The Weepen Leady

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When, leäte o' nights, above the green
  By thik wold house, the moon do sheen,
  A leädy there, a-hangèn low
  Her head, 's a-walkèn to an' fro
  In robes so white's the driven snow,
  Wi' woone eärm down, while woone do rest
  All lily-white athirt the breast
  O' thik poor weepèn leädy.

  The whirlèn wind an' whis'lèn squall
  Do sheäke the ivy by the wall,
  An' meäke the plyèn tree-tops rock,
  But never ruffle her white frock;
  An' slammèn door an' rattlèn lock,
  That in thik empty house do sound,
  Do never seem to meäke look round
  Thik ever downcast leädy.

  A leädy, as the teäle do goo,
  That woonce liv'd there, an' lov'd too true,
  Wer by a young man cast azide.
  A mother sad, but not a bride;
  An' then her father, in his pride
  An' anger, offer'd woone o' two
  Vull bitter things to undergoo
  To thik poor weepèn leädy:

  That she herzelf should leäve his door,
  To darken it ageän noo mwore;
  Or that her little plaÿsome chile,
  A-zent away a thousand mile,
  Should never meet her eyes to smile
  An' plaÿ ageän; till she, in sheäme,
  Should die an' leäve a tarnish'd neäme,
  A sad vorseäken leädy.

  "Let me be lost," she cried, "the while
  I do but know vor my poor chile;"
  An' left the hwome ov all her pride,
  To wander drough the worold wide,
  Wi' grief that vew but she ha' tried:
  An' lik' a flow'r a blow ha' broke,
  She wither'd wi' the deadly stroke,
  An' died a weepèn leädy.

  An' she do keep a-comèn on
  To zee her father dead an' gone,
  As if her soul could have noo rest
  Avore her teäry cheäk's a-prest
  By his vorgivèn kiss. Zoo blest
  Be they that can but live in love,
  An' vind a pleäce o' rest above
  Unlik' the weepèn leädy.

© William Barnes