Page:Barnes (1879) Poems of rural life in the Dorset dialect (combined).djvu/202

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
186
POEMS OF RURAL LIFE.

A-doèn housework up avore
Their smilèn mother’s feäce;
You’d cry—“Why, if a man would wive
An’ thrive, ’ithout a dow’r,
Then let en look en out a wife
In Blackmwore by the Stour.”

As I upon my road did pass
A school-house back in Maÿ,
There out upon the beäten grass
Wer maïdens at their plaÿ;
An’ as the pretty souls did tweil
An’ smile, I cried, “The flow’r
O’ beauty, then, is still in bud
In Blackmwore by the Stour.”

MY ORCHA’D IN LINDEN LEA

’Ithin the woodlands, flow’ry gleäded,
 By the woak tree’s mossy moot,
The sheenèn grass-bleädes, timber-sheäded,
 Now do quiver under voot;
An’ birds do whissle over head,
An’ water’s bubblèn in its bed,
An’ there vor me the apple tree
Do leän down low in Linden Lea.

When leaves that leätely wer a-springèn
 Now do feäde ’ithin the copse,
An’ païnted birds do hush their zingèn
 Up upon the timber’s tops;
An’ brown-leav’d fruit’s a-turnèn red,
In cloudless zunsheen, over head,
Wi’ fruit vor me, the apple tree
Do leän down low in Linden Lea.