Page:Barnes (1879) Poems of rural life in the Dorset dialect (combined).djvu/28

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POEMS OF RURAL LIFE.

Or clim’ aloft, wi’ clingèn knees,
Vor crows’ aggs up in swaÿèn trees,
While frighten’d blackbirds down below
Did chatter o’ their little foe.
An’ zoo there’s noo pleäce lik’ the drong,
Where I do hear the blackbird’s zong.

WOODCOM’ FEAST.

Come, Fanny, come! put on thy white,
’Tis Woodcom’ feäst, good now! to-night.
Come! think noo mwore, you silly maïd,
O’ chickèn drown’d, or ducks a-straÿ’d;
Nor mwope to vind thy new frock’s taïl
A-tore by hitchèn in a naïl;
Nor grieve an’ hang thy head azide,
A-thinkèn o’ thy lam’ that died.
The flag’s a-vleèn wide an’ high.
An’ ringèn bells do sheäke the sky;
The fifes do plaÿ, the horns do roar,
An’ boughs be up at ev’ry door:
They’ll be a-dancèn soon,—the drum
’S a-rumblèn now. Come, Fanny, come!
Why father’s gone, an’ mother too.
They went up leäne an hour agoo;
An’ at the green the young and wold
Do stan’ so thick as sheep in vwold:
The men do laugh, the bwoys do shout,—
Come out you mwopèn wench, come out,
An’ go wi’ me, an’ show at leäst
Bright eyes an’ smiles at Woodcom’ feäst.

Come, let’s goo out, an’ fling our heels
About in jigs an’ vow’r-han’ reels;
While äll the stiff-lagg’d wolder vo’k,
A-zittèn roun’, do talk an’ joke