Page:Barnes (1879) Poems of rural life in the Dorset dialect (combined).djvu/384

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368
POEMS OF RURAL LIFE.

Where the sleek-heäir’d maïd do zit
Out o’ door to zew or knit,
Below the elem where the spring
’S a-runnèn, an’ the road do bring
The people by to hear her zing,
   On the green,
Where she’s a-zeen, an’ she can zee,
O gaÿ is she below the tree.

Come, O zummer wind, an’ bring
Sounds o’ birds as they do zing,
An’ bring the smell o’ bloomèn maÿ,
An’ bring the smell o’ new-mow’d haÿ;
Come fan my feäce as I do stray,
   Fan the heäir
O’ Jessie feäir; fan her cool,
By the weäves o’ stream or pool.

THE NEÄME LETTERS.

When high-flown larks wer on the wing,
A warm-aïr’d holiday in Spring,
We stroll’d, ’ithout a ceäre or frown,
 Up roun’ the down at Meldonley;
An’ where the hawthorn-tree did stand
Alwone, but still wi’ mwore at hand,
We zot wi’ sheädes o’ clouds on high
 A-flittèn by, at Meldonley.

An’ there, the while the tree did sheäde
Their gigglèn heads, my knife’s keen bleäde
Carved out, in turf avore my knee,

 J. L., *T. D., at Meldonley.