Politics for the Nursery. 



Very fond of dogl, you IM; 

 But whfn dogs gu mad and bite, 

 Har-ry thinks it u not right, 

 So he tried to nuke a rale 

 For hij coro-rades a the mckool, 

 That they should without deh) 

 Muz-zk dog-gies every ** 



Tome who thought it iir to shun 

 Hib-ii hounds, ex-claimed ' Well don 

 F.ut some silly Kent-ish lads 

 Sulked for pti-tt ctrld-ish fads 



Har-ry Chap-lin quick-ly found 

 Uuz-zling dogs was dan-ger-ous groun 

 From the dogs he caught it hot- 

 Mad oats thus to bite made Iree 



r dogs J 



" Oh V they screamed, ' 

 Ra-bieswedonoifear; 

 Muz-ile* would our dog-gies slay- 

 N'aufh-iy Har-ry, go a way ' 



And they very much ap-prove, 

 Har-ry Chap-lin's piu-dent move 

 But his work he must not shun 

 " Muz-zle all or mui-zle none ! " 

 And, in-deed, the Mas-ters wink 

 Muzzles might be used, they think, 

 Very right-ly, on the crowd 

 Of the boys who talk so loud. 



I 



Othen, too, most fool-ish boys, 



y stu-pid , 

 Shrieked in wick-ed pet-tish ipite, 



And Po-lice-man X.Y.Z., 

 Shook his head, and thus he sud 

 " Taint a bit o' use at all , 

 Muz.>lcnoneormuz.tleall'" 



Har-ry muai not be a-lratd 

 By the none that fools have made 

 But the good Po-lice-man'f iptech 

 Ought a bet-ter course to teach 

 For th Mas-ters don't ad-nire 

 Dop re-plctc with rab-id ire 



From " St. Stephen's Review, ' February I, 



