"Here we come again on a Saturday night
With your fussin' and your fightin' won't you get me to the rhyme"
This couplet doesn't sound right to me, either for the context (what woud it mean for Fogerty to want someone to "get him to the rhyme," and how would fussin' and fightin' interfere with getting to a rhyme?) or for the rhyme scheme itse;f (ironically).
Wouldn't "get me to the ride" fit better? He's eager to get to a cab or limo or bus? Plus, although "night"/"ride" is a slant rhyme, it's a lot closer than "night"/"rhyme."
"Here we come again on a Saturday night With your fussin' and your fightin' won't you get me to the rhyme"
This couplet doesn't sound right to me, either for the context (what woud it mean for Fogerty to want someone to "get him to the rhyme," and how would fussin' and fightin' interfere with getting to a rhyme?) or for the rhyme scheme itse;f (ironically).
Wouldn't "get me to the ride" fit better? He's eager to get to a cab or limo or bus? Plus, although "night"/"ride" is a slant rhyme, it's a lot closer than "night"/"rhyme."