The Juvenile Library by Tabart & Co. at No. 157 New Bond Street, London
"The Old Woman and Her Pig" is a cumulative English nursery rhyme which originally developed in oral lore form until it was collected and first appeared as an illustrated print on 27 May 1806 as "The True History of a Little Old Woman Who Found a Silver Penny" published by Tabart & Co. at No. 157 New Bond Street, London, for their Juvenile Library. Since this time it has been republished and rewritten in print form many times.
Etymology
As the nursery rhyme has been retold and republished many times, variations in the name have appeared mostly under two broad categories:
1806 illustration from "The True History of a Little Old Woman Who Found a Silver Penny"
An old woman finds a silver penny while cleaning her chambers and goes to buy a pig, but can't get home when it refuses to go over a stile, she asks:
A dog to bite the pig, then on refusal;
A stick to beat the dog, then on refusal;
A fire to burn the stick, then on refusal;
Water to quench the fire, then on refusal;
A bull to drink the water, then on refusal;
A butcher to slaughter the bull, then on refusal;
A rope to hang the butcher, then on refusal;
A rat to gnaw the rope, then on refusal;
A cat to eat the rat.
The cat accepts her request causing her demands to be met in a cascade until the pig jumps the stile, allowing the woman to go home.[9]
The storyline has varied through adaptations made over the centuries by retellers, as listed below.
The rhyme scheme
Front cover of "The Pig Bought with a Silver Penny" (1881)
The rhyme scheme used for "The Old Woman and Her Pig" is simple couplets interspersed with the odd triplet as exemplified by the verses below:[10]
Delighted she seized it, and, dancing a jig,
Exclaim'd, "With this money I'll purchase a pig."
So saying, away to the market she went,
And the fruits of her fortunate sweeping she spent
Which won't be so civil my Pig just to bite
till he crosses the Stile, though the trouble's so slight,
And now I shan't get to my cottage to-night.
Near the beginning of the 19th century, there were significant improvements in the technology of printed illustrations.[11] Publishers then recognized a market for children's illustrated books with the success of books such as The Picture Gallery for all Good Boys and Girls: 'Exhibition the First', which was published on 28 April 1801.[12] Two of the earliest children's publishers were John Harris and Benjamin Tabart, who both chose to publish the common nursery rhyme: "The Old Woman and the Pig" in illustrated form. After these early forerunners, the nursery rhyme was republished numerous times, either as part of a compendium or as a stand-alone illustrated book. In the 19th century, the retellers were not given credit by publishers but by the 20th century, the retellers were given credit as they varied the rhyme and the story. A selection of popular single story retellings in the 19th and 20th centuries are listed below:
19th-century retellings
1806 – "The True History of a Little Old Woman Who Found a Silver Penny", published by Benjamin Tabart[13]
1814 – "The History of the Old Woman and Her Pig", published by John Harris[14]
1830 – "The Old Woman and Her Pig", published by Williams, Orton & Company[15]
1835 – "Little Old Woman and Her Silver Penny", published by Henry Mozley and Sons[16]
1838 – "The Old Woman and Her Silver Penny", published by James Catnach[17]
1847 – "The Little Old Woman and Her Silver Penny", published by Thomas Dean & Son[18]
1847; – "The Ancient Story of the Old Dame and Her Pig: A Legend of Obstinacy: Shewing How It Cost the Old Lady a World of Trouble, & the Pig His Tail", published by David Bogue[19]
1850 – "The Old Woman and Her Silver Penny", published by Read & Co.[20]
1855 – "The Old Woman and Her Pig", published by Sampson Low[1]
1875 – "The Story of the Old Woman and Her Crooked Sixpence, and Some Rhymes Told by Mother Goose", published by S.W. Tilton & Company[21]
1881 – "The Pig Bought with a Silver Penny", published by Dean & Son[6]
1887 – "The Story of the Poor Old Woman and the Obstinate Little Pig", published by J. Clarke & Company[22]