Old King Cole was a merry old soul.
A merry old soul
Old King Cole had three Fiddlers.Old King Cole was a merry old soul,And a merry old soul was he;He called for his pipe,And he called for his bowl,And he called for his fiddlers three.3
Old king Cole was a merry old soul and a merry old soul was he He called for his pipe and he called for his bowl and he called for his fiddlers three.
Old King Cole
he had a merry ole soul
Old King Cole had a buckskin belly and a rubber -------.
Old King Cole asked for the pipe and the bowl while listening to his 3 fiddlers.
No, "Old King Cole was a merry old soul" is not a palindrome. A palindrome is a word, phrase, or sequence of characters that reads the same backward as forward. This phrase does not read the same backward as forward.
Old King Cole was created in 1708.
Old King Cole Was a Merry Old Soul. But what does that have to do with Christmas?
The origin of the rhyme, Old King Cole, was based off of a real king. He was a Celtic King whom lived in third century AD. He seized a Roman Colony and named the place after himself. The name we know as the town he settled, is Colchester, England. (In Latin, the word for camp was castrum which later became chester in English, thus the name meaning Cole's Camp) His doing of this aroused the popular rhyme:Old King ColeWas a merry old soul,And a merry old soul was he!Old King ColeHe sat in his holeAnd called for his fiddlers three.And every fiddler he had a fine fiddleAnd a very fine fiddle had he."Tweedle-dee, tweedle-dee!" said the fiddler's three!
old king cole