Guest poem submitted by Gregory Marton:
(Poem #1664) The Distracted Centipede A centipede was happy quite,
Until a frog in fun
Said, "Pray, which leg comes after which?"
This raised her mind to such a pitch,
She lay distracted in the ditch
Considering how to run.
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I took a friend back home to Hungary this past week, and in teaching her
Hungarian, and in the simultaneous translation, I oft forgot for a few
moments how to speak either language! She appraised my predicament with
this apt and catchy limerick, and I am the richer for it.
I have seen several titles " The Puzzled Centipede", "The Frog and the
Centipede", "The Poor Worm", "The Centipede Poem", and several minor
variants: "figuring how to run", "Pray tell which leg...", a/the in several
places, his/her mind and so on. The indentation is mine, and feel free to
quash it. I was unable to find attribution, as were the editors of the
Oxford Book of Verse for Children, according to one second-hand source:
[broken link] http://faqs.jmas.co.jp/FAQs/buddhism-faq/questions
[And a few minutes after sending us the original submission, Gremio adds:]
In fact, I find some more variants and titles, when I search without "frog".
The antagonist is often a toad and sometimes a bird. I hadn't realized how
devious it is of either predator to distract its prey until I read it with a
bird. This page emphasizes the point, by cleverly (I'm giving benefit of
the doubt) substituting "Prey" for "Pray":
[broken link] http://www.camp4.com/coolsite.php?newsid=321
I also read in several places:
This raised his doubts to such a pitch
He fell distracted in the ditch
Not knowing how to run.
This has been (probably mis-)attributed to Marion Quinlan Davis here:
http://www.cognitivebehavior.com/theory/quickconcepts.html
and to Allan Watts here:
http://www.businessweek.com/smallbiz/0008/an000811.htm
Grem.
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