I.
Eh? good daĂ€y! good daĂ€y! thaw it beĂ€nât not mooch of a daĂ€y,
Nasty, casselty (1) weather! anâ mea HaĂ€fe down wiâ my haĂ€y! (2)
II.
How be the farm gittin on? noĂ€ways. Gittin on iâdeeĂ€d!
Why, tonups was HaĂ€fe on âem fingers anâ toas, (3) anâ the mare brokken-kneeĂ€d,
Anâ pigs didnât sell at fall, (4) anâ wa lost wer Haldeny cow,
Anâ it beĂ€ts ma to knaw wot she died on, but woolâs looking oop ony how.
III.
Anâ soĂ€ theyâve maĂ€de tha a parson, anâ thouâll git along, niver fear,
Fur I beĂ€n chuch-warden mysen iâ the parish fur fifteen year.
Wellâsin ther beĂ€ chuch-wardens, ther mun be parsons anâ all,
Anâ if tâöne stick alongside tâuther (5) the chuch weĂ€nt happen a fall.
IV.
Fur I wur a Baptis wonst, anâ ageĂ€n the toithe anâ the raĂ€te,
Till I fun (6) that it warnât not the gaĂ€inist (7) waĂ€y to the narra GaĂ€te.
Anâ I canât abeĂ€r âem, I canât, fur a lot on âem coomâd ta-year (8)â
I wur down wiâ the rheumatis thenâto my pond to wesh thessens theereâ
Sa I sticks like the ivin (9) as long as I lives to the owd chuch now,
Fur they weshâd their sins iâ my pond, anâ I doubts they poisonâd the cow.
V.
Ay, anâ ya seed the Bishop. They sayâs âat he coomâd fra nowtâ
Burn iâ traĂ€de. Sa I warrants âe niver said haĂ€fe wot âe thowt,
But âe creeĂ€pt anâ âe crawlâd along, till âe feeĂ€ld âe could howd âis oĂ€n,
Then âe married a greĂ€t Yerlâs darter, anâ sits oâ the Bishopâs throan.
VI.
Now Iâll gie the a bit oâ my mind anâ tha weant be taakinâ offence,
Fur thou be a big scholard now wiâ a hoonderd haĂ€cre oâ senseâ
But sich an obstropulous (10) ladânaay, naayâfur I minds tha sa well,
Thaâd niver not hopple (11) thy tongue, anâ the tongueâs sit afire oâ Hell,
As I says to my missis to-daĂ€y, when she hurlâd a plaĂ€te at the cat
Anâ anoother ageĂ€n my noĂ€se. Ya was niver sa bad as that.
VII.
But I minds when iâ Howlaby beck won daĂ€y ya was ticklinâ oâ trout,
Anâ keeĂ€per âe seed ya an roonâd, anâ âe bealâd (12) to ya âLad coom houtâ
Anâ ya stood oop naĂ€kt iâ the beck, anâ ya tellâd âim to knaw his awn plaĂ€ce
Anâ ye callâd âim a clown, ya did, anâ ya thrawâd the fish iâ âis faĂ€ce,
Anâ âe tornâd (13) as red as a stag-tuckeyâs (14) wattles, but theer anâ then
I coĂ€mbâd âim down, fur I promised yaâd niver not do it ageĂ€n.
VIII.
Anâ I cotchâd tha wonst iâ my garden, when thou was a height-year-howd, (15)
Anâ I fun thy pockets as full oâ my pippins as iver theyâd âowd, (16)
Anâ thou was as peĂ€rky (17) as owt, anâ tha maĂ€de me as mad as mad,
But I says to the âkeeĂ€p âem, anâ welcomeâ fur thou was the Parsonâs lad.
IX.
An Parson âe âears on it all, anâ then taĂ€kes kindly to me,
Anâ then I wur chose Chuch-warden anâ coomâd to the top oâ the tree,
Fur Quolotyâs hall my friends, anâ they maĂ€kes ma a help to the poor,
When I gits the plaĂ€te fuller oâ Soondays nor ony chuch-warden afoor,
Fur if iver thy feytherâed riled me I kepâ mysen meeĂ€k as a lamb,
Anâ saw by the GraĂ€ce oâ the Lord, Mr. Harry, I ham wot I ham.
X.
But Parson âe will speĂ€k out, saw, now âe be sixty-seven,
Heâll niver swap Owlby anâ Scratby fur owt but the Kingdom oâ Heaven:
Anâ thouâII be âis Curate âere, but, if iver tha meĂ€ns to git âigher,
The mun tackle the sins oâ the Woâld, (18) anâ not the faults oâ the Squire.
Anâ I reckons thaâll light of a livinâ some-wheers iâ the Wowd (19) or the Fen,
If tha cottons down to thy betters, anâ 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, anâ thouâll be a Bishop yit.
XI.
NaĂ€y, but tha mun speĂ€k hout to the Baptises here iâ the town,
Fur moĂ€st on âem talks ageĂ€n tithe, anâ Iâd like the to preĂ€ch âem down,
Fur theyâve bin a-preĂ€chinâ mea down, they heve, anâ I haĂ€tes âem now,
Fur they leĂ€ved their nasty sins iâ my pond, anâ it poisonâd the cow.