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Songs of the Ridings

Chapter 7: Our Beck
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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.

Our Beck

I niver heerd its name; we call it just “Our beck.”
    Mebbe, there’s bigger streams down Ripon way;
But if thou wants clean watter, by my neck!
    Thou’ll travel far for cleaner, ony day.

Clear watter! Why, when t’ sun is up i’ t’ sky,
    I’ve seen yon flickerin’ shadows o’ lile trout
Glidin’ ower t’ shingly boddom. Step thou nigh,
    An’ gloor at t’ minnows dartin’ in an’ out.

Our beck flows straight frae slacks o’ moorland peat,
    An’ gethers sweetness out o’ t’ ling an’ gorse;
At first its voice sounds weantly
[1] saft an’ leet,
    But graws i’ strength wi’ lowpin ower yon force.

Then thou sud see the birds alang its banks—
    Grey heronsews, that coom to fish at dawn;
Dippers, that under t’ watter play sike pranks,
    An’ lang-nebbed curlews, swaimish[2] as a fawn.

Soomtimes I’ve seen young otters leave their holes,
    An’ laik like kitlins ower the silver dew;
An’ I’ve watched squirrels climmin’ up the boles
    O’ beech trees, lowpin’ leet frae beugh to beugh.

Fowers! Why, thou’d fill thy skep,[3] lass, in an hour,
    Wi’ gowlands, paigles, blobs,[4] an’ sike-like things;
We’ve daffydills to deck a bridal bower,
    Pansies, wheer lady-cows[5] can dry their wings.

Young childer often bathe, when t’weather’s fine,
    Up yonder, wheer t’ owd miller’s bigged his weir;
I like to see their lish,[6] nakt bodies shine,
    An’ watch ’em dive i’ t’ watter widoot fear.

Ay, yon’s our brig, bent like an archer’s bow,
    It’s t’ meetin’ place o’ folk frae near an’ far;
Young ’uns coom theer wi’ lasses laughin’ low,
    Owd ’uns to talk o’ politics an’ t’ war.

It’s daft when chaps that sit i’ Parliament
    Weant tak advice frae lads that talk farm-twang;
If t’ coontry goes to t’ dogs, it’s ’cause they’ve sent
    Ower mony city folk to mend what’s wrang.

They’ve taen our day-tale men[7] to feight for t’ land,
    Then tell us we mun keep our staggarths[8] full.
What’s lasses, gauvies,[9] greybeards stark[10] i’ t’ hand,
    To strip wer kye, an’ ploo, an’ tew wi’ t’ shool?[11]

But theer, I’ll nurse my threapin’ while it rains,
    An’ while my rheumatiz is bad to bide;
I mun step heamwards now, through t’ yatts[12] an’ lanes,
    Wheer t’ owd lass waits for me by t’ fireside.

[1] Strangely.

[2] Timid.

[3] Basket.

[4] Kingcups, cowslips, globe-flowers.

[5] Ladybirds.

[6] Smooth.

[7] Day Labourers.

[8] Stock Yards.

[9] Simpletons.

[10] Stiff.

[11] Shovel.

[12] Gates.