Page:Barnes (1879) Poems of rural life in the Dorset dialect (combined).djvu/113

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
MARTIN’S TIDE.
97

Then up come zidelèn Sammy Heäre,
That’s fond o’ Poll, an’ she can’t bear,
A-holdèn out his girt scram vist,
An’ ax’d her, wi’ a grin an’ twist,
To have zome nuts; an’ she, to hide
Her laughèn, turn’d her head azide,
An’ answer’d that she’d rather not,
But Nancy mid. Am’ Nan, so hot
As vier, zaid ’twer quite enough
Vor Poll to answer vor herzuf:
She had a tongue, she zaid, an’ wit
Enough to use en, when ’twer fit.
An’ in the dusk, a-ridèn round
Drough Okford, who d’ye think we vound
But Sam ageän, a-gwäin vrom feäir
Astride his broken-winded meäre.
An’ zoo, a-hettèn her, he tried
To keep up clwose by ouer zide:
But when we come to Haÿward-brudge,
Our Poll gi’ed Dick a meänèn nudge,
An’ wi’ a little twitch our meäre
Flung out her lags so lights a heäre,
An’ left poor Sammy’s skin an’ bwones
Behind, a-kickèn o’ the stwones.

MARTIN’S TIDE.

Come, bring a log o’ cleft wood, Jack,
An’ fling en on ageän the back,
An’ zee the outside door is vast,—
The win’ do blow a cwoldish blast.
Come, so’s! come, pull your chairs in roun’
Avore the vire; an’ let’s zit down,
An’ keep up Martin’s-tide, vor I

Shall keep it up till I do die.

G