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  1. Lyrics. The most common version of the rhyme is: Jack be nimble, Jack be quick, Jack jump over the candlestick. [1] Origins and meaning. Jack is a dog, in Denslow's version. The rhyme is first recorded in a manuscript of around 1815 A.D. and was collected by James Orchard Halliwell in the mid-nineteenth century. [1] .

  2. By Mother Goose. Jack be nimble, Jack be quick, Jack jump over. The candlestick. Source: The Dorling Kindersley Book of Nursery Rhymes (2000) More About This Poem. Poems & Poets. Collections.

  3. 19 sty 2024 · BE nimble! (Or else). These kinds of double meanings give nursery rhymes their long lives. Either way, Jack thinks he’s nimble, thinks he’s quick and so he runs and leaps and jumps over the...

  4. “Jumping over candlesticks” or “Candle-leaping” was traditional in England, mostly practiced in the markets and fairs. It was believed that it is a good-luck sign to succeed to clear the candle and to not damp down the flame. “Jack be nimble” Lyrics. Jack be nimble, Jack be quick, Jack jump over The candlestick.

  5. 16 lip 2017 · This poem’s title recalls an old rhyme: Jack be nimble, Jack be quick, Jack jump over The candlestick. If Jack is not nimble, after all, he risks setting himself on fire. Plath replaces the title character with Nick, her infant son, poetically blurring the divisions between literature and biography and between illusion and reality.

  6. Lyrics. Jack be nimble, Jack be quick, Jack jump over. The candlestick. History and Meaning. The rhyme was first documented by James Halliwell-Phillipps, a 19th Century English Nursery Rhyme collector and literary scholar. At that time people would jump over candle sticks as a fair-trick.

  7. In the song “Jack Be Nimble,” the singer sings the lines “Jack be nimble. Jack be quick. Jack jump over the Candlestick”. Rather than use the name Jack, Plath went with Nick, the name of her son.