One of the most famous of our local songs, there follows one
version of The Lambton Worm. It was
said to lurk in and around the River Wear near the Lambton Estate in Co.Durham.
A spot still called Worm Hill is said by most accounts to have been its
night-time lair – though the following poem names Penshaw Hill as the location
in question.
One Sundaa mornin’
Lambton went a-fishin'’ in the Wear;
He cowt a fish upon
his heuk, he thowt lukk't vurry kwee-a.
Noo whattna kind ov
fish it waaz yung Lambton cudd’na tell;
He had’na mind t’
carry it hyem, so he hoyd it doon a well.
(chorus)
Whisht! Lads, haad yer
gobs,
An’ aa’ll tell ye aall
an aaful story.
Whisht! Lads, haad yer
gobs,
An’ aa’ll tell ye
‘boot the worm.
Noo Lambton felt
inclined t’ gan an’ fite in forrun waars;
He joined a band ov
nites wee caired for neetha woonds nor scairs.
So off he went t’ Palestine where kwee-a things him befell;
An’ vurry syun forgot
aboot yon kwee-a worm in thu well.
(repeat chorus)
Thu worm got fat an’
growd an’ growd, an’ growd t’ an aarful size;
Wi’ a git big gob, an’
git big teeth, an’ git big goggly eyes.
An’ when at neet it
craaled aroond t’ pick up bits o’ news;
If it felt dry ‘pon
the road, it milk’t a dozen coos.
(repeat chorus)
This feorful worm wud
often feed on caalves an’ lamms an’ sheep;
An’ swally little
bairns alive wen thay lay doon t’ sleep.
Wen it had eetin’ aall
it cud, an’ it had had its fill;
It craaled away an’
lapp’t its tail ten times roond Pensher Hill.
(repeat chorus)
Thu nooz ov this myest
aarful beast an’ its kwee-a gannins on;
Syunn cross’t the seez
an’ reach’t thu ee-as of bowld and brave Sor John.
So hyem he came an’
cowt the beast an’ cut it in twe haalves;
An’ that syunn stop’t
it eetin’ sheep an’ bairns an’ lamms an’ caalves.
(repeat chorus)
So noo yer naar hoo aall
thu foaks on byeth sides o’ thu Wear;
Lost lots o’ sheep an’
lots o’ sleep an’ lived in mortal fee-a.
So let’s hevv one t’
brave Sor John, wee kept the bairns fram harm;
An’ saved thu caalves
by myekin’ haalves o’ thu aafull Lambton Worm.
(chorus after last verse)
Noo, lads, aa'll had
me gob,
That's all aa knaar
aboot thu story,
Of Sor John’s clivvor
job,
Wi' thu aaful Lambton Worm.
Why not come along to...