Michaelmas and Naples and Oakland and Lexington.
But do you recall...
The most famous avenue of all?
Discussion:
Well, it ends a little abruptly, but perhaps that unexpected abruptness is an interesting surprise. For me, the unresolved ending evokes Frank R. Stockton's The Lady, or the Tiger?. The second bounce of the allusional pinball would then be Raymond Smullyan (The Lady or the Tiger? and What Is the Name of this Book?, the latter title echoing the song's unanswered question). Or would it be Nabokov, who spoofed the celebrated short story in Ada?
Addendum:
Okay, okay, after many months I have indeed come up with answers. There are actually two more avenues of interest, one of which is Holland, the next over from Lexington. But Holland Avenue is, or was, modally dissimilar from all the others in an industrious, Dutch way that must have disturbed my childish aesthetics those many years ago. No, Holland is out, by personal fiat. But, very subtly, there is one other, a slight, scruffy one, and one - this is too good - with a big, red train signal light to boot...
Had a very shiny nose,
And if you ever saw it,
You would even say it glows.
All of the other avenues
Used to laugh and call him names.
They never let poor Railroad
Join in any avenue games!
Then one frosty Christmas eve
Tragedy came their way.
A train derailed and people were hurt.
Ambulances quickly lined the squirt.
Then how the avenues loved him,
As they shouted out with glee,
"Railroad, the red-nosed avenue,
You'll go down in history!"
Here is a link, albeit a deceptive one, given the inevitable transformations of the chronological factor. Oh well...let's go meet the train!