Edward Slow
Encyclopedia
Edward Slow was a poet born in Wilton
Wilton, Wiltshire
Wilton is a town in Wiltshire, , England, with a rich heritage dating back to the Anglo-Saxons. Today it is dwarfed by its larger and more famous neighbour, Salisbury, but still has a range of notable shops and attractions, including Wilton House.The confluence of the rivers Wylye and Nadder is at...

, Wiltshire, England. By profession he was a carriage builder. He wrote many poems and tracts based on his everyday observations of contemporary Victorian and Edwardian rural life. The poems, or ‘rhymes’ as he preferred to call them, were written in a style that was intended to phonetically emulate the rural Wiltshire accent.

Slow’s Life

He was born the youngest of at least 4 siblings. His mother was a silk weaver in Wilton and his father died when Edward was 11 years old. He attended Wilton Free School and then obtained an apprenticeship with a Salisbury coach-builder and wheelwright. He later returned to Wilton were he set up his own carriage building business which he eventually sold in the 1890s. He than embarked on a 30 year retirement during which he involved himself in local politics and writing. He was Mayor of Wilton in 1892 and again in 1905.

Slow’s Poetry

Slow discovered his talent when he was invited to write something for a Harvest Supper in nearby Burcombe
Burcombe
Burcombe is a village and a civil parish in Wiltshire, England. According to the 2001 census the parish had a population of 149. The village lies each side of an unclassified road. The village is about 5 miles west of Salisbury city centre...

. His poem proved a great success and the sale of copies spurred him to produce more. His first collection, called Poems in the Wiltshire dialect was published in 1867 by a Salisbury
Salisbury
Salisbury is a cathedral city in Wiltshire, England and the only city in the county. It is the second largest settlement in the county...

 printer called Frederick Blake. On Blake’s death in 1892 Slow’s work was published by R.R. Edwards, also of Salisbury. From this time Slow produced some prose work and he included a glossary of Wiltshire dialect words with his fourth volume. He also contributed to the English Dialect Society.
His largest book was Humourous west countrie tales published in 1899. A collection of stories and some jokes he had collected from local people or had experienced himself.

Slow’s poetry, with its perceptive, descriptive style, often with a wry biting humour, provides an interesting insight into the everyday existence of rural people in late Victorian and Edwardian southern England.

Examples of Edward Slow’s ‘rhymes’

Gramfer's Crismus (extract)

...Then Father Crismus mead a spache,

A wishen ael good cheer;

Likewise a merry Crismis tide,

An happy, bright new year.

An atter that, they ate an drunk,

As much as they wur willin;

Then out comes grammer, an she gies

To every man a shillin...

Blondin at Wilton Park. (Bank Holiday, August 4th 1873) (extract)

...An then to ael tha vokes zaprize,

He tied a bandage roun his eyes.

An all his head an half his back,

He put into a girt thick zack:

An once agean he took pole in han,

An tried upon tha rope ta stan,

Purtendin two or dree times ta slip,

Bit that wur all a bit a flip;

Var on a went as blinds a bat,

An steady as a mouse or cat.

An zome did cry, “Zure, zure, he’ll vall,

Var he can’t see a glimpse at all”...

External links

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