| The Peppery Man was cross and thin;
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| He scolded out and scolded in;
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| He shook his fist, his hair he tore;
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| He stamped his feet and slammed the door.
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| Heigh ho, the Peppery Man,
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| The rabid, crabbed Peppery Man!
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| Oh, never since the world began
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| Was any one like the Peppery Man.
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| His ugly temper was so sour
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| He often scolded for an hour;
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| He gnashed his teeth and stormed and scowled,
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| He snapped and snarled and yelled and howled.
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| He wore a fierce and savage frown;
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| He scolded up and scolded down;
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| He scolded over field and glen,
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| And then he scolded back again.
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| His neighbors, when they heard his roars,
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| Closed their blinds and locked their doors,
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| Shut their windows, sought their beds,
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| Stopped their ears and covered their heads.
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| He fretted, chaffed, and boiled and fumed;
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| With fiery rage he was consumed,
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| And no one knew, when he was vexed,
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| What in the world would happen next.
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| Heigh ho, the Peppery Man,
|
| The rabid, crabbed Peppery Man!
|
| Oh, never since the world began
|
| Was any one like the Peppery Man. |