<P> She whipp'd all their bums, and sent them to bed . </P> <P> Many other variations were printed in the 18th and 19th centuries . Marjorie Ainsworth Decker published a Christian version of the rhyme in her The Christian Mother Goose Book published in 1978: </P> <P> There was an old woman Who lived in a shoe, She had so many children, And loved them all, too . She said, "Thank you Lord Jesus, For sending them bread ." Then kissed them all gladly and sent them to bed . </P> <P> Iona and Peter Opie pointed to the version published in Infant Institutes in 1797, which finished with the lines: </P>

What do you do when you live in a shoe response