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Titles of Texts in English
[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: These indexes include titles chosen by composers for their settings, titles given (when known) by the original authors of the texts, and titles of song cycles.
Taboo to boot () (Text: Ogden Nash) [x] *
Tail Piece: A Song to Make You and Me Laugh (Let me tell you the story
) (Text: Robert Graves) [x] *
Take heed, young heart (Take heed, young heart, to Time) (Text: Walter de la Mare) *
Take me, take me, some of you (Young I am and yet unskilled
) (Text: John Dryden)
Take not a woman's anger ill (Take not a woman's anger ill) (Text: Robert Gould)
Take, o take those lips away (Take, o take those lips away
) GER FRE FIN
F. Ayres, A. Beach, H. Bishop, R. Clarke, B. Dieren, M. Dring, J. Edmunds, C. Parry, M. Plumstead, R. Quilter, E. Rubbra, V. Thomson, P. Warlock, J. Wilson, E. Maconchy, T. Pasatieri, R. Vaughan Williams, R. Pearsall, W. Fortner
Take thy banner (When the dying flame of day) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
W. Birch, J. Blockley, J. Coward, M. Lindsay, H. Morris
Take time, while time doth last (Take time, while time doth last)
Take warning, tyrants () (Text: Philip Morin Freneau) [x]
Taking leave of a friend (Blue mountains to the north of the walls
) ENG (Text: Ezra Pound after Li-Tai-Po)
Talk Not to Me (Talk not to me of Summer Trees) (Text: Emily Dickinson) *
Talking in Bed () (Text: Philip Larkin) [x] *
Tall Wind [song cycle]
Tally Ho! (There's a noise of galloping over the hill
) (Text: C. P. Raydon)
Tambourines () (Text: (James Mercer) Langston Hughes) [x] *
Tame Cat (It rests me to be among beautiful women
) (Text: Ezra Pound)
J. Koch, J. Holbrooke, G. Bachlund
Taming the bull (The whip and rope are necessary) ENG (Text: Paul Reps after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist) *
Tango - Pasodoble (When Don Pasquito arrived at the seaside
) (Text: Edith Sitwell) *
Tanist (Remember the spider) (Text: James Stephens) [x] *
Tapers (Those tapers which we set upon the grave) (Text: Robert Herrick)
Tarantella (Do you remember an Inn, Miranda
) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
F. Toye, D. ApIvor, M. Burtch, J. Coulthard, E. Elgar, G. Fontrier, I. Gurney, R. Hageman, C. Le Fleming, H. Noble, B. Rawlinson, R. Thompson, G. Williams
Tarantella (Appear, Mother of Flowers Flora, be celebrated by our joyful games) ENG (Text: Elliott Cook Carter, Jr. after Ovid) *
Tarantella (Where the satyrs are chattering) (Text: Edith Sitwell)
Tarry trowsers (One fine morning as I was walking) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
Tartary (If I were Lord of Tartary) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
E. Allam, G. Bantock, H. Stevens
Tavern (I'll keep a little tavern
) (Text: Edna St. Vincent Millay)
Tavern song (When winterly weather doth pierce to the skin) (Text: Sir William Watson)
Tawny (These are the tawny days: your face comes back) (Text: Carl Sandburg)
Tawny Days (These are the tawny days: your face comes back) (Text: Carl Sandburg)
Teach me the way () (Text: E. Davey) [x] *
Teach me your mood, O patient stars (Teach me your mood, O patient stars) (Text: Ralph Waldo Emerson)
Tears (Tears! tears! tears
) (Text: Walt Whitman)
N. Dello Joio, R. Harris, J. Kaufer, C. Stanford, J. Wallach, W. Wijdeveld, J. Hanna
Tears (High o'er the hill the moon barque steers
) ENG GER (Text: Launcelot Alfred Cranmer-Byng after Wang-Seng-Yu)
E. Whithorne, H. Dixon, G. Bantock, C. Griffes
Tears (Weep you no more, sad fountains
) GER (Text: 16th century)
R. Clarke, B. Dieren, J. Dowland, J. Edmunds, I. Gurney, G. Holst, C. Parry, R. Quilter, R. Birch
Tears () [x]
Tears and laughter (Oh! stars shine brightly!) (Text: Algernon Blackwood)
Tears, idle tears (Tears, idle tears, I know not what they mean
) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
F. Bridge, R. Vaughan Williams
Tears in the Spring (Clad in blue silk and bright embroidery
) ENG (Text: Launcelot Alfred Cranmer-Byng after Wang-Chang-Ling)
Teasdale Songs [song cycle]
Tell me no more (Tell me no more you love; in vain)
Tell me no more (Tell me no more I am deceived
) (Text: William Congreve)
Tell me no more (Tell me no more, no more you love; in vain, fair Celia)
Tell me not in mournful numbers (Tell me not, in mournful numbers
) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
G. Barker, C. Beecher, L. Bellamy, F. Berger, J. Beuthin, M. Lindsay, J. Blockley, T. Clemens, A. Clifford, C. Coote, F. Cowen, F. Dugmore, L. Emerson, S. Glover, P. Guglielmo, G. Hewitt, E. Hime, F. Hodges, J. Kinross, A. Lane, H. Loomis, C. Miller, W. Montgomery, D. Peale, F. Peel, H. Proch, C. Purday, J. Römele, F. Romer, H. Smart, H. Spencer, M. Stocker, F. Tepé, C. Tillett, A. Titus, M. Wakefield, M. Warburton, J. Ward, R. Ward, E. Westrop, A. Wood
Tell me, o love (Tell me, o love, when shall it be)
Tell me, oh blue, blue sky () (Text: Karl Flaster) [x]
Tell me, Sarah Jane () (Text: Charles Causley, CBE) [x] *
Tell me, tell me (Tell me, tell me, smiling child) (Text: Emily Brontë)
J. Mitchell, N. Peros, T. Fisk, J. Joubert, R. Werther, R. Owens
Tell me, tell me, smiling child (Tell me, tell me, smiling child) (Text: Emily Brontë)
J. Mitchell, N. Peros, T. Fisk, J. Joubert, R. Werther, R. Owens
Tell me the truth about love (Some say that Love's a little boy
) (Text: W. H. (Wystan Hugh) Auden) *
Tell me, thou star (Tell me, thou star whose wings of light
) ITA (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
C. Ives, C. Lucas, C. Allen, G. Bantock, M. Blower, H. Bright
Tell me to stay (Tell me to stay; I cannot go)
Tell me, true Love (Tell me, true Love)
Tell me where is fancy bred? (Tell me where is fancy bred
) ITA (Text: William Shakespeare)
B. Britten, F. Poulenc, V. Thomson, R. Walker
Tell me why (Tell me why, my charming fair) ENG (Text: Thomas Betterton after John Fletcher)
Tell me why the roses are so pale (Tell me why the roses are so pale
) RUS ENG FRE (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
Temple Dancer () (Text: Lawrence Murphy) [x] *
Temple ceremony (Blow softly
) ENG (Text: Amy Lowell after Henjo, né Yoshimine no Munesada)
Temple Dancer () (Text: Lawrence Murphy) [x] *
Ten Blake Songs [song cycle]
Ten Epigrams by Hilaire Belloc [song cycle]
Ten Glees and a Madrigal for Four and Five Voices [song cycle]
Ten Poems [song cycle]
Ten Shakespeare Sonnets [song cycle]
Ten songs [song cycle]
Ten songs [song cycle]
Ten songs [song cycle]
Ten Zen songs [song cycle]
Tender Buttons [song cycle]
Tenebrae (It is finished) (Text: David Emery Gascoyne) [x] *
Tenebrae (We are near, Lord) ENG (Text: Michael Hamburger after Paul Celan) *
Tenebrae [song cycle]
Tennyson Trip [song cycle]
Terrible a horse at night (Terrible a horse at night) (Text: Lawrence Ferlinghetti) [x] *
Tess (I would that folk forgot me quite) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
Tess's Lament (I would that folk forgot me quite) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
Tewkesbury Road (It is good to be out on the road, and going one knows not where
) (Text: John Masefield)
M. Head, J. Brown, C. Hand, E. Thiman, S. Wilson
Thackeray Ditties [song cycle]
Thames -- a tempo (Sweet Thames! Run softly, till I end my song) (Text: Jacqueline Froom) [x] *
Thanatopsis (To him who in the love of Nature holds) (Text: William Cullen Bryant)
Thank heaven, Yanthe (Thank heaven, Neæra, once again
) (Text: Walter Savage Landor) [x]
Thank you very much indeed (Thank you very much indeed) (Text: Norman Rowland Gale)
Thanks (Thank you very much indeed) (Text: Norman Rowland Gale)
...that better things might be (It strikes me that some men and women got tired of a big job) (Text: Charles Edward Ives)
That God is great (That God is great)
That greenwood life of ours (Round us the wild creatures, overhead the trees) (Text: Robert Browning)
G. Bantock, A. Borton, H. Clarke, M. Kernochan, F. Krull, Staat
That hallowed season (Some say that ever against that Season comes
) (Text: William Shakespeare)
That I did always love (That I did always love) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
That I may see (That I may see the felicity of Thy chosen) (Text: Bible or other Sacred Texts)
That it were so (It sometimes comes into my head
) (Text: Walter Savage Landor)
That land (Oh, would that I might live for ever) (Text: Thomas Sturge Moore) [x]
That moment (The tragedy of that moment
) (Text: Thomas Hardy) *
That Nature Is a Heraclitean Fire and of the Comfort of the Resurrection (Cloud-puffball, torn tufts, tossed pillows / flaunt forth, then chevy on an air-built thoroughfare
) (Text: Gerard Manley Hopkins)
That night when joy began (That night when joy began
) (Text: W. H. (Wystan Hugh) Auden) [x] *
That shadow, my likeness (That shadow, my likeness, that goes to and fro) (Text: Walt Whitman)
That she may not find dew (That she may not find dew
)
That soothin' song (Play the blues for me
) GER (Text: (James Mercer) Langston Hughes) *
Stranger-Man (Now what is this, my daughter dear) (Text: Arthur Macy)
That time is dead forever (That time is dead for ever, child!
) RUS (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
A. Tindal, W. Hurlstone, L. Smith
That time of year (That time of year thou mayst in me behold
) RUS ITA (Text: William Shakespeare)
L. Crabtree, T. Pasatieri, E. Rautavaara, E. Firsova, E. Firsova, W. Aschaffenburg
That time of year thou mayst in me behold (That time of year thou mayst in me behold
) RUS ITA (Text: William Shakespeare)
L. Crabtree, T. Pasatieri, E. Rautavaara, E. Firsova, E. Firsova, W. Aschaffenburg
That very wise man, Old Aesop () (Text: Charles (John Huffam) Dickens) [x]
That yongë child (That yongë child when it gan weep) (Text: 14th century)
That you were mine : song from a poem by Heine (That you were mine) ENG (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
That's life (Look here, look there) (Text: Josephine Royle) *
That's our life () [x]
The 43rd Sonnet (How do I love thee? Let me count the ways
) CHI GER (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning)
H. Hadley, A. Rosser, L. Steele, E. Bacon, F. Balazs, A. Barnett, C. Beecher, G. Branscombe, N. Cain, L. Cheslock, O. Colvin, O. Colvin, L. Dallin, B. Davis, N. Dello Joio, N. Dello Joio, C. Dickinson, E. Freer, E. Freer, A. Gabert, H. Gaul, J. Gayfer, L. Glarum, W. Goldsworthy, F. Goodenough, R. Goodwin, W. Harris, F. Hart, F. Hopkins, J. Hopkins, R. Housman, R. Jones, E. Lippé, M. Madsen, A. Maekelberghe, R. Markham, W. McCauley, W. McDaniel, M. Passailaigue, A. Pierce, F. Piket, D. Protheroe, H. Rhodes, F. Riker, T. Ritchie, K. Roger, W. Roy, A. Smith, A. Stahlschmidt, C. Surinach, P. Tahourdin, B. Threlkeld, L. Vass, H. Ware, M. Weems, M. White, J. Wilson, N. Rorem
The Abbot of Inisfalen (The Abbot of Inisfalen awoke ere dawn of day
) (Text: William Allingham)
The Adventures of Footfruit () (Text: Mervyn Peake) [x] *
The Ballad of William Sycamore () (Text: Stephen Vincent Benét) [x] *
The Blodeuwedd of Gwion ap Gwreang (Not of father nor of mother
) (Text: Robert Graves) [x] *
The Buckie Braes (It isna far frae our toun) (Text: William Soutar) [x] *
The Christmas Rose (What is the flower that blooms each year) (Text: Cecil Day Lewis) [x] *
The Christmas Tree (Put out the lights now!) (Text: Cecil Day Lewis) [x] *
The Fine Pacific Island (The jolly English Yellowboy
) (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
The Force of Habit (A tail behind, a trunk in front
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman) *
The Fourth of August (Now in thy splendour go before us) (Text: Laurence Binyon) [x]
The Island of Pines (Across the willow-lake a temple shines
) ENG (Text: Launcelot Alfred Cranmer-Byng after Bai Juyi)
The Lake of Beauty (Let your mind be quiet, realising the beauty of the world
) (Text: Edward Carpenter)
The Lamb and the Tiger [song cycle]
The Naming of Cats (The Naming of Cats) (Text: T. S. (Thomas Stearns) Eliot) [x] *
The Old Gumbie Cat (I have a Gumbie Cat) (Text: T. S. (Thomas Stearns) Eliot) [x] *
The Pirde of Westmoreland (I met a man of ninety-three) (Text: Gordon Bottomley) [x] *
The River and the Leaf (Into the night the sounds of luting flow
) ENG (Text: Launcelot Alfred Cranmer-Byng after Bai Juyi)
The Thread Remains () (Text: Mervyn Peake) [x] *
The Abbot of Inisfalen (The Abbot of Inisfalen awoke ere dawn of day
) (Text: William Allingham)
The absent barber (There was an Old Man with a Beard
) (Text: Edward Lear)
G. Bachlund, M. Lang, C. Stanford
The absent-minded beggar (When you've shouted "Rule Britannia," when you've sung "God save the Queen") (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The Abyss (Pascal had his abyss, it followed him) ENG (Text: Richard Howard after Charles Baudelaire) *
The actress (I can't say I enjoyed it, but the pay was good
) (Text: Stevie Smith) *
The adieu (Adieu, thou Hill! where early joy
) (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron)
The adoration (Why have you brought me myrrh
) (Text: Arthur Symons)
The Advent (No sudden thing of glory and fear
) (Text: Alice Christina Meynell, née Thompson)
The Adventures of Footfruit () (Text: Mervyn Peake) [x] *
The Age of Wisdom (Ho! pretty page, with the dimpled chin) (Text: William Makepeace Thackeray)
A. Foote, T. Marzials, W. Platt, R. Walthew
The air is the only () (Text: Howard Moss) [x] *
The airport () (Text: Frank O'Hara) [x] *
The Akond of Swat (Who, or why, or which, or what, Is the Akond of SWAT?) (Text: Edward Lear)
R. Gerhard, E. Roxburgh, W. Skolnik, V. Thomson
The All-enduring (Man passes down the way of years)
The Alphabet (A B C D ..)
The alpine cross (Christ, on your Alpine Cross) (Text: Humbert Wolfe) [x] *
The Altars in the Street (Children begin at green dawn nimbly to build) (Text: Denise Levertov) *
The amaranth () (Text: Vachel Lindsay) [x] *
The Amorous Line [song cycle]
The amphisbaena (In the back back garden, Thomasina
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
The ancient gods (Certainly there were splashings in the water) (Text: Mary Gladys Meredith Webb) *
The Ancient Mariner (It is an ancient Mariner
) (Text: Samuel Taylor Coleridge)
The ancient stone bites into the sea (The ancient stone bites into the sea) ENG (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The angel (I dreamt a dream! what can it mean
) (Text: William Blake)
R. Ash, R. Boughton, B. Lees, W. Bolcom, J. D'Angelo, L. Segerstam, C. Vollrath
The angels are stooping (The angels are stooping, above your bed
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
I. Gurney, J. Tavener, M. Besly, T. Riego, N. Douty, C. Duncan, R. Ganz, F. Hart, D. Healey, R. Housman, H. Ley, E. Weigel, G. Whettam, M. Worder
The angels are stooping, above your bed (The angels are stooping, above your bed
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
I. Gurney, J. Tavener, M. Besly, T. Riego, N. Douty, C. Duncan, R. Ganz, F. Hart, D. Healey, R. Housman, H. Ley, E. Weigel, G. Whettam, M. Worder
The anglers' song (Man's life is but vain, for 'tis subject to pain) (Text: Izaak Walton)
The anniversary () (Text: Ogden Nash) [x] *
The anniversary (All kings, and all their favourites) (Text: John Donne)
The answer (Two little hands that meet) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
The answer () (Text: Laurence Binyon) [x]
The ant (The ant has made himself illustrious) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The Ant and the Grasshopper (Since you sing all summer, you may dance all) (Text: Jeanne Shepard) *
The apartment () (Text: Frank O'Hara) [x] *
The Ape, the Monkey and Baboon (The ape, the monkey and baboon did meet) DUT
The apparition () (Text: Theodore Roethke) [x] *
The appeal (If grief for grief can touch thee) (Text: Emily Brontë)
T. Fisk, J. Littlejohn, R. Werther
The Applicant (First, are you our sort of a person) (Text: Sylvia Plath) *
The aquiline snub (There was an old man with a nose
) (Text: Edward Lear)
The Arab (Thou to me art such a spring) (Text: George Meredith)
E. Maconchy, M. Roberts, D. Vaughan Thomas
The archaeology of silence () (Text: after Fernando António Nogueira Pessoa) [x] *
The argument of his book (I sing of brooks, of blossoms, birds, and bowers) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The Arrow and the Song (I shot an Arrow into the air) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
M. Balfe, S. Colburn, A. Beach, G. Beecroft, W. Blair, J. Blockley, L. Bonvin, W. Chenoweth, L. Coerne, M. Davis, C. Elliot, B. d'Erlanger, L. Falk, A. Foote, C. Gounod, C. Hawley, W. Hay, G. Henschel, E. Hime, W. Mulligan, J. Newell, G. Ord, C. Pinsuti, C. Pinsuti, F. Thomas, W. Van Curt, W. Watson, J. Amerongen
The arsenal (This is the Arsenal. From floor to ceiling) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
F. Høffding, J. Jones, C. Speer, D. Warden
The Arsenal at Springfield (This is the Arsenal. From floor to ceiling) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
F. Høffding, J. Jones, C. Speer, D. Warden
The artist's secret (There was an artist once, and he painted a picture) (Text: Oliver Schreiner)
The artless maid () (Text: L. Barili) [x]
The ash grove (Down yonder green valley where streamlets meander) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The aspen (Along the field as we came by
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
I. Gurney, C. Orr, R. Vaughan Williams, W. Keeney
The aspens (Along the field as we came by
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
I. Gurney, C. Orr, R. Vaughan Williams, W. Keeney
The aspidistra (I had an aspidistra) (Text: Claude Flight) *
The Aspiration (How long, great God, must I) (Text: John Norris)
The Asra () RUS ENG ITA (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The Asra (Daily walk'd in peerless beauty
) RUS ENG ITA (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The Asra () RUS ENG ITA (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The Assassination (Two fates discuss a human problem) () (Text: Robert Silliman Hillyer) [x] *
The Assyrian came down (The Assyrian came down like the wolf on the fold
) GER (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron)
I. Nathan, G. Bantock, F. Boott, A. Clifford, E. Davis, S. Glover, C. Hill, D. Jenkins, S. Lovatt, E. Parker, A. Patterson, L. Thomas, F. Tozer, B. Treharne, S. Ward-Casey, F. Wiseman
The Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold (The Assyrian came down like the wolf on the fold
) GER (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron)
I. Nathan, G. Bantock, F. Boott, A. Clifford, E. Davis, S. Glover, C. Hill, D. Jenkins, S. Lovatt, E. Parker, A. Patterson, L. Thomas, F. Tozer, B. Treharne, S. Ward-Casey, F. Wiseman
The Astronomers (An Epitaph) (We have loved the stars too deeply
)
The auld aik (The auld aik's doun) (Text: William Soutar) [x] *
The auld gudeman (I'll hae my coat o' gude snuff brown) (Text: Sir Alexander Boswell)
The auld wife ayont the fire (Where Cart rins rowing to the sea) (Text: Robert Burns)
The author's epitaph () (Text: Sir Walter Raleigh) [x]
The autumn is old (The Autumn is old) (Text: Thomas Hood)
The autumn skies are flush'd with gold (The Autumn skies are flush'd with gold) (Text: Thomas Hood)
S. Homer, W. Macfarren, C. Parry, M. Phillips
The Avenging Childe (Hurrah! hurrah! avoid the way of the avenging childe
) (Text: John Gibson Lockhart)
The Aviary [song cycle]
The awakening (Well it is gone now
) (Text: George William Russell)
The awakening (Behold, she is risen who lay asleep so long) (Text: Sir William Watson)
The azalea (There, where the sun shines first) (Text: Coventry Kersey Dighton Patmore)
The azure eyes of springtime (The azure eyes of springtime) DUT RUS ITA (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The babe's riddle () (Text: Archibald MacLeish) [x] *
The babe's riddle () (Text: Archibald MacLeish) [x] *
J. Alexander, E. Laderman
The baby (Where did you come from baby dear?) (Text: George MacDonald)
The bachelor (In all this warld nis a meriar life
) (Text: 15th century)
The Bachelor's Song (How happy a thing were a wedding) (Text: Thomas Flatman)
The Background and the Figure (I think of the slope where the rabbits fed) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The Bad Child's Songs about Beasts [song cycle]
The bag of the bee (About the sweet bag of a bee) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The bait (Come live with me, and be my love) (Text: John Donne)
The bakery (I go to the bakery to buy a bun) (Text: Peter Hyun after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist) [x]
The balance wheel (Where I waved at the sky) (Text: Anne Sexton) *
The ball (There's a ball just think) [x]
The ball once struck off (The ball once struck off) (Text: 18th century)
The ballad of Carmilhan (And now along the horizon's edge) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The Ballad of Green Broom (There was an old man lived out in the wood
) DUT
The Ballad of Minepit Shaw (About the time that taverns shut) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The Ballad of Semmerwater (Deep asleep, deep asleep
) (Text: Sir William Watson)
C. Gibbs, H. Noble, G. Peel
The Ballad of Sir Humphrey Gilbert (Southward with fleet of ice) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The Ballad of St. Brendan (A thousand years ago and more) (Text: John Francis Alexander Heath-Stubbs) *
P. Dickinson, P. Dickinson
The Ballad of the "Bolivar" (Seven men from all the world, back to Docks again) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The Ballad of the "Clampherdown" (It was our war-ship Clampherdown
) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The Ballad of the Fiddler (He had played by the cottage fire) (Text: Seumas O'Sullivan)
The Ballad of the Harp-Weaver ("Son," said my mother, when I was knee-high
) (Text: Edna St. Vincent Millay)
The Ballad of the Old Foxhunter (Now lay me in a cushioned chair
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The ballad of the oysterman (It was a tall young oysterman lived by the river-side) (Text: Oliver Wendell Holmes)
E. Bailey, G. Grant-Schaefer, J. Hatton, M. Shaw, R. Stevenson
The ballad of wild children (Down the long hall of night) (Text: George Granville Barker) [x]
The ballad of William and Nancy (As on the transport's dusky side) [x]
The Ballad of William Sycamore () (Text: Stephen Vincent Benét) [x] *
The Ballad Singer (Sing, Ballad-singer, raise a hearty tune
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
A. Downes, L. Laitman, A. Cooke, F. Goossen, A. Hale, D. Waxman
The Ballad-Singer (Sing, Ballad-singer, raise a hearty tune
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
A. Downes, L. Laitman, A. Cooke, F. Goossen, A. Hale, D. Waxman
The ballads of the four seasons [song cycle]
The bandog (Has anybody seen my Mopser?) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The Bandruidh (My robe is of green) (Text: Fiona Macleod)
H. Hopekirk, C. Taylor, N. Wood
The Banjo Player (There is music in me, the music of a peasant people
) (Text: Fenton Johnson)
The Banks o' Doon (Ye flowery banks o' bonie Doon
) (Text: Robert Burns)
The banks of the yellow sea (This is the land the sunset washes) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
E. Bacon, A. Farwell, E. Bacon
The Banner of Buccleuch (From the brown crest of Newark its summons extending) GER (Text: Sir Walter Scott)
The barber's (Gold locks, and black locks) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The bare tree () (Text: William Carlos Williams) [x] *
The barrel-organ (There's a barrel-organ carolling across a golden street) (Text: Alfred Noyes)
The bat (The bat is dun with wrinkled wings) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The Batterers (A man sits by the bed) (Text: Denise Levertov) *
The battle (They come beset by riddling hail) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The Battle Cry [song cycle]
The battle has passed from the height (The battle has passed from the height
) ITA (Text: Emily Brontë)
The Battle Hymn of the Republic (Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord:
) (Text: Julia Ward Howe)
The Battle of Blenheim (It was a summer evening) (Text: Robert Southey)
The Bayly Berith the Bell Away (The maidens came when I was in my mother's bow'r
) (Text: 15th century)
The beaches of Lukannon (I met my mates in the morning and oh, but I am old
) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The bean flower (The hawthorn brave upon the green) (Text: Dorothy Leigh Sayers)
The Bear Hunt (A wild-bear chace, didst never see?) (Text: Abraham Lincoln)
The Beatitudes (Blessed are the poor in spirit) DUT (Text: Bible or other Sacred Texts)
The Beatitudes [song cycle]
The beautiful changes (One wading a Fall meadow finds on all sides
) (Text: Richard Wilbur) *
The bedpost (Sleepy Betsy from her pillow
) (Text: Robert Graves)
The Bee-Boy's Song (A maiden in her glory) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The bees' song (Thousandz of thornz there be) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
C. Gibbs, R. Greene, C. Hely-Hutchinson, S. Liddle, A. Milner, G. Peterkin, F. Keel
The beggar (Shall I a daily beggar be) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The beleaguered city (I have read, in some old, marvellous tale) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The belfry of Bruges (In the market-place of Bruges stands the belfry old and brown) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The Bell-Bird (The stillness of the Austral noon) (Text: Fiona Macleod)
The bell-man (From noise of scare-fires rest ye free) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The bellman (From noise of scare-fires rest ye free) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The bells (I heard the bells on Christmas Day) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
A. Barnes, W. Bentley, A. Bergh, H. Bishop (attribution uncertain), A. Brewer, F. Bullard, J. Calkin, R. Dunstan, W. Earhart, F. Fontein-Tuinhout, J. Hatton, E. Hesser, Anonymous, S. Liddle, J. Matthews, G. O'Hara, B. Ramsey, H. Sawyer
The Bells (Shadow and light both strove to be
) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The Bells (Hear the sledges with the bells) RUS (Text: Edgar Allan Poe)
M. Balfe, E. Fitzwilliam, H. Roberton, T. Anderton, F. Ahrold, E. Diemer, J. Emeléus, D. Ezechiels, A. Foote, G. Fox, W. Gilchrist, J. Habash, C. Harris, H. Hawley, J. Holbrooke, F. Kebalin, H. Kinscella, H. Kjerulf, H. Lahee, F. Lancelott, F. Leoni, C. Lucas, N. Montani, P. Ochs, C. Peloquin, F. Petersilea, A. Plumpton, S. Raphling, H. Roberton, G. Sampson, A. Siegel, D. Stone, H. Sykes, G. Wald, M. White, P. Wilkinson, H. Wilson
The bells of Clermont town (There was a man was half a clown
) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
A. Bliss, A. Goodhart, H. Abady, R. Fleming, A. Potter
The bells of Hell (The bells of hell go ting-a-ling-a-ling) (Text: dates 1900-1945)
The bells of San Blas (What say the Bells of San Blas) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The bells of San Marie (It's pleasant in Holy Mary
) (Text: John Masefield)
J. Ireland, F. Jackson, E. Martin, H. Roberton, H. Sykes
The bells of youth (The Bells of Youth are ringing in the gateways of the South
) (Text: Fiona Macleod)
G. Bantock, H. Bath, H. Clough-Leighter, P. Fletcher, N. Fulton, J. Hawes, O. Speaks
The Bells of Youth [song cycle]
The bells of yule (The time draws near the birth of Christ) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
E. Bacon, L. Baker, J. Bridge, Florian, R. Graham, C. Lang, E. Lear, E. Naylor, A. Reichardt, W. Wild, D. Williams
The beloved one : a ballad (And will she love thee as well as I) (Text: Twiss, Miss) [x]
The bereaved maid () [x]
The bereaved swan (Wan) (Text: Stevie Smith) [x] *
The best (What's the best thing in the world?) (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning)
The best is yet to be (Grow old along with me!) (Text: Robert Browning)
B. Ackert, G. Branscombe, P. Curran, C. Effinger, H. Hadley, C. Keep, M. Lewis, D. Madsen, G. Zuckerman, C. Mueller, F. Ralston, G. Schuyler, L. True, L. Laitman, J. Heggie, J. Cohen
The Best she Could (Nine leaves a minute
) (Text: Thomas Hardy) *
The best thing in the world (What's the best thing in the world?) (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning)
The best thing of all () (Text: Marc Blitzstein) [x] *
The best time of the day () (Text: Raymond Clevie Carver, jr.) [x] *
The betrothal (Oh come, my lad, or go, my lad) (Text: Edna St. Vincent Millay) *
The Betrothal (I have placed a golden ring
) (Text: Thomas Bailey Aldrich)
The Big Baboon (The Big Baboon is found upon the plains of Cariboo) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
W. Kraft, L. Mannes, G. Peel, T. Scherman
The Big Bell in Zion (Come, children, hear the joyful sound) (Text: Theodore Henry Shackelford)
The big brown bear (I chanced upon a big brown bear
) (Text: H. A. Weydt)
The big doors of the country barn stand open (The big doors of the country barn stand open and read) (Text: Walt Whitman)
the bigness of cannon (the bigness of cannon) (Text: E. E. (Edward Estlin) Cummings)
The billet doux (She was a simple country maid)
The Birch Tree (Green glimmering
) (Text: Georgina Mase) *
The birch tree and the maiden (Lightly waveth the birch tree) ENG GER (Text: Constance Bache after Adam Asnyk)
The Birch-Tree (Rippling through thy branches goes the sunshine) (Text: James Russell Lowell)
The bird (O clear and musical
) (Text: Elinor Wylie) *
The bird (Adventurous bird walking upon the air) (Text: Edwin Muir) [x] *
The bird in the rain (O clear and musical
) (Text: Elinor Wylie) *
The bird of Christ (Holy, Holy, Holy, Christ upon the Cross) (Text: Fiona Macleod)
The bird of love (Ah ! Love was never yet without/ the pang
) (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron)
J. Ellerton, A. Lee, E. Masson
The birds (When Jesus Christ was four years old
) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
B. Britten, P. Warlock, V. Buck, W. Buczynski, G. Bush, W. Davies, J. Duarte, A. Fagge, J. Fearing, N. Gilbert, I. Gurney, G. Gwyther, P. James, D. Murray, W. Pasfield, V. Persichetti, G. Rathbone, J. Roff, H. Simpson, P. Sweetman, E. Thiman, L. Walters, A. Goodhart, R. Vanderlip
The birds (Where thou dwellest, in what grove
) (Text: William Blake)
W. Bell, H. Brian, M. Bucci, G. Bantock, D. Klotzman, A. Ribári, A. Whiting, F. Frye
The Birds (Cuckoo! From out of a wood did a cuckoo fly) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The birds' lament (Oh, says the linnet, if I sing
) (Text: John Clare)
The birds of the wilderness (My heart, the bird of the wilderness
) ENG GER POL (Text: Rabindranath Tagore after Rabindranath Tagore)
The Birds Sat Upon It (There was a Young Lady whose bonnet
) (Text: Edward Lear)
The Bird's Song (The Lord is my shepherd: therefore can I lack nothing) ENG GER FRE (Text: Bible or other Sacred Texts after Bible or other Sacred Texts)
The birds that sing on autumn eyes (The birds that sing on autumn eyes
) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
The birks of Invermay (The smiling morn, the breathing spring) (Text: David Mallet)
The birth of Christ (The time draws near the birth of Christ) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
E. Bacon, L. Baker, J. Bridge, Florian, R. Graham, C. Lang, E. Lear, E. Naylor, A. Reichardt, W. Wild, D. Williams
The Birth of Morn (An angel, robed in spotless white
) (Text: Paul Laurence Dunbar)
F. Leoni, S. Coleridge-Taylor, F. Hall, G. Bachlund
The birthnight (Dearest, it was a night
) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The bison (The Bison is vain, and (I write it with pain)) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
The black knight ('Twas Pentecost, the Feast of Gladness) ENG FRE (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow after Johann Ludwig Uhland)
The black swan (The sun has fallen and it lies in blood) (Text: Gian Carlo Menotti) *
The blackbird (O blackbird, what a boy you are!
