Page:Barnes (1879) Poems of rural life in the Dorset dialect (combined).djvu/68

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52
POEMS OF RURAL LIFE.

An’ when the zun, so low an’ red,
Do sheen above the leafy head
O’ zome broad tree, a-rizèn high
Avore the vi’ry western sky,
’Tis merry where all han’s do goo
Athirt the groun’, by two an’ two,
A-reäkèn, over humps an’ hollors,
The russlèn grass up into rollers.
An’ woone do row it into line,
An’ woone do clwose it up behine;
An’ after them the little bwoys
Do stride an’ fling their eärms all woys,
Wi’ busy picks, an’ proud young looks
A-meäkèn up their tiny pooks.
An’ zoo ’tis merry out among
The vo’k in haÿ-vield all day long.

HAY-CARREN.

’Tis merry ov a zummer’s day,
When vo’k be out a-haulèn haÿ,
Where boughs, a-spread upon the ground,
Do meäke the staddle big an’ round;
An’ grass do stand in pook, or lie
In long-back’d weäles or parsels, dry.
There I do vind it stir my heart
To hear the frothèn hosses snort,
A-haulèn on, wi’ sleek heäir’d hides,
The red-wheel’d waggon’s deep-blue zides.
Aye; let me have woone cup o’ drink,
An’ hear the linky harness clink,
An’ then my blood do run so warm,
An’ put sich strangth ’ithin my eärm,
That I do long to toss a pick,
A-pitchèn or a-meäkfen rick.