| «Way down south in the yankety-yank, a bull frog jumped from bank to bank,
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| just because he’d nothing better for to do! |
| He stubbed his toe and fell in the
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| water; |
| you could hear him yell for a mile and a quarter, just because he’d
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| nothing better for to do.»
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| Now the farmer went walking down the road feeling mighty proud of himself for
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| making up a song. |
| He went down to the corner store, bought himself some
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| groceries, a pair of work gloves and a plug of chewing tobacco, and said, «Oh,
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| before I go, I have to sing you my new song.»
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| «Go on home,"says the storekeeper, «I'm busy here, can’t you see all these
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| customers?»
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| «I won’t pay you any money unless you let me sing you my song!»
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| «Well, sing it and get it over with then,"said the storekeeper.
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| The farmer began to sing and the man in the store cried out, «That's a w-o-o-nderful song, gather round everybody, we’ll have a party.»
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| And he passed round the free Coca Colas and the free soda-crackers,
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| and everyone was stamping on the floor.
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| Meanwhile, all the wives and children back home were sitting down to supper,
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| and — where’s father?
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| The mother said, «Children, you better run down to the corner store and fetch
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| your old man. |
| He’s probably down there wasting his time as usual.»
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| So all the children run down the road. |
| They run inside the corner store.
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| You know, they heard all that music, they forgot about coming home.
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| The children started singing (Song is repeated in a higher voice) And they
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| were passing around the free Coca-Colas and …
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| Now, in every farmhouse it was the same situation. |
| The mother said to themselves, «This has gone far enough. |
| Supper’s getting cold. |
| 'Spect us to work
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| all the day nobody show up?»
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| They reached over on the stove and grabbed some heavy frying pans and start
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| down the road with a mad look in their eyes. |
| Somebody’s going to get beaned.
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| Well, they get near and they hear all that pretty music, and they forget all
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| about being mad. |
| They drop the frying pans in the gutter, walk into the store,
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| and the mothers start singing! |
| Way down yonder in the yankety-yank,
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| a bullfrog jumped from bank to bank … And they’re passing round the
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| free Coca-Colas and the free soda crackers, and everybody is stamping on the
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| floor!
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| Meanwhile out in the barns all the cows started talking, «Where is everybody?
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| We’re supposed to be milked and it’s getting mighty uncomfortable!
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| «So the cows left their stalls, they wobbled out of the barn, and down the road
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| right into the corner store. |
| And the cows started singing, «Moo, moo, moo, moo,
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| moo moo, moo, moo, moo, moo."(To the tune). And the cow’s tails were swishing
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| out the windows, and they were stamping on the floor, and drinking the free
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| Coca-Colas and eating the free soda …
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| Out in the barnyard all the chickens said, «Where is everybody? |
| We’re supposed
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| to be fed and we’re getting hungry!"So the chickens hopped over the fence,
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| hopped down the road, hopped into the store, and the chickens started;
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| (Chicken imitation to tune). |
| And the chicken were stamping on the floor and
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| drinking the free Coca C …
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| Meanwhile all the barns started talking to each other. |
| «We feel mighty lonely,»
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| they said, «without any cows or any chickens. |
| I guess we’ll have to go find
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| them."So the barns picked themselves off their foundations and galumphed down
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| the road, and s-q-u-e-e-z-e-d themselves into that corner store,
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| believe it or not. |
| Did you ever hear a rusty hinge on a barn door?
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| That’s the way the barns sang: Eeeee, eeeeeeeeee.
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| Out in the fields all the grass says, «Where is everybody? |
| The cows are
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| supposed to come and eat us. |
| I guess we’ll have to go find them.
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| «And the grass picked itself up and swished off down the road, and swished
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| right into the store and started singing: Sh-sh-sh-sh-sh-sh-sh.
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| Sh-sh-sh-sh-sh-sh-sh.
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| Of course, when the grass was gone, the fields were gone, so the brook didn’t
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| have any banks to flow between. |
| It said, «I've got to go someplace,»
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| so it bubbled down the road. |
| It bubbled right up into the corner store and the
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| brook started: Bubbl-bubbl-bubbl-bubbl-bubbl-bubbl-bubbl. |
| The brook was bubbling up and down the stairway! |
| The grass was growing out the
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| chimney! |
| Feathers flying through the air! |
| Cows tails swishing through the
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| windows! |
| Everybody stamping on the floor and drinking the free Coca-Cola and
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| eating the free soda-crackers!
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| Meanwhile, there’s the bullfrog in mid-air!
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| He looks down, there’s nothing underneath him. |
| He looks over and there’s no bank to land on. |
| He says, «Where am I?"And he starts hopping down the road. Hop!
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| Hop! |
| Hop! |
| Hop! |
| Hop!
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| «Hey, what’s all that racket down at the corner store?"says the frog.
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| «Why … they’re singing! |
| They’re singing about ME!"And he was so proud he puffed himself up with pride.
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| And he puffed, and he puffed, and he puffed, and he BOOM!!!
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| He exploded. |
| Cows, barns, chickens, farmers, the whole corner store went up in the air, and everybody floated down and landed right where they were supposed
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| to have been all the time. |
| They all sat down eating supper again,
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| feeling kind of foolish for themselves.
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| Next day they went out to find the frog. |
| They looked high, they looked low.
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| Coca-Cola bottles and soda crackers in all directions. |
| But no frog.
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| So all there is left of the frog is the song. |
| We might as well sing 'er once
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| again.
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| «Way down yonder in the yankety-yank…» |