) (Text: T. E. (Thomas Edward) Brown)
C. Bricken, G. Grant-Schaefer
The blackbird (The nightingale has a lyre of gold
) GER (Text: William Ernest Henley)
F. Delius, H. Parker, R. Quilter, R. Faith, F. Allitsen, A. Beach, H. Brainard, J. Densmore, V. Harris, F. Hart, A. Lambert, C. McKinley, M. Rogers, L. Ronald, H. Loomis, B. Whelply
The blackbird (As I went up a woodland walk) (Text: Alfred Perceval Graves)
The blackbird (In the far corner) (Text: Humbert Wolfe) [x] *
The blackbird sings in the hazel-bush (The blackbird sings in the hazel-brake
) (Text: Thomas Bailey Aldrich)
The bleeding hand; or, the sprig of eglantine given to a maid (From this bleeding hand of mine) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The Blessed Virgin's Expostulation (Tell me, tell me some, some pitying angel) (Text: Nahum Tate)
The blessing (The surges gushed and sounded) (Text: William Ernest Henley)
The Blind Boy (Blind from my birth
) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
The blind girl of Castèl-Cuillè (At the foot of the mountain height) ENG (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow after Jacques Jacquou Jasmin)
S. Coleridge-Taylor, F. Corder
The blind man and his dog () (Text: L. Bantock) [x]
The blind ploughman (Set my hands upon the plough, my feet upon the sod) (Text: Marguerite Radclyffe-Hall)
The blinded bird (So zestfully canst thou sing?
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The blossom (Merry, merry sparrow
) (Text: William Blake)
M. Armanini, R. Boughton, H. Boyadjian, H. Brian, M. Carmichael, W. Bolcom, E. Coolidge, E. Bainton, V. Caillard, J. Corina, J. Duke, T. Dunhill, A. Engel, E. Fogg, H. Grieveson, W. Hadow, F. Hart, C. Hely-Hutchinson, P. Jackman, J. Kennedy, C. Maclary, M. Miller, E. Raskin, M. Roberts, R. Roper, G. Smith, D. Stewart, J. West, R. Willis, C. Wood, A. Somervell
The blue bird (The lake lay blue below the hill
) GER FRE (Text: Mary Coleridge)
The blue hills of Antrim (The blue hills of Antrim I see in my dreams) (Text: Joseph Campbell)
E. Deale, H. Harty, D. Parke
The Blue Mountains (A Song of Australia) (Over the Blue Mountains
) (Text: Alfred Noyes)
The blue starred eyes of springtime (The blue starred eyes of springtime) DUT RUS ITA (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The blue-bell (In love she fell
) DUT (Text: Margaret Wade Campbell Deland)
The Blue-Eyes Fairy (There's a Fairy that hides in the beautiful eyes
) (Text: Algernon Blackwood)
The bluebell wood (Heaven upon earth! for overhead) (Text: Alfred Hayes)
The bluebird (I know the song that the bluebird is singing) (Text: Emily Huntington Miller)
The boat is chafing (The boat is chafing at our long delay
) (Text: John Davidson)
I. Gurney, R. Stevenson, A. Scott, A. Cooke
The boat of my lover (O boat of my lover, go softly, go safely) (Text: Dinah Maria Craik, née Mulock)
The boat song (The boat is chafing at our long delay
) (Text: John Davidson)
I. Gurney, R. Stevenson, A. Scott, A. Cooke
The boat song () (Text: Montrose J. Moses) [x]
The boatman (Ye gales that gently wave the sea) (Text: Allan Ramsay)
The boatmen () (Text: Witter Bynner) [x]
The boatmen's dance (The boatmen dance, the boatmen sing
) CHI (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The bold unbiddable child (Now what is he after below in the street) (Text: Winifred M. Letts)
The bondman (Bind me but to thee with thine hair) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The Bonie Lad That's Far Awa (O how can I be blythe and glad) GER (Text: Robert Burns)
The Bonnie Blue Flag (Come, brothers ! rally for the right !
) (Text: Annie Chambers Ketchum)
The bonnie Earl of Murray (Ye Hielands and ye Lawlands) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The bonny Earl o' Moray (Ye Hielands and ye Lowlands) GER (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The bonny grey-ey'd morn (A soldier am I, all the world o'er I range) (Text: William Smyth)
The bony fiddler (The maiden sleeps on her pillow) ENG FRE (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The Boogah Man (W'en de evenin' shadders) (Text: Paul Laurence Dunbar)
The border widow's lament (My love built me a bonnie bower) (Text: Sir Walter Scott)
The bourne (Underneath the growing grass
) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
A. Macdonald, A. Somervell
The boy and the brook (Down from yon distant mountain height) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The Boy from Ballytearim (He was born in Ballytearim where there's little work to do) (Text: Moira O'Neill)
The boys of England () (Text: Nellie Nurton) [x]
The boy's song () (Text: H. C. Beesking, Reverend) [x] *
The bracelet (Why I tie about thy wrist
) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The bracelet to Julia (Why I tie about thy wrist
) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The brain is wider than the sky (The brain is wider than the sky) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The Brave Roland (The brave Roland! - the brave Roland! -
) (Text: Thomas Campbell)
The Breaking of Nations (Only a man harrowing clods
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
G. Finzi, G. Bachlund, F. Austin, J. Baber, L. Burritt, D. Healey, G. Slater, R. Zupko
The breath of a rose (Love is like dew on lilacs at dawn) (Text: (James Mercer) Langston Hughes) *
The Brewing of Soma (O, Sabbath rest of Galilee) (Text: John Greenleaf Whittier)
The Bridal of Andalla ("Rise up, rise up, Xarifa, lay the golden cushion down;
) ENG (Text: John Gibson Lockhart after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist)
The bridegroom (Queen Guinevere had fled the court, and sat
) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
J. Barnett, J. Blockley, H. Deacon, W. Dempster, E. Edwards, A. Gaul, J. Guest, E. Lear, M. Lindsay, G. MacFarren, W. Montgomery, C. Salaman, E. Smith, A. Steed, J. Wade
The bride's tragedy (The wind wears roun', the day wears doun
) (Text: Algernon Charles Swinburne)
The bridge (I stood on the bridge at midnight) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
R. Armitage, J. Barnett, J. Blockley, P. Bucalossi, L. Carew, L. Cottell, E. Dickson, A. Landon, M. Lindsay, F. Romer, S. Smallwood, M. Stevens, J. Walker
The bridge of sighs (One more Unfortunate) (Text: Thomas Hood)
The brink of night (Upon the brink of night I stand) (Text: W. M. Chauvenet) [x]
The brisk young lad (The pawky auld carle came o'er the lea) (Text: James V, King of Scots)
The brisk young widow (In Chester town there liv'd) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The British Light Dragoons ('Twas a Marechal of France, and he fain would honour gain) GER (Text: Sir Walter Scott)
The broken flower (Oh! wear it on thy heart, my love) GER (Text: Felicia Dorothea (Browne) Hemans)
F. Cowen, A. Stourton, O. King, B. Hime
The broken heart (He is stark mad, who ever says) (Text: John Donne)
The Broken Heart (She is far from the land where her young hero sleeps
) (Text: Thomas Moore)
The brook (Laugh of the mountain! -- lyre of bird and tree!) ENG (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist)
The brook and the wave (The brooklet came from the mountain) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
F. Boott, C. Cadman, H. Lautz, J. Molloy, A. Parr, H. Pontet, C. Scott
The Brookland Road (I was very pleased with what I knowed) (Text: Rudyard Kipling) [x]
The Brooklet (I heard a brooklet gushing) DUT SPA ENG ITA FRE (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow after Wilhelm Müller)
E. Loder, W. Bentley, J. Blockley, A. Cox, C. Hargitt, K. Harrington, J. Hatton, H. Howard, E. Schaaf, A. Smith, O. Wintle, A. Beach
The brooklet (The brooklet came from the mountain) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
F. Boott, C. Cadman, H. Lautz, J. Molloy, A. Parr, H. Pontet, C. Scott
The brooklet and the wave (The brooklet came from the mountain) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The brooklet came from the mountain (The brooklet came from the mountain) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
F. Boott, C. Cadman, H. Lautz, J. Molloy, A. Parr, H. Pontet, C. Scott
The Broom and the Shovel, the Poker and the Tongs (The Broom and the Shovel, the Poker and the Tongs) (Text: Edward Lear)
The broom of Cowdenknows (How blythe ilk morn was I to see
) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The brown and the blond (A youth, light-hearted and content) ENG (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow after Gustav Pfizer)
M. Balfe, J. Blockley, P. Bucalossi, L. Carew, J. Chatterton, A. Houfe, F. Romer, H. Stewart, T. Wallworth
The Browning Cycle of Love Lyrics [song cycle]
The brume o' the Cowdenknowes (How blythe ilk morn was I to see
) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The bubbly jock (The bubbly jock's been at the barm) (Text: William Soutar) [x] *
The Buckie Braes (It isna far frae our toun) (Text: William Soutar) [x] *
The buckle (I had a silver buckle) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
A. Bliss, E. Leigh, H. Piggott
The buds (Now I can see
) (Text: James Stephens)
The buds in spring (All suddenly the wind comes soft
) (Text: Rupert Brooke)
J. Ireland, D. Anderson, I. Gurney, I. Gurney, R. Le Lacheur, G. Peterkin, S. Rowton, F. Swain, M. Thomas, M. Tal
The bugles of Dreamland (Swiftly the dews of the gloaming are falling) (Text: Fiona Macleod)
The Builders (All are architects of Fate) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The bull transcended (Astride the bull, I reach home) ENG (Text: Paul Reps after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist) *
The Bullfinches (Brother Bulleys, let us sing
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The bulls won't bellow (I had a lass) (Text: Ernest Butcher) [x]
The burthen of the tide (The tide was dark an' heavy with the) (Text: Fiona Macleod)
The bustle in a house (The bustle in a house) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The busy bee (The busy bee has no time for sorrow) RUS (Text: William Blake)
The busy bee () DUT (Text: A. Grein after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The buttercup song () (Text: Mervyn, Lord Horder, the Second Baron of Ashford) [x] *
The butterfly (The butterfly obtains) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The butterfly (The last, the very last
) ENG (Text: after Pavel Friedmann) *
The butterfly and the rose () ENG (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The butterfly is in love with the rose (Butterfly is in love with the rose) ENG (Text: Kate Freiligrath Kroeker after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The butterfly is in love with the rose (The butterfly is in love with the rose) ENG (Text: Alma Strettell after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The cage (A leopard went around his cage) (Text: Charles Edward Ives)
The caged bird (And like myself alone, wholly alone) (Text: Emily Brontë)
The cakewalk (In smoky lamplight of a Smyrna Café) (Text: Wilfrid Wilson Gibson)
The calf (Pray, butcher, spare yon tender calf!) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The Californy song (I am sailing for America) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
The call (Come, my Way, my Truth, my Life) (Text: George Herbert)
R. Vaughan Williams, C. Cooman
The Call of Radha (Honey child, honey child, whither are you going?) (Text: Sarojini Naidu, née Chattopadhyaya)
The Call of Spring (Come, choose your road and away, my lad) (Text: Alfred Noyes)
M. Kern, R. Parfrey, J. West
The Call of the Spring (Come, choose your road and away, my lad) (Text: Alfred Noyes)
M. Kern, R. Parfrey, J. West
the Cambridge ladies (the Cambridge ladies who live in furnished souls
) (Text: E. E. (Edward Estlin) Cummings)
The camel (The camel has a single hump) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The Camel's hump (The Camel's hump is an ugly lump) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The camp-meeting (Across the summer meadows fair) (Text: Charles Elliott)
The Canadian Boat-Song (Faintly as tolls the evening chime) (Text: Thomas Moore)
A. Beach, M. Arnold, P. Judd, E. Sweeting
The canal bank (I know a girl) (Text: James Stephens)
M. Bowles, H. Lapp, D. Parke, A. Strilko
The Candid Man (Forth went the candid man
) (Text: Stephen Crane)
The candy lion () (Text: Abbie Farwell Brown) [x]
The cantaloupe (One cantaloupe is ripe and lush) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The cap and bells (The Jester walked in the garden
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The captain (O it's I that am the captain of a tidy little ship
) FRE (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
R. Hahn, G. Cohen, M. Andrews, J. Clements, T. Crawford, E. Crowningshield, C. Grosvenor, D. Mason, M. O'Donoghue, G. Peel, M. Radnor, T. Shepard, C. Stanford, F. Keel, L. Lehmann
The Captain's Lady (O mount and go) ITA GER (Text: Robert Burns)
The captive (Tell me, Heart, what means this sorrow
) ENG ITA FRE (Text: H. Stevens after Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)
The capture of Bacchus () (Text: Charles Swain) [x]
The car ride to Christmas () (Text: Frederica von Stade) [x] *
The cardinal flower (When days are long and steeped in sun) (Text: Arlo Bates)
The carpenter's son (Here the hangman stops his cart
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
The Castle by the Sea (Hast thou seen that lordly castle) ENG FRE (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow after Johann Ludwig Uhland)
The casual look (In pictures by Grandma Moses) (Text: Phyllis McGinley) *
The cat () (Text: James Stephens) [x]
The cat (Stately, kindly, lordly friend) (Text: Algernon Charles Swinburne)
The cat and the moon (The cat went here and there
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
N. Marshall, R. Rollin, S. Shifrin, J. Wilson, J. Wilson
The caterpillar (Brown and furry) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
J. Berger, C. Parry, N. Simons
The caterpillar (Caterpillar on the wall) FRE (Text: Francis Money-Coutts, 5th Baron Latymer)
The cattle thief (They were coming across the prairie) (Text: E. Pauline Johnson)
The cause of death is wicked sin (The cause of death is wicked sin) (Text: William Leighton, Sir) [x]
The Celestial Country [song cycle]
The Celestial Vision [song cycle]
The celestial weaver (A thing of stone beside Lake Kouen-ming
) ENG (Text: Launcelot Alfred Cranmer-Byng after Han-ching T'ung)
The Celtic Twilight (Out-worn heart, in a time out-worn
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The centaurs (Playing upon the hill three centaurs were!) (Text: James Stephens)
The centipede (I objurgate the centipede) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The chains of love (O woman, fair shape!) (Text: Clifford Bax) [x] *
The challenge of Rikki-Tikki-Tavi (At the hole where he went in) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The Challenge of Thor (I am the God Thor, I am the War God) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
C. Busch, Sveinbjörn Sveinbjörnsson, A. West, D. Tinker
The chambered nautilus (This is the ship of pearl, which, poets feign) (Text: Oliver Wendell Holmes)
A. Beach, A. Farwell, J. Fearis, C. Mueller, G. Gartlan, G. La Munyon, R. Miles, D. Taylor, G. Young
The changeling (Ahoy, and ahoy! 'Twixt mocking and merry) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The chapel on the hill (The chapel of my childhood) (Text: Winifred M. Letts)
The chaplet (A little girl through field and wood) ENG (Text: William Makepeace Thackeray after Johann Ludwig Uhland)
The Character of Love as Seen as a Search for the Lost [song cycle] () (Text: Kenneth Patchen) [x] *
The chariot (Because I would not stop for Death
) FRE (Text: Emily Dickinson)
F. Chapiro, A. Copland, S. Kagen, G. Bachlund, J. Adams
The chariots of the Lord (The chariots of the Lord are strong) (Text: John Brownlie, D.D.)
The charmed sleep (Where sunless rivers weep
) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
M. Hyde, H. Mulholland, C. Naylor, R. Vaughan Williams, A. Fielitz, E. Walker, L. Woodgate, T. Pasatieri
The charming month of May (O lovely was she by the dawn) GER (Text: Robert Burns)
The cheat of Cupid; or, The ungentle guest (One silent night of late) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The Cheerful Birds [song cycle]
The cherry hung with snow (Loveliest of trees, the cherry now
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
R. Baksa, D. Arditti, G. Butterworth, C. Dougherty, J. Duke, I. Gurney, M. Horder, E. Moeran, C. Orr, G. Peel, J. Raynor, A. Rosser, A. Somervell, D. Steele, G. Getty, R. Manton, R. Abramson, K. Bissell, G. Cockshott, W. Colson, E. Cone, V. Duke, R. Field, H. Górecki, W. Grant, I. Gurney, J. Hamilton, M. Herbert, C. Herreshoff, A. Leichtling, L. Mann, C. Manney, W. Manson, C. Marillier, K. Mechem, H. Priestley-Smith, H. Proctor-Gregg, H. Roberton, C. Ross, S. Wilson, C. Woolley, J. Edmunds
The cherry tree (Loveliest of trees, the cherry now
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
R. Baksa, D. Arditti, G. Butterworth, C. Dougherty, J. Duke, I. Gurney, M. Horder, E. Moeran, C. Orr, G. Peel, J. Raynor, A. Rosser, A. Somervell, D. Steele, G. Getty, R. Manton, R. Abramson, K. Bissell, G. Cockshott, W. Colson, E. Cone, V. Duke, R. Field, H. Górecki, W. Grant, I. Gurney, J. Hamilton, M. Herbert, C. Herreshoff, A. Leichtling, L. Mann, C. Manney, W. Manson, C. Marillier, K. Mechem, H. Priestley-Smith, H. Proctor-Gregg, H. Roberton, C. Ross, S. Wilson, C. Woolley, J. Edmunds
The cherry tree (The cherry's abloom in the Northland) (Text: Margaret Rose) *
The cherry tree (Oh, fair to see) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
G. Finzi, J. Read, M. Shaw
The chestnut casts his flambeaux (The chestnut casts his flambeaux, and the flowers) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
The chestnut-blossom (The chestnut-blossom fell) (Text: Wilfrid Wilson Gibson) [x] *
The Cheviot Hills (I'll be near my journey's end) (Text: Jack Robson) *
The chief centurion (Man is a sacred city, built of marvellous earth
) (Text: John Masefield)
The chieftain's battle-song () (Text: Helen Maude Francesca Bantock (von Schweizer) [x]
The Child (Shall I be free to choose the music and the masterpiece) (Text: Peter Harris) *
The Child and the Star (Little star that shines so bright) (Text: Mother Goose)
The child and the twilight () (Text: Langdon Elwyn Mitchell) [x]
The child and the watcher (Sleep on, baby on the floor) (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning)
The child asleep (Sweet babe! true portrait of thy father's face) ENG (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow after Marguerite-Éléonore Clotilde de Vallon-Chalys, dame de Surville)
The child musician (He had played) (Text: (Henry) Austin Dobson) [x]
The children () (Text: William Soutar) [x] *
The children (We are the children who play in the park) (Text: Leonard Feeney) *
The Children [song cycle]
The children's hour (Between the dark and the daylight) SPA (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
G. Allen, J. Blockley, A. Cottam, A. Gaul, C. Ives, U. Kay, J. Maeder, Mirana, L. Williams
The children's thanks () (Text: John Bernhoff after Louis Zacharias) [x]
The chimes (Ring out, wild bells, to the wild sky
) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
E. Bainton, C. Gounod, G. Bantock, J. Blockley, L. Damrosch, G. Edmundson, W. Gilchrist, E. Hall, J. Hatton, L. Hess, R. Holmes, L. Maury, F. Tosti, E. Taylor, C. Tobin, A. Tregaskis, M. Vogrich, F. Boott, P. Fletcher, D. Cox, A. Couper, C. Atkinson, L. Baker, B. Britten, J. Calkin, E. Heathcote, J. Jordan, H. Lahee, F. McCollin, K. Newbury, J. Peake, F. Ricketts, A. Rowley, P. Sacco, R. Sanders, E. Walker, C. Wilson, F. Wood, S. Wood
The chimney sweeper (A little black thing among the snow
) FRE (Text: William Blake)
W. Bolcom, H. Brian, B. Britten, J. Butt, J. Corina, D. Freund, O. Morawetz, G. Victory
The chimney sweeper (When my mother died I was very young
) (Text: William Blake)
The chivalry of the sea (Over the warring waters, beneath the wandering skies
) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
The choice () (Text: Dorothy Parker) [x] *
The choice (The lot of love is chosen. I learnt that much struggling for an image) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The Choir Invisible [song cycle]
The choirmaster's burial (He often would ask us
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The Choric Song from "The Lotos Eaters" (There is sweet music here that softer falls
) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
E. Elgar, S. Chatman, E. Bainton, H. Bright, B. Burrows, E. Butler, P. Cartwright, J. Clements, A. Collins, B. Daubney, J. Duro, N. Fulton, A. Gibbs, J. Howard, K. Klaus, P. Koepke, C. Parry, W. Pasfield, P. Paviour, C. Proctor, A. Reed, R. Stoker, R. Werther, L. White
The Choruses from "Achilles in Scyros" [song cycle]
The chough (Desolate that cry as though the world were unworthy) (Text: Rex Warner) [x] *
The Christ child (The Christ-child lay on Mary's lap) (Text: Gilbert Keith Chesterton)
N. Dello Joio, D. Barlow, C. Black, D. Cashmore, M. Chapman, J. Conant, M. Daniels, J. Gayfer, S. Heys, M. Johnstone, T. Noble, T. Pitfield, G. Rathbone, M. Shaw, J. Tatton, R. Teed, V. Weigl, M. Williamson, A. Wills
The Christ-child (The Christ-child lay on Mary's lap) (Text: Gilbert Keith Chesterton)
N. Dello Joio, D. Barlow, C. Black, D. Cashmore, M. Chapman, J. Conant, M. Daniels, J. Gayfer, S. Heys, M. Johnstone, T. Noble, T. Pitfield, G. Rathbone, M. Shaw, J. Tatton, R. Teed, V. Weigl, M. Williamson, A. Wills
The Christ-child lay on Mary's lap (The Christ-child lay on Mary's lap) (Text: Gilbert Keith Chesterton)
N. Dello Joio, D. Barlow, C. Black, D. Cashmore, M. Chapman, J. Conant, M. Daniels, J. Gayfer, S. Heys, M. Johnstone, T. Noble, T. Pitfield, G. Rathbone, M. Shaw, J. Tatton, R. Teed, V. Weigl, M. Williamson, A. Wills
The Christmas Bird (The Christmas moon shines clear and bright
) (Text: Katharine Tynan) *
The Christmas Rose (What is the flower that blooms each year) (Text: Cecil Day Lewis) [x] *
The Christmas Tree (Put out the lights now!) (Text: Cecil Day Lewis) [x] *
The church's restoration (The church's restoration) (Text: Sir John Betjeman) [x] *
The Circus Band (All summer long, we boys dreamed 'bout big circus joys) SPA (Text: Charles Edward Ives)
The Circus Band and Other Delights [song cycle]
The city child (Dainty little maiden, whither would you wander?
) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
S. Homer, F. Keel, A. Favara, E. Bainton, M. Besly, G. Binkerd, E. Bullock, R. Clarke, L. Collingwood, D. De Lloyd, T. Dunhill, P. Fletcher, J. Groocock, M. Helyer, T. Hold, R. Macdonald, A. Somervell, A. Somervell, C. Stanford, E. Tennyson, L. Wickes, B. Williams
The City in the Sea (Lo! Death has reared himself a throne) (Text: Edgar Allan Poe)
The city of the sun () (Text: Edward Carpenter) [x]
The city-child (Dainty little maiden, whither would you wander?
) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
S. Homer, F. Keel, A. Favara, E. Bainton, M. Besly, G. Binkerd, E. Bullock, R. Clarke, L. Collingwood, D. De Lloyd, T. Dunhill, P. Fletcher, J. Groocock, M. Helyer, T. Hold, R. Macdonald, A. Somervell, A. Somervell, C. Stanford, E. Tennyson, L. Wickes, B. Williams
The cloak, the boat, and the shoes (What do you make so fair and bright?
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
B. Moore, E. Bryson, W. Butler, R. Warren
The clock (The hours of folly) RUS (Text: William Blake)
The clock of the years (And the Spirit said
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The clod and the pebble (Love seeketh not itself to please
) RUS (Text: William Blake)
R. Ash, D. Jones, W. Bolcom, J. Collignon, D. Smirnov, M. Miller, C. Gregory, D. Haines
The Cloisters [song cycle]
The cloths of heaven (Had I the heavens' embroidered cloths
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
R. Clarke, T. Dunhill, I. Gurney, P. Warlock, G. Bachlund, F. Austin, H. Bedford, B. Boydell, C. Brumby, J. Carter, M. Harvey, P. Heininen, N. Marshall, H. Roberton, R. Roderick-Jones, L. Ronald, C. Van Nuys Fogel, D. Stewart
The cloud (I bring fresh showers for the thirsting flowers) (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
E. Bainton, J. Barnett, A. Bimboni, R. Boughton
The cloud-capp'd towers (The cloud-capp'd towers, the gorgeous palaces
) ITA (Text: William Shakespeare)
R. Vaughan Williams, M. Ostrzyga
The clouds (When I saw the dark clouds, I wept, O Dark One
) ENG (Text: Robert Bly after Mirabai) *
The clover (O ruddy Lover! O brave red Clover!
