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Spring: Bringen Woone Gwain O’ Zundays

Ah! John! how I do love to look
At theaese green hollor, an’ the brook
Among the withies that do hide
The stream, a-growen at the zide;
An’ at the road athirt the wide
 An’ shallow vword, where we young bwoys
 Did peaert, when we did goo half-woys,
   To bring ye gwain o’ Zundays.
 
Vor after church, when we got hwome,
In evenen you did always come
To spend a happy hour or two
Wi’ us, or we did goo to you;
An’ never let the comers goo
 Back hwome alwone, but always took
 A stroll down wi’ em to the brook
   To bring em gwain o’ Zundays.
 
How we did scote all down the groun’,
A-pushen woone another down!
Or challengen o’ zides in jumps
Down over bars, an’ vuzz, an’ humps;
An’ peaert at last wi’ slaps an’ thumps,
 An’ run back up the hill to zee
 Who’d get hwome soonest, you or we.
   That brought ye gwain o’ Zundays.
 
O’ leaeter years, John, you’ve a-stood
My friend, an’ I’ve a-done you good;
But tidden, John, vor all that you
Be now, that I do like ye zoo,
But what you wer vor years agoo:
 Zoo if you’d stir my heart-blood now.
 Tell how we used to play, an’ how
   You brought us gwain o’ Zundays.

“To bring woone gwain,”—to bring one going; to bring one on his way.

#1879 #EnglishWriters #PoemsOfRuralLife

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