So there could be a nursery rhyme about it. Mary had a little lamb - her doctor had a shock.
Because that's how the song goes and if she didn't have a little lamb the song would be pointless.
Sara Josepha Hale wrote the nursery rhyme and song Mary Had a Little Lamb. She was a poet, author, and editor that lived during the 16th and 17th centuries.
Mary Had A Little Lamb can be considered a song as well as a nursery rhyme (and w/all due respect to Doug, Stevie Ray Vaughn has the best version!). Are we all sure that Edison spoke the words, rather than sang them?click here bro http://www.funtrivia.com/askft/Question41376.html and also wright on my wall its 123messwithme
The fleece is as white as snow, meaning the lambs wool
Lamb of God isn't a latin phrase.
Mary had a little lamb was used to test the Edison phonograph in l877 Thomas Edison, inventor here. curiously early Edison phonos did NOT use electricity but were clockwork drive and were intended to be used more like modern tape recorders, being able to record as well as play back, First cylinders, then discs, then Disk Jockeys.
The nursery rhyme with the initials MPHAD is "Mary Had a Little Lamb."
Yes
Mary Had a Little Lamb. See the Related Link below.
Mary, a character in the nursery rhyme "Mary Had a Little Lamb," had a little lamb whose fleece was white as snow.
Mary Had A Little Lamb
mary had a little lamb
From Mary Sawyer (later Tyler, an American) who did in fact have a little lamb who she took to school.
The nursery rhyme "Mary Had A Little Lamb" was published in 1830.
The nursery rhyme you're thinking of is "Mary Had a Little Lamb." It tells the story of a girl named Mary who brought her lamb to school, against the rules.
No, in the nursery rhyme "Mary Had a Little Lamb," the lamb is the only animal mentioned. The lamb is not accompanied by a bear or referred to as being bare.
There is no official source or record that states Mary's little lamb's name was Lamar. The nursery rhyme simply refers to the lamb as "Mary's little lamb."
Sarah Josepha Hale wrote, "Mary had a little lamb".