1
Milk for my sweet-arts, Bess! fur it mun be the time about now
When dolly cooms in fro the far-end close wi her paäils fro the cow.
Eh! tha be new to the plaäcethourt gaäpindoesnt tha see
I calls em arter the fellers es once was sweet upo me?
II
Naäy to be sewer it be past er time. What maäkes er sa laäte?
Goa to the laäne at the back, an looök thruf Maddisons gaäte!
III
Sweet-arts! Molly belike may a lighted to-night upo one.
Sweet-arts! thanks to the Lord that I niver not listend to noän!
So I sits i my oän armchair wi my oän kettle theere o the hob,
An Tommy the fust, an Tommy the second, an Steevie an Rob.
IV
Rob, coom cop ere o my knee. Thou sees that i spite o the men
I a kep thruf thick an thin my two oonderd a-year to mysen;
Yis! thaw tha calld me es pretty es ony lass i the Shere;
An thou be es pretty a Tabby, but Robby I seed thruf ya theere.
V
Feyther ud saäy I wur ugly es sin, an I beänt not vaäin,
But I niver wur downright hugly, thaw soom ud a thowt ma plaäin,
An I wasnt sa plaäin i pink ribbons, ye said I wur pretty i pinks,
An I liked to ear it I did, but I brunt sich a fool as ye thinks;
Ye was stroäkin ma down wi the air, as I be a-stroäkin o you,
But whiniver I looöked i the glass I wur sewer that it couldnt be true;
Niver wur pretty, not I, but ye knawd it wur pleasant to ear,
Thaw it warnt not me es wur pretty, but my two oonderd a-year.
VI
Dya mind the murnin when we was a-walkin togither, an stood
By the claäyd-oop pond, that the foalk be sa scared at, i Gigglesby wood,
Wheer the poor wench drowndid hersen, black Sal, esed been disgraäced?
An I feeld thy arm es I stood wur a-creeäpin about my waäist;
An me es wur allus afeard of a mans gittin over fond,
I sidled awaäy an awaäy till I plumpt foot fust i the pond;
And, Robby, I niver a liked tha sa well, as I did that daäy,
Fur tha joompt in thysen, an tha hoickt my feet wi a flop fro the claäy.
Ay, stick oop thy back, an set oop thy taäil, tha may gie ma a kiss,
Fur I walkd wi tha all the way hoam an wur niver sa nigh saäyin Yis.
But wa boath was i sich a clat we was shaämed to cross Gigglesby Greeän,
Fur a cat may looök at a king thou knaws but the cat mun be clean.
Sa we boäth on us kep out o sight o the winders o Gigglesby Hinn
Naäy, but the claws o tha! quiet! they pricks clean thruf to the skin
An wa boäth slinkt oäm by the brokken shed i the laäne at the back,
Wheer the poodle runnd at tha once, an thou runnd oop o the thack;
An tha squeedgd my and i the shed, fur theere we was forced to ide,
Fur I seed that Steevie wur coomin, and one o the Tommies beside.
VII
Theere now, what art a mewin at, Steevie? for owt I can tell
Robby wur fust to be sewer, or I mowt a liked tha as well.
VIII
But, Robby, I thowt o tha all the while I wur chaängin my gown,
An I thowt shall I chaänge my staäte? but, O Lord, upo coomin down
My bran-new carpet es fresh es a midder o flowers i Maäy
Why ednt tha wiped thy shoes? it wur clatted all ower wi claäy.
An I could a cried ammost, fur I seed that it couldnt be,
An Robby I gied tha a raätin that sattled thy coortin o me.
An Molly an me was agreed, as we was a-cleanin the floor,
That a man be a durty thing an a trouble an plague wi indoor.
But I rued it arter a bit, fur I stuck to tha moor na the rest,
But I couldnt a lived wi a man an I knaws it be all fur the best.
IX
Naäylet ma stroäk tha down till I maäkes tha es smooth es silk,
But if I ed married tha, Robby, thoud not a been worth thy milk,
Thoud niver a cotchd ony mice but a left me the work to do,
And a taäen to the bottle beside, so es all that I ears be true;
But I loovs tha to maäke thysen appy, an soa purr awaäy, my dear,
Thou ed wellnigh purrd ma awaäy fro my oän two oonderd a-year.
X
Sweärin agean, you Toms, as ye used to do twelve year sin!
