Page:Barnes (1879) Poems of rural life in the Dorset dialect (combined).djvu/140

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
124
POEMS OF RURAL LIFE.

A woaken bedstead, black an’ bright,
Did teäke my weary bwones at night,
Where I could stratch an’ roll about
Wi’ little fear o’ vallèn out;
An’ up above my head a peäir
Ov ugly heads a-carv’d did steäre,
An’ grin avore a bright vull moon
A’most enough to frighten woone.
An’ then we had, vor cwoats an’ frocks,
Woak cwoffers wi’ their rusty locks
An’ neämes in nails, a-left behind
By kinsvo’k dead an’ out o’ mind;
Zoo we did get on well enough
Wi’ things a-meäde ov English stuff.
But then, you know, a woaken stick
Wer cheap, vor woaken trees war thick.
When poor wold Gramfer Green wer young,
He zaid a squirrel mid a-sprung
Along the dell, vrom tree to tree,
Vrom Woodcomb all the way to Lea;
An’ woak wer all vo’k did avvword,
Avore his time, vor bed or bwoard.

LULLABY.

The rook’s nest do rock on the tree-top
Where vew foes can stand;
The martin’s is high, an’ is deep
In the steep cliff o’ zand.
But thou, love, a-sleepèn where vootsteps
Mid come to thy bed,
Hast father an’ mother to watch thee
An’ shelter thy head.
   Lullaby, Lilybrow. Lie asleep;
   Blest be thy rest.