THE APPLE-MAN FROMAWBRIDGE
While I stand upon the pavement and I dress the dusty stall,Where they sell the travelled apples, I bethink me most of allHow the Quarentines are ripening in Michelmarsh againAnd the Apple-man from Awbridge comes a-clinking up the lane.Sweet and slim the Ladies’ Fingers fall around you as you pass,And the Hollycores are mellow by the pig-hole in the grass,’Tis but green they look, you pluck them, and you list the ratt’ling core—And the Apple-man from Awbridge comes a-chaffering at the door.Then the first baked batch of Profits, ’twas a treat my mother planned,Drew them foaming from the oven with the dishcloth round her hand,She who poured the amber cider to the pewter’s polished brinkAnd the Apple-man from Awbridge wet the bargain with a drink.For he buys them by the bushel and he buys them on the treesAnd he sends them from the orchard plot to places such as these;And there’s money in your pocket and a hollow at your heartWhen the Apple-man from Awbridge comes a-loading of his cart.And maybe the nameless apples on the stall in Fulham RoadOnce were piled behind his pony in that fresh and fragrant loadAnd maybe it was my mother pulled the Ladies’ Fingers down;And the Apple-man from Awbridge turned them over to the town.
While I stand upon the pavement and I dress the dusty stall,Where they sell the travelled apples, I bethink me most of allHow the Quarentines are ripening in Michelmarsh againAnd the Apple-man from Awbridge comes a-clinking up the lane.Sweet and slim the Ladies’ Fingers fall around you as you pass,And the Hollycores are mellow by the pig-hole in the grass,’Tis but green they look, you pluck them, and you list the ratt’ling core—And the Apple-man from Awbridge comes a-chaffering at the door.Then the first baked batch of Profits, ’twas a treat my mother planned,Drew them foaming from the oven with the dishcloth round her hand,She who poured the amber cider to the pewter’s polished brinkAnd the Apple-man from Awbridge wet the bargain with a drink.For he buys them by the bushel and he buys them on the treesAnd he sends them from the orchard plot to places such as these;And there’s money in your pocket and a hollow at your heartWhen the Apple-man from Awbridge comes a-loading of his cart.And maybe the nameless apples on the stall in Fulham RoadOnce were piled behind his pony in that fresh and fragrant loadAnd maybe it was my mother pulled the Ladies’ Fingers down;And the Apple-man from Awbridge turned them over to the town.
While I stand upon the pavement and I dress the dusty stall,Where they sell the travelled apples, I bethink me most of allHow the Quarentines are ripening in Michelmarsh againAnd the Apple-man from Awbridge comes a-clinking up the lane.
Sweet and slim the Ladies’ Fingers fall around you as you pass,And the Hollycores are mellow by the pig-hole in the grass,’Tis but green they look, you pluck them, and you list the ratt’ling core—And the Apple-man from Awbridge comes a-chaffering at the door.
Then the first baked batch of Profits, ’twas a treat my mother planned,Drew them foaming from the oven with the dishcloth round her hand,She who poured the amber cider to the pewter’s polished brinkAnd the Apple-man from Awbridge wet the bargain with a drink.
For he buys them by the bushel and he buys them on the treesAnd he sends them from the orchard plot to places such as these;And there’s money in your pocket and a hollow at your heartWhen the Apple-man from Awbridge comes a-loading of his cart.
And maybe the nameless apples on the stall in Fulham RoadOnce were piled behind his pony in that fresh and fragrant loadAnd maybe it was my mother pulled the Ladies’ Fingers down;And the Apple-man from Awbridge turned them over to the town.