Jack and Jill is a nursery rhyme.
There are many modern versions of it (many of them are parodies), all sharing the same first rhyme:
The second verse of the song is less commonly performed:
(third and fourth lines of this verse are also known as*:
There is an even rarer third verse, as follows:
There are several speculations about the origin of the nursery rhyme, including:
Hjúki and Bil, a brother and sister (respectively) who according to Gylfaginning were taken up from the earth by the moon as they were fetching water from the well called Byrgir, bearing on their shoulders the cask called Saegr and the pole called Simul. They now follow him on his nocturnal journey, "as may be seen from the earth". Some scholars refer to Byrgir as a mead fountain and think Hjúki and Bil can be seen on the face of the moon as craters or as the waxing and waning phases. This story may be a source of the nursery rhyme Jack and Jill.
In 1978, the pop group Raydio had a hit song entitled "Jack and Jill" in which Jack snuck down from the hill to get "love he couldn't get from Jill". Another Raydio song, "A Woman Needs Love (Just Like You Do)" (1981) provided an apparent continuation of the earlier song by saying that when Jack returned up the hill, "somebody else had been loving Jill". The Dresden Dolls song "Half Jack" also contains references to the rhyme.
Female objects of type xxx are sometimes called Jillxxx:
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Jack and Jill (song)".
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