WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Songs of the Ridings cover

Songs of the Ridings

Chapter 12: The Gardener and the Robin
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The collection contains twenty-five dialect poems, mainly dramatic monologues and character sketches that portray Yorkshire peasants, artisans, and farmers. Using local speech and rural scenes—farm work, hearthside gatherings, lamplighters, and seasonal customs—the verses evoke community life, regional pride, and anxieties about education and social change. The poems aim to make poetry accessible to working people by preserving local voice and rendering individual psychology through plain, dramatic address, showing both affectionate observation and critical reflection.

The Gardener and the Robin

Why! Bobbie, so thou’s coom agean!
    I’m fain to see thee here;
It’s lang sin I’ve set een on thee,
    It’s ommost hauf a yeer.
What’s that thou says? Thou’s taen a wife
    An’ raised a family.
It seems thou’s gien ’em all the slip
    Now back-end’s drawin’ nigh.

I mun forgi’e thee; we’re owd friends,
    An’ fratchin’s not for us;
Blackbirds an’ spinks
[1] I can’t abide,
    At doves an’ crows I cuss.
But thou’ll noan steal my strawberries,
    Or nip my buds o’ plum;
Most feather-fowl I drive away,
    But thou can awlus coom.

Ay, that’s thy place, at top o’ t’ clod,
    Thy heead cocked o’ one side,
Lookin’ as far-learnt as a judge.
    Is that a worrm thou’s spied?
By t’ Megs! he’s well-nigh six inch lang,
    An’ reed as t’ gate i’ t’ park;
If thou don’t mesh him up a bit,
    He’ll gie thee belly-wark.

My missus awlus lets me know
    I’m noan so despert thin;
If I ate sausages as thou
    Eats worrms, I’d brust my skin!
Howd on! leave soom for t’ mowdiwarps[2]
    That scrats down under t’ grund ;
Of worrms, an’ mawks,[3] an’ bummel-clocks[4]
    Thou’s etten hauf a pund.

So now thou’ll clear thy pipes an’ sing:
    Grace after meat, I s’pose.
Thou looks as holy as t’ owd saint
    I’ church wi’ t’ brokken nose.
Thou’s plannin’ marlocks[5] all the time,
    Donned i’ thy sowdier coat;
An’ what we tak for hymns o’ praise
    Is just thy fratchin’ note.

I’ve seen thee feightin’ theer on t’ lawn,
    Beneath yon laurel tree;
Thy neb was reed wi’ blooid, thou looked
    As chuffy[6] as could be.
Thou’s got no mense nor morals, Bob,
    But weel I know thy charm.
Ay, thou can stand upon my spade.
    I’ll niver do thee harm.

[1] Chaffinches.

[2] Moles.

[3] Maggots.

[4] Beetles.

[5] Tricks.

[6] Haughty.