The (almost really) Complete Works of Lewis Carroll

A Game of Fives

Source: Rhyme? and Reason?

The text of the original manuscript with subtitle “being a panoramic view of life, by a once careless bachelor” and other minor differences (“from five years old to one”, “Five showy girls” instead of “winsome”, “I ask ‘Now which of them d’you mean?’”, “but if the men will not propose, whatever can be done?”, “Five dressy girls” instead of “showy”, next lines missing, “to feel he knows”) can be found in Letters

Five small girls sitting on the ground, the youngest a baby, the oldest little child.

Five little girls, of Five, Four, Three, Two, One:
Rolling on the hearthrug, full of tricks and fun.

Five rosy girls, in years from Ten to Six:
Sitting down to lessons—no more time for tricks.

Five growing girls, from Fifteen to Eleven:
Music, Drawing, Languages, and food enough for seven!

Five winsome girls, from Twenty to Sixteen:
Each young man that calls, I say “Now tell me which you mean!

Two men are standing in talking, in the background five young women are sitting around a table.
“Now tell me which you mean!

Five dashing girls, the youngest Twenty-one:
But, if nobody proposes, what is there to be done?

Five showy girls—but Thirty is an age
When girls may be engaging, but they somehow don’t engage.

Five dressy girls, of Thirty-one or more:
So gracious to the shy young men they snubbed so much before!


Five passé girls—Their age? Well, never mind!
We jog along together, like the rest of human kind:
But the quondam “careless bachelor” begins to think he knows
The answer to that ancient problem “how the money goes”!