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Songs of the Ridings

Chapter 26: A Song of the Yorkshire Dales
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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.

A Song of the Yorkshire Dales

A song I sing o’ t’ Yorkshire dales,
    That Winnd frae t’ moors to t’ sea;
Frae t’ breast o’ t’ fells, wheer t’ cloud-rack sails,
    Their becks flow merrily.
Their banks are breet wi’ moss an’ broom,
    An’ sweet is t’ scent o’ t’ thyme;
You can hark to t’ bees’ saft, dreamy soom
[1]
    I’ t’ foxglove bells an’ t’ lime.

Chorus

O! Swawdill’s good for horses, an’ Wensladill for cheese,
    An’ Airedill fowk are busy as a bee;
            But wheersoe’er I wander,
            My owd heart aye grows fonder
O Whardill, wheer I’ll lig me down an’ dee.

Reet bonny are our dales i’ March,
    When t’ curlews tak to t’ moors,
There’s ruddy buds on ivery larch,
    Primroses don their floors.
But bonnier yet when t’ August sun
    Leets up yon plats o’ ling;
An’ gert white fishes lowp an’ scun,[2]
    Wheer t’ weirs ower t’ watter hing.

O! Swawdillls good...

By ivery beck an abbey sleeps,
    An’ t’ ullet is t’ owd prior.
A jackdaw thruf each windey peeps,
    An’ bigs his nest i’ t’ choir.
In ivery dale a castle stands—
    Sing, Clifford, Percy, Scrope!—
They threaped amang theirsels for t’ lands,
    But fowt for t’ King or t’ Pope.

O! Swawdill’s good...

O! Eastward ho! is t’ song o’ t’ gales,
    As they sweep ower fell an’ lea;
And Eastward ho! is t’ song o’ t’ dales,
    That winnd frae t’ moors to t’ sea.
Coom winter frost, coom summer druft,
    Their watters munnot bide;
An’ t’ rain that’s fall’n when bould winds soughed
    Sal iver seawards glide.

O! Swawdill’ s good...

[1] Hum.

[2] Leap and dart away.