) DUT GER (Text: Margaret Wade Campbell Deland)
The clown (There was once a poor clown all dressed in white) (Text: Maurice Baring) [x]
The Clown's Songs from Twelfth Night [song cycle]
The coach is at the door at last (The coach is at the door at last) (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
G. Chadwick, T. Crawford, E. Crowningshield, N. Curtis, J. Groocock, T. Shepard, M. Thomas, P. Williams
The coat (I made my song a coat
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The cock shall crow (The cock shall crow in the morning grey
) (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
The collection (Now help us, Lord, Thy yoke to wear) (Text: Charles Edward Ives)
The colour (What shall I bring you
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
R. Milford, C. Le Fleming, M. Sheldon, M. Horder
The colour from the flower is flown (The odour from the flower is gone
) ITA (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
F. Bridge, A. Farwell, G. Bennett, E. Bracken, C. Deis, A. Dexter, A. Donato, E. Fogg, E. Ford, J. Forrester, A. Fox, J. Gledhill, F. Groton, C. Higgin, E. Hughes, E. Loder, G. Loder, C. McAlpin, H. MacCunn, H. MacCunn, H. MacWhirter, W. Metcalfe, C. Mills, C. Piatti, H. Pierson, E. Thorne, E. Troup, E. Troup
The colour from the flow'r is gone (The colour from the flower is gone) (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
The columbine (Gay in her red gown, trim and fine) (Text: Arlo Bates)
The comet (O still withold thyself, be not possessed) (Text: Ruth Pitter) [x] *
The comet at Yalbury or Yell'ham (It bends far over Yell'ham Plain
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The Comet at Yell'ham (It bends far over Yell'ham Plain
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The Comfort of Friends (O the rapes) (O the rapes, fires, murders, and rivers of blood) (Text: William Penn)
The coming of good luck (So good luck came, and on my roof did light) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The coming of wisdom with time (Though leaves are many, the root is one
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
R. Jones, F. Schwartz, P. Moravec
The complaint (And must a faithful am'rous swain)
The Compleat Virtuoso (There was an old man of the Isles
) (Text: Edward Lear)
The composer (All the others translate
) (Text: W. H. (Wystan Hugh) Auden) [x] *
The computation (For my first twenty years, since yesterday) (Text: John Donne)
The concealment (No, to what purpose should I speak
) (Text: Abraham Cowley)
The conclusion (Even such is time, that takes in trust) (Text: Sir Walter Raleigh)
I. Gurney, M. Duncan, J. Beeson
The conclusion of the matter (Fear God, obey His just decrees) (Text: Christopher Smart)
The condemned playground [song cycle]
The Confession of Devorgilla (Oh! Shrive me, father - haste, haste, and shrive me) (Text: Frederick E. Weatherly)
The Confession Stone (The Songs of Mary) [song cycle]
The confirmation (Yes, yours, my love) (Text: Edwin Muir) [x] *
The Consecration of Pulaski's Banner and Hymn of the Moravian Nuns of Bethlehem (When the dying flame of day) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
W. Birch, J. Blockley, J. Coward, M. Lindsay, H. Morris
The consolation (Though bleak these woods and damp the ground
) (Text: Anne Brontë)
The conspiracy (Sigh no more, ladies, sigh no more
) DUT (Text: William Shakespeare)
D. Amram, G. Bush, W. Fisher, K. Leighton, M. Plumstead, R. Quilter, V. Thomson, R. Vaughan Williams, P. Warlock, M. Horder, F. Keel, T. Arne, A. Sullivan, B. Roe
The constant lover (Out upon it, I have loved) (Text: Sir John Suckling)
J. Anderson, C. Parry, P. Graener
The contented lover (Now sleep, and take thy rest) (Text: James Mabbe)
The contents of an ink-bottle (Well of blackness, all defiling) (Text: Mary Coleridge)
The contrast (In London I never knew what I'd be at
) (Text: Charles Morris)
The convergence of the twain (In a solitude of the sea) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The conversion (King Olaf's prows at Nidaros) (Text: Harry Arbuthnot Acworth)
The cool web (Children are dumb to say how hot the day is
) (Text: Robert Graves) [x] *
The coolin (Come with me, under my coat
) ENG (Text: James Stephens after Antoine Ó Raifteirí)
S. Barber, H. Lapp, W. Mourant, D. Parke
The coolun (Come with me, under my coat
) ENG (Text: James Stephens after Antoine Ó Raifteirí)
The cottage boy () (Text: Robert Anderson) [x]
The cottage maid (I envy not the splendour fine) GER (Text: William Smyth)
The counter () (Text: William Carlos Williams) [x] *
The Country Lover [song cycle]
The Country of the Camisards (We travelled in the print of olden wars
) (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
The country song of the Camisards (We travelled in the print of olden wars
) (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
The countryman (Oh, the sweet contentment) (Text: John Chalkhill)
The County Mayo (Now with the coming in of the spring) ENG (Text: James Stephens after Antoine Ó Raifteirí)
The County Mayo [song cycle]
The Couriers (The word of a snail on the plate of a leaf) (Text: Sylvia Plath) *
The Course of the Year [song cycle]
The course of true love () RUS ENG ITA FRE (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The court of dreams (Rain from the mountains of Ki-Sho
) ENG (Text: Launcelot Alfred Cranmer-Byng after Song Zhiwen)
The Courtier (Long have I lived in Court yet learned not all this while) (Text: Sir John Davies)
The Courtship of the Yonghy-Bònghy-Bò (On the Coast of Coromandel) (Text: Edward Lear)
D. Glass, W. Skolnik, M. Best
The cow (There once was a cow
) (Text: Theodore Roethke) *
K. Benshoof, H. Lindenfeld
The cow (The friendly cow all red and white
) (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
A. Foerster, E. Birge, H. Brook, H. Coleman, G. Conant, E. Crowningshield, E. Falk, F. Hart, M. Jacobson, G. Peel, M. Radnor, A. Rowley, G. Shaw, P. Wishart
The cow (The cow is of the bovine ilk) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The Cow and the Coward (There was an Old Man who said, "How") (Text: Edward Lear)
The Cow Slips Away (The tall pines pine) (Text: Benjamin Franklin King)
The coward's lament () (Text: John Francis Alexander Heath-Stubbs) [x] *
The cradle (He smiles within his cradle) (Text: Robert Graves after David Gregor Corner) [x] *
The cradle song (Baby, O baby, fain you are for bed
) (Text: Louis Esson)
The cradle will rock () (Text: Marc Blitzstein) [x] *
The crane (I know you, Crane
) (Text: Padraic Colum) *
A. Fleischmann, H. Cowell
The crickets sang (The crickets sang) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The crocus (Brave crocus, out of time and rash) (Text: Arlo Bates)
The cross (Since Christ embraced the cross itself, dare I) (Text: John Donne)
The cross of stone (As daylight dies) [x]
The crowder ('Twixt Coldmouth Hill and Butterstone Shank) (Text: Wilfrid Wilson Gibson) [x]
The crown () (Text: Witter Bynner) [x]
The crucifixion (At the cry of the first bird they began to crucify thee, O Swan!) ENG (Text: Howard Mumford Jones after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist) *
The cryin' blues (Hey! Hey! That's what the blues singers say) (Text: (James Mercer) Langston Hughes) *
The crying of water (O Water, voice of my heart
) FRE (Text: Arthur Symons)
L. Campbell-Tipton, P. McIntyre
The crystal bowl (Red roses floating in a crystal bowl) (Text: Wilfrid Wilson Gibson)
The crystal water of endless life (The crystal water of endless life) (Text: Nick Peros)
The cuckoo (The cuckoo is a merry bird, she sings as she flies
) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The cuckoo (When daisies pied and violets blue
) NOR GER FIN (Text: William Shakespeare)
T. Arne, M. Dring, J. Edmunds, G. Finzi, G. MacFarren, I. Stravinsky, P. Warlock, E. Moeran, F. Keel, W. Fortner
The cuckoo (The Cuckoo sat in the old pear-tree) (Text: William Brighty Rands)
The Cudgel'd Husband (As Thomas was cudgel'd one day by his wife) (Text: Jonathan Swift)
The Cumberland (At anchor in Hampton Roads we lay) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The cup of the lily () DUT SPA ENG ITA SLN FRE (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The cupboard (What's in that cupboard, Mary?
) (Text: Robert Graves)
The cupboard (I know a little cupboard
) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
G. Bachlund, V. Harris, C. Hely-Hutchinson, E. Leigh, H. McKinney, W. Miessner, A. Milner, D. Moore, D. Parke, M. Strong
The curfew (Solemnly, mournfully, dealing its dole) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
T. Anderton, W. Bentley, F. Berger, Beta, J. Blockley, G. Chadwick, G. Dinelli, T. Distin, E. Finck, H. Gaul, W. Gilchrist, S. Glover, G. Gow, G. Gow, A. Gower, P. Guglielmo, J. Hatton, A. Marchant, J. Newell, H. Perabeau, J. Read, T. Seward, E. Silas, H. Smart, S. Waley
The curfew bell (Solemnly, mournfully, dealing its dole) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
T. Anderton, W. Bentley, F. Berger, Beta, J. Blockley, G. Chadwick, G. Dinelli, T. Distin, E. Finck, H. Gaul, W. Gilchrist, S. Glover, G. Gow, G. Gow, A. Gower, P. Guglielmo, J. Hatton, A. Marchant, J. Newell, H. Perabeau, J. Read, T. Seward, E. Silas, H. Smart, S. Waley
The curfew song (The sun has gone) (Text: Algernon Blackwood)
The curfew tolls the bell (The curfew tolls the knell of parting day
)
The curlew (O, curlew, cry no more in the air
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
P. Warlock, L. Gilman, R. Roderick-Jones, P. Glanville-Hicks, J. Tavener
The Curlew [song cycle]
The curtains now are drawn (The curtains now are drawn) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
A. Downes, R. Buckle, R. Patterson
The cyclamen (Over the plains where Persian hosts) (Text: Arlo Bates)
The cypress curtain of the night (The cypress curtain of the night is spread
) (Text: Thomas Campion)
The cypress tree (When I am dead, my dearest
) GER (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
D. Arditti, J. Ireland, L. Lehmann, R. Still, G. Alcock, F. Austin, F. Barry, E. Beck-Slinn, F. Borowski, W. Branson, H. Bright, J. Butt, M. Castelnuovo-Tedesco, G. Chadwick, H. Cheney, F. Cliffe, S. Coleridge-Taylor, A. Nevin, A. Cripps, B. Daubney, G. Davies, N. Dello Joio, O. Edwards, G. English, R. Hageman, T. Gillibrand, B. Goode, R. Greaves, E. Harris, F. Hueffer, B. Innes, G. Kechley, G. Kechley, G. Klemm, M. Lawson, R. Le Lacheur, A. MacKenzie, R. Mitchell, T. Noble, O. Norman, J. Orrego-Salas, W. Parkhurst, H. Pyke, R. Quilter, O. Rasbach, H. Roberton, M. Roeder, T. Southam, A. Smith, H. Squire, H. Stevens, Sibyl, J. Þórarinsson, R. Vaughan Williams, J. Villaume, V. Weigl, A. Whiting, M. Williamson, J. Winne, R. Woodman, L. Laitman
The Daddy Long-Legs and the Fly (Once Mr. Daddy Long-Legs
) (Text: Edward Lear)
G. Bachlund, M. Dale, D. Glass, G. Ingraham, E. Troup
The Daddy Longlegs (Once Mr. Daddy Long-Legs
) (Text: Edward Lear)
G. Bachlund, M. Dale, D. Glass, G. Ingraham, E. Troup
The Daffodils (I wandered lonely as a cloud
) ENG GER (Text: William Wordsworth)
E. Thiman, F. Kelley, G. Bachlund, H. de Lange
The daft tree (A tree's a leerie kind o' loon) (Text: William Soutar) [x] *
The Dairy-House (A spreading hawthorn shades the seat) GER FRE (Text: Anne Hunter)
The daisies (In the scented bud of the morning O
) SPA (Text: James Stephens)
S. Barber, S. Barab, M. Bowles, R. Farley, W. Mourant, M. Mulliner, D. Parke, R. Quilter, A. Shepherd, L. Mann, M. Wyrill
The daisy (I plucked a daisy in the fields) (Text: Sara Teasdale)
The daisy (Where innocent bright-eyed daisies are) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
The daisy chain: twelve songs of childhood [song cycle]
The daisy follows soft the sun (The daisy follows soft the sun) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The daisy's song (The sun, with his great eye) (Text: John Keats)
C. Burleigh, G. Cory, E. Hartzell, J. Longmire, B. Luard-Selby, K. Schindler, F. Wadely
The damsels of Cardigan (Fair Tivy how sweet are thy waves gently flowing) GER (Text: W. Jones)
The dance (Come and hasten to the dancing) (Text: Caroline Alice Elgar, née Roberts)
The Dance (I am weary and my heel is tired) (Text: David Fries) *
The dance (As the Wind, and as the Wind) (Text: Rupert Brooke)
The dance (In Brueghel's great picture, The Kermess
) (Text: William Carlos Williams) *
The dance continued (Regret not me
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The dancer (Behold the brand of beauty tossed) (Text: Edmund Waller)
The dancer (He's in his grave and on his head) (Text: Alun Lewis) *
The dancers (All day beneath the hurtling shells) (Text: Wilfrid Wilson Gibson)
The Dancers [song cycle]
The dancing girl (In early dusk I saw her pass alone) (Text: John Irvine) [x] *
The dancing seal (When we were building Skua Light) (Text: Wilfrid Wilson Gibson)
The dandelion (The dandelion is brave and gay
) (Text: Frances Cornford)
The danger is over (The danger is over, the Battle is past) (Text: Thomas Southerne)
The Danza (If you never have danced the Danza) (Text: Arlo Bates)
The dark hills (Dark hills at evening in the west
) GER (Text: Edwin Arlington Robinson)
S. Adler, L. Bassett, K. Bissell, W. Coker, P. Pisk, J. Russell, L. Souther, R. Travis, W. Watts
The dark is magical (The dark is magical, the air
) (Text: Joseph Campbell)
The dark is my delight (The dark is my delight) (Text: John Marston)
The Dark King's Daughter (Red leaf, red leaf, falling to float) (Text: Conrad Aiken)
The dark-eyed gentleman (I pitched my day's leazings in Crimmercrock Lane
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The dark-eyed sailor (It was a comely young lady fair) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The darkened valley (Memory, hither come
) (Text: William Blake)
M. Arnold, R. Birch, M. Blower, H. Brown, W. Busch, E. Carr, T. Chanler, R. Cumming, W. Duncan, D. Elwyn-Edwards, J. Friskin, R. Harvey, J. Ireland, J. Ireland, S. Kagen, D. Kechley, F. Lewin, J. Mitchell, D. Pinkham, R. Quilter, W. Rogers, M. Sutherland, R. Tremain
The darkened woods (Woods, you need not frown on me) (Text: Emily Brontë)
The darkling thrush (I leaned upon a coppice gate
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
R. Milford, R. Caviani, L. Hoiby
The darkness rolls upward (The darkness rolls upward
) (Text: John Gould Fletcher)
The dawn (The Night looked up to the Day) (Text: Edward Teschemacher)
The dawn (The pale stars are gone!
) (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
The dawn (They're all soft-shiny now) (Text: Algernon Blackwood)
The Dawn Verse (The dark is dividing) (Text: D. H. (David Herbert) Lawrence) *
The dawn wind (At two o'clock in the morning, if you open your window and listen) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The Day () (Text: Jean Harper) [x] *
The day is cold (The day is cold, and dark, and dreary
) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
A. Beach, C. Gibbs, M. Ames, M. Balfe, J. Barnby, A. Behrend, A. Bergen, F. Berger, J. Bischoff, J. Blockley, J. Blumenthal, L. Bonvin, Camille, M. Clemens, F. Cowen, W. Dempster, V. Despommier, J. Ellerton, A. Elliott, L. Emerson, R. Goldbeck, H. Gorst, C. Grylls, R. Harraden, W. Harrison, J. Hatton, F. Hodges, C. Johnson, M. Lee, A. Marchant, W. Maynard, K. Morrow, H. Pasmore, I. Piaggio, S. Pratt, C. Reinhardt, H. Rudersdorff, R. Shanley, A. Sullivan, F. Swinstead, E. Weibé, N. Flagello
The day is cold, and dark and dreary (The day is cold, and dark, and dreary
) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
A. Beach, C. Gibbs, M. Ames, M. Balfe, J. Barnby, A. Behrend, A. Bergen, F. Berger, J. Bischoff, J. Blockley, J. Blumenthal, L. Bonvin, Camille, M. Clemens, F. Cowen, W. Dempster, V. Despommier, J. Ellerton, A. Elliott, L. Emerson, R. Goldbeck, H. Gorst, C. Grylls, R. Harraden, W. Harrison, J. Hatton, F. Hodges, C. Johnson, M. Lee, A. Marchant, W. Maynard, K. Morrow, H. Pasmore, I. Piaggio, S. Pratt, C. Reinhardt, H. Rudersdorff, R. Shanley, A. Sullivan, F. Swinstead, E. Weibé, N. Flagello
The day is dark & dreary (The day is cold, and dark, and dreary
) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
A. Beach, C. Gibbs, M. Ames, M. Balfe, J. Barnby, A. Behrend, A. Bergen, F. Berger, J. Bischoff, J. Blockley, J. Blumenthal, L. Bonvin, Camille, M. Clemens, F. Cowen, W. Dempster, V. Despommier, J. Ellerton, A. Elliott, L. Emerson, R. Goldbeck, H. Gorst, C. Grylls, R. Harraden, W. Harrison, J. Hatton, F. Hodges, C. Johnson, M. Lee, A. Marchant, W. Maynard, K. Morrow, H. Pasmore, I. Piaggio, S. Pratt, C. Reinhardt, H. Rudersdorff, R. Shanley, A. Sullivan, F. Swinstead, E. Weibé, N. Flagello
The day is dark and dreary (The day is cold, and dark, and dreary
) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
A. Beach, C. Gibbs, M. Ames, M. Balfe, J. Barnby, A. Behrend, A. Bergen, F. Berger, J. Bischoff, J. Blockley, J. Blumenthal, L. Bonvin, Camille, M. Clemens, F. Cowen, W. Dempster, V. Despommier, J. Ellerton, A. Elliott, L. Emerson, R. Goldbeck, H. Gorst, C. Grylls, R. Harraden, W. Harrison, J. Hatton, F. Hodges, C. Johnson, M. Lee, A. Marchant, W. Maynard, K. Morrow, H. Pasmore, I. Piaggio, S. Pratt, C. Reinhardt, H. Rudersdorff, R. Shanley, A. Sullivan, F. Swinstead, E. Weibé, N. Flagello
The day is done (The day is done, and the darkness) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
G. Allen, R. Andrews, M. Balfe, Beta, J. Blockley, O. Carter, M. Castelnuovo-Tedesco, L. Davis, Anonymous, A. Gaul, J. Kinney, H. Löhr, A. Loud, W. Neidlinger, C. Reinhardt, W. Schäffer, W. Sellé, H. Smart, E. Williams, A. Wood
The day is ending (The day is ending) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
E. Aguilar, A. Blunt, A. Cottam, J. Haakman, J. Hullah, T. Noble, R. Zabel
The day is no more (The day is no more, the shadow is upon the earth
) ENG ITA GER (Text: Rabindranath Tagore after Rabindranath Tagore)
The Day of Palms (Because it is the day of Palms
) (Text: Arthur Symons)
J. Ireland, J. Musto, E. Moeran, H. Noble, M. Sheldon
The day recedes (The day recedes, both joy and light grow pale) ENG (Text: Luise Haessler after Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche)
The days are clear (The days are clear) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
The days of roses are vanished (Days of roses, ye are vanished) ENG GER (Text: Constance Bache after Adam Asnyk)
The dazzling sun is glistening (The dazzling sun is glistening) RUS ENG GER (Text: Walter Creighton after Friedrich Martin von Bodenstedt)
The dead (These hearts were woven of human joys and cares
) ITA (Text: Rupert Brooke)
The dead (Blow out, you bugles, over the rich Dead
) (Text: Rupert Brooke)
J. Ireland, F. Bridge, A. Gray
The dead (How they so softly rest) ENG (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow after Ernst Stockmann)
S. Coleridge-Taylor, Y. Van Antwerp, F. Hodges
The dead Christ (Once more the dead Christ lies) (Text: Edward Carpenter) [x]
The dead Christ (Once more the dead Christ lies) (Text: Edward Carpenter) [x]
The Dead Drummer (They throw in Drummer Hodge, to rest
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The death of Crazy Jane ('Twas at the hour when night retreating) (Text: Robert Anderson) [x]
The Death of Admiral Blake (Laden with spoil of the South, fulfilled with the glory of achievement
) (Text: Sir Henry Newbolt)
The death of Autumn (When reeds are dead and straw to thatch the marshes) (Text: Edna St. Vincent Millay)
The death of Crazy Jane ('Twas at the hour when night retreating) (Text: Robert Anderson) [x]
The Death of Lincoln (Oh, slow to smite and swift to spare) (Text: William Cullen Bryant)
The Death of Mr. Barrett (It is true that first words must be said --
) (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning)
The death of Nelson (O'er Nelson's Tomb, with silent grief oppress'd) (Text: Samuel James Arnold)
The Death of Olaf (King Olaf's dragons take the sea) (Text: Harry Arbuthnot Acworth)
The Death of Œnone (Œnone sat within the cave from out) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
The Death of Queen Jane (King Henry was sent for)
The Death of Richard Wagner (Mourning on earth, as when dark hours descend) (Text: Algernon Charles Swinburne)
The death of the linnet (But lately seen, in gladsome green
) (Text: Robert Burns)
The Death of the Old Year (Full knee-deep lies the winter snow) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
S. Cooke, E. Davis, R. Jackson
The death of young Romilly : a ballad (What is good for a bootless bene
) (Text: William Wordsworth)
The Death-Bed (He drowsed and was aware of silence heaped) (Text: Siegfried Lorraine Sassoon)
The death-bed (We watch'd her breathing thro' the night) (Text: Thomas Hood)
The decoys (There are some birds) (Text: W. H. (Wystan Hugh) Auden) [x] *
The Deep-Sea Pearl (The love of my life came not) (Text: Edith M. Thomas)
The deepest desire (I thought I knew my heart's desire) (Text: Helen Prejean, Sister) *
The Deepest Desire: Four Meditations on Love [song cycle]
The Defense of Corinth (When Philip, King of Macedon, enterprised the Siege and ruin of) ENG (Text: (Paul) Jules Barbier after François Rabelais)
The delights of the bottle (The delights of the bottle and the charms of good wine)
The Demon of Adachigahara () (Text: Ted Hughes) [x] *
The descent () (Text: William Carlos Williams) [x] *
The descent of Mr. Aldez (That cloud--amiguous, not) (Text: John Updike) *
The deserted house (There's no smoke in the chimney) (Text: Mary Coleridge)
The deserter (What sound awakened me, I wonder, for now 'tis dumb
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
The deserter (If sadly thinking and spirits sinking
) GER (Text: John Philpot Curran)
The desire (Give me no mansions ivory white) (Text: Katharine Tynan)
The desire for hermitage (Ah! To be all alone in a little cell) ENG (Text: Sean O'Faolain after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist) *
The destiny of my words (All the words that I utter
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
E. Whyte, L. Campbell-Tipton, I. Gurney
The Destruction of Sennacherib (The Assyrian came down like the wolf on the fold
) GER (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron)
I. Nathan, G. Bantock, F. Boott, A. Clifford, E. Davis, S. Glover, C. Hill, D. Jenkins, S. Lovatt, E. Parker, A. Patterson, L. Thomas, F. Tozer, B. Treharne, S. Ward-Casey, F. Wiseman
The Destruction of the Assyrians (The Assyrian came down like the wolf on the fold
) GER (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron)
I. Nathan, G. Bantock, F. Boott, A. Clifford, E. Davis, S. Glover, C. Hill, D. Jenkins, S. Lovatt, E. Parker, A. Patterson, L. Thomas, F. Tozer, B. Treharne, S. Ward-Casey, F. Wiseman
The Devil's Love Song (Tho' my sins have from heaven forevermore barred me
) (Text: Maurice V. Samuels)
The Devon maid (Where be you going, you Devon maid) (Text: John Keats)
The devout lover (It is not mine to sing the stately grace) (Text: Walter Herries Pollock)
The Diary (April, 1919) (What sort of diary should I like mine to be? Something so elastic that it will embrace anything) (Text: Virginia Woolf) [x] *
The dismantled ship (In some unused lagoon, some nameless bay
) (Text: Walt Whitman)
The distant drum (I am not a metaphor or symbol) (Text: Calvin C. Hernton) *
The distracted lover ("O distracted lover, writing
) ENG (Text: Edward Fitzgerald after Nur ad-Din Abd ar-Rahman Jami)
The distracted maid (One morning very early, one morning in the spring
)
The Diver () [x]
The Divine (My calling is divine, and I from God am sent) (Text: Sir John Davies)
The divine image (To Mercy, Pity, Peace and Love
) RUS (Text: William Blake)
J. Mitchell, R. Vaughan Williams, W. Bolcom, D. Thomas, G. Bachlund, H. Clarke, D. Smirnov, M. Miller, V. Thomson, O. Luening
The divine ship (One thought ever at the fore
) (Text: Walt Whitman)
E. Bacon, E. Bacon, P. Stearns, R. Ward
The Division (Rain on the windows, creaking doors) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The doctor's song (The goodman said 'tis time for bed) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The Dodger (Yes the candidate's a dodger
) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The dodo (The Dodo used to walk around) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
The doe (Through the snow/ the graceful doe) (Text: John Fandel) *
The doe-skin blanket () (Text: Nelle Richmond Eberhart) [x]
The dog lies in his kennel (The dog lies in his kennel) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
The dong (When awful darkness and silence reign) (Text: Edward Lear)
M. Forsyth, J. Szajna-Lewandowska, R. Bruce, H. Noble, S. Oliver, E. Roxburgh
The dong with the luminous nose (When awful darkness and silence reign) (Text: Edward Lear)
M. Forsyth, J. Szajna-Lewandowska, R. Bruce, H. Noble, S. Oliver, E. Roxburgh
The donkey (When fishes flew and forests walked
) GER (Text: Gilbert Keith Chesterton)
H. Cowell, A. Baas, M. Besly, R. Boughton, D. Bright, V. Buck, W. Buczynski, R. Hageman, H. Purdie, H. Roberton, J. Roff, H. Searle, L. Smit, G. Tomlins, B. Treharne, M. Horder
The door (When she came suddenly in) (Text: Robert Graves) [x] *
The Door of Death is made of gold (The Door of Death is made of gold) (Text: William Blake)
The Door Standing Open [song cycle]
The Double Standard Song (Do as I say, not as I do
) (Text: Gary Bachlund)
The dove (and here is old Picasso
) (Text: (James Mercer) Langston Hughes) *
E. Siegmeister, D. Gilliam
The dove (I had a dove and the sweet dove died
) (Text: John Keats)
B. Frankel, C. Busch, M. Castelnuovo-Tedesco, G. Fagan, E. Fogg, J. Furze, M. Head, M. Helyer, I. Klein, T. Pritchard, L. Ronald, F. White, C. Wood, W. Young
The dove (How often, these hours) (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x] *
The dove (The dove descending breaks the air) (Text: T. S. (Thomas Stearns) Eliot) *
I. Stravinsky, J. Harvey, A. Lourié
The dove (My dove, my beautiful one
) FRE (Text: James Joyce)
D. Arditti, R. Mengelberg, K. Szymanowski, J. Brown, D. Del Tredici, J. Jarrett, H. Kauder, P. Pisk, H. Reutter, I. Spector, C. Susa, G. Treacher
The dove descending (The dove descending breaks the air) (Text: T. S. (Thomas Stearns) Eliot) *
I. Stravinsky, J. Harvey, A. Lourié
The dove song (When all is fair and still) (Text: Ethan Ayer) *
The doves () (Text: Leonard Feeney) [x]
The Dream (Love, if I weep it will not matter) (Text: Edna St. Vincent Millay)
The dream (When he had tasted in a dream of the Ten Courts of Purgatory) (Text: Eunice Tietjens, née Hammond)
The dream (Last night worn with anguish that tortur'd my breast) ENG GER (Text: Reverend Roberts of Pentre after Dafydd ap Gwilym)
The dream (I woke to find my pillow wet
) (Text: George William Russell)
The Dream (How he sleepeth! having drunken weary childhood's mandragore
) (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning)
The dream (Dear, though the night is gone
) (Text: W. H. (Wystan Hugh) Auden) *
The Dream Keeper (Bring me all of your dreams) (Text: (James Mercer) Langston Hughes) *
C. De Jong, S. Hovey, S. Raphling
The Dream of a Boy who Lived at Nine-Elms (Nine grenadiers, with bayonets in their guns) (Text: William Brighty Rands)
The Dream of a Girl who Lived at Seven-Oaks (Seven sweet singing birds up in a tree) (Text: William Brighty Rands)
The dream of home (Who has not felt how sadly sweet) (Text: Thomas Moore)
W. Pearson, E. Thorne, C. Wood
The Dream of the Rood (Listen! I will describe the best of dreams) (Text: Kevin John William Crossley-Holland) [x] *
The Dream-Bridge (All drear and barren seemed the hours) (Text: Clark Ashton Smith)
The dream-city (On a dream-hill we'll build our city
) (Text: Humbert Wolfe) *
The dream-maker man () [x]
The dream-wind (When, like a sleeping child or a bird in the nest) (Text: Fiona Macleod)
The dreaming lake (The tropic wind dies down) (Text: Elizabeth Evelyn Moore)
The dreaming water-lily () DUT RUS ENG ITA (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The dreaming waterlily (The dreaming waterlily) DUT RUS ENG ITA (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The dreary day (The day is cold, and dark, and dreary
) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
A. Beach, C. Gibbs, M. Ames, M. Balfe, J. Barnby, A. Behrend, A. Bergen, F. Berger, J. Bischoff, J. Blockley, J. Blumenthal, L. Bonvin, Camille, M. Clemens, F. Cowen, W. Dempster, V. Despommier, J. Ellerton, A. Elliott, L. Emerson, R. Goldbeck, H. Gorst, C. Grylls, R. Harraden, W. Harrison, J. Hatton, F. Hodges, C. Johnson, M. Lee, A. Marchant, W. Maynard, K. Morrow, H. Pasmore, I. Piaggio, S. Pratt, C. Reinhardt, H. Rudersdorff, R. Shanley, A. Sullivan, F. Swinstead, E. Weibé, N. Flagello
The droll wee man (There was a wee bit mannie) (Text: William Soutar) [x] *
The dromedary (The Dromedary is a cheerful bird) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
The drovers (Through heat and cold, and shower and sun) (Text: John Greenleaf Whittier)
The Drummer (They throw in Drummer Hodge, to rest
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
G. Baxter, J. Joubert, J. Edmunds, A. Hale
The Drunkard (I had a wife but, but she is gone. She left me a week ago. God bless her!) (Text: Fenton Johnson)
The Duchess' Lullaby (Speak roughly to your little boy) (Text: Lewis Carroll)
U. Grahn, J. Duke, L. Lehmann, G. Bachlund
The duck (Behold the duck) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The Duck and the Kangaroo (Said the Duck to the Kangaroo
) (Text: Edward Lear)
G. Bachlund, M. Dale, D. Glass, G. Grant-Schaefer, C. Hely-Hutchinson, J. Horovitz, G. Ingraham, E. Troup, P. Chépélov
The Duck and the Yak () (Text: Gertrude Norman) [x] *
The Dug-Out (Why do you lie with your legs ungainly huddled
) (Text: Siegfried Lorraine Sassoon)
The dunce (Why does he still keep ticking?) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
E. Belchamber, H. Howells
The dust of Timas (This dust was Timas; and they say
) ENG (Text: Edwin Arlington Robinson after Sappho)
The dust of snow (The way a crow
) (Text: Robert Frost) *
W. Ames, E. Carter, N. Peros, V. Persichetti, A. Rosser, L. Hoiby
The dust of Timas (This dust was Timas; and they say
) ENG (Text: Edwin Arlington Robinson after Sappho)
The dustman (At night when everyone's asleep
) (Text: Seumas O'Sullivan)
The Dwarf of Battersea () (Text: Mervyn Peake) [x] *
The dying nightingale () (Text: Stark Young) [x] *
The dying of the light (Do not go gentle into that good night
