| First Line |
Page |
Verses |
| Come take the harp....'tis vain to muse (fl) |
3-4 |
3 |
| 'Twas Monmouth fair, the sun shone bright (fl) |
4-5 |
|
| Little Cupid one day o'er a myrtle bough stray'd (fl) |
5-6 |
2 |
| When in death I shall calm recline (fl) |
6-7 |
3 |
| There is not in the wide world a valley so sweet (fl) |
7-8 |
4 |
| Last week I took a wife (fl) |
8-9 |
3 |
| Faintly as tolls the ev'ning chime (fl) |
9-10 |
3 |
| Dear is my little native vale (fl) |
10-11 |
3 |
| I wander'd once at break of day (fl) |
11-12 |
3 |
| Did you ne'er hear a tale, how a lad in the vale (fl) |
12-13 |
3 |
| Mary once, had lovers two (fl) |
13 |
2 |
| Thimble's scolding wife lay dead (fl) |
14 |
4 |
| When Steerwell heard me first impart (fl) |
15-16 |
3 |
| Begone, dull care (fl) |
16-17 |
2 |
| Ah, who is that, whose thrilling tones (fl) |
17-18 |
6 |
| O, young Lochinvar is come out of the west (fl) |
18-20 |
8 |
| Away with melancholy, nor doleful changes ring (fl) |
20-21 |
3 |
| To a woodman's hut there came one day (fl) |
21 |
4 |
| Come, take up your hats, and away let us haste (fl) |
22-23 |
8 |
| Glasses sparkle on the board, The (fl) |
23-24 |
3 |
| When freshly blows the northern gale (fl) |
24-25 |
3 |
| Just like love is yonder rose (fl) |
26 |
3 |
| Oh the moment was sad when my love and I parted (fl) |
26-27 |
3 |
| There came to the beach a poor exile of Erin (fl) |
27-29 |
5 |
| Ah!,soldiers of Britain, your merciless doings (fl) |
29-31 |
6 |
| [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] |
3 |
| [Twins of Latona, so kind to my boon, The] (fl) |
[34-35] |
|
| Bright chanticleer proclaims the dawn (fl) |
35-36 |
3 |
| On this cold flinty rock I will lay down my head (fl) |
36-37 |
3 |
| O My love's like the red red rose (fl) |
37-38 |
2 |
| Said a smile to a tear (fl) |
38-39 |
3 |
| [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 |
2 |
| What tho' tis true I've talk'd of love (fl) |
43 |
2 |
| On the banks of the Rhine at the sun setting hour (fl) |
44 |
2 |
| Ah! sigh not for love, if you wish not to know (fl) |
44-45 |
3 |
| Ye winds and ye waves, bear my sorrows away (fl) |
45-46 |
3 |
| Ye banks and braes, and streams around (fl) |
46-47 |
4 |
| Deep in a vale a cottage stood (fl) |
47-48 |
2 |
| Ye ling'ring winds that feebly blow (fl) |
48-49 |
5 |
| Hark! where martial music sounding far (fl) |
50 |
2 |
| Why does azure deck the sky? (fl) |
50-51 |
3 |
| World may go hunting for riches or fame, The (fl) |
51-52 |
3 |
| Landlady of France she loved an officer, 'tis said, A (fl) |
52-53 |
4 |
| Hail Liberty supreme delight (fl) |
53-54 |
4 |
| How blest the life a sailor leads (fl) |
54-55 |
3 |
| Does the harp of Rosa slumber? (fl) |
56 |
3 |
| Oh, have you not heard of Kate Kearney? (fl) |
56-57 |
4 |
| Love in thine eyes for ever plays (fl) |
57 |
2 |
| Ah! little blind boy! much too often you prove us (fl) |
58 |
2 |
| He was fam'd for deeds of arms (fl) |
58-59 |
3 |
| Downy cheek, so soft, so fair, The (fl) |
59-60 |
2 |
| I knew by the smoke that so gracefully curl'd (fl) |
60-61 |
2 |
| Among the green meadows when Sol is appearing (fl) |
61 |
3 |
| While I hang on your bosom distracted to lose you (fl) |
62 |
2 |
| Sly Cupid one day made a little bit os blund'ring (fl) |
62-64 |
4 |
| Drink to me only with thine eyes (fl) |
64-65 |
4 |
| Alone, to the banks of the dark rolling Danube (fl) |
65-66 |
3 |
| Tho' my eyes, dearest Anna, to others will stray (fl) |
66-67 |
5 |
| I have a heart, a little heart (fl) |
67-68 |
3 |
| Hope told a flatt'ring tale (fl) |
68 |
1 |
