Bibliography - Syren, 1812

Return to Database Home Page
Short Title Syren, 1812 
Title Syren, The 
Pages 134 
Publisher Cooper, W. 
Location RPB/RPB MF FH B6 03093.2/Rdx MF 26841 
Date 1812 
Place Washington 
Data Place Rdx S26841 
Comments  
First Line Page Verses
Come take the harp....'tis vain to muse (fl)  3-4 
'Twas Monmouth fair, the sun shone bright (fl)  4-5   
Little Cupid one day o'er a myrtle bough stray'd (fl)  5-6 
When in death I shall calm recline (fl)  6-7 
There is not in the wide world a valley so sweet (fl)  7-8 
Last week I took a wife (fl)  8-9 
Faintly as tolls the ev'ning chime (fl)  9-10 
Dear is my little native vale (fl)  10-11 
I wander'd once at break of day (fl)  11-12 
Did you ne'er hear a tale, how a lad in the vale (fl)  12-13 
Mary once, had lovers two (fl)  13 
Thimble's scolding wife lay dead (fl)  14 
When Steerwell heard me first impart (fl)  15-16 
Begone, dull care (fl)  16-17 
Ah, who is that, whose thrilling tones (fl)  17-18 
O, young Lochinvar is come out of the west (fl)  18-20 
Away with melancholy, nor doleful changes ring (fl)  20-21 
To a woodman's hut there came one day (fl)  21 
Come, take up your hats, and away let us haste (fl)  22-23 
Glasses sparkle on the board, The (fl)  23-24 
When freshly blows the northern gale (fl)  24-25 
Just like love is yonder rose (fl)  26 
Oh the moment was sad when my love and I parted (fl)  26-27 
There came to the beach a poor exile of Erin (fl)  27-29 
Ah!,soldiers of Britain, your merciless doings (fl)  29-31 
[Oh breathe not his name, let it sleep in the shade] (fl)  [32]   
[Hush ev'ry breeze, let nothing move] (fl)  [32-33]   
[Giles Scroggins courted Molly Brown] (fl)  [33] 
[Twins of Latona, so kind to my boon, The] (fl)  [34-35]   
Bright chanticleer proclaims the dawn (fl)  35-36 
On this cold flinty rock I will lay down my head (fl)  36-37 
O My love's like the red red rose (fl)  37-38 
Said a smile to a tear (fl)  38-39 
[Adieu to the village delights] (fl)  [39]   
[Tho' far beyond the mountains that look so distant here] (fl)  [40]-41   
Fly not yet! 'tis just the hour (fl)  42 
What tho' tis true I've talk'd of love (fl)  43 
On the banks of the Rhine at the sun setting hour (fl)  44 
Ah! sigh not for love, if you wish not to know (fl)  44-45 
Ye winds and ye waves, bear my sorrows away (fl)  45-46 
Ye banks and braes, and streams around (fl)  46-47 
Deep in a vale a cottage stood (fl)  47-48 
Ye ling'ring winds that feebly blow (fl)  48-49 
Hark! where martial music sounding far (fl)  50 
Why does azure deck the sky? (fl)  50-51 
World may go hunting for riches or fame, The (fl)  51-52 
Landlady of France she loved an officer, 'tis said, A (fl)  52-53 
Hail Liberty supreme delight (fl)  53-54 
How blest the life a sailor leads (fl)  54-55 
Does the harp of Rosa slumber? (fl)  56 
Oh, have you not heard of Kate Kearney? (fl)  56-57 
Love in thine eyes for ever plays (fl)  57 
Ah! little blind boy! much too often you prove us (fl)  58 
He was fam'd for deeds of arms (fl)  58-59 
Downy cheek, so soft, so fair, The (fl)  59-60 
I knew by the smoke that so gracefully curl'd (fl)  60-61 
Among the green meadows when Sol is appearing (fl)  61 
While I hang on your bosom distracted to lose you (fl)  62 
Sly Cupid one day made a little bit os blund'ring (fl)  62-64 
Drink to me only with thine eyes (fl)  64-65 
Alone, to the banks of the dark rolling Danube (fl)  65-66 
Tho' my eyes, dearest Anna, to others will stray (fl)  66-67 
I have a heart, a little heart (fl)  67-68 
Hope told a flatt'ring tale (fl)  68 
To thy green fields, sweet Erin, I've long bade adieu (fl)  69 
Dear Erin! how sweetly thy green bosom rises (fl)  69-70 
Rise, Cynthia, rise (fl)  70-71 