) (Text: Dylan Thomas) *
W. Riegger, I. Stravinsky, J. Hearne, E. Lutyens, J. McCabe, R. Orton, H. Reisberg, G. Whettam
The dying patriot (Day breaks on England down the Kentish hills) (Text: James Elroy Flecker)
The eagle (He clasps the crag with crooked hands) GER (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
C. Busch, N. Flagello, G. Grant-Schaefer, I. Gurney, J. Heymann, G. Jacob, E. MacDowell, P. Naylor, S. Pierce, J. Wilson
The eagle (Round us the wild creatures, overhead the trees) (Text: Robert Browning)
G. Bantock, A. Borton, H. Clarke, M. Kernochan, F. Krull, Staat
The early morning (The moon on the one hand, the dawn on the other) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
The early nightingale (When first we hear the shy-come nightingales) (Text: John Clare)
The earth abideth (The earth abideth for ever
) (Text: Bible or other Sacred Texts)
The earth is so lovely (The earth is so lovely) CZE ENG FRE (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The earth loveth the spring (The earth loveth the spring) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
The Earth, the Wind, and the Sky [song cycle]
The east neuk o' Fife (Auld gudeman, ye're a drunken carle, drunken carle) (Text: Sir Alexander Boswell)
The Eastern Window (Come to me, O ye children!) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
T. Anderton, G. Baker, E. Bainton, R. Batten, A. Cecil, C. Chase, W. Dempster, J. Driver, J. Hatton, M. Kingston, G. Linley, C. Macirone, F. Maker, I. Martinez, C. Matthews, W. Maynard, J. Mountfort, J. Newell, F. Romer, L. Selle, A. Sullivan, H. Watkis, D. Whyte
The ebb and flow (When first Thou on me, Lord, wroughtest Thy sweet print) (Text: Edward Taylor)
The echoing green (The sun does arise
) DUT (Text: William Blake)
P. Bezanson, W. Busch, A. Brewer, F. Breydert, H. Brian, E. Button, A. Caesar, W. Bolcom, A. Cooke, E. Crocker, J. Ireland, M. Jacques
The ecstatic (Lark, skylark, spilling your rubbed and round) (Text: Cecil Day Lewis) [x] *
N. Lindsay, B. Naylor, P. Naylor, F. Stark
The Eden Rose (Fair Eve knelt close to the guarded gate in the hush of an Eastern spring) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The eel (I don't mind eels except as meals) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The Electric Cop (this guy on t.v.) (Text: Victor Hernandez Cruz) *
The elephant (When people call this beast to mind) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
The Elfin Fairies (We fairy elves in secret dells
) GER (Text: David Thomson)
The elfin shoemaker (Little Cowboy, what have you heard
) (Text: William Allingham)
The Elusive (Up above a star -- down a mountain side) (Text: Dorothy Dow)
The elves' ride () ENG (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The emigrant (Going by Daly's shanty I heard the boys within) (Text: John Masefield)
R. Boughton, H. Fothergill, L. Russell, F. Scott, B. Smith
The Emigrant (O talk not to me of my country's delights) (Text: Amelia Alderson Opie)
The emigrant's adieu to Ballyshanny (Adieu to Ballyshanny! where I was bred and born
) (Text: William Allingham)
The emigrant's grave (Why mourn ye) [x]
The Emperor of Ice-Cream (Call the roller of big cigars
) (Text: Wallace Stevens)
The Emperor's New Clothes (Many years ago lived an Emperor who was so fond of new clothes that he spent all of his money on dressing fashionably) (Text: Jan Jarvlepp after Mrs. H. B. Paull) [x] *
The empty purse (One song leads on to another) (Text: Wilfrid Wilson Gibson) [x] *
The Enchanted Fiddle () (Text: Sir Arnold Edward Trevor Bax) [x]
The enchanted hill (From height of noon) (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x]
The Enchanted Hour [song cycle]
The Enchantress (By the lore of ages far) (Text: Henry Fothergill Chorley)
The encounter (The street sounds to the soldiers' tread) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
L. Berkeley, J. Ireland, G. Peel, H. Searle, A. Somervell, R. Boughton, E. Cone, L. Crerar, A. Cripps, C. Lambert
The End (We'll to the Woods no more) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
J. Ireland, R. Vaughan Williams, M. Chanwai, L. Crerar, C. Duncan, D. Stewart, H. Thomas, J. Raynor
The end (After the blast of lighning from the East
) (Text: Wilfred Owen)
The End of Daylight Savings Time () (Text: Alice Wirth Gray) [x] *
The end of love (Now he is dead
) (Text: Kathleen Raine) *
The End of Love [song cycle]
The end of the episode (Indulge no more may we
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The end of the world () (Text: Archibald MacLeish) [x] *
R. Cumming, J. Duke, P. Spino
The ending year (Frail autumn lights on the leaves)
The Enemies () (Text: Richard Nickson) [x]
The enemy speak () (Text: Cecil Day Lewis) [x] *
The Englishman (St George he was for England) (Text: Gilbert Keith Chesterton)
The Epitaph () (Text: Logan Pearsall Smith) [x]
The Erl King () DUT SPA ENG ITA FRE FIN (Text: after Johann Wolfgang von Goethe) [x]
The Erl King () DUT SPA ENG ITA FRE FIN (Text: W. Bartholomew after Johann Wolfgang von Goethe) [x]
The estuary (Light, stillness and peace lie on the broad sands
) (Text: Ruth Pitter) *
The eternal feminine (When I was a freckled bit bairn) (Text: John Buchan)
The Eternal Goodness (O friends! with whom my feet have trod
) (Text: John Greenleaf Whittier)
S. Homer, E. Bacon, U. Burnap, C. Hawley, W. Irmer, H. Johnson, W. Schulthes, L. Zaninelli
The eternal prisoner (How can one age the heart) (Text: Gian Carlo Menotti) *
The evening primrose (When once the sun sinks in the west
) DUT (Text: John Clare)
The evening reverie, or Footsteps of angels (When the hours of Day are numbered) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
F. Baer, J. Blockley, M. Davis, W. Dempster, A. Gaul, E. Harding, J. Harding, E. Hime, G. Linley, J. Normann, F. Perkins, F. Romer, E. Schulz
The evening star (Just above yon sandy bar) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
C. Busch, V. d'Indy, A. Nevin
The evening star (See how her body pants) (Text: William Henry Davies) [x] *
The evening sun was sinking down (The evening sun was sinking down) (Text: Emily Brontë)
The everlasting gospel (The vision of Christ that thou dost see) (Text: William Blake)
The Everlasting Mercy (From '41 to '51
) (Text: John Masefield)
The everlasting voices (O sweet everlasting Voices, be still
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
P. Warlock, D. Ruyneman, D. Wickens, R. Roderick-Jones, T. Kelly
The Everlasting Voices [song cycle]
The ewe-bughts (Will ye go to the ewe-bughts, Marion
) GER (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The example (Here's an example from/ a butterfly) (Text: William Henry Davies)
The Exequies (Draw near, you lovers that complain) (Text: Thomas Stanley)
The exile (The swallow with summer) (Text: Thomas Hood)
The exile (Had the gods loved me I had lain) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The exile's home: duettino (Where, tell us where) (Text: William Ball) [x]
The exile's song () (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson) [x]
The expiration (So, so break off this last lamenting kiss
) (Text: John Donne)
The express (After the first powerful plain manifesto
) (Text: Stephen Spender) [x] *
The eyes that mock me sign the way (The eyes that mock me sign the way
) FRE (Text: James Joyce)
D. Del Tredici, C. Orr, S. Bate, R. Field, J. Gruen
The face of all the world has changed (The face of all the world is changed, I think
) GER (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning)
G. Branscombe, L. Cheslock, L. Dallin, C. Dougherty, E. Freer, G. Booth, H. Hadley, B. Naylor, A. Kaiser, O. Morawetz, C. Surinach
The face of all the world is changed (The face of all the world is changed, I think
) GER (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning)
G. Branscombe, L. Cheslock, L. Dallin, C. Dougherty, E. Freer, G. Booth, H. Hadley, B. Naylor, A. Kaiser, O. Morawetz, C. Surinach
The face of all the world is changed, I think (The face of all the world is changed, I think
) GER (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning)
G. Branscombe, L. Cheslock, L. Dallin, C. Dougherty, E. Freer, G. Booth, H. Hadley, B. Naylor, A. Kaiser, O. Morawetz, C. Surinach
The face of war [song cycle]
The faces (The apparition of these faces in the crowd) (Text: Ezra Pound)
The factory window song (Factory windows are always broken) (Text: Vachel Lindsay)
The faded violet (The odour from the flower is gone
) ITA (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
F. Bridge, A. Farwell, G. Bennett, E. Bracken, C. Deis, A. Dexter, A. Donato, E. Fogg, E. Ford, J. Forrester, A. Fox, J. Gledhill, F. Groton, C. Higgin, E. Hughes, E. Loder, G. Loder, C. McAlpin, H. MacCunn, H. MacCunn, H. MacWhirter, W. Metcalfe, C. Mills, C. Piatti, H. Pierson, E. Thorne, E. Troup, E. Troup
The faery host (The host is riding from Knocknarea
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The Faery Isle of Janjira (O faery queen of a flowering clime) (Text: Sarojini Naidu, née Chattopadhyaya)
The faery kye (There's a warld o' kye astray) [x]
The fair (When first my way to fair I took) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
B. Burrows, F. Lydiate, D. Mason, L. Russell
The fair (Oh! We're off to the fair now the lot of us together) (Text: Winifred M. Letts)
The fair maid of Mona (How, my love, could hapless doubts o'er take thee
) GER (Text: William Smyth)
The fair morning (The clear bright morning, with its scented air) (Text: Jones Very)
The fair singer (To make a final conquest of all me) (Text: Andrew Marvell)
The Fairies (Up the aery mountain
) (Text: William Allingham)
H. Bath, A. Bax, S. Bodley, J. Butt, B. Dieren, J. Gaynor, L. Gruenberg, H. Hadley, M. Hill, W. Macfarren, P. Mimart, A. Needham, H. Roberton, A. Robinson, M. Shaw, G. Taylor, M. Thomas, F. White, L. Woodgate, G. Rathbone, F. Ward
The fairies (If ye will with Mab find grace) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The fairies' dance (Once in the morning when the breeze) (Text: Frank Dempster Sherman)
The fairy (Come hither, my sparrows) (Text: William Blake)
The fairy boat (Sometime a-down a magic stream a little boat comes sailing) (Text: Annette Horey)
The Fairy Folk (Up the aery mountain
) (Text: William Allingham)
H. Bath, A. Bax, S. Bodley, J. Butt, B. Dieren, J. Gaynor, L. Gruenberg, H. Hadley, M. Hill, W. Macfarren, P. Mimart, A. Needham, H. Roberton, A. Robinson, M. Shaw, G. Taylor, M. Thomas, F. White, L. Woodgate, G. Rathbone, F. Ward
The Fairy Lough (Lough-a-reem-a! Lough-a-reem-a) (Text: Moira O'Neill)
The fairy queen () (Text: Thomas Hood) [x]
The fairy song (I'll be a fairy and drink the dew) (Text: William Roscoe)
The fairy's child (I have known love
) (Text: Edward Shanks) [x] *
The fairy's child (I have known love
) (Text: Edward Shanks) [x] *
The faithful lover (She hath grown cold, whose kindness won me to her) (Text: Alfred Perceval Graves)
The faithful swallow (When summer shone) (Text: Thomas Hardy) [x] *
The faithless shepherdess (While that the sun with his beams hot
)
R. Quilter, W. Byrd, F. Allitsen
The Fakir's song () (Text: Helen Maude Francesca Bantock (von Schweizer) [x]
The falcon () [x]
The Falcon (I know a falcon swift and peerless) (Text: James Russell Lowell)
The fall () (Text: Archibald MacLeish) [x] *
The fall of the stone (By the Hoof of the Wild Goat uptossed
) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The fallen leaf (The wind was rough which tore
) (Text: Emily Brontë)
The fallen oak (The fallen oak
) FRE (Text: (Agnes) Mary (Frances) Robinson)
The falling of the leaves (Autumn is over the long leaves that love us) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
A. Blank, N. Marshall, D. Parke
The falling of the leaves [song cycle]
The falling star () ENG FRE (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The fallow deer at the lonely house (One without looks in tonight
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The false friends () (Text: Dorothy Parker) [x] *
The false heart (I said to Heart, "How goes it?") (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
The False Knight upon the road (The knight met the child in the road) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The faltering dusk (Back she came through the trembling dusk) (Text: Louis Untermeyer)
The familiar (Are you far away?
) (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x]
The family (Man I am and man would be, Love merest man and nothing more) (Text: Robert Browning)
The Family of Man [song cycle]
The far country (Into my heart an air that kills
) ITA (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
I. Gurney, C. Orr, N. Peros, A. Somervell, T. Armstrong, E. Avril, E. Cone, A. Cripps, V. Duke, C. Duncan, R. Field, W. Hoskins, M. Kilby, M. Lang, A. Leichtling, C. Manney, H. Priestley-Smith, H. Proctor-Gregg, E. Rose, L. Russell, J. Raynor
The Far-Farers (The broad sun) (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
The Farewell (No coward soul is mine) (Text: Emily Brontë)
J. Mitchell, T. Fisk, I. Boyle, J. Dixon, C. Dougherty, J. Joubert, L. Klein, J. Littlejohn, G. Shaw, R. Stevenson, P. Tranchell
The farewell (Farewell my bosoms delight) [x]
The Farewell Song (O Erin! To thy harp divine
) GER (Text: William Smyth)
The farm () (Text: Philip Littell) [x] *
The farmer's eldest daughter (No, no! I ben't a-runnèn down
) (Text: William Barnes)
The farmer's woldest dā'ter (No, no! I ben't a-runnèn down
) (Text: William Barnes)
The farms of home (The farms of home lie lost in even) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman) *
The fatal hour comes on apace (The fatal hour comes on apace)
The Fates of Men (Often and again, through God's grace, man and woman usher a child into the world) (Text: Kevin John William Crossley-Holland) [x] *
The Fatherland (Where is the true man's fatherland?) (Text: James Russell Lowell)
C. Bellman, F. Petersilea, F. Reichardt
The fault was mine (The fault was mine, the fault was mine") (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
The Fauns and Satyrs tripping (The Fauns and Satyrs tripping)
The fawn (Listening to a cry of bombs) (Text: Rhoda Levine) *
The feast () [x]
The Feast of Crispian (This day is call'd the feast of Crispian
) (Text: William Shakespeare)
The feather (A feather, a feather) (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x] *
The feckless dinner-party (Who are we waiting for?) (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x] *
The felon (On mark his wan and hollow cheeks) [x]
The feminine approach to feminine fashions (There would be far less masculine gaming and boozing) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The ferry (Ferry me across the water
) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
N. Rorem, A. Blank, G. Finzi, S. Fraser, M. Helyer, S. Homer, J. Ireland, J. Longmire, D. Lord, D. Parke, G. Peel, B. Scott, S. Scott, C. Sharman, M. Shaw, C. Stanford, F. Swinstead, E. Thiman, J. Wardale, P. Wilkinson, D. Hagen, D. Hagen
The ferry (Many a year is in its grave
) ENG FRE (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow after Johann Ludwig Uhland)
The ferryman (Ferry me across the water
) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
N. Rorem, A. Blank, G. Finzi, S. Fraser, M. Helyer, S. Homer, J. Ireland, J. Longmire, D. Lord, D. Parke, G. Peel, B. Scott, S. Scott, C. Sharman, M. Shaw, C. Stanford, F. Swinstead, E. Thiman, J. Wardale, P. Wilkinson, D. Hagen, D. Hagen
The fiddler (The fiddler knows what's brewing
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The fiddler (A fiddler gaed fiddlin' thru oor toun) (Text: William Soutar) [x] *
The Fiddler [song cycle]
The fiddler of Dooney (When I play on my fiddle in Dooney
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
I. Gurney, S. Homer, M. Andrews, A. Bax, W. Butler, T. Dunhill, F. Frank, R. Hageman, H. Harty, C. Loeffler, N. Marshall, R. Milford, V. Rieti, W. Webber
The fiddlers (Nine feat fiddlers had good Queen Bess) (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x]
The Fidgety Bairn (Hush, my dear! the gallopin' men) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The fields are full (The fields are full of summer still
) (Text: Edward Shanks)
C. Gibbs, I. Gurney, P. Warlock
The fields in May (What can better please) (Text: William Allingham)
The fifes of June (The ways are green with the gladdening sheen) (Text: William Ernest Henley)
The fifteen acres (I cling and swing
) (Text: James Stephens)
The Fiftieth Birthday of Agassiz (It was fifty years ago) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The Fighting Téméraire (It was eight bells ringing) (Text: Sir Henry Newbolt)
The finding of love (Pale at first and cold
) (Text: Robert Graves)
The fire in leaf and grass (The fire in leaf and grass
) (Text: Denise Levertov) *
The fire-flame (Sunbeams from the warm blue sky) (Text: Alfred Hayes)
The fire-fly () (Text: Helen Maude Francesca Bantock (von Schweizer) [x]
The firefly (The firefly's flame Is something for which science has no name) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The fires (Men make them fires on the hearth
) (Text: Pres. Hadley)
The first born (What can I offer you now, now?) (Text: Malcolm Cowley) *
The first chantey (Mine was the woman to me, darkling I found her) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The First Dandelion (Simple and fresh and fair from winter's close emerging) (Text: Walt Whitman)
W. Neidlinger, A. Radleigh
The first farewell (I may not kiss away the tears that still) (Text: (Edward) Robert Bulwer-Lytton)
The first jasmines (Ah, these jasmines, these white jasmines
) ENG (Text: Rabindranath Tagore after Rabindranath Tagore)
The first mercy (Ox and ass at Bethlehem) (Text: Bruce Blunt) *
the first of all my dreams (the first of all my dreams was of
) (Text: E. E. (Edward Estlin) Cummings) *
R. Manno, E. Siegmeister, E. Mandel
The First of May (The orchards half the way
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
M. Head, D. Stewart, D. Symons
The First Snow-Fall (The snow had begun in the gloaming) (Text: James Russell Lowell)
The first snowfall (The Fir tree felt it with a thrill) (Text: John Banister Tabb)
The first spring day (I wonder if the sap is stirring yet) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
M. Davey, A. MacKenzie, M. Phillips, L. Somerset
The first time that the sun rose on thine oath (The first time that the sun rose on thine oath) GER (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning)
L. Cheslock, C. Dougherty, E. Freer
The firtrees taper (The fir trees taper into twigs and wear) (Text: John Clare)
The fish () (Text: Ogden Nash) [x] *
The fisher-boy (The glittering waves) SPA ENG (Text: Edward Alexander MacDowell after Friedrich von Schiller) [x]
The fishermaiden () NOR DUT SPA RUS ENG ITA FRE (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The fishermaiden (Thou beauteous fishermaiden) NOR DUT SPA RUS ENG ITA FRE (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The fisherman's cottage (The twilight is sad and cloudy
) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
A. Beach, W. Bentley, I. Berrow, A. Blakeway, C. Clark, R. Ella, J. Hatton, A. Marchant, G. Morgan, J. Newell, M. Robinson, S. Smith, W. Weiss
The fisherman's dwelling (We sat by the fisher's dwelling) ENG FRE (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The fishermen of England (Around the shores of England, which stretch towards the sea) (Text: Gerald Dodson)
The fishers of Dee () (Text: H. Ernest Hunt) [x]
The fisher's widow (The boats go out and the boats come in) (Text: Arthur Symons)
L. Coerne, C. Edwards, P. McIntyre, H. Tye
The Five Nations (God of our fathers, known of old
) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The flea (Mark but this flea, and mark in this) (Text: John Donne)
The fleeting (The late wind failed) (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x] *
L. Berkeley, W. Wordsworth
The flesh profiteth nothing (Like as the damask rose you see
) GER (Text: Simon Wastell)
The flight () (Text: Leonard Feeney) [x]
The flight (How do the days press on, and lay) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The flight (Look back with longing eyes and know that I will follow) (Text: Sara Teasdale)
The flight () (Text: Sir Thomas Wyatt) [x]
The Flight into Egypt () (Text: Ll. Wollen after Elisabeth of Wied (Queen Consort of King Carol I of Romania) [x]
The Flight of the Eagle [song cycle]
The flirt (A pretty game, my girl) (Text: William Henry Davies)
The Flooded Stream (I was quiet and the road was quiet) (Text: Margaret Cropper) *
The floral bandit (Beyond the town - oh far! beyond it
) (Text: Humbert Wolfe) *
The Flower (Listen, I who love thee well
) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The flower (Horizon to horizon) (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x]
The Flower of Liberty (What flower is this that greets the morn) (Text: Oliver Wendell Holmes)
W. Neidlinger, B. Treharne, O. Brown, H. Keens
The flower of love () ENG (Text: W. Grist after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The flower that smiles (Whilst skies are blue and bright
) ITA (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
C. Allen, G. Arnold, G. Bantock, G. Bennett, A. Berdahl, E. Button, D. Thomas
The flower that smiles today (Whilst skies are blue and bright
) ITA (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
C. Allen, G. Arnold, G. Bantock, G. Bennett, A. Berdahl, E. Button, D. Thomas
The flower-bird (Many a flower have I seen blossom) (Text: Mary Coleridge)
The Flower-Fed Buffaloes [song cycle]
The flowers (All the names I know from nurse
) (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
M. Williamson, A. Rosenstein, M. Radnor
The flowers of Easter ('Tis spring; come out to ramble
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
I. Gurney, M. Horder, J. Ireland, C. Orr, M. Owen, C. Champion, A. Cripps, H. Milvain, L. Russell, S. Wilson
The flowers of Edinburgh (Here is the glen, and here the bower) (Text: Robert Burns)
The flowers of the sea (The flowers of the sea are brief
) (Text: Archibald MacLeish) [x] *
The fly (Little Fly, thy summer's play
) RUS FRE (Text: William Blake)
J. Adler, J. Alexander, V. Archer, R. Ash, G. Bantock, W. Bolcom, H. Boyadjian, H. Brian, B. Britten, J. Butt, J. Carpenter, B. Childs, W. Colson, J. Corina, V. Duke, D. Farquhar, D. Fornuto, M. Green, A. Hinton, D. Kechley, A. Kirkwood, D. Klotzman, R. Lomon, M. Miller, F. Mueller, H. Parrott, M. Raphael, G. Rochberg, M. Rose, G. Schürmann, L. Segerstam, N. Simons, Sommerfeldt, C. Steel, A. Taffs, G. Victory, C. Vollrath, P. Wilkinson, M. Williamson, P. Winsor, D. Thomas, A. Close, D. Smirnov, H. de Lange, D. Haines
The fly (Busy, curious, thirsty fly) (Text: William Oldys)
The fly (I must admit) (Text: Ogden Nash) [x] *
The fly (God, in his wisdom invented the fly) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The fly (Compose, you said, a poem for this fly) (Text: Nancy Cardozo) *
The fly (How large unto the tiny fly) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The fly and I () (Text: John Gracen Brown) [x] *
The foggy, foggy dew (When I was a bachelor I lived all alone) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The folly of being comforted (One that is ever kind said yesterday
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The fool by the roadside (When all works that have) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The foolish maid (O fye, what mean I, foolish maid) (Text: John Crowne)
The fool's song (I tried to put a bird in a cage) (Text: William Carlos Williams)
The Force of Prayer; or, The Founding of Bolton Priory: A Tradition (What is good for a bootless bene
) (Text: William Wordsworth)
The force that through the green fuse drives the flower (The force that through the green fuse drives the flower
) (Text: Dylan Thomas) *
The foreboding (Looking by chance in at the open window) (Text: Robert Graves) [x] *
The Forsaken Merman (Come, dear children, let us away
) (Text: Matthew Arnold)
M. Bauer, B. Burrows, R. Milford, R. Robbins, A. Somervell
The Forsaken Merman, Epilogue (Come, dear children, let us away
) (Text: Matthew Arnold)
M. Bauer, B. Burrows, R. Milford, R. Robbins, A. Somervell
The Fountain (Into the sunshine, full of the light) (Text: James Russell Lowell)
H. Clarke, H. Hadley, W. Hammond, H. Kaun, H. Loomis, L. Southard, S. Warren, H. Watts
The fountain (The unthrift sun shot vital gold) (Text: Henry Vaughan)
The Fountain (Don't say, don't say there is no water) (Text: Denise Levertov) *
The fountain and the fire (Let trumpets snarl from the high tower) (Text: Richard Nickson) *
The fountain song (Lo, how like silver and like pearls) (Text: Nelle Richmond Eberhart)
The fountains mingle (The fountains mingle with the River) FRE (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
D. Arditti, F. Delius, R. Manno, R. Quilter, A. Foerster, E. Ahnell, V. Alvstad, J. Ashe, A. Backer-Grøndahl, W. Ball, E. Barber, H. Bauer, H. Bell, G. Bennett, E. Blake, D. Booth, A. Borton, C. Braun, A. Brewer, F. Butcher, C. Campbell, C. Campbell, C. Christopher, R. Clarke, A. Buzzi-Peccia, C. Gounod, T. Pasatieri, P. Heininen, G. Coleridge-Taylor, A. Hovhaness
The fountains mingle with the River (The fountains mingle with the River) FRE (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
D. Arditti, F. Delius, R. Manno, R. Quilter, A. Foerster, E. Ahnell, V. Alvstad, J. Ashe, A. Backer-Grøndahl, W. Ball, E. Barber, H. Bauer, H. Bell, G. Bennett, E. Blake, D. Booth, A. Borton, C. Braun, A. Brewer, F. Butcher, C. Campbell, C. Campbell, C. Christopher, R. Clarke, A. Buzzi-Peccia, C. Gounod, T. Pasatieri, P. Heininen, G. Coleridge-Taylor, A. Hovhaness
The four ages of Man (He with body waged a fight
) (Text: William Butler Yeats) *
The four brothers (Hithery, hethery -- I love best) (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x] *
The four old men (In the café where I sit) (Text: James Stephens)
The four sweet months (First, April, she with mellow showers) DUT (Text: Robert Herrick)
The Fourth of August (Now in thy splendour go before us) (Text: Laurence Binyon) [x]
The fowler (A wild bird filled the morning air) (Text: Wilfrid Wilson Gibson) [x] *
The fox (At The Fox Inn") (Text: Bruce Blunt) *
The fox (The fox went out one chilly night) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The Fox (The shepherd on his journey heard when nigh) (Text: John Clare)
The foxglove (In grandmamma's garden in shining rows) (Text: Arlo Bates)
The Freedom of the City (I am the fever in the head) (Text: Maurice Denton) *
The Friar of Orders Grey (I am the Friar of Orders gray)
The friend of my heart : a favorite song (For thee all the hardships of life I could bear) (Text: M. P. Andrews) [x]
The friendly cow (The friendly cow all red and white
) (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
A. Foerster, E. Birge, H. Brook, H. Coleman, G. Conant, E. Crowningshield, E. Falk, F. Hart, M. Jacobson, G. Peel, M. Radnor, A. Rowley, G. Shaw, P. Wishart
The Fringes of the Fleet [song cycle]
The frog () (Text: Ogden Nash) [x] *
The frog (Be kind and tender to the Frog
) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
The Frog and the Snake () (Text: Gertrude Norman) [x] *
The frog prince (I am a frog) (Text: Stevie Smith) [x] *
The frogs hold court () (Text: Paul Rochberg) [x] *
The frost is here (The frost is here) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
A. Egerton, R. Milford, A. Sullivan, S. Thomson, R. Vaughan Williams
The Frostbound Wood (Mary that was the Child’s mother
) (Text: Bruce Blunt) *
The frozen wreck (It was the schooner Hesperus) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
T. Anderton, J. Blockley, W. Burr, F. Dunkley, A. Fisher, A. Foote, J. Hatton, J. Hullah, J. Hyde, C. Lewis, H. MacCunn, C. Mills, L. Parker, J. Read, F. Romer, H. Wareing, W. Weiss, R. Wilson, W. Wilson
The Fuchsia Tree (O what if the fowler my blackbird has taken) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The fugitive ideal (As some most pure and noble face) (Text: Sir William Watson)
The fugitives (The waters are flashing
) GER (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
H. Heale, D. Jenkins, B. Reeves
The full sea rolls and thunders (The full sea rolls and thunders
) ITA (Text: William Ernest Henley)
F. Brinkworth, I. Gurney, F. Korbay
The gallant's song (When the maiden leaves off teasing) (Text: Thomas Hardy) [x] *
The Galley-Rowers (Staggering over the running combers) (Text: John Masefield)
The galliass (Tell me, tell me, unknown stranger
) (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x]
The gamester (Dark was the night) [x]
The gander (Be careful not to cross the gander) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The gaoler: a favorite ballad (Stay gaoler stay and hear my woe
) (Text: Matthew Gregory Lewis)
The garden (A little garden/ fragrant and full of roses
) ENG (Text: after Franta Bass) *
The garden (The lily's withered chalice falls
) (Text: Oscar Wilde)
C. Griffes, H. Jervis-Read
The garden (That wooden hive between the trees) (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x] *
The garden (My heart shall be thy garden. Come, my own) (Text: Alice Christina Meynell, née Thompson)
The garden near the sea (Wild fell the rain from the soaked apple branches) (Text: Frances Cornford) [x] *
The garden of bamboos (I live all alone, and I am a young girl) ENG (Text: E. Powys Mathers after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist)
The Garden of Love (I went to the Garden of Love
) (Text: William Blake)
G. Antheil, W. Bolcom, G. Higginson, M. Miller, J. Mitchell, S. Pimsleur, E. Siegmeister, Sommerfeldt, C. Vollrath, J. Zaimont, V. Frohne
The Garden of Mystery [song cycle]
The garden seat (Its former green is blue and thin) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The Garland (Roses blushing red and white
) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
The Garret (Come, let us pity those who are better off than we are) (Text: Ezra Pound)
The garrison () (Text: W. H. (Wystan Hugh) Auden) [x] *
The Gartan mother's lullaby (Sleep, o babe, for the red bee hums
) (Text: Joseph Campbell)
The gateway (Now the heart sings with all its thousand voices) (Text: A. D. Hope) [x] *
The gay Gordons (Who's for the Gathering, who's for the Fair?
