Page:Barnes (1879) Poems of rural life in the Dorset dialect (combined).djvu/315

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WOONE RULE.
299

An’ there be sons in youthvul pride,
 An’ fathers weak wi’ years an’ païn,
 An’ daughters in their mother’s traïn,
The tall wi’ smaller at their zide;
  Heads in murnèn
  Never turnèn,
Cheäks a-burnèn, wi’ the het
O’ youth, an’ eyes noo tears do wet.

There friends do settle, zide by zide,
 The knower speechless to the known;
 Their vaïce is there vor God alwone
To flesh an’ blood their tongues be tied.
  Grief a-wringèn,
  Jaÿ a-zingèn,
Pray’r a-bringèn welcome rest
So softly to the troubled breast.

WOONE RULE.

An’ while I zot, wi’ thoughtvul mind,
Up where the lwonesome Coombs do wind,
An’ watch’d the little gully slide
So crookèd to the river-zide;
I thought how wrong the Stour did zeem
To roll along his ramblèn stream,
A-runnèn wide the left o’ south,
To vind his mouth, the right-hand zide.

But though his stream do teäke, at mill,
An’ eastward bend by Newton Hill,
An’ goo to lay his welcome boon

O’ daïly water round Hammoon,