


In the Sesame Street video Let's Eat!: Funny Food Songs, Miss Muffet is a patron at the Planet Storybook restaurant.In a 2005 episode of Sesame Street, Goldilocks sits on Miss Muffet's tuffet, causing the real Miss Muffet to accuse her of stealing her nursery rhyme.When Mother Goose came to visit Sesame Street in episode 3057, she reveals that Miss Muffet grew up to be a bug-and-spider specialist.In yet another 1993 episode, Bob reads Telly Monster the story of Little Miss Muffet, which Telly could identify from the pictures.Muffet-Malone sat on a throne With her husband Frank, eating curds and whey When a spider who'd seen them Sat right in between them And frightened them both away!" In another 1993 episode of Sesame Street, Miss Muffet has gotten married and is now known as Ms.Unfortunately, he falls off and shatters when he sees a spider. In a 1993 episode of Sesame Street, Humpty Dumpty decides to sit on a tuffet, like Little Miss Muffet.In a 1992 episode of Sesame Street, Little Miss Muffet donates the whey from her curds and whey as part of Elmo's alphabet collection.In The Sesame Street Dictionary, a Little Miss Muffet pageant is shown, with Miss Muffet's spider revealed to be her pet, Stanley.Featured as part of the Grouch Medley on the recording Kids' Favorite Songs.A story read by Gina entitled "Little Miss Muffet and the Spider: The Continuing Story.".An animated song version about the number 8.On Sesame Street, Little Miss Muffet has been featured in numerous skits throughout the series.The nursery rhyme was the inspiration for the Mother Goose Stories episode " Miss Muffet.".The poem has been the inspiration and basis for many Muppet productions and references.
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Designed primarily for thrusting its also capable of delivering cuts and slashes while its sharpened wings provide substantial catching and trapping potential as well. The blade of our spontoon is 10 ½ âlong and 4mm thick with 3 ½â wings on either side. Thompson became fascinated by the spontoon after reading Tim Willocksâ novel the Twelve Children of Paris (3 times!) so we decided to make our own model based on historical examples. Issued in substantial quantity by both sides of every conflict from the French and Indian war (1754-1763) to the War of 1812 it was carried as both a weapon and a badge of rank or authority by commissioned and noncommissioned officers alike.

The spontoon is basically a scaled down polearm or winged spear that often served as a substitute for a rifle or musket in colonial America.
