Poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect/Easter Zunday
EASTER ZUNDAY.
Last Easter Jim put on his blue
Frock cwoat, the vu’st time—vier new;
Wi’ yollow buttons all o’ brass,
That glitter’d in the zun lik’ glass;
An’ pok’d ’ithin the button-hole
A tutty he’d a-begg’d or stole.
A span-new wes’co’t, too, he wore,
Wi’ yollow stripes all down avore;
An’ tied his breeches’ lags below
The knee, wi’ ribbon in a bow;
An’ drow’d his kitty-boots azide,
An’ put his laggèns on, an’ tied
His shoes wi’ strings two vingers wide,
Because ’twer Easter Zunday.
An’ after mornèn church wer out
He come back hwome, an’ stroll’d about
All down the vields, an’ drough the leäne,
Wi’ sister Kit an’ cousin Jeäne,
A-turnèn proudly to their view
His yollow breast an’ back o’ blue.
The lambs did play, the grounds wer green.
The trees did bud, the zun did sheen;
The lark did zing below the sky,
An’ roads wer all a-blown so dry,
As if the zummer wer begun;
An’ he had sich a bit o’ fun!
He meäde the maïdens squeäl an’ run,
Because ’twer Easter Zunday.