Jack and Jill
Went up the hill
To fetch a pail of water
Jack fell down
And broke his crown,
And Jill came tumbling after.
this how most people know this nursery rhyme, but over time, it had been add verses.
Jack and Jill
Went up the hill
To fetch a pail of water
Jack fell down
And broke his crown,
And Jill came tumbling after.
By the early 20th century this had been modified in some collections, such as L. E. Walter's, Mother Goose's Nursery Rhymes (London, 1919) to:
Up Jack got
And home did trot,
As fast as he could caper;
And went to bed
And plastered his head
With vinegar and brown paper.
A third verse, sometimes added to the rhyme, was first recorded in a 19th-century chapbook and took
Twentieth-century versions of this verse include:
When Jill came in
How she did grin
To see Jack's paper plaster;
Mother vexed
Did whip her next
For causing Jack's disaster.
so, it seem that jack and jill climb up the hill, to fetch a bottle of liquid, they got drunk. both wineheads lost their balance and tumbling down the hill. they were smash.
jack was soo smash, he try to run home. as fast as jack could to get home. jack was soo smash, he went to bed. he realizes in bed that he drink and getting drunk on vinegar. that jack had the bottle, he was drinking the bottle in a brown paper bag. a true winehead.
so when jill got home, with a drunken grin on her face. her mother saw that her daughter become a winehead. jill's mother whip the crap out of jill's ass. jill's mother be damn if jill will ever see jack again!
you see why that they stick with this verse only:
Jack and Jill
Went up the hill
To fetch a pail of water
Jack fell down
And broke his crown,
And Jill came tumbling after.
if every child that read the whole nursery rhyme of jack and jill.
everybody for centuries would be wineheads, before they were 10.