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Saturday, January 9, 2016

WILLIAM BARNES 1801-86


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ZUMMER AN' WINTER

When I led by zummer streams
The pride o' Lea, as naighbours thought her,
While the zun, wi' evenen beams,
Did cast our sheades athirt the water;
Winds a-blowen,
Streams a-flowen,
Skies a-glowen,
Tokens ov my jay zoo fleeten,
Heightened it, that happy meeten.

Then, when maid an' man took pleaces,
Gay in winter's Chris'mas dances,
Showen in their merry feaces
Kindly smiles an' glisnen glances;
Stars a-winken,
Day a-shrinken,
Sheades a-zinken,
Brought anew the happy meeten,
That did meake the night too fleeten. 

William Barnes was a Dorset clergyman whose poetry about local life soon made his name well-known. However, he was later writing on a variety of subjects including geography, mathematics and astronomy. Barnes is particularly remembered today for using the Dorset dialect in some of his poems.

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