What a queer bird
"What a queer bird" is a poem, folk song,[1] or essay[2][3] that may be sung as a round.[4][5] It first can be found in print in 1922, rapidly disseminating across dozens of publications in the United States that year, but its precise origin is unclear.[6]
Poem
The words are as follows:
What a queer bird, the frog are
When he sit he stand (almost)
When he walk he fly (almost)
When he talk he cry (almost)
He ain't got no sense, hardly
He ain't got no tail, neither, hardly
He sit on what he ain't got hardly
Publication
In 1922, multiple United States publications attributed the poem or essay to "a young Norwegian in Chicago", with the work allegedly first printed in the Bulletin of the Chicago Board of Education.[3][2] The Chicago Ledger printed the work its "Jokes and More Jokes" section in May 1922, where the word "wonderful" replaced "queer".[2] In July 1922, it appeared as a verse of imprecise origin in the American Consular Bulletin.[7] When printed in the "Pleasantries" section of The Christian Register in September 1922, it was attributed as a "[c]omposition by foreigner in a Chicago night school."[8] By 1980, it was published as a folk song to be sung as a round.[4][5]
Popular culture
At the 2017 Mark Twain Prize comedian Bill Murray recited the poem to recipient David Letterman while being dressed as an Elizabethan king.
References
- Fisher-Davis, Eric and Elizabeth. "George Elmer Fisher (1864-1953)". Archived from the original on 2016-06-18. Retrieved 2018-03-15.
- "An Essay on Frogs". Chicago Ledger. L (20). 1922-05-20. p. 14.
- "Almost". Cleveland Engineering. Vol. 15 no. 33. 1923-01-18.
- "The Frog Round: a Children's Folk Song sung as a Round". Music Files Ltd. Retrieved 2018-03-15.
- Malinowski, Stephen. "Frog Round". Retrieved 2018-03-15.
- "The Uncertain History of the Frog Round". www.musanim.com. Retrieved 2018-10-03.
- "The Frog" (PDF). American Consular Bulletin. Vol. 4 no. 7. July 1922.
- "Pleasantries". Christian Register. Vol. 101 no. 39. 1922-09-28.