|
|
|
|
If you find the information here useful, please help support this project!
|
Author: Cecil Day Lewis (1904-1972)
Text collections / compilations [warning - not necessarily comprehensive]
Texts set to music [warning - not necessarily comprehensive]
[x] indicates a placeholder for a text that is not yet in the database * indicates that a text cannot (yet?) be displayed on this site because of its copyright status.
Note: titles are in bold and first lines are in italics. A blue rectangle containing a language code such as ENG indicates the presence of a translation to that language. A grey rectangle such as FRE indicates a particular translation (usually one set to music) exists but is missing.
A carol (Melt the glass and leave the sticks) - E. Gregson [x] *
A fountain plays no more: those pure cascades
(from Pegasus and Other Poems) * A. Bliss: Elegiac sonnet
Admit then and be glad (from A Time to Dance and Other Poems) [x] * G. Bush: Earth has grain to grow
Beauty's end is in sight (Beauty's end is in sight) (from From Feathers to Iron) - B. Naylor [x] *
Beauty's end is in sight (from From Feathers to Iron) [x] * B. Naylor: Beauty's end is in sight
Birthday song for a royal child - A. Bliss [x] *
Come live with me (Come, live with me and be my love
) - E. Gregson GER
Come, live with me and be my love (Come, live with me and be my love
) GER E. Gregson: Come live with me
Come, live with me and be my love
GER E. Gregson: Come live with me
Come out in the sun (Come out in the sun, for a man is born today!) (from From Feathers to Iron) - A. Lewis [x] *
Come out in the sun, for a man is born today! (from From Feathers to Iron) [x] * A. Lewis: Come out in the sun
Earth has grain to grow (Admit then and be glad) (from A Time to Dance and Other Poems) - G. Bush [x] *
Elegiac sonnet (A fountain plays no more: those pure cascades
) (from Pegasus and Other Poems) - A. Bliss *
Grant us untroubled rest (from The Gate and Other Poems) [x] * D. Swann: Requiem for the Living
Hornpipe (Now the peak of summer's past) (from Poems in Wartime) - F. Scott [x] *
In these our winter days (In these our winter days) (from The Magnetic Mountain) - D. Farquhar [x] *
In these our winter days (from The Magnetic Mountain) [x] * D. Farquhar: In these our winter days
Jig (That winter love spoke
) (from Poems in Wartime) - N. Maw [x] *
Lark, skylark, spilling your rubbed and round (from A Time to Dance and Other Poems) [x] * P. Naylor: The lark
N. Lindsay, B. Naylor, F. Stark: The ecstatic
Love and pity (Love without pity is a child's hand reaching) (from Pegasus and Other Poems) - H. Orland [x] *
Love without pity is a child's hand reaching (from Pegasus and Other Poems) [x] * H. Orland: Love and pity
Melt the glass and leave the sticks [x] * E. Gregson: A carol
Now she is like the white tree-room (Now she is like the white tree-room) (from From Feathers to Iron) - B. Naylor, P. Nisbet [x] *
Now she is like the white tree-room (from From Feathers to Iron) [x] * B. Naylor, P. Nisbet: Now she is like the white tree-room
Now the peak of summer's past (from Poems in Wartime) [x] * F. Scott: Hornpipe
Now to be with you, elate, unshared (from The Magnetic Mountain) [x] * N. Lefanu: Now to be with you, elate, unshared
Poem for an anniversary (Admit then and be glad) (from A Time to Dance and Other Poems) [x] * G. Bush: Earth has grain to grow
Put out the lights now! (from Poems 1943-1947) [x] * C. Effinger: The Christmas Tree
Requiem for the Living (Grant us untroubled rest) (from The Gate and Other Poems) [x] * D. Swann: Requiem for the Living
Rest from loving and be living (Rest from loving and be living) (from From Feathers to Iron) - D. Farquhar, B. Naylor [x] *
Rest from loving and be living (from From Feathers to Iron) [x] * N. Lefanu: Now to be with you, elate, unshared
D. Farquhar, B. Naylor: Rest from loving and be living
River music 1967 - A. Bliss [x] *
Song for a Festival - G. Dyson [x] *
Song of welcome - A. Bliss [x] *
That winter love spoke
(from Poems in Wartime) [x] * N. Maw: Jig
The Christmas Rose (What is the flower that blooms each year) (from The Gate and Other Poems) [x] * A. Ridout: The Christmas Rose
The Christmas Tree (Put out the lights now!) (from Poems 1943-1947) [x] * C. Effinger: The Christmas Tree
The ecstatic (Lark, skylark, spilling your rubbed and round) (from A Time to Dance and Other Poems) - N. Lindsay, B. Naylor, F. Stark [x] *
The enemy speak - A. Rawsthorne [x] *
The lark (Lark, skylark, spilling your rubbed and round) (from A Time to Dance and Other Poems) - P. Naylor [x] *
Twenty weeks near past (Twenty weeks near past) (from From Feathers to Iron) - B. Naylor [x] *
Twenty weeks near past (from From Feathers to Iron) [x] * B. Naylor: Twenty weeks near past
What is the flower that blooms each year (from The Gate and Other Poems) [x] * A. Ridout: The Christmas Rose
[No Title] (Now to be with you, elate, unshared) (from The Magnetic Mountain) - N. Lefanu [x] *
[No Title] (Rest from loving and be living) (from From Feathers to Iron) - N. Lefanu [x] *
[x] indicates a placeholder for a text that is not yet in the database
* indicates that a text cannot (yet?) be displayed on this site because of its copyright status.
|
|