The Church-Warden And The Curate

I.
Eh? good daĂ€y! good daĂ€y! thaw it beĂ€n’t not mooch of a daĂ€y,
Nasty, casselty (1) weather! an’ mea HaĂ€fe down wi’ my haĂ€y! (2)

II.
How be the farm gittin on? noĂ€ways. Gittin on i’deeĂ€d!
Why, tonups was HaĂ€fe on ’em fingers an’ toas, (3) an’ the mare brokken-kneeĂ€d,
An’ pigs didn’t sell at fall, (4) an’ wa lost wer Haldeny cow,
An’ it beĂ€ts ma to knaw wot she died on, but wool’s looking oop ony how.

III.
An’ soĂ€ they’ve maĂ€de tha a parson, an’ thou’ll git along, niver fear,
Fur I beĂ€n chuch-warden mysen i’ the parish fur fifteen year.
Well—sin ther beĂ€ chuch-wardens, ther mun be parsons an’ all,
An’ if t’öne stick alongside t’uther (5) the chuch weĂ€nt happen a fall.

IV.
Fur I wur a Baptis wonst, an’ ageĂ€n the toithe an’ the raĂ€te,
Till I fun (6) that it warn’t not the gaĂ€inist (7) waĂ€y to the narra GaĂ€te.
An’ I can’t abeĂ€r ’em, I can’t, fur a lot on ’em coom’d ta-year (8)—
I wur down wi’ the rheumatis then—to my pond to wesh thessens theere—
Sa I sticks like the ivin (9) as long as I lives to the owd chuch now,
Fur they wesh’d their sins i’ my pond, an’ I doubts they poison’d the cow.

V.
Ay, an’ ya seed the Bishop. They say’s ’at he coom’d fra nowt—
Burn i’ traĂ€de. Sa I warrants ’e niver said haĂ€fe wot ’e thowt,
But ’e creeĂ€pt an’ ’e crawl’d along, till ’e feeĂ€ld ’e could howd ’is oĂ€n,
Then ’e married a greĂ€t Yerl’s darter, an’ sits o’ the Bishop’s throan.

VI.
Now I’ll gie the a bit o’ my mind an’ tha weant be taakin’ offence,
Fur thou be a big scholard now wi’ a hoonderd haĂ€cre o’ sense—
But sich an obstropulous (10) lad—naay, naay—fur I minds tha sa well,
Tha’d niver not hopple (11) thy tongue, an’ the tongue’s sit afire o’ Hell,
As I says to my missis to-daĂ€y, when she hurl’d a plaĂ€te at the cat
An’ anoother ageĂ€n my noĂ€se. Ya was niver sa bad as that.

VII.
But I minds when i’ Howlaby beck won daĂ€y ya was ticklin’ o’ trout,
An’ keeĂ€per ’e seed ya an roon’d, an’ ’e beal’d (12) to ya ‘Lad coom hout’
An’ ya stood oop naĂ€kt i’ the beck, an’ ya tell’d ’im to knaw his awn plaĂ€ce
An’ ye call’d ’im a clown, ya did, an’ ya thraw’d the fish i’ ’is faĂ€ce,
An’ ’e torn’d (13) as red as a stag-tuckey’s (14) wattles, but theer an’ then
I coĂ€mb’d ’im down, fur I promised ya’d niver not do it ageĂ€n.

VIII.
An’ I cotch’d tha wonst i’ my garden, when thou was a height-year-howd, (15)
An’ I fun thy pockets as full o’ my pippins as iver they’d ’owd, (16)
An’ thou was as peĂ€rky (17) as owt, an’ tha maĂ€de me as mad as mad,
But I says to the ‘keeĂ€p ’em, an’ welcome’ fur thou was the Parson’s lad.

IX.
An Parson ’e ’ears on it all, an’ then taĂ€kes kindly to me,
An’ then I wur chose Chuch-warden an’ coom’d to the top o’ the tree,
Fur Quoloty’s hall my friends, an’ they maĂ€kes ma a help to the poor,
When I gits the plaĂ€te fuller o’ Soondays nor ony chuch-warden afoor,
Fur if iver thy feyther’ed riled me I kep’ mysen meeĂ€k as a lamb,
An’ saw by the GraĂ€ce o’ the Lord, Mr. Harry, I ham wot I ham.

X.
But Parson ’e will speĂ€k out, saw, now ’e be sixty-seven,
He’ll niver swap Owlby an’ Scratby fur owt but the Kingdom o’ Heaven:
An’ thou’II be ’is Curate ’ere, but, if iver tha meĂ€ns to git ’igher,
The mun tackle the sins o’ the Wo’ld, (18) an’ not the faults o’ the Squire.
An’ I reckons tha’ll light of a livin’ some-wheers i’ the Wowd (19) or the Fen,
If tha cottons down to thy betters, an’ keeĂ€ps thysen to thysen.
But niver not speÀk plaÀin out, if tha wants to git forrards a bit,
But creeĂ€p along the hedge-bottoms, an’ thou’ll be a Bishop yit.

XI.
NaĂ€y, but tha mun speĂ€k hout to the Baptises here i’ the town,
Fur moĂ€st on ’em talks ageĂ€n tithe, an’ I’d like the to preĂ€ch ’em down,
Fur they’ve bin a-preĂ€chin’ mea down, they heve, an’ I haĂ€tes ’em now,
Fur they leĂ€ved their nasty sins i’ my pond, an’ it poison’d the cow.