THE ZILVER-WEED.
The zilver-weed upon the green,
Out where my sons an’ daughters plaÿ’d,
Had never time to bloom between
The litty steps o’ bwoy an’ maïd.
But rwose-trees down along the wall,
That then wer all the maïden’s ceäre,
An’ all a-trimm’d an’ traïn’d, did bear
Their bloomèn buds vrom Spring to Fall.
But now the zilver leaves do show
To zummer day their goolden crown,
Wi’ noo swift shoe-zoles’ litty blow,
In merry plaÿ to beät em down.
An’ where vor years zome busy hand
Did traïn the rwoses wide an’ high;
Now woone by woone the trees do die,
An’ vew of all the row do stand.
THE WIDOW’S HOUSE.
I went hwome in the dead o’ the night,
When the yields wer all empty o’ vo’k,
An’ the tuns at their cool-winded height
Wer all dark, an’ all cwold ’ithout smoke;
An’ the heads o’ the trees that I pass’d
Wer a-swaÿèn wi’ low-ruslèn sound,
An’ the doust wer a-whirl’d wi’ the blast,
Aye, a smeech wi’ the wind on the ground.
Then I come by the young widow’s hatch,
Down below the wold elem’s tall head,
But noo vinger did lift up the latch,