What a queer bird"What a queer bird" is a poem, folk song,[1] or essay[2][3] that may be sung as a round.[4][5] It first can be found in print in 1921. It rapidly disseminated across dozens of publications in the United States the following year, but its precise origin is unclear.[6] PoemThe words are as follows:
PublicationThe poem was printed in Minnesota's Willmar Tribune in January 1921, and was attributed to "A Swedish boy up in Biwabik" instructed to write an essay on the frog.[7] In 1922, multiple United States publications attributed the poem or essay to "a young Norwegian in Chicago", with the work allegedly first printed in the Bulletin of the Chicago Board of Education.[3][2] The Chicago Ledger printed the work in its "Jokes and More Jokes" section in May 1922, where the word "wonderful" replaced "queer".[2] In July 1922, it appeared as a verse of imprecise origin in the American Consular Bulletin.[8] When printed in the "Pleasantries" section of The Christian Register in September 1922, it was attributed as a "[c]omposition by foreigner in a Chicago night school."[9] By 1980, it was published as a folk song to be sung as a round.[4][5] Popular cultureAt the 2017 Mark Twain Prize comedian Bill Murray recited the poem to recipient David Letterman while being dressed as an Elizabethan king. [10] References
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