There's a Skeeter on My Peter

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"There's a Skeeter on My Peter (Knock it Off)" sample  is a well-known humorous song. It is sung to the tune of "She'll Be Coming 'Round the Mountain". The premise of this song is that the mosquito is on the singer's penis ("peter") and he would like someone to cause the insect to depart from his appendage. This song, like many in its genre, has frequently variable lyrics, including a tongue-in-cheek reference to handjobs or masturbation by substituting "knock it off" with "beat it off" or "whack it off".

Contents

[edit] Variations of version

Variant #1:

There's a skeeter on my peter, knock it off
There's a skeeter on my peter, knock it off
There's a dozen on my cousin's
I can hear the bastards [or buggers] buzzin'
There's a skeeter on my peter, knock it off

Variant #2:

There's a skeeter on my peter, sweet Marie
There's another on my brother, can't you see
There's a dozen on my cousin
Can't you hear those bastards buzzin'
There's a skeeter on my peter, sweet Marie

[edit] Origins

This is known as a drinking song by Hash House Harriers and by rugby players. The "masturbation" version of the song is a standard in the act of musician/comedian John Valby. It has been commercially recorded by Valby (sample ) and by an anonymous person on 1960 LP The Unexpurgated Folk Songs of Men (sample ). The earliest printed example of this song is found in the book Parodology (1927) where the tune is listed as an adaptation of the tune "Little Bit of Love".

[edit] Children's version

More recently, the song has been adapted, with a 1999 copyright, to make it more appropriate for children. It is titled There's a Skeeter (or There's a Skeeter Biting Peter) is a well known humorous children's song[1] in the United States.

The premise of the song, sung to the tune of "Frere Jacques",[2] is that a mosquito ("skeeter") is biting a boy, and must be driven away:

There's a skeeter biting Peter,
Knock him off! Knock him off!
What a pesky skeeter,
Biting little Peter!
Knock him off! Knock him off!

[edit] References

  • Parodology (1927) pg 16. song #39.
  • The Unexpurgated Folk Songs of Men. 16pp booklet which accompanies the LP of the same name.

[edit] External links