The book opens with an introduction by Baum that traces the history of Mother Goose. It is followed by the original text of a nursery rhyme with a broader story to establish its literary context. •
Sing a Song o' Sixpence •
The Story of Little Boy Blue •
The Cat and the Fiddle •
Black Sheep •
Old King Cole •
Mistress Mary •
The Wond'rous Wise Man •
What Jack Horner Did •
The Man in the Moon •
The Jolly Miller •
The Little Man and His Little Gun •
Hickory, Dickory, Dock •
Little Bo-Peep •
The Story of Tommy Tucker •
Pussy-cat Mew •
How the Beggars Came to Town •
Tom, Tom, the Piper's Son •
Humpty Dumpty •
The Woman Who Lived in a Shoe •
Little Miss Muffet •
Three Wise Men of Gotham •
Little Bun Rabbit The book's last selection features a girl named Dorothy who can talk to animals—an anticipation of the
Oz books. When Baum later included this story in his
Juvenile Speaker (1910) and
The Snuggle Tales (1916–17), he changed the girl's name to Doris, to avoid confusing her with
Dorothy Gale. Though handsomely produced,
Mother Goose in Prose was priced relatively expensively for a children's book; it was "only moderately successful" commercially. Publisher Way and Williams went bankrupt a year later. Baum took a different approach in a subsequent venture, composing original verses for his
Father Goose: His Book in 1899. ==Later editions==