) (Text: Sir Henry Newbolt)
The generous distressed (Blow, ye bleak winds, around my head)
The Generous Parishioner (There was an Old Man in a pew) (Text: Edward Lear)
The gentle lady (So beautiful, so dainty-sweet
) (Text: John Masefield)
The gentlest mother (Nature, the gentlest mother) FRE (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The germ (A mighty creature is the germ) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The ghost (Peace in thy hands) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The ghost ("Who knocks?" -- "I, who was beautiful) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The ghost () (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x]
The ghost road (The winds and the pines are whispering
) ENG (Text: Launcelot Alfred Cranmer-Byng after Tu Fu)
The gift () (Text: Alice Stuart) [x]
The gift (I thought, beloved, to have brought to you) (Text: George William Russell)
The Gift Outright (The land was ours before we were the land's
) (Text: Robert Frost) *
The Gifts of the Gods (Once with life and love enarmoured
) FRE (Text: Francis Money-Coutts, 5th Baron Latymer)
The Gipsy Girl's Dream (I dreamt that I dwelt in marble halls) (Text: Alfred Bunn)
The girl in the tea shop (The girl in the tea shop
) (Text: Ezra Pound)
J. Koch, J. Holbrooke, G. Bachlund
The girl with the Tyrian lyre (There was a Young Lady of Tyre) (Text: Edward Lear)
The Gladness of Nature (Is this a time to be cloudy and sad) (Text: William Cullen Bryant)
C. Demarest, R. Merriam, J. Molloy
The glorious hobo () (Text: Charlotte Storm) [x] *
The glorious vagabond () (Text: Charlotte Storm) [x] *
The glory is fallen out of the sky (the glory is fallen out of) (Text: E. E. (Edward Estlin) Cummings) *
The glory of God () (Text: William Blake) [x]
The glory of the day was in her face (The glory of the day was in her face) (Text: James Weldon Johnson)
The gnomies (As I lay awake in the white moonlight) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The goat paths (The crooked paths go every way) (Text: James Stephens)
The god of love (The god of love
) (Text: William Shakespeare)
The goddess (She goes by many names) (Text: Kathleen Raine) [x] *
The going of the battery (O it was sad enough, weak enough, mad enough) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The gold forlorn (The sudden thought of your face is like a wound when it comes unsought
) (Text: Laurence Hope)
The gold-thread robe (Covet not a gold-threaded robe
) ENG (Text: Witter Bynner after Du Qiuniang)
The gold-threaded robe (Covet not a gold-threaded robe
) ENG (Text: Witter Bynner after Du Qiuniang)
The Golden Cage [song cycle]
The Golden City of St. Mary (Out beyond the sunset, could I but find the way) (Text: John Masefield)
R. Clarke, I. Copley, T. Wood
The golden mile-stone (Leafless are the trees; their purple branches) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The golden nenuphar () (Text: Launcelot Alfred Cranmer-Byng after Han Yu) [x]
The Golden Ray (O, hark ye lubbers, in a far-off sea
) (Text: Bernard Martin) *
The golden ring (I have placed a golden ring
) (Text: Thomas Bailey Aldrich)
The golden robe (A golden robe my Love shall wear) GER FRE (Text: Anne Hunter)
The golden willow tree (There was a little ship in South Amerikee) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The golden wine is drunk (The fire is out, and spent the warmth thereof
) (Text: Ernest Dowson)
H. Richardson, D. Bedford
The gondolier (Row gently here
) GER (Text: Thomas Moore)
B. Carr, E. Hopkins, P. van Katwijk
The gong of Time () (Text: Carl Sandburg) [x] *
The gong of Time () (Text: Carl Sandburg) [x] *
The Good Earth (I am the poet of the Body and I am the poet of the Soul
) ITA (Text: Walt Whitman)
L. Campbell-Tipton, R. Williams, B. Lees, H. Norris
The good morrow (I wonder, by my troth, what thou, and I
) ITA (Text: John Donne)
S. Adler, B. Stevens, D. McWhinnie, M. Arnold, G. Swayne
The good night kiss (Look off, dear Love, across the sallow sands) (Text: Sidney Lanier)
C. Fallberg, C. Griffes, H. Hadley, D. Buck, J. Camp, M. Bumstead, R. Colan, R. de Koven, M. De Packh, E. Freer, P. James, E. Menges, J. Rodgers, G. Root, A. Russell
The good part (She dwells by Great Kenhawa's side) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The Good-morrow (I wonder, by my troth, what thou, and I
) ITA (Text: John Donne)
S. Adler, B. Stevens, D. McWhinnie, M. Arnold, G. Swayne
The goose (I knew an old wife lean and poor) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
The Gourmet's Love Song (How strange is Love: I am not one
) (Text: Sir Pelham Grenville Wodehouse KBE)
The gowk (Half doun the hill, whaur fa's the linn) (Text: William Soutar) [x] *
The graceful swaying wattle (The bush was grey a week today) DUT (Text: Veronica Mason)
The grapevine () (Text: John Ashbery) [x] *
The grass (The grass so little has to do) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
E. Bacon, A. Bergh, A. Farwell, V. Persichetti
The grass so little has to do (The grass so little has to do) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
E. Bacon, A. Bergh, A. Farwell, V. Persichetti
The Grave (Cold in the earth, the deep snow piled above thee
) (Text: Emily Brontë)
J. Mitchell, T. Fisk, J. Duke, J. Duke, A. Jepson, L. Klein, J. Littlejohn, B. Montgomery
The grave of Love (I dug, beneath the cypress shade
) (Text: Thomas Love Peacock)
T. Pasatieri, A. Tollefsen
The gravedigger (In youth, when I did love, did love
) GER (Text: William Shakespeare)
The Graverobber (One night, - a doctor said, - last fall) (Text: Ambrose Bierce)
The Great Blue Heron (As I wandered the beach) (Text: Carolyn Kizer) [x] *
The great breath (Its edges foamed with amethyst and rose) (Text: George William Russell)
The great sea () (Text: Elizabeth Spires) [x] *
The greatest man (My teacher said us boys should write) (Text: Anne Collins)
The Greek exile (Where is the summer with her golden sun!?) [x]
The green dog (If my dog were green
) (Text: Herbert Kingsley)
The green hills o' Somerset (Oh the green hills o' Somerset) (Text: Frederick E. Weatherly)
The Green Lady (My robe is of green) (Text: Fiona Macleod)
H. Hopekirk, C. Taylor, N. Wood
The green river (I know a green grass path that leaves the field
) (Text: Lord Alfred Bruce Douglas)
J. Carpenter, R. Birch, W. Pasfield
The green tent (Summer has spread a cool, green tent) (Text: William Henry Davies)
The green trees whispered low and mild (Pleasant it was, when woods were green
) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
M. Balfe, J. Blockley, J. Knight, C. Reinhardt
The grenadier's goodbye () (Text: Sir Henry Newbolt) [x]
The grey mouse (By herself, by herself, watching the party,) (Text: Rhoda Levine) *
The grey streets of London (The grey streets of London are greyer than the stone) (Text: Katharine Tynan)
The grey wolf (The grey wolf comes again
) (Text: Arthur Symons)
The Grim Troubadour [song cycle]
The ground swayed (The ground swayed like a sea) (Text: Howard Nemerov) *
The guardian angel (Dear and great Angel, wouldst thou only leave
) (Text: Robert Browning)
The guardian-angel (Dear and great Angel, wouldst thou only leave
) (Text: Robert Browning)
The guest (There came a man across the moor) (Text: Mary Coleridge)
The guy (Here am I) (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x] *
The Hag (The Hag is astride) DUT (Text: Robert Herrick)
E. Bunge, J. Hatton, C. Wood
The Hag is astride (The Hag is astride) DUT (Text: Robert Herrick)
E. Bunge, J. Hatton, C. Wood
The Hair-Tonic Bottle (How dear to my heart is the old village drugstore) (Text: Benjamin Franklin King)
The half-moon westers low (The half-moon westers low, my love
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
L. Berkeley, D. Martino, R. Vaughan Williams, S. Calvin, L. Russell, R. Wilding-White, J. Heggie
The half-moon westers low, my love (The half-moon westers low, my love
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
L. Berkeley, D. Martino, R. Vaughan Williams, S. Calvin, L. Russell, R. Wilding-White, J. Heggie
The Half-Ring Moon (Over the sea, over the sea
) (Text: John Banister Tabb)
The hallowing of Pain (The hallowing of Pain) (Text: Emily Dickinson) *
The halt of the legion (Here the legion halted, here the ranks were broken) (Text: John Masefield)
The Hammer (I have seen/ the old gods go) (Text: Carl Sandburg)
The hammers (Noise of hammers once I heard) (Text: Ralph Hodgson)
The hand and foot () (Text: Jones Very) [x]
The Hanging Man (By the roots of my hair some god got hold of me
) (Text: Sylvia Plath) *
The hangman at home (What does the hangman think about
) (Text: Carl Sandburg)
The happiest land (There sat one day in quiet) ENG (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist)
M. Balfe, O. Cramer, C. Heuberer, W. Jude, W. Montgomery, J. Perring, F. Rogers, W. Watson
The happy child (I saw this day sweet flowers grow thick) (Text: William Henry Davies)
A. Garlick, F. Lydiate, R. Premru
The happy flood () (Text: Anne (Dudley) Bradstreet) [x]
The happy hour (The happy day is over, the household work is done)
The Happy Meadow [song cycle]
The happy piper (Piping down the valleys wild
) RUS (Text: William Blake)
J. Anderson, P. Bezanson, R. Boughton, G. Branning, H. Brian, G. Broadhead, C. Brown, M. Carmichael, G. Read, R. Vaughan Williams, W. Bolcom, D. Thomas, S. Chatman, G. Clough-Leighter, D. Cohen, J. Crawford, A. Cooke, F. Corbett, J. Coulthard, D. Smirnov, O. Morawetz, A. Somervell, P. Irby, A. Shepherd, G. Gwyther, M. Jacques, T. Lenk, F. Leoni, M. Lippincott
The Happy Shepherd [song cycle]
The happy townland (There's many a strong farmer) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The happy tree (There was a bright and happy tree) (Text: Gerald Gould)
The happy trio (O Willie brew'd a peck o' maut
) (Text: Robert Burns)
The Hardy Norse-woman (There was a young lady from Norway
) (Text: Edward Lear)
The hare (In the black furrow of a field) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The Harlot's House (We caught the tread of dancing feet) (Text: Oscar Wilde)
G. Bachlund, T. Pasatieri
The Harmonius Blacksmith (Under a spreading chestnut-tree) GER (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
W. Weiss, T. Anderton, M. Balfe, W. Berwald, J. Blockley, D. Buck, H. Daykin, S. Gaines, W. Haesche, G. Händel, J. Hatton, C. Heuberer, T. Jephson, R. Kountz, W. Neidlinger, G. Nevin, C. Noyes, G. Peabody, C. Reinhardt, W. Rhys-Herbert, C. Wagner, D. Warden
The Harmony of Morning (The Harmony of morning) (Text: Mark van Doren) *
The harp () [x]
The harp (Harp of wild and dreamy strain, when I touch thy strings) (Text: Emily Brontë)
J. Mitchell, J. Joubert, L. Klein
The harp (My soul is dark - Oh! quickly string
) RUS GER (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron)
I. Nathan, J. Amerongen, A. Alexander, L. Barbour, S. Bugatch, N. Cain, T. Case, T. Chatterton, T. Childs, H. Coldwell, C. de Beriot, D. Diamond, J. Ellerton, W. Gilchrist, A. Gutman, J. Hall, J. Nary, S. Oakley, C. Phillips, G. Pigott, B. Treharne, T. Wiesenthal
The harp of Bendemeer : a ballad (Tell me why is that harp now so silently thrown) (Text: Charlotte Anley) [x]
The harp that once through Tara's halls (The harp that once through Tara's halls) (Text: Thomas Moore)
The harp the monarch minstrel swept (The harp the monarch minstrel swept
) GER (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron)
I. Nathan, S. Bugatch, O. Luening
The harp weaver ("Son," said my mother, when I was knee-high
) (Text: Edna St. Vincent Millay)
The harvest according (As I watch'd the ploughman ploughing
) (Text: Walt Whitman)
P. Dalmas, W. Neidlinger, A. Stout, R. Ward
The harvest moon (It is the Harvest Moon! On gilded vanes) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The Haughty Snail-king (Twelve snails went walking after night.
) (Text: Vachel Lindsay)
The haunted place (In the greenest of our valleys) (Text: Edgar Allan Poe)
J. Bälan, J. Habash, J. Holbrooke
The haven (Where the gray bushes by the gray sea grow) (Text: Mary Coleridge)
The hawk (Sing while you may, O bird upon the tree!) (Text: James Stephens)
The hawthorn hath a deathly smell (The flowers of the field) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The hawthorn hedge (All suddenly the wind comes soft
) (Text: Rupert Brooke)
J. Ireland, D. Anderson, I. Gurney, I. Gurney, R. Le Lacheur, G. Peterkin, S. Rowton, F. Swain, M. Thomas, M. Tal
The hawthorn tree (The hawthorn tree was gnarled in limb
) (Text: Hilda Maude) [x] *
The hawthorn tree (Across the shimmering meadows) (Text: Willa Cather)
The hay sings () [x]
The hayloft (Through all the pleasant meadow-side) (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
R. Milford, D. Moule-Evans, H. Rhodes
The head of old Silenus (Come, old friend! sit down and listen!) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The head-ake (I held Love's head while it did ache
) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The hearse song (The old grey hearse goes rolling by)
The heart (The heart asks pleasure first) FRE (Text: Emily Dickinson)
E. Bacon, J. Langert, G. Perle, W. Rogers
The heart asks pleasure first (The heart asks pleasure first) FRE (Text: Emily Dickinson)
E. Bacon, J. Langert, G. Perle, W. Rogers
The heart is the capital of the mind (The Heart is the Capital of the Mind
) (Text: Emily Dickinson) *
The heart of a pearl (A simple ring with a single stone) (Text: Robert Browning)
The heart of a woman (The heart of a woman goes forth with the dawn
) (Text: Georgia Douglas Johnson)
The Heart of Canada (Because her heart is all too proud) (Text: Alfred Noyes)
The heart of the woman (O what to me the little room) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The heart that melts () [x]
The heart worships (Silence in Heav'n) (Text: Alice M. Buckton)
The heart's assurance (O never trust the heart's assurance
) (Text: Sidney Arthur Kilworth Keyes) *
The heart's assurance [song cycle]
The heart's desire (The Sun at noon to higher air
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
The heart's devotion (I fear thy kisses, gentle maiden) RUS (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
G. Butterworth, R. Still, C. Allen, L. Ashton, J. Becker, G. Bennett, L. Benson, R. Birch, E. Blake, C. Braun, A. Brewer
The heart's journey (A flower has opened in my heart) (Text: Siegfried Lorraine Sassoon) [x] *
The Heart's Journey [song cycle]
The Heart's Journey [song cycle]
The heart's prevention (I found to-day out walking) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges) [x]
The heathen Chinee (I reside at Table Mountain, and my name is Truthful James
) (Text: (Francis) Bret(t) Harte)
G. Bachlund, F. Boott, M. Keller, C. Towner
The heavenly banquet (I would like to have the men of Heaven in my own house) ENG (Text: Sean O'Faolain after St. Brigid) *
The heavenly bay (The heavenly bay, ringed round with cliffs and moors) (Text: Algernon Charles Swinburne)
The heavenly Noel (Oh! what great thing is done tonight) (Text: Richard Lawson Gales)
The heavens above us (To the Heavens above us) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The Height of the Ridiculous (I wrote some lines once on a time) (Text: Oliver Wendell Holmes)
The Heights of Haworth [song cycle]
The hemlock tree (O hemlock-tree! O hemlock-tree! how faithful are thy branches!) ENG (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist)
R. Baldwin, A. Baumer, J. Hatton, B. Whaples
The herald (A grim old king) (Text: Alexander Smith)
The Herd Boy's Song (Splashing water
) ENG (Text: E. D. (Evangeline Dora) Edwards after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist) *
The herdsman (O herdsman, driving your slow twilight flock) (Text: Seumas O'Sullivan)
E. Moeran, F. May, H. Fletcher
The hero (Here the hero, wrapped in crimson) (Text: Robert Horan) *
The hero may perish (The hero may perish his country to save
) GER (Text: William Smyth)
L. Beethoven, L. Beethoven
The Hesperus (It was the schooner Hesperus) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
T. Anderton, J. Blockley, W. Burr, F. Dunkley, A. Fisher, A. Foote, J. Hatton, J. Hullah, J. Hyde, C. Lewis, H. MacCunn, C. Mills, L. Parker, J. Read, F. Romer, H. Wareing, W. Weiss, R. Wilson, W. Wilson
The Hesperus Songs [song cycle]
The Hideous Root () (Text: Mervyn Peake) [x] *
The high hill () (Text: Sara Teasdale) [x]
The high song (The high song is over) (Text: Humbert Wolfe) [x] *
The Highland Balou (Hee Balou, my sweet wee Donald
) ENG GER FRE (Text: Robert Burns)
The Highland Watch (Old Scotia, wake thy mountain strain) GER (Text: James Hogg)
The highwayman (The wind was a torrent of darkness among the gusty trees) (Text: Alfred Noyes)
M. Andrews, C. Gibbs, D. Taylor
The Higland Watch (Old Scotia, wake thy mountain strain) GER (Text: James Hogg)
The hill () (Text: James Stephens) [x]
The hill (All night long in the garden of the cypresses) (Text: John Francis Alexander Heath-Stubbs) [x] *
The hill (Where are Elmer, Herman, Bert, Tom, and Charley) (Text: Edgar Lee Masters)
The hill pines were sighing (The hill pines were sighing) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
The hills (How calm, how constant are the hills) (Text: James Kirkup) *
The hills o' Skye (There's a ship lies off Dunvegan) (Text: William McLennan)
The hippopotamus (Behold the hippopotamus!
) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The hippopotamus (I shoot the Hippopotamus) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
The Hired Girls () (Text: Willa Cather) [x] *
The history of the flood (Bang bang bang) (Text: John Francis Alexander Heath-Stubbs) [x] *
The hoard of the Gibbelins (The Gibbelins eat, as is well known) (Text: Edward John Moreton Drax Plunkett, 18th Baron Dunsany)
The holly () (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x] *
The Holly Tree (Love is like the wild rose-briar
) (Text: Emily Brontë)
J. Ireland, J. Clements, J. Coulthard, J. Duke, Einna, H. Horrocks, A. Jepson
The Hollyford Valley () (Text: Alistair Campbell) [x] *
The holy city (Last night I lay a-sleeping) (Text: Frederick E. Weatherly)
The holy dead (How they so softly rest) ENG (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow after Ernst Stockmann)
S. Coleridge-Taylor, Y. Van Antwerp, F. Hodges
The Holy Ghost (O Holy Ghost, whose temple I am) (Text: John Donne)
The holy infant's lullaby () [x]
The Holy of Holies (Elder father, though thine eyes) (Text: Gilbert Keith Chesterton)
The Holy Sonnets of John Donne [song cycle]
The Home-Wind (Ho! wind of the wild morasses
) (Text: Arthur Guiterman)
The homecoming (Gruffly growled the wind on Toller downland broad and bare) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The homing heart (Each day, dear love, my road leads far) (Text: Daniel Henderson) *
The honest fellow () [x]
The Honour of a Jubilee (The day that such a blessing gave) DUT (Text: Nahum Tate)
The horn (Hark! is that a horn I hear) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
A. Butterworth, C. Gibbs, K. Richards
The Horrible History of Jones (Jones had a dog; it had a chain) (Text: Gilbert Keith Chesterton)
The horse with violin in mouth (Don't let that horse eat that violin
) (Text: Lawrence Ferlinghetti) *
C. Berg, A. Blank, C. Yavelow
The horses of the sea (The horses of the sea) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
The host () (Text: M. Lee) [x]
The host of the air (O'Driscoll drove with a song
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
T. Dunhill, C. Loeffler, N. Marshall
The hosting of the Sidhe (The host is riding from Knocknarea
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The hosts flew white (And I was riding on a mighty, swift-borne sledge
) (Text: Alan Hovhaness) *
The hour (Was it foreknown, was it foredoomed) (Text: Sara Teasdale)
The hour glass (Consider this small dust, here in the glass) (Text: Ben Jonson)
The hours rise up () (Text: E. E. (Edward Estlin) Cummings) [x] *
the hours rise up putting off stars (the hours rise up putting off stars and it is
) (Text: E. E. (Edward Estlin) Cummings) *
The Housatonic at Stockbridge (Contented river! In thy dreamy realm) (Text: Robert Underwood Johnson)
The House of Dream (Candle, candle, burning clear) (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x] *
The House of Life [song cycle]
The house on a hill () (Text: Ernest Charles) [x] *
The house on the hill (They are all gone away) (Text: Edwin Arlington Robinson)
A. Copland, T. Mirante, L. Souther
The housewife (My love could come home early) (Text: Michael Baldwin) [x] *
The Human Abstract (Pity would be no more if we did not make somebody Poor
) (Text: William Blake)
The Humours of Love [song cycle]
The huntsmen (Three jolly gentlemen) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
A. Bliss, G. Bachlund, M. Bartholomew, J. Brown, N. Butterworth, J. Emeléus, C. Gibbs, C. Hely-Hutchinson, A. O'Murnaghan, H. Roberton, R. Teed
The huntsmen () (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson) [x]
The Hymn of Man (In the grey beginning of years, in the twilight of things that began) (Text: Algernon Charles Swinburne)
The icicle lesson () [x]
The idle gift (Do not despise the rose because its beauty is manifest) (Text: Gian Carlo Menotti) *
The idle life I lead (The idle life I lead) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
F. Hart, H. MacCunn, C. Osmond
The Idlers (The gipsies lit their fuels by the chalk-pit gate anew) (Text: Edmund Charles Blunden) [x] *
The Idol-Maker Prays (Great god whom I shall carve from this gray stone
) (Text: Arthur Guiterman)
The image of God (O Lord! who seest, from yon starry height) ENG (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow after Francisco de Aldana)
The Immortal Legions () (Text: Alfred Noyes) [x]
The Imperial Heart (Savior! I've no one else to tell) (Text: Emily Dickinson) *
The imprisoned soul (At the last, tenderly) (Text: Walt Whitman)
S. Adler, E. Bacon, A. Bergh, M. Besly, G. Binkerd, E. Bonner, J. Boyd, F. Bridge, L. Campbell-Tipton, J. Carter, R. Diggle, P. Garratt, P. Glass, E. Henderson, W. Hively, L. Kastle, O. Luening, A. Powers, J. Rogers, A. Schmutz, W. Schuman, E. Spalding, W. Storey-Smith, E. Whithorne, T. Whitmer, R. Thompson, T. Pasatieri
The Impulse (It was too lonely for her there
) (Text: Robert Frost)
The incarnate sun (The incarnate sun, a tall strong youth) (Text: Algernon Charles Swinburne)
The Indian serenade (I arise from dreams of thee) ITA GER (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
D. Arditti, J. Barnett, F. Delius, T. Adamowski, P. Ambrose, M. Arkwright, E. Bairstow, J. Barricelli, I. Beaumont, A. Bendelari, A. Bennett, W. Berwald, J. Beuthin, J. Bischoff, F. Bornschein, F. Brackett, F. Bullard, N. Cain, J. Camp, O. Canale, O. Carter, H. Clark, L. Coerne, F. Converse, C. Coombs, B. Reeves, M. Head
The Indians (Alas! for them their day is o'er) (Text: Charles James Sprague)
The indifferent (I can love both fair and brown) ITA (Text: John Donne)
The infinite shining heavens (The infinite shining heavens
) ITA (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
R. Vaughan Williams, S. Colburn
The inkbottle (Well of blackness, all defiling) (Text: Mary Coleridge)
The Inn (Do you remember an Inn, Miranda
) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
F. Toye, D. ApIvor, M. Burtch, J. Coulthard, E. Elgar, G. Fontrier, I. Gurney, R. Hageman, C. Le Fleming, H. Noble, B. Rawlinson, R. Thompson, G. Williams
The Inn of Earth (I came to the crowded Inn of Earth
) (Text: Sara Teasdale)
The innate (Voices live in every finite being) (Text: Charles Edward Ives)
The Innocence of Experience [song cycle]
The innumerable dance (Thou perceivest the Flowers put forth their precious Odours) (Text: William Blake)
The inquiry (And are ye one of Hermitage
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The Insect World [song cycle]
The Instilling () (Text: James Ingram Merrill) [x] *
The Inuit (The People of the Eastern Ice, they are melting like the snow) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The invisible light () (Text: Johanna Frada) [x]
The invitation to the gondola (Come forth; for Night is falling) (Text: John Addington Symonds)
The Irish Book [song cycle]
The Irish grass (The grey streets of London are greyer than the stone) (Text: Katharine Tynan)
The Irishman in London (Och! I have you not heard, Pat, of many a joke
) GER
The island dream (The island dreams under the dawn) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The Island of Pines (Across the willow-lake a temple shines
) ENG (Text: Launcelot Alfred Cranmer-Byng after Bai Juyi)
The Islands (A Song of New Zealand) () (Text: Alfred Noyes) [x]
The isle (There was a little lawny islet) RUS (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
The Isle of Lost Dreams (There is an Isle beyond our ken) (Text: Fiona Macleod)
The Isle of Portland (The star-filled seas are smooth to-night
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
C. Orr, T. Dunhill, J. Edmunds
The Italian Cook and the English Maid (From beef-steak pies up to fricassees Alessandro is a master.
