Tae pass a dreighy day
If'n yer oanythin lik masel ye'll no bae tae far travel't this
wather. Aye, it's oan oul, coul, wet, days lik tha yins wae hae noo that A hae
mine o ma mither lukkin’
oot tha winda an tellin' me, " thon's a day fer tha fire". Maun bit
it's a lucky man that haes his kindlin' split an his scuttles fu tae tha brim.
Bit yince yer settled whut dae ye dae. Fer thur’s niver oanythin worth watchin'
oan tha box an tha wireless disnae git guid tae tha nicht. Weel, if ye'll heed
me, January is a quare month tae git caught up wi tha readin'. Iver tha past
wheen o' years thur haes bin near a dizin o' tha oul Ulster-Scots classics
reprinted.
If lik masel yer fae tha Ardes, an even if yer no, ye cud dae a
hale locht worse thon tae git houl o' yin o' W.G. Lyttles buks tae pass a
dreighy day.
Tha buks ir scrieved in tha 'kail-yard' style that wus popular,
acroass tha scheugh, in Scotland at tha time. Yin o' tha main features o' this
style is it’s use o’ twa languages fer whiles tha
story is scrieved in English, aa tha taakin perts ir in Ulster-Scots. Noo es ye
ken Am near aye oan fer tha braid Scots tha hale road. Bit A hae tae admit its
no tha worst wye o’ wurkin.
Especially fer aa thon wha ir a wee bit mere hesitant in readin tha hamely
tongue.
If ye havnae read W. G. Lyttle A wud recommend ye tae stairt wi
'Betsy Grey and the Hearts of Down'. A story woven aroon oor ain folk an
history. Tha buk taks es bak tae 1798 whun Betsy an hir brither George alang wi hir fiance
Willie Boal tak pert in tha 'Turn oot', tha name gien tae tha United Irish
rebellion bye tha folk in tha Ardes. Tha buk follas brave Betsy fae tha Smidy
at tha sax road ends tae tha battle o' Ballynahinch whur shae faced tha muskets
an canons o tha King's sodjers. Aye tha dinnae mak them lik thon oany mere.
Tae nixt time lang may yer
lum reek an yer spicket dribble
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