this day or else he’ll sooin’ be left
behund. Ther’s some absent minded fowk
think they get on varry weel i’th’ owd
way an’ they’re quite content, but its
nobbut becoss they’re too absent minded to see
ha mich better they mud ha done if they’d wakken’d
up a bit sooiner. Aw once knew a varry absent
minded chap; he wur allus dooin’ some sooart
o’ wrang heeaded tricks. Aw’ remember
once we’d booath to sleep i’ one bed, an
aw gate in fust, an’ when aw luk’d to
see if he wor commin’, aw’m blow’d!
if he hadn’t put his cloas into bed an hung
hissen ovver th’ cheer back. Awm sure aw
connot tell where all this marchin’ is likely
to lead us to at last, but aw hooap we shall be all
reight, for aw do think ther’s plenty o’
room to mend even yet, but the deuce on it is,’
ther’s soa monny different notions abaat what
is reight wol aw’m flamigaster’d amang
it. Some say drink is the besetting sin; another
says ‘bacca is man’s ruination. One
says we’re all goin’ to the devil becoss
we goa to church, an’ another says we’st
niver goa to heaven if we goa to th’ chapel,
but aw dooant let ony o’ them things bother me.
‘At ther is a deeal o’ sin i’th’
world aw dooant deny, an’, aw think ther is
one ‘at just bears th’ same relation to
other sins as a split ring bears to a bunch o’
keys; it’s one ‘at all t’other things
on: an’ that’s
selfishness,
an we’ve all sadly too mich o’ that.
We follow that “number one” doctrine
sadly too mich,—iverybody seems bent o’
gettin, but ther’s varry few think o’ givin’—(unless
its advice, ther’s any on ’em ready enuff
to give that; but if advice wor stuff ‘at they
could buy potatoes wi’, ther’ wodn’t
be as mich o’ that knockin’ abaat for
nowt as ther’ is).
We’re all varry apt to know the messur o’
ivrybody’s heead but us own; we can tell when
a cap fits them directly, but we con niver tell when
ther’s one ’at just fits us. Miss
Parsnip said last Sunday, when shoo’d been to
th’ chapel, “at shoo wondered ha Mrs. Cauliflaar
could fashion to hold her heead up, for shoo niver
heeard a praicher hit onybody harder in all her life,”
An’ Mrs. Cauliflaar tell’d me “’at
if shoo wor Miss Parsnip shoo’d niver put her
heead i’ that chapel ageean, for iverybody knew
‘at he meant her’ when he wor tawkin’
abaat backbitin’.” An’soa
it is; we luk at other fowk’s faults through
th’ thin end o’ th’ spy glass, but
when we want to look at us own, we turn it raand.
“O, wad some power the giftie
gie us
To see oursels as others see us,
It wad fra many a blunder free us
An’ foolish notion.
What airs in dress an’ g’ait wad lea’
us
An’ ev’n devotion.”
Selfishness may do varry weel for this world, but
we should remember it isn’t th gooid one does
to hissen ’at he gets rewarded for after—
it’s th’ gooid he does to others, an’
although we may be able to mak’ a spreead here,
wi’ fine clooas, fine haases, an’ sich
like; unless we put selfishness o’ one side
an’ practise charity it’ll be noa use
then.