Yorkshire Dialect Poems (1673-1915) and traditional poems






Heam, Sweet Heam (1914)

     A. C. Watson

     When oft at neet I wanders heame
     To cosy cot an' busy deame,
     My hardest day's wark seems but leet,
     When I can get back heame at neet,
     My wife an' bairns to sit besaade,
     Aroond my awn bit firesaade.
     What comfort there's i' steep(1) for me,
     A laatle prattler on my knee!
     What tales I have to listen tea!
     But just at fost there's sike to-dea
     As niver was. Each laatle dot
     Can fain agree for t' fav'rite spot.
     Sike problems they can set for me
     'T wad puzzle waaser heeads mebbe.
     An' questions hawf a scoor they ask,
     To answer' em wad prove a task;
     For laatle thowts stray far away
     To things mysterious, oot o' t' way.
     An' then sike toffer(2) they torn oot,
     An' pratty lips begin to poot,
     If iverything's nut stowed away
     To cumulate frae day to day.
     Sike treasures they could niver spare,
     But gether mair an' mair an' mair
     In ivery pocket. I've nea doot
     They've things they think the wo'ld aboot.
     An' when their bed-taame's drawin' nigh,
     Wi' heavy heead an' sleepy eye,
     It's vary laatle din they mak,
     But slyly try a nap to tak.
     An' when on t' lats(3) they've gone aboon,
     I fills my pipe an' sattles do on
     To have a comfortable smewk.
     An' then at t' news I has a lewk;
     Or hods a bit o' talk wi' t' wife,
     The praade an' comfort o' my life.
     Cawd winds may blaw, an' snaw-flakes flee,
     An' neets may be beath lang an' dree,
     Or it may rain an' rain agean,
     Sea lang as I've my day's wark dean,
     I wadn't swap my humble heame
     For bigger hoose or finer neame.
     If all could as contented be,
     There'd be mair joy an' less mis'ry.

     1. In store.  2. Odds and ends. 3. Laths.

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