Page:Barnes (1879) Poems of rural life in the Dorset dialect (combined).djvu/330

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314
POEMS OF RURAL LIFE.

An’ I must own, my heart do beät
Wi’ pride avore my own blue geäte,
Where I can bid the steätely tree
Be cast, at langth, avore my knee;
An’ clover red, an’ deäzies feaïr,
An’ gil’cups wi’ their yollow gleäre,
Be all a-match’d avore my zight
By wheelèn buttervlees in flight,
The while the burnèn zun at noon
Do sheen upon my meäd in June.

An’ there do zing the swingèn lark
So gaÿ’s above the finest park,
An’ day do sheäde my trees as true
As any steätely avenue;
An’ show’ry clouds o’ Spring do pass
To shed their raïn on my young grass,
An’ aïr do blow the whole day long,
To bring me breath, an’ teäke my zong,
An’ I do miss noo needvul boon
A-gi’ed to other meäds in June.

An’ when the bloomèn rwose do ride
Upon the boughy hedge’s zide,
We haymeäkers, in snow-white sleeves,
Do work in sheädes o’ quiv’rèn leaves,
In afternoon, a-liftèn high
Our reäkes avore the viery sky,
A-reäken up the haÿ a-dried
By day, in lwongsome weäles, to bide
In chilly dew below the moon,
O’ shorten’d nights in zultry June.

An’ there the brook do softly flow
Along, a-bendèn in a bow,