Oh! lady fair, where art thou roaming? (fl)  71-72  10 
Oh! stay sweet fair, till day is breaking (fl)  72-73  10 
When time who steals our years away (fl)  74 
Deserted by the waning moon (fl)  75-76 
Shadows of eve 'gan to steal o'er the plain, The (fl)  76 
Life let us cherish (fl)  77 
'Twas at night, when the bell had toll'd twelve (fl)  78 
Claudine liv'd contented, and peace was her lot (fl)  78-79 
Rose had been wash'd, just wash'd in a shower, The (fl)  79-80 
How sweet in the woodlands, with fleet hound and horn (fl)  80 
Tho' the muses ne'er smile by the light of the sun (fl)  80-81 
Ye banks and braes of bonie Doon [sic] (fl)  81-82 
Charming maid of Lodi, The (fl)  82-83 
Where Dee flows saftly yo the sea [sic] (fl)  83-84 
Roy's wife, of Aldivalloch (fl)  84-85 
Canst thou leave me thus, my Katy? (fl)  85 
Now hope, now fear, my bosom rending (fl)  86-87 
Oh! give me of the icy wave (fl)  87-88 
Lass for a sailor is lively and free, The (fl)  88 
Oh! first I saw the youth who came to me a wooing (fl)  88-89 
All in the Downs the fleet was moor'd (fl)  89-91 
I love, but dare not say who (fl)  91-92 
Tear fell gently from her eye, The (fl)  92-93 
Hark! the goddess Diana calls out for the chase (fl)  93 
Mary I believ'd thee true (fl)  93-94 
Not the charms of blooming spring (fl)  94 
Far retir'd from noise and smoke (fl)  95-96 
When she smiles, oh I think of the heaven's warm ray (fl)  96-97 
Oh! why should the girl of my soul be in tears (fl)  97 
Tho' oft we meet severe distress (fl)  98 
Oh! weep for the hour (fl)  98-99 
Sweet is the vale where innocence resides (fl)  99 
You own I'm complacent, but tell me I'm cold (fl)  100 
Where is the nymph whose azure eye (fl)  100-101 
Llewellyn with his Patience dear (fl)  101-102 
Sweet weeping willow, friend of tears (fl)  102-103 
When day has smiled a soft farewell (fl)  103-104 
Oh! come sweet lass! the dawning morn (fl)  104 
Dark was the night, and dreary was the scene (fl)  105 
It is not that I love you less (fl)  106 
Too late I staid, forgive the crime (fl)  106-107 
Prey to tender anguish, A (fl)  107-108 
When Edward left his native plain (fl)  108-109 
Yes, when thou hear'st the gentle breeze (fl)  109-110 
In peace, love tunes the shepherd's reed (fl)  110   
Swain to his love went a-wooing, A (fl)  111 
Says Ella to her love, remember (fl)  111-112 
They bid me sleep, they bid me pray (fl)  112 
To a shady retreat fair Eliza I trac'd (fl)  113 
I have lov'd thee, dearly lov'd thee (fl)  113-114 
Beam of morning trembling, The (fl)  114-115 
Oh! my darling little Mary (fl)  115 
Rose that weeps with morning dew, The (fl)  116 
Sigh of her heart was sincere, The (fl)  116-117 
Soldier slumb'ring after war, The (fl)  117-118 
I married a wife "who cares" says I (fl)  118-119 
Soft as summer's beauty (fl)  119-120 
In a village there lived an old maid (fl)  120-121 
'Tis he, my William, come from sea (fl)  121-122 
Oh! tell me pilgrims! faint and weary (fl)  122-123 
When Fanny first with playful art (fl)  123-124 
Go where glory waits thee (fl)  124-125 
Soft as yon silver ray that sleeps (fl)  126 
What do I love? a polish'd mind (fl)  126-127 
Fair Geraldine each charm of spring possess'd (fl)  127 
Gentle as the breath of morn (fl)  128 
When the midnight of absence the day scene pervading (fl)  128-129 
Harp that once through Tara's halls, The (fl)  129-130 
In sorrow's sad and gloomy hour (fl)  130 
If then to love thee be offence (fl)  131 
O, Marian the merry, who gave you that fairing (fl)  131-132 
In Fairy Hill's embower'd retreat (fl)  132-133 
Blessing unknown to ambition and pride, A (fl)  133-134 
Bird upon the summer spray, The (fl)  134 
Return to Database Home Page
© 2008 Robert M Keller