Page:Barnes (1879) Poems of rural life in the Dorset dialect (combined).djvu/307

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THE BACHELOR.
291

  Lie alwone! sigh alwone! die alwone!
     Then be vorgot.
  No! I be content wi’ my lot.

Ah! where be the vingers so feäir,
 Vor to pat en so soft on the feäce,
To mend ev’ry stitch that do tear,
 An’ keep ev’ry button in pleäce?
  Crack a-tore! brack a-tore! back a-tore!
     Buttons a-vled!
  Vor want ov a wife wi’ her thread.

Ah! where is the sweet-perty head
 That do nod till he’s gone out o’ zight?
An’ where be the two eärms a-spread,
 To show en he’s welcome at night?
  Dine alwone! pine alwone! whine alwone!
     Oh! what a life!
  I’ll have a friend in a wife.

An’ when vrom a meetèn o’ me’th
 Each husban’ do leäd hwome his bride,
Then he do slink hwome to his he’th,
 Wi’ his eärm a-hung down his cwold zide.
  Slinkèn on! blinkèn on! thinkèn on!
     Gloomy an’ glum;
  Nothèn but dullness to come.

An’ when he do onlock his door,
 Do rumble as hollow’s a drum,
An’ the veäries a-hid roun’ the vloor,
 Do grin vor to see en so glum.
  Keep alwone! sleep alwone! weep alwone!
     There let en bide,
  I’ll have a wife at my zide.