Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Key to phonetic symbols
- Alternative pronunciations
- Table of common alternatives
- Introduction
- Second-Collection Poems with phonemic transcripts
- Blackmwore maïdens
- My orcha‘d in Lindèn Lea
- Bishop‘s Caundle
- Haÿ meäkèn—nunchen time
- A father out, an‘ mother hwome
- Riddles
- Day‘s work a-done
- Light or sheäde
- The waggon a-stooded
- Gwaïn down the steps vor water
- Ellen Brine ov Allenburn
- The motherless child
- The leädy‘s tower
- Fatherhood
- The Maïd o‘ Newton
- Childhood
- Meäry‘s smile
- Meäry wedded
- The stwonen bwoy upon the pillar
- The young that died in beauty
- Fair Emily of Yarrow Mill
- The scud
- Mindèn house
- The lovely maïd ov Elwell Meäd
- Our fathers‘ works
- The wold vo‘k dead
- Culver Dell and the squire
- Our be‘thplace
- The window freämed wi‘ stwone
- The water-spring in the leäne
- The poplars
- The linden on the lawn
- Our abode in Arby Wood
- Slow to come, quick agone
- The vier-zide
- Knowlwood
- Hallowed pleäces
- The wold wall
- Bleäke‘s house in Blackmwore
- John Bleäke at hwome at night
- Milkèn time
- When birds be still
- Ridèn hwome at night
- Zun-zet
- Spring
- The zummer hedge
- The water crowvoot
- The lilac
- The blackbird [II]
- The slantèn light o‘ fall
- Thissledown
- The maÿ-tree
- Lydlinch bells
- The stage coach
- Wayfeärèn
- The leäne
- The raïlroad [I]
- The raïlroad [II]
- Seats
- Sound o‘ water
- Trees be company
- A pleäce in zight
- Gwaïn to Brookwell
- Brookwell
- The shy man
- The winter‘s willow
- I know who
- Jessie Lee
- True love
- The beän vield
- Wold friends a-met
- Fifehead
- Ivy Hall
- False friends-like
- The bachelor
- Married peäir‘s love walk
- A wife a-praïs‘d
- The wife a-lost
- The thorns in the geäte
- Angels by the door
- Vo‘k a-comèn into church
- Woone rule
- Good Meäster Collins
- Herrenston
- Out at plough
- The bwoat
- The pleäce our own ageän
- Eclogue: John an‘ Thomas
- Pentridge by the river
- Wheat
- The meäd in June
- Early risèn
- Zellèn woone‘s honey to buy zome‘hat sweet
- Dobbin dead
- Happiness
- Gruffmoody Grim
- The turn o‘ the days
- The sparrow club
- Gammony Gaÿ
- The heäre
- Nanny Gill
- Moonlight on the door
- My love‘s guardian angel
- Leeburn Mill
- Praïse o‘ Do‘set
- Textual notes
- Appendix: A summary of sections 7 and 8 of WBPG
- By the same author
The young that died in beauty
from Second-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
- Second-Collection Poems with phonemic transcripts
- Blackmwore maïdens
- My orcha‘d in Lindèn Lea
- Bishop‘s Caundle
- Haÿ meäkèn—nunchen time
- A father out, an‘ mother hwome
- Riddles
- Day‘s work a-done
- Light or sheäde
- The waggon a-stooded
- Gwaïn down the steps vor water
- Ellen Brine ov Allenburn
- The motherless child
- The leädy‘s tower
- Fatherhood
- The Maïd o‘ Newton
- Childhood
- Meäry‘s smile
- Meäry wedded
- The stwonen bwoy upon the pillar
- The young that died in beauty
- Fair Emily of Yarrow Mill
- The scud
- Mindèn house
- The lovely maïd ov Elwell Meäd
- Our fathers‘ works
- The wold vo‘k dead
- Culver Dell and the squire
- Our be‘thplace
- The window freämed wi‘ stwone
- The water-spring in the leäne
- The poplars
- The linden on the lawn
- Our abode in Arby Wood
- Slow to come, quick agone
- The vier-zide
- Knowlwood
- Hallowed pleäces
- The wold wall
- Bleäke‘s house in Blackmwore
- John Bleäke at hwome at night
- Milkèn time
- When birds be still
- Ridèn hwome at night
- Zun-zet
- Spring
- The zummer hedge
- The water crowvoot
- The lilac
- The blackbird [II]
- The slantèn light o‘ fall
- Thissledown
- The maÿ-tree
- Lydlinch bells
- The stage coach
- Wayfeärèn
- The leäne
- The raïlroad [I]
- The raïlroad [II]
- Seats
- Sound o‘ water
- Trees be company
- A pleäce in zight
- Gwaïn to Brookwell
- Brookwell
- The shy man
- The winter‘s willow
- I know who
- Jessie Lee
- True love
- The beän vield
- Wold friends a-met
- Fifehead
- Ivy Hall
- False friends-like
- The bachelor
- Married peäir‘s love walk
- A wife a-praïs‘d
- The wife a-lost
- The thorns in the geäte
- Angels by the door
- Vo‘k a-comèn into church
- Woone rule
- Good Meäster Collins
- Herrenston
- Out at plough
- The bwoat
- The pleäce our own ageän
- Eclogue: John an‘ Thomas
- Pentridge by the river
- Wheat
- The meäd in June
- Early risèn
- Zellèn woone‘s honey to buy zome‘hat sweet
- Dobbin dead
- Happiness
- Gruffmoody Grim
- The turn o‘ the days
- The sparrow club
- Gammony Gaÿ
- The heäre
- Nanny Gill
- Moonlight on the door
- My love‘s guardian angel
- Leeburn Mill
- Praïse o‘ Do‘set
- Textual notes
- Appendix: A summary of sections 7 and 8 of WBPG
- By the same author
Summary
IF souls should only sheen so bright shine
In heaven as in e'thly light, earthly
An’ nothèn better wer the ceäse,
How comely still, in sheäpe an’ feäce,
Would many reach thik happy pleäce,— that
The hopeful souls that in their prime
Ha’ seem'd a-took avore their time—
The young that died in beauty.
But when woone's lim's ha’ lost their strangth one's
A-tweilèn drough a lifetime's langth, toiling through
An’ over cheäks a-growèn wold old
The slowly-weästen years ha’ rolled
The deep'nèn wrinkle's hollow vwold; fold
When life is ripe, then death do call
Vor less ov thought, than when do vall
On young vo'ks in their beauty. folk
But pinèn souls, wi’ heads a-hung
In heavy sorrow vor the young,
The sister ov the brother dead,
The father wi’ a child a-vled, flown
The husband when his bride ha’ laid
Her head at rest, noo mwore to turn,
Have all a-vound the time to murn mourn
Vor youth that died in beauty.
An’ yeet the church, where praÿer do rise yet
Vrom thoughtvul souls, wi’ downcast eyes,
An’ village greens, a-beät half beäre bare
By dancers that do meet, an’ weär
Such merry looks at feäst an’ feäir,
Do gather under leätest skies,
Their bloomèn cheäks an’ sparklèn eyes,
Though young ha’ died in beauty.
But still the dead shall mwore than keep
The beauty ov their eärly sleep;
Where comely looks shall never weär
Uncomely, under tweil an’ ceäre. toil
The feäir at death be always feäir,
Still feäir to livers’ thought an’ love,
An’ feäirer still to God above,
Than when they died in beauty.
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- Information
- The Sound of William Barnes's Dialect Poems , pp. 124 - 127Publisher: The University of Adelaide PressPrint publication year: 2017