Ye niver eärd Steevie swear cep it wur at a dog coomin in,
An boath o ye mun be fools to be hallus a-shawin your claws,
Fur I niver cared nothink for neitheran one o ye deäd ye knaws!
Coom give hoäver then, weant ye? I warrant ye soom fine daäy
Theere, dig downI shall hew to gie one or tother awaäy.
Cant ye taäke pattern by Steevie? ye shant hew a drop fro the paäil.
Steevie be right good manners bang thruf to the tip o the taäil.
Xl.
Robby, git down witha, wilt tha? let Steevie coom oop o my knee.
Steevie, my lad, thou ed very nigh been the Steevie fur me!
Robby wur fust to be sewer, e wur burn an bred i the ouse,
But thou be es ansom a tabby es iver patted a mouse.
XII
An I beänt not vaäin, but I knaws I ed led tha a quieter life
Nor her wi the hepitaph yonder! A faäithfnl an loovin wife!
An cos o thy farm by the beck, an thy windmill oop o the croft,
Tha thowt tha would marry ma, did tha? but that wur a bit ower soft,
Thaw thou was es soäber es daäy, wi a niced red faäce, an es cleän
Es a shillin fresh fro the mint wi a bran-new eäd o the Queeän,
An thy farmin es cleän es thysen, fur, Steevie, tha kep it sa neät
That I niver not spied sa much es a poppy along wi the wheät,
An the wool of a thistle a-flyin an seeädin tha haäted to see;
Twur es bad es a battle-twig1 ere i my oän blue chaumber to me.
Ay, roob thy whiskers ageän ma, fur I could a taäen to tha well,
But fur thy bairns, poor Steevie, a bouncin boy an a gell.
XIII
An thou was es fond o thy bairns es I be mysen o my cats,
But I niver not wishd fur childer, I hevnt naw likin fur brats;
Pretty anew when ya dresses em oop, an they goäs fur a walk,
Or sits wi their ands afoor em, an doesnt not inder the talk!
But their bottles o pap, an their mucky bibs, an the clats an the clouts,
An their mashin their toys to pieäces an maäkin ma deaf wi their shouts,
An hallus a-joompin about ma as if they was set upo springs,
An a haxin ma hawkard questions, an saäyin ondecent things,
Alt a-callin ma hugly mayhap to my faäce, or a teärin my gown
Dear! dear! dear! I mun part them TommiesSteevie git down.
XIV
Ye be wuss nor the men-tommies, you. I telld ya, na moor o that!
Tom, lig theere o the cushion, an tother Tom ere o the mat.
XV
Theere! I ha masterd them! Hed I married the TommiesO Lord,
To loove an obaäy the Tommies! I couldnt a stuck by my word.
To be horderd about, an waäked, when Molly d put out the light,
By a man coomin in wi a hiccup at ony hour o the night!
An the taäble staäind wi is aäle, an the mud o is boots o the stairs,
An the stink o is pipe i the ouse, an the mark o is eäd o the chairs!
An noun o my four sweet-arts ud a let me a led my oän waäy,
Sa I likes em best wi taäils when they evnt a word to saäy.
XVII
An I sits i my oän little parlour, an sarved by my oän little lass,
Wi my oän little garden outside, an my oän bed o sparrow-grass,
An my oän door-poorch wi the woodbine an jessmine a-dressin it greeän,
An my oän fine Jackman i purple a roäbin the ouse like a Queeän.
XVII
An the little gells bobs to ma hoffens es I be abroad i the laänes,
When I goäs fur to coomfut the poor es be down wi their haäches an their paäins:
An a haäf-pot o jam, or a mossel o meät when it beänt too dear,
They maäkes ma a graäter Laädy nor er i the mansion theer,
Hes es hallus to hax of a man how much to spare or to spend;
An a spinster I be an I will be, if soä pleäse God, to the hend.
XVIII
Mew! mew!Bess wi the milk! what ha maäde our Molly sa laäte?
It should a been ere by seven, an theereit be strikin height
Cushie wur craäzed furer cauf wellI eärd er a maäkin er moän,
An I thowt to mysen thank God that I hevnt naw cauf o my oän.
Theere!
Set it down!
Now Robby!
You Tommies shall waäit to-night
Till Robby an Steevie es ed their lapan it sarves ye right.
The Spinsters Sweet-Arts
Alfred Lord Tennyson
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