William Barnes

The Hedger

Upon the hedge theaese bank did bear,
       Wi’ lwonesome thought untwold in words,
I woonce did work, wi’ noo sound there
       But my own strokes, an’ chirpen birds;
As down the west the zun went wan,
An’ days brought on our Zunday’s rest,
When sounds o’ cheemen bells did vill
The air, an’ hook an’ axe wer still.
 
Along the wold town-path vo’k went,
       An’ met unknown, or friend wi’ friend,
The maid her busy mother zent,
       The mother wi’ noo maid to zend;
An’ in the light the gleaezier’s glass,
As he did pass, wer dazzlen bright,
Or woone went by wi’ down-cast head,
A wrapp’d in blackness vor the dead.
 
An’ then the bank, wi’ risen back,
       That’s now a-most a-trodden down,
Bore thorns wi’ rind o’ sheeny black,
       An’ meaeple stems o’ ribby brown;
An’ in the lewth o’ theaese tree heads,
Wer primrwose beds a-sprung in blooth,
An’ here a geaete, a-slammen to,
Did let the slow-wheel’d plough roll drough.
 
Ov all that then went by, but vew
       Be now a-left behine’, to beaet
The mornen flow’rs or evenen dew,
       Or slam the woaken vive-bar’d geaete;
But woone, my wife, so litty-stepp’d,
That have a-kept my path o’ life,
Wi’ her vew errands on the road,
Where woonce she bore her mother’s lwoad.

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