Page:Barnes (1879) Poems of rural life in the Dorset dialect (combined).djvu/282

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POEMS OF RURAL LIFE.

Vor to catch at land, Thomas, an’ snatch at land,
   Now is the plan;
Meäke money wherever you can.

The childern wull soon have noo pleäce
 Vor to plaÿ in, an’ if they do grow,
They wull have a thin musheroom feäce,
 Wi’ their bodies so sumple as dough.
But a man is a-meäde ov a child,
 An’ his limbs do grow worksome by plaÿ;
An’ if the young child’s little body’s a-spweil’d,
 Why, the man’s wull the sooner decaÿ.
But wealth is wo’th now mwore than health is wo’th;
   Let it all goo,
If’t ’ull bring but a sov’rèn or two.

Vor to breed the young fox or the heäre,
 We can gi’e up whole eäcres o’ ground,
But the greens be a-grudg’d, vor to rear
 Our young childern up healthy an’ sound,
Why, there woont be a-left the next age
 A green spot where their veet can goo free;
An’ the goocoo wull soon be committed to cage
 Vor a trespass in zomebody’s tree.
Vor ’tis lockèn up, Thomas, an’ blockèn up,
   Stranger or brother,
Men mussen come nigh woone another.

Woone day I went in at a geäte,
 Wi’ my child, where an echo did sound.
An’ the owner come up, an’ did reäte
 Me as if I would car off his ground.
But his vield an’ the grass wer-a-let,
 An’ the damage that he could a-took
Wer at mwost that the while I did open the geäte
 I did rub roun’ the eye on the hook.