About This Book
In three parts the poem registers the year and lives of a rural parish, moving from baptisms and household scenes to marriages, deaths, and moral reckonings. It juxtaposes industrious cottagers, their gardens, prints, and domestic routines with the improvidence of the idle, the alehouse, gambling, petty crime, and social gossip. Through compact portraits and seasonal detail it documents family size, poverty, virtue, and vice, and reflects on frugality, labour, community rituals, and mortality, offering a plain-eyed social portrait rather than a romanticized rural idyll.
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