Jack and Jill

Origin
"Jack and Jill" is a traditional English nursery rhyme.

The first and most commonly repeated verse is:
 * Jack and Jill went up the hill
 * To fetch a pail of water.
 * Jack fell down and broke his crown,
 * And Jill came tumbling after.

Many verses have been added to the rhyme, including a version with a total of 15 stanzas in a chapbook of the 19th century. The second verse, probably added as part of these extensions has become a standard part of the nursery rhyme. Early versions took the form:
 * Up Jack got, and home did trot,
 * As fast as he could caper;
 * To old Dame Dob, who patched his nob
 * With vinegar and brown paper.

A third verse, sometimes added to the rhyme, was first recorded in a 19th-century chapbook and took the form:
 * Then Jill came in, and she did grin,
 * To see Jack's paper plaster;
 * Her mother whipt her, across her knee,
 * For laughing at Jack's disaster.

Twentieth-century versions of this verse include:
 * When Jill came in how she did grin
 * To see Jack's paper plaster;
 * Mother vexed did whip her next
 * For causing Jack's disaster.