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Songs of the Ridings

Chapter 18: The Miller by the Shore an East Coast Chanty
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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 Miller by the Shore
an East Coast Chanty

The miller by the shore am I,
    A man o’ despert sense;
I’ve fotty different soorts o’ ways
    O’ addlin’ honest pence.
Good wheat and wuts and barley-corns
    My mill grinds all t’ day lang ;
Frae faave ’o t’ morn while seven o’ t’ neet
    My days are varra thrang.

Chorus

I mill a bit, I till a bit,
    I dee all maks ’o jobs,
Frae followin’ ploos and hollowin’ coos
    To mendin’ chairs and squabs.
[1]
Oh! folks they laugh and girn at me,
    I niver tak it ill;
If I’s the Jack ’o ivery trade,
    They all bring grist to t’ mill.

I tend my hunderd yakker farm,
    An’ milk my Kyloe kye.
I’ve Lincoln yowes an’ Leicester tups
    An’ twenty head ’o wye.[2]
I’ve stirks to tak to Scarbro’ mart,
    I’ve meers for farmers’ gigs;
And oh! I wish that you could see
    My laatle sookin’ pigs.

I mill a bit. ...

When summer days graws lang an’ breet,
    Oot cooms my “Noah’s Arks,”
Wheer city folk undriss theirsels
    An’ don my bathin’ sarks.[3]
An’ when they git on land agean,
    I rub’ em smooth as silk;
Then bring’ em oot, to fill their weeams,
    My parkin ceakes an’ milk.

I mill a bit. ...

I pike[4] stray timmer on the shore,
    An’ cuvins[5] on the scar;
I know wheer crabs ’ll hugger up,[6]
    I know wheer t’ lobsters are.
I’ve cobles fishin’ oot i’ t’ bay,
    For whitings, dabs and cods,
I’ve herrin’ trawls and salmon nets,
    I’ve hooks and lines and rods.

I mill a bit. ...

On darksome neets, back-end ’o t’ yeer,
    I like another sport;
I row my boat wheer t’ lugger lies,
    Coom frae some foreign port;
A guinea in a coastguard’s poke
    Will mak him steck his een ;
So he says nowt when I coom yam
    Wi’ scent and saccharine.

I mill a bit. ...

[1] Settles.

[2] Heifers.

[3] Shirts.

[4] Pick up.

[5] Periwinkles.

[6] Crowd together.