Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Key to phonetic symbols
- Alternative pronunciations
- Table of common alternatives
- Introduction
- Third-Collection Poems with phonemic transcripts
- Woone smile mwore
- The echo
- Vull a man
- Naïghbour plaÿmeätes
- The lark
- The two churches
- Woak Hill
- The hedger
- In the Spring
- The flood in Spring
- Comèn hwome
- Grammer a-crippled
- The castle ruins
- Eclogue: John, Jealous at Shroton Feäir
- Early plaÿmeäte
- Pickèn o‘ scroff
- Good night
- Went hwome
- The hollow woak
- Childern‘s childern
- The rwose in the dark
- Come
- Zummer winds
- The neäme letters
- The new house a-gettèn wold
- Zunday
- The pillar‘d geäte
- Zummer stream
- Linda Deäne
- Eclogue: Come and zee us in the zummer
- Lindenore
- Me‘th below the tree
- Treat well your wife
- The child an‘ the mowers
- The love child
- Hawthorn Down
- Oben vields
- What John wer a-tellèn his mis‘ess out in the corn ground
- Sheädes
- Times o‘ year
- Eclogue: Racketèn Joe
- Zummer an‘ winter
- To me
- Two an‘ two
- The lew o‘ the rick
- The wind in woone‘s feäce
- Tokens
- Tweil
- Fancy
- The broken heart
- Evenèn light
- Vields by watervalls
- The wheel routs
- Nanny‘s new abode
- Leaves a-vallèn
- Lizzie
- Blessèns a-left
- Fall time
- Fall
- The zilver-weed
- The widow‘s house
- The child‘s greäve
- Went vrom hwome
- The fancy feäir at Maïden Newton
- Things do come round
- Zummer thoughts in winter time
- I‘m out o‘ door
- Grief an‘ gladness
- Slidèn
- Lwonesomeness
- A snowy night
- The year-clock
- Not goo hwome to-night
- The humstrum
- Shaftesbury Feäir
- The beäten path
- Ruth a-ridèn
- Beauty undecked
- My love is good
- Heedless o‘ my love
- The Do‘set militia
- A Do‘set sale
- Don‘t ceäre
- Changes [I]
- Kindness
- Withstanders
- Daniel Dwithen, the wise chap
- Turnèn things off
- The giants in treädes
- The little worold
- Bad news
- The turnstile
- The better vor zeèn o‘ you
- Pity
- John Bloom in Lon‘on
- A lot o‘ maïdens a-runnèn the vields
- Textual Notes
- Appendix: A summary of sections 7 and 8 of WBPG
- List of Contributors
Changes [I]
from Third-Collection Poems with phonemic transcripts
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 March 2018
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Key to phonetic symbols
- Alternative pronunciations
- Table of common alternatives
- Introduction
- Third-Collection Poems with phonemic transcripts
- Woone smile mwore
- The echo
- Vull a man
- Naïghbour plaÿmeätes
- The lark
- The two churches
- Woak Hill
- The hedger
- In the Spring
- The flood in Spring
- Comèn hwome
- Grammer a-crippled
- The castle ruins
- Eclogue: John, Jealous at Shroton Feäir
- Early plaÿmeäte
- Pickèn o‘ scroff
- Good night
- Went hwome
- The hollow woak
- Childern‘s childern
- The rwose in the dark
- Come
- Zummer winds
- The neäme letters
- The new house a-gettèn wold
- Zunday
- The pillar‘d geäte
- Zummer stream
- Linda Deäne
- Eclogue: Come and zee us in the zummer
- Lindenore
- Me‘th below the tree
- Treat well your wife
- The child an‘ the mowers
- The love child
- Hawthorn Down
- Oben vields
- What John wer a-tellèn his mis‘ess out in the corn ground
- Sheädes
- Times o‘ year
- Eclogue: Racketèn Joe
- Zummer an‘ winter
- To me
- Two an‘ two
- The lew o‘ the rick
- The wind in woone‘s feäce
- Tokens
- Tweil
- Fancy
- The broken heart
- Evenèn light
- Vields by watervalls
- The wheel routs
- Nanny‘s new abode
- Leaves a-vallèn
- Lizzie
- Blessèns a-left
- Fall time
- Fall
- The zilver-weed
- The widow‘s house
- The child‘s greäve
- Went vrom hwome
- The fancy feäir at Maïden Newton
- Things do come round
- Zummer thoughts in winter time
- I‘m out o‘ door
- Grief an‘ gladness
- Slidèn
- Lwonesomeness
- A snowy night
- The year-clock
- Not goo hwome to-night
- The humstrum
- Shaftesbury Feäir
- The beäten path
- Ruth a-ridèn
- Beauty undecked
- My love is good
- Heedless o‘ my love
- The Do‘set militia
- A Do‘set sale
- Don‘t ceäre
- Changes [I]
- Kindness
- Withstanders
- Daniel Dwithen, the wise chap
- Turnèn things off
- The giants in treädes
- The little worold
- Bad news
- The turnstile
- The better vor zeèn o‘ you
- Pity
- John Bloom in Lon‘on
- A lot o‘ maïdens a-runnèn the vields
- Textual Notes
- Appendix: A summary of sections 7 and 8 of WBPG
- List of Contributors
Summary
BY time's a-brought the mornèn light,
By time the light do weäne; wane
By time's a-brought the young man's might,
By time his might do weäne;
The Winter snow do whitèn grass,
The zummer flow'rs do brightèn grass,
Vor zome things we do lose wi’ païn,
We've mwore that mid be jaÿ to gaïn, may, joy
An’ my dear life do seem the seäme
While at my zide
There still do bide
Your welcome feäce an’ hwomely neäme.
Wi’ ev'ry day that woonce come on once
I had to choose a jaÿ,
Wi’ many that be since a-gone
I had to lose a jaÿ.
Drough longsome years a-wanderèn, through
Drough lwonesome rest a-ponderèn,
Woone peaceful daytime wer a-bro't one, brought
To heal the heart another smote;
But my dear life do seem the seäme
While I can hear,
A-soundèn near,
Your answ'rèn vaïce an’ long-call'd neäme.
An’ oh! that hope, when life do dawn,
Should rise to light our waÿ,
An’ then, wi’ weänèn het withdrawn, heat
Should soon benight our waÿ.
Whatever mid beval me still, may
Wherever chance mid call me still,
Though leäte my evenèn tweil mid cease, toil
An’ though my night mid lose its peace,
My life will seem to me the seäme
While you do sheäre
My daily ceäre,
An’ answer to your long-call'd neäme.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Sound of William Barnes's Dialect Poems , pp. 314 - 317Publisher: The University of Adelaide PressPrint publication year: 2017