) (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning)
The Ivy-Wife (I longed to love a full-boughed beech
) SPA (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The Jacqueminot rose ('Twas a Jacqueminot rose) (Text: Arlo Bates)
The Jade Garden [song cycle]
The Jade Mountain [song cycle]
The jasmine (The soft, warm night wind flutters) (Text: Arlo Bates)
The jealous lover (My dear mistress has a heart) (Text: John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester)
The jellyfish (Who wants my jellyfish?) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The jester () (Text: Helen Maude Francesca Bantock (von Schweizer) [x]
The Jesus Affair () (Text: Mervyn, Lord Horder, the Second Baron of Ashford) [x] *
The jewel (There is this cave
) (Text: James Wright) [x] *
The Jewish Cemetery at Newport (How strange it seems! These Hebrews in their graves) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The jocund dance (I love the jocund dance
) (Text: William Blake)
J. Mitchell, R. Quilter, H. Grieveson, F. Corder, O. Morawetz, D. Jones, W. Harris
The jolly English Yellowboy (The jolly English Yellowboy
) (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
The Jolly Roger (Ship ahoy! Yo-ho! Sing a song of pirates, sailing o'er the main) (Text: Dorothy Foster Brown)
The Jolly Young Waterman (And did you not hear of a jolly young waterman)
The journey (Do you see the road a-winding through the dear green fields below) (Text: Ernest Blake)
The Journey to Ithaca (When you start on the journey to Ithaca
) ENG ITA (Text: Lisa van Auken after Constantine P. Cavafy)
The journeyman weaver (Beam and shuttle seem to know
) (Text: Joseph Campbell)
The Joyce Book [song cycle] FRE
The joyous wanderer (I go by road, I go by street) ENG (Text: Alice Christina Meynell, née Thompson after Catulle Mendès)
The Judgment of Paris [song cycle]
The Jumblies (They went to sea in a Sieve, they did
) (Text: Edward Lear)
G. Bachlund, M. Burtch, M. Dale, C. Gibbs, D. Glass, G. Grant-Schaefer, G. Ingraham, D. James, M. Lang, E. Roxburgh, A. Silver, R. Steptoe, V. Thomson, E. Troup
The Jungle Book [song cycle]
The jungle flower (Ah, the cool silence of the shaded hours) (Text: Laurence Hope)
The Junk Man (I am glad God saw Death) (Text: Carl Sandburg)
The K'e (The K'e still ripples to its banks
) ENG (Text: after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist)
The keel row (As I came thro' Sandgate) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The keen stars were twinkling (The keen stars were twinkling
) (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
N. Rorem, G. Bennett, R. Faith
The kind ghosts (She sleeps on soft, last breaths; but no ghost looms
) (Text: Wilfred Owen)
The kind moon (I think the moon is very kind) (Text: Sara Teasdale)
The king goes hunting (The king goes hunting) ENG (Text: Iris Rogers after Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The King of Liang (There was a King of Liang -- a king of wondrous might
) CZE ENG (Text: Launcelot Alfred Cranmer-Byng after Gao Shi)
G. Branscombe, E. Whithorne, G. Bantock
The King of Love my Shepherd is (The King of Love my Shepherd is) FRE (Text: Sir Henry William Baker)
The King of Tang () (Text: Launcelot Alfred Cranmer-Byng after Wang Bo) [x]
The king of the fairy men (I know the man without a soul) (Text: James Stephens)
The king on the tower (The cold gray hills they bind me around) ENG FRE (Text: William Makepeace Thackeray after Johann Ludwig Uhland)
The King-Fisher Song (King Fisher courted Lady Bird
) (Text: Lewis Carroll)
The kingfisher (It was the Rainbow gave thee birth
) (Text: William Henry Davies)
R. Still, F. Hart, P. Naylor
The Kingfisher's Tower (Clad in blue silk and bright embroidery
) ENG (Text: Launcelot Alfred Cranmer-Byng after Wang-Chang-Ling)
The King's Highway (When moonlight flecks the cruiser's decks) (Text: Sir Henry Newbolt)
The king's men (We be the King's men, hale and hearty
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
I. Copley, T. Dunhill, C. Gibbs, H. Sarson, R. Vaughan Williams, P. Wilkinson, H. Gaul
The King's Way (The newest street in London town) (Text: Caroline Alice Elgar, née Roberts)
The kiss (I hoped that he would love me) (Text: Sara Teasdale)
G. Bachlund, S. Barab, A. Jacchia, J. Kennedy, L. Laitman
The kiss (Before you kissed me only winds of heaven) (Text: Sara Teasdale)
The kiss () (Text: Dulman) [x]
The kiss (The kiss, dear maid, thy lip has left
) GER FRE (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron)
L. Beethoven, W. Aspull, S. Auteri-Manzocchi, J. Barnett, J. Beale, H. Bedford, H. Bishop, J. Chadwick, E. Ford, R. Guerini, E. Kreuz, B. Molique, F. Moseley, A. Mullen, I. Nathan, J. Parry, M. Southcote, M. Target, J. Taylor, W. Tollemache, R. Williams, T. Williams, V. Zavertal
The kiss, dear maid (The kiss, dear maid, thy lip has left
) GER FRE (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron)
L. Beethoven, W. Aspull, S. Auteri-Manzocchi, J. Barnett, J. Beale, H. Bedford, H. Bishop, J. Chadwick, E. Ford, R. Guerini, E. Kreuz, B. Molique, F. Moseley, A. Mullen, I. Nathan, J. Parry, M. Southcote, M. Target, J. Taylor, W. Tollemache, R. Williams, T. Williams, V. Zavertal
The kiss, dear maid, thy lip has left (The kiss, dear maid, thy lip has left
) GER FRE (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron)
L. Beethoven, W. Aspull, S. Auteri-Manzocchi, J. Barnett, J. Beale, H. Bedford, H. Bishop, J. Chadwick, E. Ford, R. Guerini, E. Kreuz, B. Molique, F. Moseley, A. Mullen, I. Nathan, J. Parry, M. Southcote, M. Target, J. Taylor, W. Tollemache, R. Williams, T. Williams, V. Zavertal
The Kiss in Colin's Eyes (Strephon kissed me in the spring) (Text: Sara Teasdale)
S. Barab, J. Behrend, A. Fish, M. Flothuis, F. Foster, F. Fox, M. Hill, R. Housman, F. Jacobi, J. Kennedy, E. Menges, B. Murray, D. Rybner
The kitten (The trouble with a kitten is that) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The kitten (The kitten's face is soft) (Text: Ogden Nash) [x] *
The kitty-cat bird () (Text: Theodore Roethke) [x] *
The knight whose armour didn't squeak (Of all the Knights in Appledore) (Text: Alan Alexander Milne) *
The knotting song (Hears not my Phillis how the birds) GER (Text: Sir Charles Sedley)
The Kye-Song of St. Bride (O sweet St. Bride of the yellow, yellow hair) (Text: Fiona Macleod)
The lad wha lilts sae sweetly (Say lads and lasses ha' ye seen) (Text: Charles Dibdin)
The ladies of the garden clubbub () (Text: Ogden Nash) [x] *
The lads in their hundreds (The lads in their hundreds to Ludlow come in for the fair
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
G. Butterworth, I. Gurney, E. Moeran, C. Orr, A. Somervell, A. Cripps, S. Wilson
The lads in their hundreds to Ludlow come in for the fair (The lads in their hundreds to Ludlow come in for the fair
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
G. Butterworth, I. Gurney, E. Moeran, C. Orr, A. Somervell, A. Cripps, S. Wilson
The lads in their hundreds to Ludlow come in for the fair (The lads in their hundreds to Ludlow come in for the fair
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
G. Butterworth, I. Gurney, E. Moeran, C. Orr, A. Somervell, A. Cripps, S. Wilson
The lady of my delight (She walks -- the lady of my delight) (Text: Alice Christina Meynell, née Thompson)
I. Atkins, S. Avery, A. Bleadon, G. Cook, V. Galway, E. Horsman, W. Hunt, D. MacMurrough, R. Robbins, H. Roberton, L. Salter, D. Smith, B. Treharne, H. Watts, M. Bruce
The Lady of Tearful Regret () (Text: Edward Albee) [x] *
The lady of the lambs (She walks -- the lady of my delight) (Text: Alice Christina Meynell, née Thompson)
I. Atkins, S. Avery, A. Bleadon, G. Cook, V. Galway, E. Horsman, W. Hunt, D. MacMurrough, R. Robbins, H. Roberton, L. Salter, D. Smith, B. Treharne, H. Watts, M. Bruce
The Lady of the West Country (Here lies a most beautiful lady
) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
I. Gurney, D. Barlow, M. Besly, G. Cockshott, E. Deale, J. Duarte, A. Hoggett, R. Housman, J. Koch, M. Mulliner, M. Sheldon, D. Stone
The Lady Oriana () [x]
The Lady to her Guitar (For him who struck thy foreign string
) (Text: Emily Brontë)
The Lady Visitor in the Pauper Ward (Why do you break upon this old, cool peace) (Text: Robert Graves)
The ladybird (I caught a little ladybird) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
The Lady's Looking-glass (Trust not too much to that enchanting face)
The Laid-out body () (Text: Alistair Campbell) [x] *
The lake (If only I could change like the lake-- dark-- light-- dark-- a broadening smile) (Text: Christopher Hewitt) [x] *
The Lake Isle of Innisfree (I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree
) ITA (Text: William Butler Yeats)
B. Moore, E. Poston, M. Howe, R. Braun, W. Butler, J. Couch, A. Foote, G. Gibbs, I. Gurney, M. Herbert, T. Kelly, L. Lehmann, H. Ley, A. Morrison, J. Palmer, G. Peel, T. Ritchie, H. Willan, D. Zanders
The Lake of Beauty (Let your mind be quiet, realising the beauty of the world
) (Text: Edward Carpenter)
The lama (In far Tibet there live a lama) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
S. Adler, J. Bilik, J. Cohn
The lama (I will arise and go now) (In far Tibet there live a lama) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
S. Adler, J. Bilik, J. Cohn
The lamb (Little Lamb, who made thee
) RUS (Text: William Blake)
J. Adler, S. Adler, O. Anderton, V. Archer, M. Armanini, R. Arnatt, C. Atkinson, E. Bacon, M. Brahe, P. Bezanson, G. Binkerd, R. Boughton, C. Bowman, G. Branning, H. Brian, L. Bristol, J. Brody, H. Brook, C. Brown, P. Browne, J. Brydson, M. Bucci, W. Buczynski, G. Bush, F. Butcher, W. MacNutt, E. Button, N. Cain, M. Caldwell, L. Hoiby, J. Mitchell, R. Vaughan Williams, J. Tavener, W. Bolcom, D. Thomas, P. Carr, G. Chadwick, T. Chanler, J. Chorbajian, F. Christiansen, O. Christiansen, I. Citkowitz, A. Close, J. Collignon, A. Collins, G. Conant, B. Craveiro, J. Crawford, E. Coolidge, G. Cohen, D. Smirnov, A. Somervell, D. Kay, F. Hart, P. Nordoff, A. Somervell, L. Furnivall, C. Rasely, J. Roff, N. Rorem, G. Shaw, R. Grow, R. Gronninsater, W. Hartley, P. Kapp, M. Jacques, B. Jagger, S. Lekberg, T. Lenk, T. Lenk
The lamb () (Text: Theodore Roethke) [x] *
The Lamb and Other New Carols [song cycle]
The Lamb and the Dove (Did any bird come flying
) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
The Lament (I sigh as I sing for the story land
) (Text: Lewis Wallace)
The Lament for Shuil Donald's Daughter (In old Shuil Donald's cottage there are many voices weeping
) (Text: Caroline Elizabeth Sarah Norton, née Sheridan)
The Lament of Ian the Proud (What is this crying that I hear in the wind
) (Text: Fiona Macleod)
The lamentation (The beauty of Israel is slain upon high) (Text: Michael Desmond Ryan)
The lamentation of Don Roderick (The hosts of Don Rodrigo were scatter'd in dismay
) (Text: John Gibson Lockhart)
The lamp () (Text: Sara Teasdale) [x] *
The lamp in the empty room (I looked back suddenly into the empty room
) (Text: Humbert Wolfe) *
The lamplighter (My tea is nearly ready and the sun has left the sky
) (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
R. Quilter, M. Williamson, E. Crowningshield, H. Edwards, S. Lekberg, D. Mason, A. Rowley, T. Shepard, E. Smith, R. Stevenson, J. Whitfield
The land () (Text: Demetrios Capetanakis) [x] *
The Land [song cycle]
The Land o' the leal (I'm wearin' awa', John) (Text: Carolina, Lady Nairne)
The Land of Counterpane (When I was sick and lay a-bed) (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
G. Chadwick, E. Crowningshield, R. Jager, W. Miessner, M. Radnor, T. Shepard
The land of dreams (Awake, awake my little boy) (Text: William Blake)
A. Aronis, H. Brian, N. Butterley, V. Thomson, O. Morawetz, F. Frye
The Land of Heart's Desire (The wind blows out of the gates of the day) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
I. Gurney, H. Gilbert, H. Nelson, M. Shaw
The land of lost content (Into my heart an air that kills
) ITA (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
I. Gurney, C. Orr, N. Peros, A. Somervell, T. Armstrong, E. Avril, E. Cone, A. Cripps, V. Duke, C. Duncan, R. Field, W. Hoskins, M. Kilby, M. Lang, A. Leichtling, C. Manney, H. Priestley-Smith, H. Proctor-Gregg, E. Rose, L. Russell, J. Raynor
The Land of Lost Content [song cycle]
The Land of Nod (From breakfast on through all the day
) (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
E. Crowningshield, E. Falk, W. Gilchrist, H. Norris, M. Radnor, L. Zaninelli
The Land of Story-Books (At evening when the lamp is lit
) (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
The landlord's daughter (There sat one day in quiet) ENG (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist)
M. Balfe, O. Cramer, C. Heuberer, W. Jude, W. Montgomery, J. Perring, F. Rogers, W. Watson
The lanely müne (Saftly, saftly through the mirk) (Text: William Soutar) [x] *
The lanely müne (Saftly, saftly through the mirk) (Text: William Soutar) [x] *
The language of flowers (In Eastern lands they talk in flow'rs
) (Text: Sir Edward Elgar)
The lark () [x]
The lark (A lull in the racket and brattle) (Text: Wilfrid Wilson Gibson)
The lark (Lark, skylark, spilling your rubbed and round) (Text: Cecil Day Lewis) [x] *
N. Lindsay, B. Naylor, P. Naylor, F. Stark
The lark (Do you ask what the birds say?) (Text: Samuel Taylor Coleridge)
The lark (Swift through the yielding air I glide)
The lark ascending (He rises and begins to round
) (Text: George Meredith)
The lark in the clear air (Dear thoughts are in my mind, and my soul soars enchanted
) (Text: Sir Samuel Ferguson)
The larky lad (The larky lad frae the pantry) (Text: William Soutar) [x] *
The lass of Patie's mill (The lass of Patie's mill) (Text: Allan Ramsay)
The lass with the delicate air (Young Molly who lived at the foot of the hill
)
The last chantey (Thus said the Lord in the vault above the cherubim
) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The last dance (The violins swayed the languorous waltz) (Text: Frederick H. Martens)
The last farewell of lovers () ENG FRE (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The last gallop (Gone the saturnalia sighing, dying) (Text: Edith Sitwell)
The last hermitage () (Text: Ruth Pitter) [x] *
The last hero (We laid him to rest with tenderness) (Text: George William Russell)
The last hour () (Text: Jessie Christian Brown) [x]
The last invocation (At the last, tenderly) (Text: Walt Whitman)
S. Adler, E. Bacon, A. Bergh, M. Besly, G. Binkerd, E. Bonner, J. Boyd, F. Bridge, L. Campbell-Tipton, J. Carter, R. Diggle, P. Garratt, P. Glass, E. Henderson, W. Hively, L. Kastle, O. Luening, A. Powers, J. Rogers, A. Schmutz, W. Schuman, E. Spalding, W. Storey-Smith, E. Whithorne, T. Whitmer, R. Thompson, T. Pasatieri
The last journey (I felt the world a-spinning on its nave) (Text: John Davidson)
The last laugh ('Oh! Jesus Christ! I'm hit,' he said; and died) (Text: Wilfred Owen)
The last leaf (I saw him once before
) (Text: Oliver Wendell Holmes)
The last night that she lived (The last night that she lived) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The last performance (I am playing my oldest tunes, declared she) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The last post (The day's high work is over and done) (Text: William Ernest Henley)
The last reader (I sometimes sit beneath a tree and read my own sweet songs) (Text: Oliver Wendell Holmes)
The last revel (From silver lamps a thin blue smoke is streaming
) ENG (Text: Launcelot Alfred Cranmer-Byng after Chen Zi'ang)
The last rose of summer ('Tis the last rose of summer) GER (Text: Thomas Moore)
B. Britten, A. Foerster, J. Stevenson, F. von Flotow, R. Lalli
The last time I came o'er the muir (The last time I came o'er the muir
) (Text: Allan Ramsay)
The last vermillion (The last vermillion) (Text: Ruth Pitter) [x] *
The last wine () (Text: Tennessee Williams) [x] *
The last word (As sweet as the breath that goes) (Text: Thomas Bailey Aldrich)
The last word of a bluebird (As I went out a Crow) (Text: Robert Frost)
The last word of a bluebird as told to a child (As I went out a Crow) (Text: Robert Frost)
The late leaves (The leaves are falling; so am I) (Text: Walter Savage Landor)
B. Dieren, C. Forsyth, L. Impey, R. Milford, L. Talma
The Late Singer (Here it is spring again) (Text: William Carlos Williams)
The Latmian shepherd (The moon's a drowsy fool to-night) (Text: Edward Shanks)
The laugher (I'm everywhere) (Text: Algernon Blackwood)
The Law the Lawyers Know About (The law the lawyers know about
) (Text: Harry (later Hilary) Douglas Clark Pepler)
The laws of God, the laws of man (The laws of God, the laws of man) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
The Lawyer (The law my calling is; my robe, my tongue, my pen) (Text: Sir John Davies)
The Lawyers Know Too Much (The lawyers, Bob, know too much) (Text: Carl Sandburg)
The Lawyers' Way (I 've been list'nin' to them lawyers) (Text: Paul Laurence Dunbar)
The Lay of the Laborer (A spade! a rake! a hoe!
) (Text: Thomas Hood)
The lea (I think no heaven shall ever be) (Text: William Soutar) [x] *
The lea-rig (When o'er the hill the eastern star
) GER (Text: Robert Burns)
The leap (Forget the rest: my heart is true) (Text: Robert Graves) [x] *
The Leap of Kurroglou (Mounted on Kyrat strong and fleet) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The Leap of Roushan Beg (Mounted on Kyrat strong and fleet) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The leather-winged bat () (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs) [x]
The leaves are falling; so am I (The leaves are falling; so am I) (Text: Walter Savage Landor)
B. Dieren, C. Forsyth, L. Impey, R. Milford, L. Talma
The legend beautiful (In his chamber all alone) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The legend of the birds (When Jesus Christ was four years old
) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
B. Britten, P. Warlock, V. Buck, W. Buczynski, G. Bush, W. Davies, J. Duarte, A. Fagge, J. Fearing, N. Gilbert, I. Gurney, G. Gwyther, P. James, D. Murray, W. Pasfield, V. Persichetti, G. Rathbone, J. Roff, H. Simpson, P. Sweetman, E. Thiman, L. Walters, A. Goodhart, R. Vanderlip
The legend of the crossbill (On the cross the dying Saviour) ENG (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow after Julius Mosen)
E. Jones, A. Hopper, L. Lemmens
The legs (There was this road) (Text: Robert Graves) [x] *
The lemmings (Once in a hundred years the Lemmings come) (Text: John Masefield)
The lent lily ('Tis spring; come out to ramble
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
I. Gurney, M. Horder, J. Ireland, C. Orr, M. Owen, C. Champion, A. Cripps, H. Milvain, L. Russell, S. Wilson
The lenten lily ('Tis spring; come out to ramble
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
I. Gurney, M. Horder, J. Ireland, C. Orr, M. Owen, C. Champion, A. Cripps, H. Milvain, L. Russell, S. Wilson
The Lepracaun or Fairy Shoemaker (Little Cowboy, what have you heard
) (Text: William Allingham)
The letter (Where is another, sweet as my sweet!) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
C. Burleigh, F. Gambogi, A. Pease, A. Sullivan, S. Thomson, R. Walthew, F. Woods
The level bee (Like trains of cars on tracks of plush) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The leveller (Near Martinpuisch that night of hell
) (Text: Robert Graves)
The licorice field of Pontefract (In the licorice fields of Pontefract) (Text: Sir John Betjeman) [x] *
The licorice field of Pontefract (In the licorice fields of Pontefract) (Text: Sir John Betjeman) [x] *
The Life of the Bee [song cycle]
The Light of Golden Summer () FRE (Text: Julian Fane after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The light of other days (Oft in the stilly night
) (Text: Thomas Moore)
B. Britten, J. Stevenson, C. Gibbs, D. Nyvall, C. Parry, W. Potter, R. Werther
The light of stars (The night is come, but not too soon) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
C. Anderson, F. Cowen, J. Horn, W. Sellé
The light that is felt (A tender child of summers three
) (Text: John Greenleaf Whittier)
F. Graham, C. Ives, J. Methfessel
The lighthouse (The rocky ledge runs far into the sea) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
C. Burleigh, E. Gest, H. Nelson
The lights of home (Pilot, how far from home?
) (Text: Alfred Noyes)
The likeness (When I came forth this morn I saw) (Text: William Henry Davies)
The lilac (Who thought of the lilac?) (Text: Humbert Wolfe) [x] *
The lilacs are in bloom (The lilacs are in bloom
) (Text: George Moore)
The lilly (The modest rose puts forth a thorn
) (Text: William Blake)
W. Alwyn, R. Ash, W. Bolcom, G. Bachlund, F. Hart, O. Luening, E. Hartzell
The lily (The modest rose puts forth a thorn
) (Text: William Blake)
W. Alwyn, R. Ash, W. Bolcom, G. Bachlund, F. Hart, O. Luening, E. Hartzell
The lily (Far up the steep, a lily grows) ENG (Text: T. R. Sullivan after A. Salvini)
The lily () (Text: R. W. Fullerton after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The lily () DUT RUS ENG ITA (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The lily has a smooth stalk (The lily has a smooth stalk) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
G. Finzi, H. Sarson, A. Weidig
The lily in a crystal (You have beheld a smiling rose) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The lily of a day (It is not growing like a tree) (Text: Ben Jonson)
The lily of the vale () (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs) [x]
The Lincolnshire poacher (When I was bound apprentice in famous Lincolnshire) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The linden branch () (Text: Archibald MacLeish) [x] *
The line-gang (Here come the line-gang pioneering by
) (Text: Robert Frost)
The linnet (I heard a linnet courting) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
H. Brook, B. Dale, D. Edge, V. Galway, I. Herbert, H. Noble, H. Parrott, D. Stone, J. Turner
The linnet (Upon this leafy bush) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
C. Gibbs, E. Leigh, K. Leighton, P. Naylor, M. Horder
The linnet in the rocky dells (The linnet in the rocky dells
) (Text: Emily Brontë)
T. Fisk, A. Butterworth, J. Littlejohn, J. Mitchell
The lion (The Lion, the Lion, he dwells in the Waste) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
The Lion (The Lion is a kingly beast
) (Text: Vachel Lindsay)
The lion (Oh, weep for Mr. and Mrs. Bryan) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The Lion and the Unicorn (The Lion and the Unicorn were fighting for the crown)
The lion house () (Text: John Hall Wheelock) [x] *
The lip and the heart (One day between the Lip and the Heart) (Text: John Quincy Adams)
The listeners ('Is there anybody there?' said the Traveller) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
N. Dello Joio, C. Gibbs, C. Lander, R. Stephenson, L. White, D. Young, J. Beeson
The little admiral (Stand by to reckon up your battleships) (Text: Sir Henry Newbolt)
The little bee () DUT (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The little bird (My dear Daddie bought a mansion) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The little black boy (My mother taught me underneath a tree
) (Text: William Blake)
W. Bolcom, H. Cowell, J. Crawford, J. Crawford, H. de Lange, R. Cumming, V. Thomson, P. Karvonen
The little boy found (The little boy lost in the lonely fen
) (Text: William Blake)
R. Boughton, H. Brian, W. Bolcom, T. Lenk
The little boy lost (Father! father! where are you going?
) (Text: William Blake)
W. Bolcom, D. Thomas, T. Lenk
The little boy lost (Nought loves another as itself
) (Text: William Blake)
R. Boughton, H. Brian, C. Brown, W. Bolcom, T. Lenk
The little creature (Twinkum, twankum, twirlum and twitch
) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The little crocodile (How doth the little crocodile
) (Text: Lewis Carroll)
J. Duke, L. Lehmann, G. Bachlund
The little dancers (Lonely, save for a few faint stars
) (Text: Laurence Binyon) [x]
The little Dream-Princess (When all the world asleep) (Text: Hilda von Siller after Hermann Hesse) [x] *
The little dreams () (Text: Eileen M. Reynolds) [x]
The little field (Within a little field
) (Text: (William) Monk Gibbon) [x] *
The little girl found (All the night in woe Lyca's parents go
) (Text: William Blake)
The little girl lost (In futurity I prophetic see
) (Text: William Blake)
W. Bolcom, W. Bolcom, T. Lenk, T. Lenk
The little girl lost (In the southern clime) (In futurity I prophetic see
) (Text: William Blake)
W. Bolcom, W. Bolcom, T. Lenk, T. Lenk
The little girl lost (Introd. In futurity I prophetic see) (In futurity I prophetic see
) (Text: William Blake)
W. Bolcom, W. Bolcom, T. Lenk, T. Lenk
The little green orchard (Some one is always sitting there) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
C. Gibbs, H. Farjeon, F. Keel
The little horses (Hush you bye, don't you cry, go to sleepy little baby) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The Little Lamb (Little Lamb, who made thee
) RUS (Text: William Blake)
J. Adler, S. Adler, O. Anderton, V. Archer, M. Armanini, R. Arnatt, C. Atkinson, E. Bacon, M. Brahe, P. Bezanson, G. Binkerd, R. Boughton, C. Bowman, G. Branning, H. Brian, L. Bristol, J. Brody, H. Brook, C. Brown, P. Browne, J. Brydson, M. Bucci, W. Buczynski, G. Bush, F. Butcher, W. MacNutt, E. Button, N. Cain, M. Caldwell, L. Hoiby, J. Mitchell, R. Vaughan Williams, J. Tavener, W. Bolcom, D. Thomas, P. Carr, G. Chadwick, T. Chanler, J. Chorbajian, F. Christiansen, O. Christiansen, I. Citkowitz, A. Close, J. Collignon, A. Collins, G. Conant, B. Craveiro, J. Crawford, E. Coolidge, G. Cohen, D. Smirnov, A. Somervell, D. Kay, F. Hart, P. Nordoff, A. Somervell, L. Furnivall, C. Rasely, J. Roff, N. Rorem, G. Shaw, R. Grow, R. Gronninsater, W. Hartley, P. Kapp, M. Jacques, B. Jagger, S. Lekberg, T. Lenk, T. Lenk
The little love-god (The little love-god lying once asleep
) (Text: William Shakespeare)
J. Andriessen, P. Ketting
The little love-god lying once asleep (The little love-god lying once asleep
) (Text: William Shakespeare)
J. Andriessen, P. Ketting
The Little Match Girl (It was terribly cold, darkness was falling, and it was snowing quickly on the last evening of the year) (Text: Jan Jarvlepp after Mrs. H. B. Paull) [x] *
The little men (Up the aery mountain
) (Text: William Allingham)
H. Bath, A. Bax, S. Bodley, J. Butt, B. Dieren, J. Gaynor, L. Gruenberg, H. Hadley, M. Hill, W. Macfarren, P. Mimart, A. Needham, H. Roberton, A. Robinson, M. Shaw, G. Taylor, M. Thomas, F. White, L. Woodgate, G. Rathbone, F. Ward
The little nut-tree (I had a little nut-tree, and nothing would it bear) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The little old Cupid ('Twas a very small garden) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
B. Crist, C. Hely-Hutchinson, H. McKinney
The little old table (Creak, little wood thing, creak
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The little one sleeps in its cradle (The little one sleeps in its cradle) (Text: Walt Whitman)
The little red calf (The little red calf) (Text: Wilfrid Wilson Gibson) [x] *
The little red lark (Oh swan of slenderness
) (Text: Alfred Perceval Graves)
The Little Rooster and the Little Hen (This is the story of the Little Rooster and the Little Hen
) ENG (Text: Lynn Steele after Olive Beaupre Miller)
The little salamander (When I go free) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The little seamstress () (Text: Leonard Alfred George Strong) [x]
The little serving maid (There was a Queen of England) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
The little shepherd's song () (Text: William Alexander Percy) [x]
The little stone (How happy is the little stone) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
E. Bacon, A. Brown, J. Heiss
The little Tartar maiden (The little Tartar maiden) (Text: Richard Henry Stoddard)
The little tavern (I'll keep a little tavern
) (Text: Edna St. Vincent Millay)
The little tippler (I taste a liquor never brewed) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
C. Dickinson, J. Duke, R. Escher, A. Farwell, W. Gettel, N. Peros, W. Sydeman, R. Ward, A. Weiss, B. Roe
The little turtle (There was a little turtle) (Text: Vachel Lindsay)
J. Carpenter, H. Enders, H. Sherman, V. Weigl
The Little Turtle Dove (O can't you see yon little turtle dove)
The little vagabond (Dear Mother, dear Mother, the Church is cold
) (Text: William Blake)
R. Ash, G. Antheil, W. Bolcom, W. Kemp, M. Shaw, Sommerfeldt, G. Victory, C. Vollrath, J. Crawford, O. Luening
The Lobster Quadrille (Will you walk a little faster?" said a whiting to a snail
) (Text: Lewis Carroll)
G. Ligeti, J. Duke, L. Lehmann
The loneliest man (Now since the day) ENG (Text: Luise Haessler after Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche)
The loneliness one dare not sound (The Loneliness One dare not sound) (Text: Emily Dickinson) *
The lonely (Lone and forgotten) (Text: George William Russell) [x] *
The Lonely Death (In the cold I will rise, I will bathe) (Text: Adelaide Crapsey)
The lonely hunter (Green branches, green branches, I see you beckon; I follow!) (Text: Fiona Macleod)
The lonely land (Cedar and jagged fir uplift sharp barbs) (Text: A. J. M. (Arthur James Marshall) Smith) *
The Lonely Landscape [song cycle]
The lonely of heart (The wind blows out of the gates of the day) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
I. Gurney, H. Gilbert, H. Nelson, M. Shaw
The lonely tree (A twisted ash, a ragged fir
) (Text: Wilfrid Wilson Gibson)
F. Hart, R. Housman, W. Wordsworth
The lonesome dove (Oh, don't you see that lonesome dove) (Text: Arnold Sundgaard)
The long day closes (No star is o'er the lake) (Text: Henry Fothergill Chorley)
The long hill (I must have passed the crest a while ago) (Text: Sara Teasdale)
The longest wait (No, it is not love that I desire) (Text: Gian Carlo Menotti) *
The look (Strephon kissed me in the spring) (Text: Sara Teasdale)
S. Barab, J. Behrend, A. Fish, M. Flothuis, F. Foster, F. Fox, M. Hill, R. Housman, F. Jacobi, J. Kennedy, E. Menges, B. Murray, D. Rybner
The Lord bless you and keep you (The Lord bless you and keep you) (Text: Bible or other Sacred Texts)
The Lord is my light (The Lord is my light
) (Text: Bible or other Sacred Texts after Bible or other Sacred Texts) [x]
The Lord Is My Shepherd (The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want
) ENG GER FRE (Text: Bible or other Sacred Texts after Bible or other Sacred Texts)
P. Creston, E. Rubbra, G. Bachlund
The Lord knows... () (Text: Ann Smith) [x]
The Lord Mayor's Table (Let all the Nine Muses lay by their abuses) (Text: Thomas Jordan)
The Lord Star (On the beach, at night, stands a child) (Text: Walt Whitman)
E. Bacon, W. Bergsma, J. Harrison, A. Imbrie, P. James, V. Persichetti
The Lordly Hudson (Driver, what stream is it?" I asked, well knowing
) (Text: Paul Goodman) *
The Lord's Prayer (Our Father, which art in heaven) ENG GER (Text: Bible or other Sacred Texts after Bible or other Sacred Texts)
The Lore-Ley () SPA ENG ITA FRE FIN (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The Loreley: legend () SPA ENG ITA FRE FIN (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The loss of love (All through an empty place I go) (Text: Countee Cullen)
The Lost Child (It was fifty years ago) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The lost chord (Seated one day at the organ) (Text: Adelaide Anne Procter)
The Lost Heart [song cycle]
The Lost Lady Found ('Twas down in yon valley a fair maid did dwell
) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The lost lamb (The little Tartar maiden) (Text: Richard Henry Stoddard)
The lost one (The red gleam o'er the mountains
) ENG (Text: Launcelot Alfred Cranmer-Byng after Meng Haoran)
The lost one (It is the evening hour
) (Text: John Clare)
H. Clark, S. Fraser, L. Walters
The lost shoe (Poor little Lucy
) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
G. Bachlund, A. Milner, J. Turner
The lost star (A star was loosed from heaven) (Text: Fiona Macleod)
The Lost Sunbeam (There were loud drums) (Text: Wallace Earl De Pue)
The lot of love is chosen (The lot of love is chosen. I learnt that much struggling for an image) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The lotus flower () RUS BAQ ENG ITA FRE (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The lotus flower () RUS BAQ ENG ITA FRE (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The lotus flower () RUS BAQ ENG ITA FRE (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The Lotus Isles ("Courage!" he said, and pointed toward the land) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
The lout (No sort of learning ever hurt his head) (Text: John Clare) [x]
The Love of Comrades (Come, I will make the continent indissoluble) (Text: Walt Whitman)
R. Boughton, M. Frank, Anonymous, I. Gertz, E. Helm, G. Kleinsinger, H. Norris, F. White, E. Zuckmayer
The Love Poems of Marichiko [song cycle]
The love song of Har Dyal (Alone upon the housetops to the North
) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
P. Grainger, C. Ives, F. Ayres, A. Adams, M. Batten, A. Foote, T. Galloway, T. Hunt, M. Kernochan, A. Scott
The love which me (The love which me so cruelly tormenteth) (Text: Edmund Spenser)
The love-gift of sorrow (For all my sorrow I have been more glad) (Text: Seumas O'Sullivan) [x]
The lovely lass of Inverness (The lovely lass o' Inverness) ITA GER FRE (Text: Robert Burns)
The lovely month of May () DUT HEB SPA ENG ITA FRE FIN (Text: Jacques Ahrem after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The lover (My love has no measure) (Text: Ursula Vaughan Williams, née Joan Ursula Penton Lock) [x] *
The Lover and his Lass (In the spring time, the only pretty ring time
) GER FIN (Text: William Shakespeare)
B. King, G. Barton, D. Buck, G. Bush, M. Dring, H. Clough-Leighter, G. Finzi, A. Foote, E. Korngold, T. Morley, C. Parry, R. Quilter, P. Warlock, F. Delius, R. Faith, M. Horder, E. Moeran, R. Clarke, M. Horder, D. Edeson, F. Keel
The lover as mirror () (Text: Edward Stringham) [x] *
The lover complayneth the unkindnes of his love (My lute, adieu ! perform the last) (Text: Sir Thomas Wyatt)
The lover mourns for the loss of love (Pale brows, still hands and dim hair
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
P. Warlock, P. Warlock, R. Warren, R. Warren
The Lover Pleads with His Friend for Old Friends (Though you are in your shining days
) ITA (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The lover tells of a rose (All things uncomely and broken, all things worn out and old) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The Lover tells of the Rose in his Heart (All things uncomely and broken, all things worn out and old) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The lovers (The rose did caper on her cheek) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The lover's curse (This one and that one will court him) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The lover's ghost (Well met, well met, my own true love) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The lover's maze (O be still, be still, unquiet thoughts, and rest on love's adventer) (Text: Thomas Campion)
The Lover's Resolution (Shall I, wasting in despair
) FRE GER (Text: George Wither)
The lover's song (Lend me thy fillet, Love!
