"List of literary allusions in the texts, the chapters where they appear and the original source (if known)Swallows and Amazons\n\n* =====Chapter head quote: Or like stout Cortez ... silent, on a peak in Darien. see John Keats's sonnet \"On first looking into Chapman's Homer\".===== \n* =====Titty had named the peak Darien ... she had heard the sonnet read aloud at school (SA1).===== \n* ====='Wraggle Taggle Gipsy' is actually a song===== \n* =====\"And what happened to Don't Care?\" (Mary Walker, SA2) \"Came to a bad end\", said Roger. A traditional nursery rhyme: \"Don\u2019t care didn\u2019t care / Don\u2019t care was wild / Don\u2019t care stole plum and pear / Like any beggar\u2019s child. / Don\u2019t care was made to care / Don\u2019t care was hung / Don\u2019t care was put in a pot / And boiled till he was done.\" A New York"@en . . "List of literary allusions in the texts, the chapters where they appear and the original source (if known)Swallows and Amazons\n\n* =====Chapter head quote: Or like stout Cortez ... silent, on a peak in Darien. see John Keats's sonnet \"On first looking into Chapman's Homer\".===== \n* =====Titty had named the peak Darien ... she had heard the sonnet read aloud at school (SA1).===== \n* ====='Wraggle Taggle Gipsy' is actually a song===== \n* =====\"And what happened to Don't Care?\" (Mary Walker, SA2) \"Came to a bad end\", said Roger. A traditional nursery rhyme: \"Don\u2019t care didn\u2019t care / Don\u2019t care was wild / Don\u2019t care stole plum and pear / Like any beggar\u2019s child. / Don\u2019t care was made to care / Don\u2019t care was hung / Don\u2019t care was put in a pot / And boiled till he was done.\" A New York Times article of 29 Sept. 1870 criticising, inter alia, the lax observation of harbour quarantine regulations, begins: ' \"Don't care came to a bad end\" was a maxim which old-time story-books endeavored to impress upon the youthful mind, and with tolerable success. ...'===== \n* =====He comes dancing on to the scene. \"'And well,' says he, 'and how are your arms and legs and liver and lungs and bones afeeling now?' Don't you remember?\": From John Masefield's \"One of the Bo'sun's Yarns\" part of his Saltwater Ballads. The first part of the quote comes from an earlier verse but John has put them together.===== \n* =====Books taken to Wild Cat Island by the Swallows:===== \n* \n* =====Titty took Robinson Crusoe: \"It tells you just what to do on an island.\" (SA2). Later: \"So you really are Robinson Crusoe,\" said mother, \"and I am Man Friday in earnest.\" (SA18).===== \n* =====John took The Seaman's Handybook. (The only result for this in Google Books is SA and a couple of other books about Arthur Ransome, so this might be a fictional book.)===== \n* =====John took Vol 3 of The Baltic Pilot: The Baltic pilot: comprising directions for the Baltic Sea, Gulf of Finland, and Gulf of Bothnia, Great Britain. Hydrographic Office, Printed for the Hydrographic Office, Admiralty, 1888 (Google Books)===== \n* =====Susan took Simple Cooking for Small Households: (As with The Seaman's Handybook above, the only result for this in Google Books is SA and a couple of other books about Arthur Ransome, however an unrelated reference seems to confirm this was an actual publication.) (Query, whether Jessie Conrad, Simple cooking: precepts for a little house (1921), with a preface by her husband, Joseph Conrad, and subsequently titled A handbook of cookery for a small house').===== \n* =====Queen Elizabeth and Sir Walter Raleigh (SA2): see Elizabeth I and Walter Raleigh===== \n* =====Chapter 3 header by Thackeray:=====There were three sailors in Bristol city Who took a. boat and went to sea.\nBut first with beef and captain's biscuit And pickled pork they loaded she.\n"@en . . "Literary allusions and historical references"@en . .