If All the World Were Apple Pie - English Children's Songs - England - Mama Lisa's World: Children's Songs and Rhymes from Around the World  - Intro Image

Notes

Harry's Ladder to Learning (1850) has these two additional lines at the end:

It's enough to make an old man
Scratch his head and think.

I found the version below in The Baby's Bouquet, A Fresh Bunch of Rhymes and Tunes by Walter Crane (1878):

1. If all the world were paper,
And all the sea were ink,
And all the trees were bread and cheese,
What should we do for drink?

2. If all the world were sand - O!
Oh, then what should we lack - O!
If, as they say, there were no clay,
How should we take tobacco?

3. If all our vessels ran-a,
If none but had a crack,
If Spanish apes ate all the grapes,
How should we do for sack*?

*The word sack comes from "vin sec" which is French for dry wine. So sack here means dry wine.

Here's a version from The Little Mother Goose (1912), illustrated by Jessie Willcox Smith:

If all the world were water,
And all the water were ink,
What should we do for bread and cheese?
What should we do for drink?

Listen

Download

1st MP3 Recording: Mama Lisa

Download

2nd MP3 recording: Ruth Golding

Watch
Here's a fun animation we created for this rhyme.
(Scroll down for the lyrics.)
This movie requires Flash Player 8. Download it here.

Thanks and Acknowledgements

The black and white illustration is from The Nursery Rhyme Book, edited by Andrew Lang and illustrated by L. Leslie Brooke (1897). This rhyme can be found in The Real Mother Goose (1916), illustrated by Blanche Fisher Wright.