) (Text: Edward Rowland Sill)
The lowest trees have tops (The lowest trees have tops, the ant her gall) ITA (Text: Sir Edward Dyer)
The Lowestoft Boat (In Lowestoft a boat was laid) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The loyal lover (I'll weave my love a garland) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The Lucy Poems: A Song Cycle for Bass-Baritone and Piano [song cycle]
The Ludlow Cycle [song cycle]
The lupine (Ah, lupine, with silvery leaves) (Text: Arlo Bates)
The lute () (Text: Jean Lunn after Rainer Maria Rilke) [x]
The lute player (She was a lady great and splendid) (Text: Sir William Watson)
The Lute Player of Casa Blanca (No others sing as you have sung) (Text: Laurence Hope)
The mad dog (Good people all, of every sort) (Text: Oliver Goldsmith)
The Mad Gardener's Song (He thought he saw an Elephant) (Text: Lewis Carroll)
The Mad Girl's Song (Good-morrow to the day so fair) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The mad knight's song () (Text: John Francis Alexander Heath-Stubbs) [x] *
The Mad Maid's Song (Good-morrow to the day so fair) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The mad prince (Who said 'Peacock Pie'
) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
C. Gibbs, I. Anhalt, J. Emeléus
The mad woman of Punnet's Town (A swell within her billowed skirts
) (Text: Leonard Alfred George Strong)
The madman and the child () (Text: Frances Cornford) [x] *
The Magi and King Herod (Three Kings are here, both wealthy and wise
) (Text: Robert Graves after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist) [x] *
The magic morning (The boating party) (Text: Stevie Smith) [x] *
The Magpie (I lingered near a cottage door) (Text: Harry Hunter)
The maid and the ferry (Ferry me across the water
) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
N. Rorem, A. Blank, G. Finzi, S. Fraser, M. Helyer, S. Homer, J. Ireland, J. Longmire, D. Lord, D. Parke, G. Peel, B. Scott, S. Scott, C. Sharman, M. Shaw, C. Stanford, F. Swinstead, E. Thiman, J. Wardale, P. Wilkinson, D. Hagen, D. Hagen
The maid of artless grace (She is a maid of artless grace) ENG (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist)
G. Allen, J. Blockley, R. Cairos-Rego
The maid of Athens (Maid of Athens, ere we part
) GER (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron)
H. Allen, M. Balfe, J. Barnett, P. Cimino, W. Duncan, G. Duval, J. Ellerton, B. Farebrother, C. Gounod, A. Guilbert, W. Horsley, H. Kalliwoda, G. Kiallmark, G. Linley, E. Loder, J. Mount, I. Nathan, S. Nelson, H. Pierson, V. Puccita, H. Salwey, F. Vollrath, S. Waller, W. Williams
The maid of Isla (O, Maid of Isla, from the cliff) GER (Text: Sir Walter Scott)
The Maid of the Mill [song cycle]
The maid that tends the goats (Hark! the mavis' evening sang
) (Text: Robert Burns)
The maiden (Who was this that came by the way
) (Text: Mary Coleridge)
The maiden and the weathercock (O weathercock on the village spire) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
W. Austin, L. Lehmann, C. Noyes, H. Pasmore
The Maiden Blush (So look the mornings when the sun) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The maid's lament (I loved him not; and yet, now he is gone) (Text: Walter Savage Landor)
The main deep (The long-rólling) (Text: James Stephens) [x] *
The Man (Truly," said Man, "I am made in the image of God) (Text: Peter Harris) *
The man he killed (Had he and I but met
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The man of life upright (The man of life upright) (Text: Thomas Campion)
The man of life vpright (The man of life vpright, whose chearfull minde is free
) (Text: Thomas Campion)
The man of life vpright (The man of life vpright, whose guiltlesse hart is free
) (Text: Thomas Campion)
The man of Tyre (The man of Tyre went down to the sea) (Text: D. H. (David Herbert) Lawrence) *
The man, the flute, the serpent (There was an Old Man with a flute) (Text: Edward Lear)
K. Jones, T. Kirk, E. Pehkonen, G. Petrassi
The Man with the Hoe and Other Songs [song cycle]
The Manly Heart (or, in Lilyanne's case, Womanly) (Shall I, wasting in despair
) FRE GER (Text: George Wither)
The mantle of blue (O men from the fields
) (Text: Padraic Colum)
H. Hughes, A. Bax, M. Sheldon, J. Angel, M. Brand, F. Bridge, C. Cadoret, A. Cooke, J. Coulthard, E. Deale, E. Deale, E. Deale, J. Dear, J. Duarte, P. Edmonds, R. Fleming, R. Ganz, F. Hart, H. Harty, J. Hind, E. Lodge, H. Loughborough, P. McIntyre, D. Parke, B. Pentland, E. Rubbra, A. Stout, P. Sweetman, C. Thomas, K. Tod, B. Treharne, M. Weaver, K. Weigl, P. Wilkinson
The march (I heard a voice that cried, "Make way for those who died!") (Text: Sir John Collings Squire)
The Marchioness Of Brinvilliers (He toned the sprightly beam of morning
) (Text: Herman Melville)
The Margaret Sanger Song (More children from the fit, less from the unfit) (Text: Margaret Sanger)
The market (A man came to me at the fair
) (Text: James Stephens)
The Market-Girl (Nobody took any notice of her as she stood on the causey kerb
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
G. Finzi, A. Bax, F. Goossen, A. Hale
The marksmen (Come from the mountain side) (Text: Caroline Alice Elgar, née Roberts)
The Marriage of Heaven and Hell () (Text: William Blake) [x]
The Marriage of Heaven and Hell [song cycle]
The marriage of souls () (Text: William Carlos Williams) [x] *
The marriage of true minds (Let me not to the marriage of true minds
) ITA GER (Text: William Shakespeare)
G. Bachlund, H. Bielawa, R. Bruči, M. Castelnuovo-Tedesco, D. Cooke, J. Coulthard, A. Hale, W. Huebner, R. Lake, C. James, B. Johansson, L. Kondorossy, R. Le Lacheur, J. Littlejohn, B. Phillips, S. Pimsleur, D. Roth, J. Selnes, R. Simpson, M. Sofsky, G. Swisher, G. Winham, L. Zarchen, L. Hoiby
The Married Beau [song cycle]
The married man (The bachelor 'e fights for one
) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
G. Cobb, J. Gro, W. Ward-Higgs
The martini () (Text: Ogden Nash) [x] *
The mask (When I complained of April's day) (Text: William Henry Davies) [x] *
The mask (Put off that mask of burning gold) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The master and the leaves (We are budding, Master, budding) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The Master-Player (An old, worn harp that had been played) (Text: Paul Laurence Dunbar)
The matron-cat's song (So once again the trouble's o'er
) (Text: Ruth Pitter) *
The May morning () FRE (Text: J. B. Townsend after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The meadow rue (The tall white rue stands like a ghost) (Text: Arlo Bates)
The Meditation of the Old Fisherman (You waves, though you dance by my feet like children at play) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The meeting (All under the lime-trees the music sounds) (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The meeting (After so long an absence) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The meeting () (Text: Helen Maude Francesca Bantock (von Schweizer) [x]
The melodies you sing () (Text: Clifford Bax) [x] *
The melon-seller (Wish no word unspoken, want no look away!) (Text: Robert Browning)
The Men in Bowler Hats Are Sweet () (Text: Mervyn Peake) [x] *
The men of Gotham (In a bowl to sea went wise men three
) (Text: Thomas Love Peacock)
C. Gibbs, G. Jacob, C. Lloyd, D. Stone, R. Tremain
The mermaid () (Text: Ogden Nash) [x] *
The mermaid's song (Now the dancing sunbeams play
) FRE (Text: Anne Hunter)
The merry bells of Yule (The time draws near the birth of Christ) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
E. Bacon, L. Baker, J. Bridge, Florian, R. Graham, C. Lang, E. Lear, E. Naylor, A. Reichardt, W. Wild, D. Williams
The merry bells shall ring (The merry bells shall ring) (Text: Thomas Bailey Aldrich)
The merry cuckoo (The merry cuckoo, messenger of spring) (Text: Edmund Spenser)
The merry green wood (Who goes amid the green wood
) FRE (Text: James Joyce)
D. Arditti, L. Betts, J. Brown, L. Clarke, H. Kauder, C. Kittleson, E. Moeran, H. Richards, W. Spencer
The merry, merry lark (The merry, merry lark was up and singing
) (Text: Charles Kingsley)
The merry month of May (O, the month of May, the merry month of May) (Text: Thomas Dekker)
The merry wedding (Tidings are told both far and wide) ENG FRE (Text: Percy Aldridge Grainger after Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The message () (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The message () (Text: Sara Teasdale) [x]
The message (Send home my long-strayed eyes to me) (Text: John Donne)
W. Flanagan, G. Coprario, L. Hoiby
The message (Toward sunset this November day) (Text: Siegfried Lorraine Sassoon) [x] *
The Message (Wind of the gentle summer night) (Text: Duncan Campbell Scott)
The Messenger (He comes with western winds, with evening's wandering airs) (Text: Emily Brontë)
The messenger (Bee! tell me whence do you come?) (Text: James Stephens)
The Messenger (In the dungeon-crypts, idly did I stray
) (Text: Emily Brontë)
The Metropolitan Tower (We walked together in the dusk) (Text: Sara Teasdale)
The Metropolitan Tower and Other Songs [song cycle]
The microbe (The Microbe is so very small) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
D. Martino, V. Persichetti
The Mid-World (This is the red, red region) (Text: George William Russell)
The middle watch (In a blue dusk the ship astern) (Text: Sir Henry Newbolt)
The middle-aged shepherd () (Text: Robert H. Deutsch) [x] *
The midnight hour (I stood on the bridge at midnight) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
R. Armitage, J. Barnett, J. Blockley, P. Bucalossi, L. Carew, L. Cottell, E. Dickson, A. Landon, M. Lindsay, F. Romer, S. Smallwood, M. Stevens, J. Walker
The midnight ride of Paul Revere (Listen, my children, and you shall hear of the midnight ride of Paul Revere) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
D. Buck, C. Busch, N. Cain, A. Gantvoort, D. Mason, R. Ringwald, J. Schehl, M. Vernon, N. Olin
The midnight skaters (The hop-poles stand in cones) (Text: Edmund Charles Blunden) [x] *
The midnight sun (I thought I woke: the midnight sun) (Text: Paul Goodman) [x] *
The mighty thoughts of an old world (The mighty thought of an old world) (Text: Thomas Lovell Beddoes)
The mignonette (A dame of high degree) (Text: Margaret Wade Campbell Deland) [x]
The mild mother () [x]
The milkmaid's song (Shame upon you, Robin) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
The mill (Winding and grinding) (Text: Dinah Maria Craik, née Mulock) [x]
The mill stream (The mill-stream, now that noises cease) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman) *
The millennium () (Text: Baroness Karen von Blixen-Finecke, née Karen Dinesen) [x]
The Miller of Dee (There was a jolly miller once lived on the river Dee
) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The Miller of Dee (There was a jolly miller once
) GER (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The miller of Mansfield (How happy a state does the miller possess)
The miller's daughter (I ha'e been courting at a lass) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The miller's daughter (Love that hath us in the net
) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
G. Bennett, F. Brandeis, H. Burnett, A. Buzzi-Peccia, A. Cellier, G. Chadwick, O. Cramer, R. De Valmeney, W. Duncan, J. Farmer, E. Fitzwilliam, J. Fuchs, W. Gill, R. Goldbeck, A. Hartel, J. Hatton, Hatzfeld, F. Hervey, E. Loder, E. Monk, F. Nicholls, A. Pease, C. Pinsuti, A. Plumpton (attribution uncertain), H. Roberton, L. Taylor, E. Tennyson, J. Thomas, S. Thomson, C. Vauclain, S. Warren, S. Warren, H. Willan
The mind lives on the heart (The Mind lives on the Heart) (Text: Emily Dickinson) *
The Minister (I mastered pastoral theology, the Greek of the Apostles, and all the difficult subjects in a minister's carriculum.
) (Text: Fenton Johnson)
The Minnesinger (Vogelweid the Minnesinger) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
J. Hatton, G. Rathbone, W. Weiss
The minstrel (Keen blaws the wind o'er Donocht head) (Text: Thomas Pickering)
The Minstrel Boy (The Minstrel Boy to the war is gone) (Text: Thomas Moore)
The Minstrel-Boy (The Minstrel Boy to the war is gone) (Text: Thomas Moore)
The Minstrels (God sent his Singers upon earth
) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
D. Arditti, F. Abt, D. Bell, F. Bornschein, A. Gaul, H. Gaul, C. Harris, A. MacKenzie, W. Mitchell, G. Osborne, D. Protheroe, E. Rau, L. Saar, B. Schurig, D. Sellew, C. Sodero, H. Stark, B. Tours, H. Waller, J. Work
The minuet () (Text: Raymond Clevie Carver, jr.) [x] *
The miracle (The fields lay brown on either hand) (Text: Helen Taylor) [x]
The Mob Within the Heart [song cycle]
The Mock Turtle's Lament (Beautiful Soup, so rich and green) (Text: Lewis Carroll)
J. Duke, L. Lehmann, G. Bachlund
The Mock Turtle's Song (Beautiful Soup, so rich and green) (Text: Lewis Carroll)
J. Duke, L. Lehmann, G. Bachlund
The mocking fairy (Won't you look out of your window, Mrs. Gill) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
M. Besly, G. Dyson, B. Crist
The moment (Never, never again) (Text: Kathleen Raine) [x] *
The monk (I go with silent feet and slow) (Text: Seumas O'Sullivan)
The monk and his cat (Pangur, white Pangur) ENG (Text: W. H. (Wystan Hugh) Auden after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist) *
The Monks of Bangor's March (When the heathen trumpet's clang) GER (Text: Sir Walter Scott)
The monks of Croyland (Witlaf, a king of the Saxons) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
H. Allon, G. Gow, J. Hatton, M. Ostlere, W. Weiss
The monotony song () (Text: Theodore Roethke) [x] *
The monstrous sea (The monstrous sea, with melancholy war
) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
The moods (Time drops in decay) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The moon (Thy beauty haunts me heart and soul) (Text: William Henry Davies)
R. Farley, A. Garlick, A. Garlick, I. Gurney, G. Read, R. Smith, F. Ticciati, W. Webber
The moon (And, like a dying lady, lean and pale
) (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
P. Hindemith, B. Rands, J. Beeson, A. Steinert, A. Cooke
The moon (The moon has a face like the clock in the hall
) (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
A. Hovhaness, L. Lehmann, A. Balendonck, M. Covert, E. Falk, M. Helyer, M. Radnor, A. Shields, P. Wilkinson, P. Williams
The moon (The moon, like a flower
) (Text: William Blake)
B. Rands, A. Aronis, J. Audlin, C. Bänsch-Narnia, P. Bezanson, J. Blumenthal, E. Button, A. Callaway, W. Bolcom, A. Colborn, K. Harding, G. Gwyther, S. Lekberg, F. Lewin
The Moon (If the Moon had a hand) (Text: James Stephens)
The moon and the water-lily () DUT RUS ENG ITA (Text: Emma Lazarus after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The moon drops low (The moon drops low that once soared high) (Text: Nelle Richmond Eberhart)
The moon has a face (The moon has a face like the clock in the hall
) (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
A. Hovhaness, L. Lehmann, A. Balendonck, M. Covert, E. Falk, M. Helyer, M. Radnor, A. Shields, P. Wilkinson, P. Williams
The moon has set (The moon has set, and the Pleiades) ENG ITA GER (Text: Helen Maude Francesca Bantock (von Schweizer) after Henry Thornton Wharton)
The Moon is a Mirror [song cycle]
The moon is fully risen (The moon is fully risen
) ENG FRE (Text: James Thomson after Heinrich Heine)
The moon is in the marshes (The moon is in the marshes
) (Text: Joseph Campbell)
The moon maiden's song (Sleep! Cast thy canopy
) (Text: Ernest Dowson)
The moon of roses (This is the moon of roses) (Text: William Ernest Henley)
K. Bassett, B. Crist, C. Johns
The Moon Songs [song cycle]
The moonlit tree () (Text: Richard Nickson) [x]
The moonpath () (Text: K. Adams) [x]
The moon's funeral (The Moon is dead. I saw her die) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
The moon's greygolden meshes make (The moon's greygolden meshes make
) FRE (Text: James Joyce)
D. Del Tredici, E. Carducci, B. Boydell, R. Field, J. Gruen, J. Jarrett, D. Martino
The Moon's the North Wind's Cooky (The Moon's the North Wind's cooky
) (Text: Vachel Lindsay)
M. Taylor, E. Kettering, J. Heggie
The Moon's the North Wind's Cooky (What the Little Girl Said) (The Moon's the North Wind's cooky
) (Text: Vachel Lindsay)
The Moon's the North Wind's Cooky (What the little girl said) (The Moon's the North Wind's cooky
) (Text: Vachel Lindsay)
M. Taylor, E. Kettering, J. Heggie
The more loving one (Looking up at the stars, I know quite well
) (Text: W. H. (Wystan Hugh) Auden) *
The morning air plays on my face (The morning air plays on my face
) GER (Text: Joanna Baillie)
The morning comes to consciousness (The morning comes to consciousness) (Text: T. S. (Thomas Stearns) Eliot)
E. Rautavaara, H. Swanson
The Morning Pool (All night the pool held mysteries) (Text: Clark Ashton Smith)
The morning star (Now the bright morning star, day's harbinger) (Text: John Milton)
The morning watch (O joys! Infinite sweetness! with what flowers) (Text: Henry Vaughan)
The morns are meeker than they were (The morns are meeker than they were) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
R. Baksa, A. Brown, H. Clarke, R. Kent, E. Marzo
The moth (Isled in the midnight air) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The Mother (You are the present and the past) (Text: Peter Harris) *
The Mother of God (The threefold terror of love; a fallen flare) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The Mother of the Commander Michitsuna (Have you any idea how long a night can last) ENG (Text: Kenneth Rexroth after Michitsuna no Haha) *
The mother's heart (A poor lad once and a lad so trim
) ENG (Text: (Frederic) Herbert Trench after Jean Richepin)
The mother's song (It is so still in the house.
) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The moth's kiss (The moth's kiss, first
) (Text: Robert Browning)
N. Rorem, A. Barnett, J. Komter, B. Treharne, L. True, A. Hartmann
The moth's kiss and the bee's kiss (The moth's kiss, first
) (Text: Robert Browning)
N. Rorem, A. Barnett, J. Komter, B. Treharne, L. True, A. Hartmann
The mound (For a moment pause
) (Text: Thomas Hardy) *
The mountain (The mountain sat upon the plain) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The mountain echo () ENG (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The mountain echo () ENG (Text: W. Grist after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The mountain voice () ENG (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The mountain voice () ENG (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The mountain voice () ENG (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The mountaineer (Oh, at the eagle's height) (Text: George William Russell)
The mountains (Still, and blanched, and cold, and lone) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The mountains -- grow unnoticed (The Mountains -- grow unnoticed
) (Text: Emily Dickinson) *
The mountains are dancing (when faces called flowers float out of the ground
) (Text: E. E. (Edward Estlin) Cummings) *
D. Argento, J. Duke, E. Mandel
The mountain's voice () ENG (Text: after Heinrich Heine) [x]
The mournful lovers (Come, sad turtle, mateless moaning
) (Text: 17th century)
The mouse () (Text: Ogden Nash) [x] *
The Mouse That Gnawed the Oak-Tree Down (The mouse that gnawed the oak-tree down) (Text: Vachel Lindsay)
L. Gruenberg, N. Dello Joio
The Mouse's Waltz () (Text: Mervyn, Lord Horder, the Second Baron of Ashford) [x] *
The mucking o' Geordie's byre (My heart is a breaking, dear Tittie
) (Text: Robert Burns)
The mucking of Geordie's byer (As I went o'er yon meadow) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The mugger's song (Driving up the Mallerstang
) (Text: Wilfrid Wilson Gibson)
The Music Makers (We are the music makers) (Text: Arthur William Edgar O'Shaughnessy)
The music of the sea (The night is calm and cloudless) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
F. Boott, F. Boott, W. Borrow, J. Coward, E. Done, G. Dyson, R. Harvey, J. Hatton, B. Loveland, J. Mosenthal, J. Nelson
The music tree (I have made my tree a singing tree whose every leaf is a note) (Text: Peter Thorogood) [x] *
The Musical Box (Mary, Mary come and listen a minute!
) (Text: James Reeves) *
The Musical Box [song cycle]
The Musumë's song () (Text: Helen Maude Francesca Bantock (von Schweizer) [x]
The myrtle (Its clinging, mournful leaves, I said
) GER (Text: Margaret Wade Campbell Deland)
The mysteries (When I was young I'd little sense) (Text: Leonard Alfred George Strong) [x]
The mysterious beloved ("I am writing
) ENG (Text: Edward Fitzgerald after Nur ad-Din Abd ar-Rahman Jami)
A. Hovhaness, A. Hovhaness
The Mysterious Cat (I saw a proud, mysterious cat) (Text: Vachel Lindsay)
L. Gruenberg, E. Kettering, D. Moore
The mystery (Your eyes drink of me) (Text: Sara Teasdale)
The mystic's prayer (Lay me to sleep in sheltering flame
) (Text: Fiona Macleod)
The Naming of Cats (The Naming of Cats) (Text: T. S. (Thomas Stearns) Eliot) [x] *
The Nantucket Songs [song cycle]
The nature of Love (To noble heart Love doth for shelter fly) ENG (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow after Guido Guinizzelli)
The Nautch girl () (Text: Helen Maude Francesca Bantock (von Schweizer) [x]
The Negro speaks of rivers (I've known rivers: I've known rivers ancient as the world
) (Text: (James Mercer) Langston Hughes)
M. Bonds, H. Swanson, J. Berger, J. Work, G. Bachlund
The neophyte (Who knows what days I answer for to-day?) (Text: Alice Christina Meynell, née Thompson)
The nettle (It nods and curtseys and recovers
) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
I. Gurney, H. Searle, A. Cripps, R. Field
The New Bedford Whaler (There was a 'Bedford Whaler put out to hunt for oil) (Text: John Masefield)
The New Cabaret Girl (That little yaller gal wid blue-green eyes) (Text: (James Mercer) Langston Hughes) *
The New Colossus (Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame) (Text: Emma Lazarus)
The New Ghost (And he cast it down, down, on the green grass
) (Text: Fredegond Shove)
The new mistress (Oh, sick am I to see you, will you never let me be?) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
R. Baksa, H. Foss, C. Marillier
The new moon's silver sickle () (Text: Edwin Arnold after Hafis (Mohammed Schemsed-din) [x]
The new river (Down the river comes a noise) (Text: Charles Edward Ives)
The new road (Slowly and softly the waters recede) (Text: Anne Lafeber) *
The new suit (Racka moochy wicky wacky and a woo, haggedy goo
) (Text: Marc Blitzstein) *
The new suit (Zipperfly) (Racka moochy wicky wacky and a woo, haggedy goo
) (Text: Marc Blitzstein) *
The new trail () (Text: Nelle Richmond Eberhart) [x]
The New World [song cycle]
The New Year (Ring out, wild bells, to the wild sky
) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
E. Bainton, C. Gounod, G. Bantock, J. Blockley, L. Damrosch, G. Edmundson, W. Gilchrist, E. Hall, J. Hatton, L. Hess, R. Holmes, L. Maury, F. Tosti, E. Taylor, C. Tobin, A. Tregaskis, M. Vogrich, F. Boott, P. Fletcher, D. Cox, A. Couper, C. Atkinson, L. Baker, B. Britten, J. Calkin, E. Heathcote, J. Jordan, H. Lahee, F. McCollin, K. Newbury, J. Peake, F. Ricketts, A. Rowley, P. Sacco, R. Sanders, E. Walker, C. Wilson, F. Wood, S. Wood
The New Year's Bells (Ring out, wild bells, to the wild sky
) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
E. Bainton, C. Gounod, G. Bantock, J. Blockley, L. Damrosch, G. Edmundson, W. Gilchrist, E. Hall, J. Hatton, L. Hess, R. Holmes, L. Maury, F. Tosti, E. Taylor, C. Tobin, A. Tregaskis, M. Vogrich, F. Boott, P. Fletcher, D. Cox, A. Couper, C. Atkinson, L. Baker, B. Britten, J. Calkin, E. Heathcote, J. Jordan, H. Lahee, F. McCollin, K. Newbury, J. Peake, F. Ricketts, A. Rowley, P. Sacco, R. Sanders, E. Walker, C. Wilson, F. Wood, S. Wood
The nickel under the foot () (Text: Marc Blitzstein) [x] *
The night (Most Holy Night, that still dost keep
) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
I. Gurney, P. Warlock, R. Fleming, D. Barlow, R. Fleming, H. Gill, M. Herbert, J. Hind, A. Potter, E. Rubbra, B. Treharne, M. Horder
The night dances (A smile fell in the grass. Irretrievable!
) (Text: Sylvia Plath) *
M. Altena, F. Ahrold, P. Lambro
The night has a thousand eyes (The night has a thousand eyes
) (Text: Francis William Bourdillon)
The night in silence under many a star (Come lovely and soothing death
) (Text: Walt Whitman)
W. Schuman, G. Crumb, G. Crumb, G. Crumb, G. Crumb, G. Crumb
The night is calm and cloudless (The night is calm and cloudless) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
F. Boott, F. Boott, W. Borrow, J. Coward, E. Done, G. Dyson, R. Harvey, J. Hatton, B. Loveland, J. Mosenthal, J. Nelson
The night is dark and loud (The sea is full of wandering foam) (Text: William Ernest Henley)
I. Gurney, F. Hart, F. Hart
The night is darkening round me (The night is darkening round me
) (Text: Emily Brontë)
J. Mitchell, P. Harrison, L. Klein, F. Piket
The night is darknening round me (The night is darkening round me
) (Text: Emily Brontë)
J. Mitchell, P. Harrison, L. Klein, F. Piket
The night is freezing fast (The night is freezing fast) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
H. Andrews, A. Garlick, D. Hollister, M. Merriman, L. Russell, J. Heggie
The night of the dance (The cold moon hangs to the sky by its horn) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The night of Trafalgar (In the wild October night-time, when the wind raved round the land
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
I. Gurney, C. Scott, B. Smith
The Night Piece (Her eyes the glow-worm lend thee
) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The Night Piece, to Julia (Her eyes the glow-worm lend thee
) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The night rider (Whenever the moon and the stars are set
) FRE (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
J. Masseus, C. Stanford, R. Hahn, H. Andrews, M. Andrews, A. Balendonck, M. Bodde, H. Bright, H. Brook, E. Crowningshield, T. Riego, V. Drozdoff, E. Falk, J. Foulds, F. Gambogi, N. Gilbert, G. Grant-Schaefer, C. Hand, D. Holman, D. Mason, M. Radnor, H. Rhodes, J. Rutter, B. Scott, E. Smith
The night sea () (Text: Harriet Elizabeth Prescott Spofford) [x]
The night sky () (Text: David Wolfson) [x] *
The night song ('Tis silence on the enchanted lake) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The night watch () (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x]
The Night Wind (There it is! It wakes tonight sweet thoughts that will not die) (Text: Emily Brontë)
The Night Wind [song cycle]
The night-swans ('Tis silence on the enchanted lake) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The Night-Wind (In summer's mellow midnight
) (Text: Emily Brontë)
T. Fisk, A. Butterworth, M. Sutherland
The nightingale (Sing, sing nightingale blest
) ENG (Text: W. Grist after Theodor Kjerulf)
The nightingale (The nightingale has a lyre of gold
) GER (Text: William Ernest Henley)
F. Delius, H. Parker, R. Quilter, R. Faith, F. Allitsen, A. Beach, H. Brainard, J. Densmore, V. Harris, F. Hart, A. Lambert, C. McKinley, M. Rogers, L. Ronald, H. Loomis, B. Whelply
The nightingale (Hark how the Nightingale displayes)
The nightingale (The nightingale has not come) ENG (Text: Kenneth Rexroth after Akiko Yosano) *
The nightingale (One mornin', one mornin', one mornin' in May) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The nightingale (The nightingale, as soon as April bringeth) (Text: Sir Philip Sidney)
The nightingale (Here is the soundless cypress on the lawn
) (Text: Harold Monro)
The nightingale and the lark (I can never remember all the words of our song. Help me out, come on
) ENG (Text: William Ball after Ivan Sergeyevich Turgenev)
The nightingale and the rose (From the brake the Nightingale
) (Text: William Ernest Henley)
R. Quilter, S. Homer, W. Watts
The nightingale has a lyre of gold (The nightingale has a lyre of gold
) GER (Text: William Ernest Henley)
F. Delius, H. Parker, R. Quilter, R. Faith, F. Allitsen, A. Beach, H. Brainard, J. Densmore, V. Harris, F. Hart, A. Lambert, C. McKinley, M. Rogers, L. Ronald, H. Loomis, B. Whelply
The nightingale near the house (Here is the soundless cypress on the lawn
) (Text: Harold Monro)
The nightingale unheard (Yes, Nightingale, through all the summer-time) (Text: Josephine Preston Peabody)
The nightingales (Beautiful must be the mountains whence ye come) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
G. Finzi, E. Cone, D. Dorward, F. Hart, K. Jones, E. Mattila, R. Robbins, L. Saar, J. Sacco, H. Swanson
The nightingale's song () (Text: Helen Maude Francesca Bantock (von Schweizer) [x]
The nightingale's song (I sing to my love, the rose) (Text: Alvin Hovey King)
The ninepenny fidil (My father and mother were Irish
) (Text: Joseph Campbell)
The non-pareil (Though Chloe's out of fashion)
The noon call (Hear the call!/ Fays be still!) (Text: William Allingham)
The Norman baron (n his chamber, weak and dying) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
T. Anderton, F. Baxter, G. Francis
The North Wind (Fresh from his fastnesses) (Text: William Ernest Henley)
The northern days (The summer nights are short) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
The Northern Star (Behold, she is risen who lay asleep so long) (Text: Sir William Watson)
The Now () [x]
The Nun of Nidaros (In the convent of Drontheim
) DUT ENG (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
E. Elgar, D. Buck, D. Protheroe
The nurse's song (When the voices of children are heard on the green
) (Text: William Blake)
A. Aronis, G. Beglarion, P. Bezanson, A. Brewer, W. Bolcom, J. Crawford, J. Crawford, W. Crofut, F. Keel, A. Somervell, G. Gwyther, M. Jacques
The Nurse's Song (Lullaby baby, lullaby baby, thy nurse will tend thee) ENG (Text: John Phillip)
The nut brown maid ('Twas in the bloom of May) [x]
The Nymphs and shepherds danced () [x]
The oak () [x]
The oak () (Text: D. Hedrick) [x]
The oblation (Ask nothing more of me, sweet) (Text: Algernon Charles Swinburne)
H. Brown, F. Cowen, B. Crist, C. Deis, T. Marzials, K. Rathaus, H. Ware
The Occultation of Orion (I saw, as in a dream sublime) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The ocean wood (Gray woods within whose silent shade) (Text: Warren John Byrne Leicester, Baron de Tabley)
The October Redbreast (Autumn is weary, halt, and old
) (Text: Alice Christina Meynell, née Thompson)
The octogenarian (The octogenarian leaned from his window) (Text: Edith Sitwell)
The octopus (Tell me, O Octopus, I begs) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The Odalisque (A gaily dressed damsel steps forth from her bower) ENG (Text: Herbert Allen Giles after Yü-Hsi)
The officer (The officer wore a thin smile) (Text: Howard Nemerov) *
the old almost lady (n ot eth eold almos
) (Text: E. E. (Edward Estlin) Cummings) *
The old black billy an' me (The sheep are yarded, an' I sit) (Text: Louis Esson)
The old, bold mate (Oh, some are fond of red wine and some are fond of white
) (Text: John Masefield)
P. Warlock, D. Taylor, I. Gurney, E. Bristol
The old bridge at Florence (Taddeo Gaddi built me. I am old) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The old brigade (Where are the boys of the old Brigade) (Text: Frederick E. Weatherly)
The old clock (Somewhat back from the village street) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
F. Allitsen, M. Lindsay, J. Blockley, F. Boott, T. Bricher, J. Callcott, L. Carew, E. Dickson, J. Hatton, E. Hime, J. Hutchinson, A. Landon, L. Marshall, G. Marston, W. Montgomery, F. Pease, R. Stöpel, M. Trannack, W. Watson
The old clock on the stairs (Somewhat back from the village street) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
F. Allitsen, M. Lindsay, J. Blockley, F. Boott, T. Bricher, J. Callcott, L. Carew, E. Dickson, J. Hatton, E. Hime, J. Hutchinson, A. Landon, L. Marshall, G. Marston, W. Montgomery, F. Pease, R. Stöpel, M. Trannack, W. Watson
The old enemy () (Text: Sara Teasdale) [x] *
The old familiar faces (I have had playmates, I have had companions) (Text: Charles Lamb)
The old fisherman of the mists and waters (The Lady Moon is my lover
) ENG (Text: Launcelot Alfred Cranmer-Byng after He Zhizhang)
The old gown (I have seen her in gowns the brightest) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The Old Gumbie Cat (I have a Gumbie Cat) (Text: T. S. (Thomas Stearns) Eliot) [x] *
The Old Hall (Old Hall of Elbe, ruined, lonely now) (Text: Emily Brontë)
The old highland laddie (The Lawland maids gang trig and fine
) (Text: Allan Ramsay)
The Old Horse in the City (The moon's a peck of corn. It lies
) (Text: Vachel Lindsay)
The old house (Deserted here, the old house
) ENG (Text: after Franta Bass) *
The old house (The old house is drowsy) (Text: Gray Hayward Kirkus) [x] *
The old house (Lonely I wander through scenes of my childhood) (Text: Frederick O'Connor) *
The old house by the lindens (The old house by the lindens) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
G. Liebling, R. Andrews, J. Bennett, J. Blockley, M. Davis, E. Dickson, F. Fontein-Tuinhout, C. Frost, A. Gatty, H. Glover, E. Hime, G. Martin, C. Miller, Minima, W. Mitchell, C. Converse, A. Rosewig, W. Weiss
The old house by the lindens stood (The old house by the lindens) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
G. Liebling, R. Andrews, J. Bennett, J. Blockley, M. Davis, E. Dickson, F. Fontein-Tuinhout, C. Frost, A. Gatty, H. Glover, E. Hime, G. Martin, C. Miller, Minima, W. Mitchell, C. Converse, A. Rosewig, W. Weiss
The old house by the lindens. The faces of the children they were no longer there. (The old house by the lindens) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
G. Liebling, R. Andrews, J. Bennett, J. Blockley, M. Davis, E. Dickson, F. Fontein-Tuinhout, C. Frost, A. Gatty, H. Glover, E. Hime, G. Martin, C. Miller, Minima, W. Mitchell, C. Converse, A. Rosewig, W. Weiss
The old king () (Text: John Francis Alexander Heath-Stubbs) [x] *
The old maid (I saw her in a Broadway car) (Text: Sara Teasdale)
The old man (I am my own ghost now) (Text: Ursula Vaughan Williams, née Joan Ursula Penton Lock) [x] *
The old man at the crossing (I sweep the street and lift me hat) (Text: Leonard Alfred George Strong) [x]
The old man with a beard (There was an Old Man with a Beard
) (Text: Edward Lear)
G. Bachlund, M. Lang, C. Stanford
The Old Man with a gong (There was an Old Man with a gong) (Text: Edward Lear)
C. Gibbs, M. Lang, E. Pehkonen, C. Stanford
The old man's love song (Ha hae ha ha hae ha hae ha nae thae ha tha ae ha thoe. Daylight! Dawnlight!
) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The Old Man's Love-Song (Ha hae ha ha hae ha hae ha nae thae ha tha ae ha tho-e) (Text: Arthur Farwell)
The old men (I heard the old, old men say
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
N. Rorem, K. Bissell, R. Rollin, R. Warren
The Old Men (Old men who have studied) (Text: William Carlos Williams)
The old men admiring themselves in the water (I heard the old, old men say
) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
N. Rorem, K. Bissell, R. Rollin, R. Warren
The old mother (My dear old mother, poor thou art) ENG GER (Text: Frederick Corder after Aasmund Olavsson Vinje)
The old, old winds (The old old winds that blew) (Text: Adelaide Crapsey)
The old sailor (There came an old sailor
) (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x] *
The old sailor (There was once an old sailor my grandfather knew) (Text: Alan Alexander Milne) *
The old soldier (There came an Old Soldier to my door) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
B. Crist, D. Dushkin, C. Gibbs, C. Hely-Hutchinson, F. Swain
The old stoic (Riches I hold in light esteem
) (Text: Emily Brontë)
J. Bove, J. Duke, T. Pasatieri, R. Owens
The old stone house (Nothing on the grey roof, nothing on the brown) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The old story (Like many a one, when you had gold
) ENG (Text: Edwin Arlington Robinson after Marcus Argentarius)
The old strain (My pleasant home be side the Dee!
) GER (Text: William Smyth)
The "Old Superb" (The wind was rising easterly, the morning sky was blue
) (Text: Sir Henry Newbolt)
The old tailor (There once was an old Tailor) (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x] *
The old temple among the mountains (The temple courts with grasses rank abound) ENG (Text: Charles Budd after Chang Wen-Chang)
The old timepiece (Somewhat back from the village street) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
F. Allitsen, M. Lindsay, J. Blockley, F. Boott, T. Bricher, J. Callcott, L. Carew, E. Dickson, J. Hatton, E. Hime, J. Hutchinson, A. Landon, L. Marshall, G. Marston, W. Montgomery, F. Pease, R. Stöpel, M. Trannack, W. Watson
The old timepiece on the stairs (Somewhat back from the village street) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
F. Allitsen, M. Lindsay, J. Blockley, F. Boott, T. Bricher, J. Callcott, L. Carew, E. Dickson, J. Hatton, E. Hime, J. Hutchinson, A. Landon, L. Marshall, G. Marston, W. Montgomery, F. Pease, R. Stöpel, M. Trannack, W. Watson
The old tunes (I am playing my oldest tunes, declared she) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The Old Vicarage, Granchester (Would I were in Grantchester, in Grantchester
) (Text: Rupert Brooke)
The old woman (As a white candle) (Text: Joseph Campbell) [x]
S. Dillon, F. Hart, H. Haufrecht, D. Parke, H. Roberton, P. Edmonds
The old woman at the flower show () (Text: Frances Cornford) [x] *
The one (Before this loved one) (Text: W. H. (Wystan Hugh) Auden) [x] *
The one hope (When vain desire at last and vain regret
) (Text: Dante Gabriel Rossetti)
The one I dare not name : a ballad (I love with an unchanging love) (Text: Mark Lemon) [x]
The one that could repeat the summer day (The one that could repeat the summer day) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The one white rose (A sorrowful woman said to me) (Text: Thomas Bailey Aldrich)
The one who might have borne a message () (Text: Edna St. Vincent Millay) [x]
The Only Child (Crying, my little one, footsore and weary
) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
The only son (And the Only Son lay down again and dreamed that he dreamed a dream
) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The only son (The lark will make her hymn to God
) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The Open Road (Afoot and light-hearted, I take to the open road
) (Text: Walt Whitman)
The Open Sentence (To look out over roofs) (Text: Denise Levertov) *
The open window (The old house by the lindens) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
G. Liebling, R. Andrews, J. Bennett, J. Blockley, M. Davis, E. Dickson, F. Fontein-Tuinhout, C. Frost, A. Gatty, H. Glover, E. Hime, G. Martin, C. Miller, Minima, W. Mitchell, C. Converse, A. Rosewig, W. Weiss
The Opening Game (With Chance on first, and Evers on third) (Text: Ernest Hemmingway)
The opium-smoker (I am engulfed, and drown deliciously) (Text: Arthur Symons)
The Orange Tree (The young girl stood beside me. I) (Text: John Shaw Neilson) *
The orchard sings to the child (Dancing ground for your feet) (Text: Margaret Cropper) [x]
The organ-grinder and his monkey () (Text: L. Bantock) [x]
The Orphaned Old Maid (I wanted to marry, but father said, "No -
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The orphan's prayer (The frozen streets in moonshine glitter
) (Text: Matthew Gregory Lewis)
The orphan's prayer: a pathetic ballad (The frozen streets in moonshine glitter
) (Text: Matthew Gregory Lewis)
The ostrich () (Text: Ogden Nash) [x] *
The owl (When cats run home and light is come
) GER (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
H. Gilbert, H. Pierson, R. Clarke, H. Andrews, J. Backer-Lunde, R. Bennett, W. Bexfield, A. Brewer, E. Bullock, M. Castelnuovo-Tedesco, F. Chapple, A. Cooke, T. Dunhill, T. Dutton, C. Edmunds, N. Flagello, P. Garratt, R. Gatty, J. Groocock, M. Helyer, F. Jackson, G. Jacob, R. Jones, L. Lavater, C. Osmond, C. Parry, M. Phillips, A. Pritchard, D. Protheroe, J. Sidebotham, E. Silas, H. Sykes, E. Thiman, V. Weigl
The Owl (Three little owlets) (Text: (A.S.)
The Owl and the Pussy-Cat (The Owl and the Pussycat went to sea
) RUS (Text: Edward Lear)
R. Birch, R. Faith, G. Bachlund, I. Stravinsky, R. Thomas, H. Searle, J. Backer-Lunde, B. Boydell, M. Dale, A. Decevee, R. de Koven, C. Elliott, D. Glass, R. Hageman, C. Harker, S. Harmati, C. Hely-Hutchinson, G. Ingraham, R. Johnston, D. Leitch, M. Lindsay, M. Phillips, F. Pinchin, E. Roxburgh, J. Rutter, G. Seaman, M. Seiber, A. Semmler, A. Silver, F. Wadely, E. Watson, H. Wood
The Owl and the Pussycat (The Owl and the Pussycat went to sea
) RUS (Text: Edward Lear)
R. Birch, R. Faith, G. Bachlund, I. Stravinsky, R. Thomas, H. Searle, J. Backer-Lunde, B. Boydell, M. Dale, A. Decevee, R. de Koven, C. Elliott, D. Glass, R. Hageman, C. Harker, S. Harmati, C. Hely-Hutchinson, G. Ingraham, R. Johnston, D. Leitch, M. Lindsay, M. Phillips, F. Pinchin, E. Roxburgh, J. Rutter, G. Seaman, M. Seiber, A. Semmler, A. Silver, F. Wadely, E. Watson, H. Wood
The Owl Is Abroad (The Owl is abroad)
H. Purcell (misattributed), J. Smith
The Oxen (Christmas Eve, and twelve of the clock
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
C. Gibbs, R. Vaughan Williams, B. Britten, L. Cochran, E. Dent, J. Elkus, R. Fleming, W. Pasfield, G. Peel, A. Rawsthorne, R. Williams, R. Winslow, G. Finzi
The pain of earth (Does the earth grow grey with grief) (Text: George William Russell)
The pale and pilgrim moon (I stretched out my hands) (Text: Humbert Wolfe) [x] *
The Pale Horizon [song cycle]
The pancake man (Mix a pancake) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
M. Halle, S. Homer, E. Smith, C. Wood
The pansy (O dainty Pansy! hooded all in blue) GER (Text: Margaret Wade Campbell Deland)
The Paps of Dana (The mountains stand and stare around) (Text: James Stephens)
The parable of the Old Man and the Young (So Abram rose, and clave the wood, and went) (Text: Wilfred Owen)
The parsnip () (Text: Ogden Nash) [x] *
The parting (When we two parted
) (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron)
J. Alexander, H. Allen, F. Allitsen, M. Andrews, C. Armstrong, M. Barlow, W. Bexfield, R. Braun, H. Cadogan, A. Caldicott, M. Castelnuovo-Tedesco, J. Clarke-Whitfeld, H. Charles, A. Comfort, C. Dorling, G. Duval, J. Ellerton, J. Ellerton, J. Elliott, R. Farley, H. Fielding, R. Glendenning, H. Harris, R. Harvey, M. Hawes, S. Hudson, J. Hugo, P. Knapton, J. Knight, H. Lane-Wilson, G. Linley, S. Lowry, C. Lucas, G. MacFarren, O. Morawetz, P. Nash, I. Nathan, C. Parry, H. Pierson, P. Pitt, E. Rogers, C. Rudolphus, S. Saxe, G. Schuyler, C. Seeger, T. Stephenson, C. Thornton, W. Tollemache, G. Tomling, B. Treharne, S. Wesley, J. Wood, R. Owens, T. Southam
The parting kiss (Laura, thy sighs must now no more
) FRE GER (Text: William Smyth)
The parting pledge (The kiss, dear maid, thy lip has left
) GER FRE (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron)
L. Beethoven, W. Aspull, S. Auteri-Manzocchi, J. Barnett, J. Beale, H. Bedford, H. Bishop, J. Chadwick, E. Ford, R. Guerini, E. Kreuz, B. Molique, F. Moseley, A. Mullen, I. Nathan, J. Parry, M. Southcote, M. Target, J. Taylor, W. Tollemache, R. Williams, T. Williams, V. Zavertal
The passing stranger (Of all the mysteries wherethrough we move) (Text: John Addington Symonds)
The passionate shepherd to his love (Come live with me and be my love) ENG (Text: Christopher Marlowe after Christopher Marlowe)
The passionate shepherd to his love (Come live with me and be my love) ENG (Text: Christopher Marlowe after Christopher Marlowe)
The past (Wilt thou forget the happy hours
) GER (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
The past and present (This is the place. Stand still, my steed) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
M. Balfe, J. Blockley, L. Campbell-Tipton, F. Romer, F. Romer, E. Sotheby
The pasture (I'm going out to clean the pasture spring
) (Text: Robert Frost)
H. Cowell, P. Gordon, B. Murray, C. Naginski, V. Persichetti, R. Thompson
The path (Tremulous grey of dusk) (Text: Seumas O'Sullivan)
The patient sleeps () (Text: William Ernest Henley) [x]
The patient sleeps (Lived on one's back) (Text: William Ernest Henley)
The patriot (It was roses, roses, all the way) (Text: Robert Browning)
The Pauper's Drive (There's a grim one-horse hearse in a jolly 'round brot
) (Text: Thomas Noel)
The pavilion of abounding joy (Red trees, green hills in the sunset, and steppes of boundless grass) (Text: Launcelot Alfred Cranmer-Byng after Ouyang Xiu) [x]
The peacefull westerne winde (The peacefull westerne winde) (Text: Thomas Campion)
The peacock has a score of eyes (The peacock has a score of eyes) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
The pear tree () (Text: Edna St. Vincent Millay) [x] *
The pearl and the rose () (Text: Helen Maude Francesca Bantock (von Schweizer) [x]
The peasant's confession (Good Father! . . . It was eve in middle June) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The Pelican Chorus (King and Queen of the Pelicans we) (Text: Edward Lear)
G. Bachlund, M. Best, R. Elkin, W. Skolnik
The Penny Whistle (The new moon hangs like an ivory bugle) (Text: Edward Thomas)
The pennycandy store beyond the El (The pennycandy store beyond the El) (Text: Lawrence Ferlinghetti) [x] *
The pensive autumn () (Text: Alice Stuart) [x]
The people to their land () (Text: Edward Carpenter) [x]
The Peora hunt (Pit where the buffalo cooled his hide
) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
The Pessimist (Nothing to do but work) (Text: Benjamin Franklin King)
The pessimist (O for the time when I shall sleep without Identity
) (Text: Emily Brontë)
The Peter-penny (Fresh strewings allow) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The phantom (That was once her casement
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The phantom (Queer are the ways of a man I know
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The phantom horsewoman (Queer are the ways of a man I know
) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The phantom ship (In Mather's Magnalia Christi) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
The Phantom-Wooer (A ghost, that loved a lady fair
) (Text: Thomas Lovell Beddoes)
B. Holmes, H. Brian, W. Hurlstone
The Philosophist () (Text: Sir Walter Raleigh) [x]
The Phisition (I study to uphold the slippery state of man) (Text: Sir John Davies)
The pibroch (The pibroch, man, the pibroch) (Text: Murdoch Maclean)
The picture (Here is a sea-legged sailor) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The picture graved into my heart () (Text: Hannah Anderson Ropes) [x]
The pidgeon () (Text: Ogden Nash) [x] *
The pidgeons (Odalisques, odalisques) (Text: Padraic Colum)
The pig (The Pig, if I am not mistaken
) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
G. Bachlund, V. Duke, P. Hagemann
The Pig - A Fable (In ev'ry age, and each profession) (Text: Christopher Smart)
The pigeon () (Text: Ogden Nash) [x] *
The pigeons (Odalisques, odalisques) (Text: Padraic Colum)
The pigs and the charcoal-burner (The old Pig said to the little pigs) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The pigtail (There liv'd a sage in days of yore
) ENG (Text: William Makepeace Thackeray after Adelbert von Chamisso)
B. Britten, A. Bergh, F. Bullard, E. Bullock, G. Chadwick, M. Dring, J. Fox, H. Gilbert, A. Hamerton, H. Noble, G. Peterkin, J. Roff, D. Slater, P. Tranchell, J. Wardale
The pilgrim () (Text: William Blake) [x]
The pilgrim (A wearied pilgrim, I have wandered here) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The pilgrim cranes (The pilgrim cranes are moving to their south) (Text: Warren John Byrne Leicester, Baron de Tabley)
The Pilgrim Fathers (The pilgrim fathers -- where are they?
) (Text: John Pierpont)
The Pilgrim Fathers : a ballad (The pilgrim fathers -- where are they?
) (Text: John Pierpont)
The Pilgrim Soul (When you are old and gray and full of sleep
) ITA (Text: William Butler Yeats)
G. Baxter, Y. Wyner, G. Bachlund, V. Rieti, J. Tavener, F. Bridge, D. Droste, J. Fearing, I. Gurney, W. Mourant, T. Ritchie, R. Warren, G. Whettam
The Pilgrim's Psalm (I will put on the whole arm our of light that I may be able to stand in the evil day) (Text: Bible or other Sacred Texts)
The pink frock (O my pretty pink frock) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
The piper (Piping down the valleys wild
) RUS (Text: William Blake)
J. Anderson, P. Bezanson, R. Boughton, G. Branning, H. Brian, G. Broadhead, C. Brown, M. Carmichael, G. Read, R. Vaughan Williams, W. Bolcom, D. Thomas, S. Chatman, G. Clough-Leighter, D. Cohen, J. Crawford, A. Cooke, F. Corbett, J. Coulthard, D. Smirnov, O. Morawetz, A. Somervell, P. Irby, A. Shepherd, G. Gwyther, M. Jacques, T. Lenk, F. Leoni, M. Lippincott
The piper (Again I hear you piping, for I know the tune so well) (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
The piper (Shepherd! while the lambs do feed
) (Text: James Stephens)
S. Adler, W. Stickles, P. Taylor
The piper (A piper in the streets today
) (Text: Seumas O'Sullivan)
J. Duke, I. Gurney, M. Head, P. Bowles, A. Benjamin, G. Brown, P. Crossley-Holland, H. Greenhill, C. Hand, G. Peterkin, R. Vaughan Williams, W. Webber
The Pipes of Pan (When the woods are gay in the time of June) (Text: Adrian Ross)
The pirate's farewell (Farewell the voice you hear) [x]
The pirate's farewell: a ballad (Farewell! Farewell! the voice you hear) (Text: Sir Walter Scott)
The Pirde of Westmoreland (I met a man of ninety-three) (Text: Gordon Bottomley) [x] *
The pity of love (A pity beyond all telling) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The Pity of Love [song cycle]
The pizza () (Text: Ogden Nash) [x] *
The pizza [Table Talk 3] () (Text: Ogden Nash) [x] *
The Place of the Damned (All folks who pretend to religion and grace) (Text: Jonathan Swift)
The plague of love (Yes, I'm in love, I feel it now) (Text: William Whitehead)
The Plain of Badajos ('Twas a Marechal of France, and he fain would honour gain) GER (Text: Sir Walter Scott)
The plaint (O, let me forever weep) (Text: Elkanah Settle)
The Player Queen (My mother dandled me and sang) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The Player Queen: Song from an Unfinished Play (My mother dandled me and sang) (Text: William Butler Yeats)
The pleasant valley (O cool is the valley now
) FRE (Text: James Joyce)
D. Arditti, N. Peros, G. Bachlund, L. Betts, T. Beveridge, L. Calabro, J. Ferris, A. Freed, E. Goossens, S. Kagen, W. Karlins, H. Kauder, C. Kittleson, L. Koemmenich, A. Kunz, E. Moeran, V. Persichetti, W. Spencer, C. Susa
The Pleasure of Giving (I'd rather say You're welcome" once) (Text: Carrie Jacobs-Bond)
The Pleiades (On the beach, at night, stands a child) (Text: Walt Whitman)
E. Bacon, W. Bergsma, J. Harrison, A. Imbrie, P. James, V. Persichetti
The ploughboy (A flaxen-headed cowboy, as simple as may be
) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The plum-tree (Come oot, come oot) (Text: William Soutar) [x] *
The plunge (I would bathe myself in strangeness) (Text: Ezra Pound) *
The Pobble who has no toes (The Pobble who has no toes
) (Text: Edward Lear)
R. Thomas, M. Dale, G. Grant-Schaefer
The poet sings (She's somewhere in the sunlight strong
) (Text: Richard Le Gallienne)
M. Head, S. Barab, J. Duke, C. Bennett, N. Cain, R. Hammond, R. Osborne, L. Versel, C. Lander, W. Watts
The Poetess Ono No Komachi (Imperceptible it withers in the world) ENG (Text: Kenneth Rexroth after Ono no Komachi) *
The poetry of dress (A sweet disorder in the dress
) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The Poetry of Sausages: Morcilla (Flesh and blood, raisins,/ walnuts, pinenuts, wine) (Text: Alice Wirth Gray) [x] *
The Poet's ain Jean (Of a' the airts the wind can blaw
) DAN (Text: Robert Burns)
D. Arditti, F. Scott, J. Haydn, M. Horder
The Poet's Circuits [song cycle]
The Poet's Life (A poet sang, so light of heart was he
) (Text: Sophie Jewett)
The Poet's Requiem [song cycle]
The Poet's Song (The rain had fallen, the Poet arose) (Text: Lord Alfred Tennyson)
The poet's world (On a poet's lips I slept
) (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley)
B. Britten, C. Allen, E. Bairstow, H. Brian
The poison tree (I was angry with my friend
) FRE (Text: William Blake)
W. Alwyn, G. Antheil, A. Aronis, W. Bolcom, H. Boyadjian, B. Britten, S. Davis, D. Kechley, M. Someren-Godfery, R. Vaughan Williams, J. Wise
The polar bear (The Polar Bear is unaware) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
The policeman in the park () (Text: Leonard Feeney) [x]
The pool (Her mind's a shallow bowl) (Text: Wilfrid Wilson Gibson) [x] *
The poor man's song () [x]
The poor old man (I'm sure that you would never guess) (Text: Sir John Collings Squire)
The poplars (As I went dreaming
) (Text: Seumas O'Sullivan)
The portrait of a warrior (His brow is seamed with line and scar) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The Postponeless Creature (It's coming -- the postponeless Creature) (Text: Emily Dickinson) *
The potter (Turn, turn, my wheel! Turn round and round
) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
A. Farwell, A. Gaul, C. Mallard
The power of love (A green-growing tree
) ENG (Text: after Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The prairie lily (Blow, where the north wind blows through prairie grain) (Text: Hugh Blakeney) *
The Praise of Harmony (Look down, harmonious Saint) ENG (Text: Newburgh Hamilton after John Dryden)
The praises of God (How foolish the man who does not raise) ENG (Text: W. H. (Wystan Hugh) Auden after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist) *
The prayer (Wilt Thou not visit me?) (Text: Jones Very)
The prayer of Fiona Macleod () (Text: Fiona Macleod) [x]
The Prayer of Steel (Lay me on an anvil, O God
) (Text: Carl Sandburg)
R. Crawford-Seeger, P. Christiansen, R. Hughes, J. Spencer
The presence of Pan : three songs [song cycle]
The press gang forc'd my love to go (On Tay's sweet banks the lintwhite sings sae cheerily) (Text: Robert Anderson)
The Pretty Maid Milkin' her Cow (It was early one fine summer's mornin'
) (Text: Volkslieder (Folksongs)
The pretty rain (The pretty Rain from those sweet Eaves
) FRE (Text: Emily Dickinson)
The pretty washermaiden (The pretty washermaiden) (Text: William Ernest Henley)
The price of experience () (Text: William Blake) [x]
The Price of the Admiralty (Hear now the Song of the Dead
) (Text: Rudyard Kipling)
C. Ives, G. Bantock, R. Boughton, P. Grainger, P. Grainger
The primrose (Ring-Ting! I wish I were a Primrose
) (Text: William Allingham)
F. Boott, W. Gilchrist, H. Loomis, W. Miessner, E. Newton, C. Stanford
The primrose (Ask me why I send you here) (Text: Robert Herrick)
The prince of sleep (I met at eve the Prince of sleep) GER (Text: Walter de la Mare) *
The princess and the gypsies () (Text: Frances Cornford) [x] *
The prinkin' leddie (The Hielan' lassies are a' for spinnin') (Text: Elinor Wylie)
The prism of life (All that began with God, in God must end) (Text: John Addington Symonds)
The prisoner () (Text: Hans Magnus Enzensberger) [x] *
The Prisoner (In the dungeon-crypts, idly did I stray
) (Text: Emily Brontë)
The private dining room () (Text: Ogden Nash) [x] *
The professor (Some souls have quickened, eye to eye) (Text: Arthur Christopher Benson)
The protean maiden (This single girl is two girls) (Text: Thomas Hardy) [x] *
The proverbs of hell () (Text: William Blake) [x]
The pulse of an Irishman (The pulse of an Irishman
) FRE GER (Text: Sir Alexander Boswell)
The purist (I give you now Professor Twist
) (Text: Ogden Nash) *
The python (A Python I should not advise) (Text: (Joseph) Hilaire Belloc)
M. Couper, A. Frackenpohl
The python () (Text: Ogden Nash) [x] *
The Quadroon Girl (The Slaver in the broad lagoon) (Text: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
M. Balfe, S. Coleridge-Taylor
The Quaker's wife (Dark was the morn and black the sea) GER (Text: a son of Anne Hunter)
The quarry (Along the green banks by the waterside) (Text: Ursula Vaughan Williams, née Joan Ursula Penton Lock) [x] *
The quarry (O what is that sound which so thrills the ear
) (Text: W. H. (Wystan Hugh) Auden) *
W. Bennett, R. Kreuger, J. Beeson, D. Hagen
The quartet (Tom sang for joy and Ned sang for joy and old Sam sang for joy) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
G. Grant-Schaefer, D. Symons
The quartette (Tom sang for joy and Ned sang for joy and old Sam sang for joy) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
G. Grant-Schaefer, D. Symons
The Queen (In collaboration with my others
) (Text: Jeffery Beam)
The Queen of Arabia (The Queen of Arabia, Uanjinee) (Text: Walter de la Mare) [x]
The Queen of Hearts (The Queen of Hearts, she made some tarts) (Text: Lewis Carroll)
The Queen's Epicedium (No, Lesbia no, you ask in vain) (Text: George Herbert)
The queen's face on the summery coin (The queen's face on the summery coin) (Text: Robert Horan) *
The quiet (I could not understand the sudden quiet) (Text: Wilfrid Wilson Gibson)
The Quiet August Noon (The quiet August noon has come) (Text: William Cullen Bryant)
H. Bright, H. Brook, H. Pasmore
The quiet comes in (Whan the rage is by) (Text: William Soutar) [x] *
The Quilt (Name the names
) (Text: Gary Bachlund)
The radiant dark (Should I long that dark were fair?) (Text: Mary Ann Evans)
The rags of time (Busy old fool, unruly Sun) (Text: John Donne)
The ragwort (The thistles on the sandy flats
) (Text: Frances Cornford)
The railway train (I like to see it lap the miles) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
G. Perle, W. Rogers, A. Weiss
The rain (I hear leaves drinking rain) (Text: William Henry Davies)
The Rain Is Failing (The rain is falling all around
) ENG (Text: Gary Bachlund after Robert Louis Stevenson)
The rain it raineth every day (When that I was and a little tiny boy
) SWE DAN GER (Text: William Shakespeare)
D. Amram, G. Baxter, E. Korngold, R. Quilter, C. Stanford, J. Sibelius, M. Horder, E. Maconchy, M. Horder, L. Hoiby
The rainbow (I saw the lovely arch) (Text: Walter de la Mare)
The Rainbow (My heart leaps up when I behold
) GER (Text: William Wordsworth)
C. Ives, N. Rorem, P. Moravec
The Rainbow comes and goes (The Rainbow comes and goes) (Text: William Wordsworth)
The rainy day (The day is cold, and dark, and dreary
) | |