Question:

Who wrote a poem called 'A man of words and not of deeds'.?

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A man of words and not of deeds is like a garden full of weeds

When the weeds begin to grow it's like a garden full of snow

When the snow begins to fall....etc

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  1. This rhyme can be found in A History of Nursery Rhymes (1899) by Percy B. Green. Green wrote about this rhyme, "In a copy of rhyming proverbs in the British Museum, written about the year 1680, occurs the following Puritan satire on Charles II.'s changeability"...

    A Man of Words and Not Deeds

    A man of words and not of deeds

    Is like a garden full of weeds

    And when the weeds begin to grow

    It's like a garden full of snow

    And when the snow begins to fall

    It's like a bird upon the wall

    And when the bird away does fly

    It's like an eagle in the sky

    And when the sky begins to roar

    It's like a lion at the door

    And when the door begins to crack

    It's like a stick across your back

    And when your back begins to smart

    It's like a penknife in your heart

    And when your heart begins to bleed

    You're dead, and dead, and dead indeed.  Charles II ruled from 1660 until 1685, during a time known as the Restoration (after the Puritans ruled England under Cromwell). At the beginning of his reign Charles promised religious Dissenters freedom of conscience. But later he began to persecute them. His words did not translate into deeds.


  2. It's a traditional English nursery rhyme. There's no known author, but some speculate that the words may have been inspired by a  play by John Fletcher, an Elizabethan playwright, which contains the words "Deeds, not words."

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