised land. This song might have boosted the morale and spirit of the slaves, giving them hope that there was a place waiting that was better than where they were.
A well known drinking or bawdy song using the Cock of the North tune [7] is known as Aunty Mary. There are a great number of versions of varying degrees of obscenity. They nearly all share the same first two lines. One of the milder versions runs: Auntie Mary had a canary Up the leg of her drawers; She was sleeping, it was creeping, Up the leg ...
The Fox is a traditional folk song (Roud 131) from England. It is also the subject of at least two picture books, The Fox Went out on a Chilly Night: An Old Song , illustrated by Peter Spier and Fox Went out on a Chilly Night , by Wendy Watson.
John Graves, who wrote it in the Cumbrian dialect, tinkered with the words over the years and several versions are known.George Coward, a Carlisle bookseller who wrote under the pseudonym Sidney Gilpin, rewrote the lyrics with Graves' approval, translating them from their original broad Cumberland dialect to Anglian; and in 1866, he published them in the book, Songs and Ballads of Cumberland.
Visual albums — a bunch of videos strung together to commemorate the release of new work from a musical artist — typically either feel like shameless promotion or a vanity project. “Songs ...
A number of smaller hounds come out of a giant dog house, followed by a large fox hound (Willoughby, voiced by Freberg) who is excited by the prospect of the hunt, especially the moment where the fox's tail is to be cut off. The hunters and dogs then pass over Bugs' hole, waking him, with the large fox hound lagging behind.