320 / Types of Writing
Commens 2
traditional nursery rhymes contained in this publication and those succeeding it were recited
and sung long before they were ever written down. Most of the rhymes popular today have
existed for so long that their actual author is unknown (Becker 13). The famous Mother Goose
rhymes have been passed from parent to child, and both enjoy these rhymes together, the
child for the first time and the adult once again in remembrance of his childhood (Parker 46).
In remembering their own exposure to the nursery rhymes, parents approve of Mother Goose,
for she has proved to be a good influence upon a child. She serves as a child’s first introduc-
tion to literature (Huck and Kuhn 104). Pre-school and primary-grade educators incorporate
numerous activities by which youngsters of all backgrounds learn about Mary’s lamb or Little
Boy Blue even before they can read (Daycare, Parker 46), and it is the literature a child grows
up with which greatly influences the type of an adult he will become (LaRoche 114). A child
who grows up with Mother Goose is “apt to be a child who learns rapidly, who discovers early
in life the commingling pleasures that words and pictures award to those who read books”
(Huck and Kuhn 387). Although Mother Goose is not actually poetry, her rhymes provide a
background for the child to accept and understand real poetry (Grover 2). The child who is
exposed to Mother Goose will progress to other classics, such as Shakespeare, more easily
because Mother Goose encourages a child to read good literature (Likens 22).
A child who grows up with Mother Goose not only learns the pleasures of reading, but he
also discovers that the Mother Goose characters can become his friends. Many of the Mother
Goose characters are reminiscent of real people, such as Mother Hubbard and her concern for
her dog, Mary with her pet lamb, the Old Woman in the Shoe with her housing problem, and
Little Bo Beep with her lost sheep. When the child reads about Jack and Jill and Peter, he is
reminded of everyday people (Huck and Kuhn 99). A study of the history of children’s literature
clarifies that both the poetry and the illustrations accompanying Mother Goose help children
become familiar with major archetypes and motifs (Vandergrift 2).