Poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect/The Vrost

WINTER.

——o——

THE VROST.

Come, run up hwome wi’ us to night,
Athirt the vield a-vroze so white,
Where vrosty sheädes do lie below
The winter ricks a-tipp’d wi’ snow,
An’ lively birds, wi’ waggèn taïls,
Do hop upon the icy raïls.
An’ rime do whiten all the tops
O’ bush an’ tree in hedge an’ copse,
 In wind’s a-cuttèn keen.

Come, maïdens, come: the groun’s a-vroze
Too hard to-night to spweil your clothes.
You got noo pools to waddle drough,
Nor clay a-pullèn off your shoe:
An’ we can trig ye at the zide,
To keep ye up if you do slide:
Zoo while there’s neither wet nor mud,
’S the time to run an’ warm your blood,
 In winds a-cuttèn keen.

Vor young men’s hearts an’ maïden’s eyes
Don’t vreeze below the cwoldest skies,
While they in twice so keen a blast
Can wag their brisk lim’s twice so vast!
Though vier-light, a-flick’rèn red
Drough vrosty window-peänes, do spread
Vrom wall to wall, vrom he’th to door,
Vor us to goo an’ zit avore,
 Vrom winds a-cuttèn keen.