Read full poem →Why, I was coming ’ome.
I’d ’a been yere before, but I lost my way,
Got buried in the snow. Then I ’eard you
Origin
Origin details are still being enriched for this entry.
Common Phrases
Poetry examples for “d”
Excerpts from the ReadingWillow English Library collection.
Read full poem →enough, he liked his fireside, and he liked his bed when I was by ’im.
Ah! And then one day he’d ’ad enough of comfort, and was off,--looking
for what? ’Ardship? He might have ’ad that ’ere if he’d but stayed.
Read full poem →A-building him, we didn’t ever know
How big he’d get to be--he seemed to grow
All by himself!
Read full poem →Soon as my back is turned. That heap o’ snow
How long’s that to stay there, I’d like to know?
Here, take your milk, and there’s a bit o’ bread
Read full poem →Where shall one halt to deliver
This luggage I'd lief set down?
Not Thames, not Teme is the river,
Read full poem →Be clean then; rot before you do
A thing they'd not believe of you.
You and I must keep from shame
Read full poem →This time of year a twelvemmonth past .
Along the field as we came by d «
Is my team ploughing . 2 : ;
Read full poem →Was there a chief but melted at the sight?
A common soldier, but who clubb'd his mite?
Such, such emotions should in Britons rise,
Read full poem →Fain I'd in Fulvia spy the tender wife;
I cannot prove it on her, for my life:
Read full poem →Where one lean herring furnish'd Cotta's board,
And nettles grew, fit porridge for their lord;
