Revised Edition of Poems. Bill o'th' Hoylus End

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Revised Edition of Poems - Bill o'th' Hoylus End


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days employ

      To raise themselves, no matter how,

         And better men destroy:

      How different is the mind of him,

         Whose deeds themselves are told,

      Who values worth more nobly far

         Than all the heaps of gold.

      His feast and revels are not such,

         As those we hear and see,

      No princely show does he indulge,

         Nor feats of revelry;

      But in the orphan schools they are,

         Or in the cot with her,

      The widow and the orphan of

         The shipwrecked mariner,

      When stricken down with age and care,

         His good old neighbours grieved,

      Or loss of family or mate,

         Or all on earth bereaved;

      Go see them in their houses,

         Where peace their days may end,

      And learn from them the name of him

         Who is their aged friend.

      With good and great his worth shall live,

         With high or lowly born;

      His name is on the scroll of fame,

         Sweet as the songs of morn;

      While tyranny and villany

         Is surely stamped with shame;

      A nation gives her patriot

         A never-dying fame.

      No empty titles ever could

         His principles subdue,

      His queen and country too he loved, —

         Was loyal and was true:

      He craved no boon from royalty,

         Nor wished their pomp to share,

      Far nobler is the soul of him,

         The founder of Saltaire.

      Thus lives this sage philanthropist,

         From courtly pomp removed,

      But not secluded from his friends,

         For frienship’s bond he loved;

      A noble reputation too

         Crowns all his latter days;

      The young men they admire him,

         And the aged they him praise.

      Long life to thee, Sir Titus,

         The darling of our town;

      Around thy head while living,

         We’ll weave a laurel crown.

      Thy monument in marble

         May suit the passer by,

      But a monument in all our hearts

         Will never, never die.

      And when thy days are over,

         And we miss thee on our isle,

      Around thy tomb for ever

         May unfading laurels smile:

      Then may the sweetest flowers

         Usher in the spring;

      And roses in the gentle gales,

         Their balmy odours fling.

      May summer’s beams shine sweetly,

         Upon thy hallowed clay,

      And yellow autumn o’er thy head,

         Yield many a placid ray;

      May winter winds blow slightly, —

         The green-grass softly wave,

      And falling snow drop lightly

         Upon thy honoured grave.

      Cowd az Leead

      An’ arta fra thi father torn,

      So early i’ thi youthful morn,

      An’ mun aw pine away forlorn,

            I’ grief an’ pain?

      Fer consolashun I sall scorn

            If tha be ta’en.

      O yes, tha art, an’ aw mun wail

      Thi loss through ivvery hill an’ dale,

      Fer nah it is too true a tale,

            Tha’rt cowd az leead.

      An’ nah thi bonny face iz pale,

            Tha’rt deead! tha’rt deead’!

      Aw’s miss tha when aw cum fra t’shop,

      An’ see thi bat, an’ ball, an’ top;

      An’ aw’s be ommust fit ta drop,

            Aw sall so freeat,

      An’ Oh! mi varry heart may stop

            An’ cease to beeat!

      Ah’d allus aimed, if tha’d been spar’d,

      Of summat better to hev shared

      Ner what thi poor owd father fared,

            I’ this cowd sphere;

      Yet, after all, aw’st noan o’ cared

            If tha’d stayed here.

      But O!  Tha Conquerer Divine,

      ’At vanquished deeath i’ Palestine,

      Tak to Thi arms this lad o’ mine

            Noan freely given;

      But mak him same as wun o’ Thine,

            Wi’ Thee i’ Heaven.

      The Factory Girl

      Shoo stud beside her looms an’ watch’d

         The shuttle passin’ through,

      But yet her soul wur sumweer else,

         ’Twor face ta face wi’ Joe.

      They saw her lips move as in speech,

         Yet none cud hear a word,

      An’ but fer t’grindin’ o’ the wheels,

         This language might be heard.

      “I’t’ spite o’ all thi treacherous art,

         At length aw breeathe again;

      The pityin’ stars hes tane mi part,

         An’ eas’d a wretch’s pain.

      An’ Oh! aw feel as fra a maze,

         Mi rescued soul is free,

      Aw knaw aw do not dream an daze

         I’ fancied liberty.

      “Extinguished nah is ivvery spark,

         No love for thee remains,

      Fer heart-felt love i’ vain sall strive

         Ta live, when tha disdains.

      No longer when thi name I hear,

         Mi conscious colour flies!

      No longer when


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