Page:Barnes (1879) Poems of rural life in the Dorset dialect (combined).djvu/172

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156
POEMS OF RURAL LIFE.

When I, a-stannèn in the lew
O’ trees a storm’s a-beätèn drough,
Do zee the slantèn mist a-drove
By spitevul winds along the grove,
An’ hear their hollow sounds above
 My shelter’d head, do seem, as I
 Do think o’ zunny days gone by,
  Lik’ music vor the dead, John.

Last night, as I wer gwaïn along
The brook, I heard the milk-maïd’s zong
A-ringèn out so clear an’ shrill
Along the meäds an’ roun’ the hill.
I catch’d the tuèn, an’ stood still
 To hear ’t; ’twer woone that Jeäne did zing
 A-vield a-milkèn in the spring,—
  Sweet music o’ the dead, John.

Don’t tell o’ zongs that be a-zung
By young chaps now, wi’ sheämeless tongue:
Zing me wold ditties, that would start
The maïden’s tears, or stir my heart
To teäke in life a manly peärt,—
 The wold vo’k’s zongs that twold a teäle,
 An’ vollow’d round their mugs o’ eäle,
  The music o’ the dead, John.

THE PLEÄCE A TEÄLE’S A-TWOLD O’.

Why tidden vields an’ runnèn brooks,
 Nor trees in Spring or fall;
An’ tidden woody slopes an’ nooks,
 Do touch us mwost ov all;
An’ tidden ivy that do cling
 By housen big an’ wold, O,
But this is, after all, the thing,—
 The pleäce a teäle’s a-twold o’.