by Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (1832 - 1898), as Lewis Carroll
A game of fives
Language: English
Five little girls, of Five, Four, Three, Two, One: Rolling on the hearthrug, full of tricks and fun. Five rosy girls, in years from Ten to Six: Sitting down to lessons — no more time for tricks. Five growing girls, from Fifteen to Eleven: Music, Drawing, Languages, and food enough for seven! Five winsome girls, from Twenty to Sixteen: Each young man that calls, I say “Now tell me which you mean!” Five dashing girls, the youngest Twenty-one: But, if nobody proposes, what is there to be done? Five showy girls — but Thirty is an age When girls may be engaging, but they somehow don’t engage. Five dressy girls, of Thirty-one or more: So gracious to the shy young men they snubbed so much before! Five passé girls — Their age? Well, never mind! We jog along together, like the rest of human kind: But the quondam “careless bachelor” begins to think he knows The answer to that ancient problem “how the money goes”!
Text Authorship:
- by Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (1832 - 1898), as Lewis Carroll, "A game of fives", appears in Phantasmagoria and Other Poems, first published 1869 [author's text not yet checked against a primary source]
Musical settings (art songs, Lieder, mélodies, (etc.), choral pieces, and other vocal works set to this text), listed by composer (not necessarily exhaustive):
- by Gary Bachlund (b. 1947), "A game of fives", 2014 [ tenor and piano ] [sung text checked 1 time]
- by Richard Farber (b. 1945), "A game of fives", 2020 [ voice and piano ], from A Game of Five, Six Nonsense Songs for Voice and Piano on Verse by Lewis Carroll, no. 1 [sung text not yet checked]
Researcher for this text: Emily Ezust [Administrator]
This text was added to the website: 2017-11-14
Line count: 18
Word count: 165