There once was an ugly duckling With feathers all stubby and brown And the other birds said in so many words Said quack! Get out of town Quack! Get out, quack, quack! Get out, quack, quack! Get out of town And he went with a quack and a waddle and a quack In a flurry of eiderdown That poor little ugly duckling Went wandering far and near But at every place they said to his face Quack! Get out of here Quack! Get out, quack, quack! Get out, quack, quack! Get out of here And he went with a quack and a waddle and a quack And a very unhappy tear All through the wintertime, he hid himself away Ashamed to show his face, afraid of what others might say All through the winter in his lonely clump of wheat 'Til a flock of swans spied him there and very soon agreed You're a very fine swan indeed! Who? Me? A swan? And he looked, and he saw, and he said I'm not such an ugly duckling No feathers all stubby and brown For infact these birds in so many words said White! The best in town White! The best, white-white The best, white-white The best in town Not a quack, not a quack, not a waddle or a quack But a glide and a whistle and a snowy white back And a head so noble and high Say who's an ugly duckling? Not I!