The following rhymes are from Inaqua, Bahama Island. They're recited over the hole of a doodlebug to try to get it to come out.

A doodlebug is, "Some kind of larva that lives in a hole in the ground, about the size of a knitting-needle, is angled for by dropping a juicy grass-stalk into the hole." -Poems Here at Home

Notes

*Master

Comments

If anyone from The Bahamas is familiar with these rhymes, please email me to let us know. Thanks in advance! –Mama Lisa

Thanks and Acknowledgements

This can be found in "Poems Here at Home" (1896).