

By Dorothy Denne
A friend asked me the other day if I remembered the poem entitled “Sunday’s Child.” I could only remember parts of it. It really bugs me and causes me to stew when I can’t remember something. So, I turned to my less than terrific technical skills to jog my memory. I Googled.
Apparently the rhyme was first recorded in the early 1800s in A.E. Brady’s Traditions of Devonshire. Rhymes of this type were used for a kind of fortune telling and character prediction. Here ’tis:
“Monday’s child is fair of face,
Tuesday’s child is full of grace,
Wednesday’s child is full of woe,
Thursday’s child has far to go,
Friday’s child is loving and giving,
Saturday’s child works hard for a living,
But the child who is born on the Sabbath Day
Is bonny and blithe and good and gay.”
Care to guess the day on which I was born? Yep, it was Saturday and that fortune-telling rhymer was right.
I believe it must have been very late on a Saturday night though because, according to my older relatives, I had some Sunday genes too. I ‘m told that I came into this world as a round little nine-pound bundle of joy. All one had to do was cuddle and feed me and my response was to giggle and wiggle, then sleep.
What can I say? Those who know me probably would say that pretty much describes me today. I’m still a worker. I’m still on the round side. I still like to be cuddled. I still giggle and wiggle and I guess we might, at this stage, add juggle.
Hey, it could be worse. I could have been born on Wednesday.
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