alphabet rhyme, mnemonic verse or song used to help children learn an alphabet; such devices appear in almost every alphabetic language. Some of the early English favourites are about 300 years old and have served as models for countless variations. One is a cumulative rhyme to which there is a printed reference as early as 1671. It often appeared in 18th-century chapbooks under the imposing name The Tragical Death of A, Apple Pye Who was Cut in Pieces and Eat by Twenty-Five Gentlemen with whom All Little People Ought to be Very well acquainted. It begins:
A was an apple-pie;
B bit it,
C cut it,
D dealt it, etc.
Another, known as “Tom Thumb’s Alphabet,” enjoyed continuous popularity. The earliest printed record of it is from c. 1712. In its most familiar version, the rhyme begins:
A was an archer, who shot at a frog.
B was a butcher, and had a great dog.
These early rhymes showed little discrimination in subject matter. Lines such as “D was a drunkard, and had a red face,” “U was a Usurer took Ten per Cent,” or “Y was a youth, that did not love school” were later considered to have a harmful effect on children; they were replaced by the widely taught alphabet rhyme of the New-England Primer, published by Benjamin Harris (q.v.) in the late 17th century, which combined moral messages with the learning of letters:
In Adam’s fall
We sinned all.
A simplified version of English alphabet rhyme, popular today, is sung to the tune of “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star.”
A B C D E F G
H I J K L M N O P
Q and R and S and T
U V W X Y Z
Now I’ve said my ABC’s,
Tell me what you think of me.