| To thy green fields, sweet Erin, I've long bade adieu (fl) |
69 |
2 |
| Dear Erin! how sweetly thy green bosom rises (fl) |
69-70 |
4 |
| Rise, Cynthia, rise (fl) |
70-71 |
1 |
| 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 |
9 |
| Deserted by the waning moon (fl) |
75-76 |
2 |
| Shadows of eve 'gan to steal o'er the plain, The (fl) |
76 |
2 |
| Life let us cherish (fl) |
77 |
4 |
| 'Twas at night, when the bell had toll'd twelve (fl) |
78 |
3 |
| Claudine liv'd contented, and peace was her lot (fl) |
78-79 |
2 |
| Rose had been wash'd, just wash'd in a shower, The (fl) |
79-80 |
5 |
| How sweet in the woodlands, with fleet hound and horn (fl) |
80 |
2 |
| Tho' the muses ne'er smile by the light of the sun (fl) |
80-81 |
3 |
| Ye banks and braes of bonie Doon [sic] (fl) |
81-82 |
2 |
| Charming maid of Lodi, The (fl) |
82-83 |
3 |
| Where Dee flows saftly yo the sea [sic] (fl) |
83-84 |
3 |
| Roy's wife, of Aldivalloch (fl) |
84-85 |
4 |
| Canst thou leave me thus, my Katy? (fl) |
85 |
3 |
| Now hope, now fear, my bosom rending (fl) |
86-87 |
9 |
| Oh! give me of the icy wave (fl) |
87-88 |
5 |
| Lass for a sailor is lively and free, The (fl) |
88 |
3 |
| Oh! first I saw the youth who came to me a wooing (fl) |
88-89 |
2 |
| All in the Downs the fleet was moor'd (fl) |
89-91 |
8 |
| I love, but dare not say who (fl) |
91-92 |
2 |
| Tear fell gently from her eye, The (fl) |
92-93 |
2 |
| Hark! the goddess Diana calls out for the chase (fl) |
93 |
2 |
| Mary I believ'd thee true (fl) |
93-94 |
2 |
| Not the charms of blooming spring (fl) |
94 |
2 |
| Far retir'd from noise and smoke (fl) |
95-96 |
5 |
| When she smiles, oh I think of the heaven's warm ray (fl) |
96-97 |
3 |
| Oh! why should the girl of my soul be in tears (fl) |
97 |
3 |
| Tho' oft we meet severe distress (fl) |
98 |
3 |
| Oh! weep for the hour (fl) |
98-99 |
4 |
| Sweet is the vale where innocence resides (fl) |
99 |
1 |
| You own I'm complacent, but tell me I'm cold (fl) |
100 |
3 |
| Where is the nymph whose azure eye (fl) |
100-101 |
3 |
| Llewellyn with his Patience dear (fl) |
101-102 |
3 |
| Sweet weeping willow, friend of tears (fl) |
102-103 |
4 |
| When day has smiled a soft farewell (fl) |
103-104 |
4 |
| Oh! come sweet lass! the dawning morn (fl) |
104 |
2 |
| Dark was the night, and dreary was the scene (fl) |
105 |
3 |
| It is not that I love you less (fl) |
106 |
2 |
| Too late I staid, forgive the crime (fl) |
106-107 |
4 |
| Prey to tender anguish, A (fl) |
107-108 |
5 |
| When Edward left his native plain (fl) |
108-109 |
5 |
| Yes, when thou hear'st the gentle breeze (fl) |
109-110 |
3 |
| In peace, love tunes the shepherd's reed (fl) |
110 |
|
| Swain to his love went a-wooing, A (fl) |
111 |
3 |
| Says Ella to her love, remember (fl) |
111-112 |
3 |
| They bid me sleep, they bid me pray (fl) |
112 |
2 |
| To a shady retreat fair Eliza I trac'd (fl) |
113 |
2 |
| I have lov'd thee, dearly lov'd thee (fl) |
113-114 |
2 |
| Beam of morning trembling, The (fl) |
114-115 |
3 |
| Oh! my darling little Mary (fl) |
115 |
2 |
| Rose that weeps with morning dew, The (fl) |
116 |
2 |
| Sigh of her heart was sincere, The (fl) |
116-117 |
4 |
| Soldier slumb'ring after war, The (fl) |
117-118 |
3 |
| I married a wife "who cares" says I (fl) |
118-119 |
4 |
| Soft as summer's beauty (fl) |
119-120 |
3 |
| In a village there lived an old maid (fl) |
120-121 |
3 |
| 'Tis he, my William, come from sea (fl) |
121-122 |
3 |
| Oh! tell me pilgrims! faint and weary (fl) |
122-123 |
5 |
| When Fanny first with playful art (fl) |
123-124 |
3 |
| Go where glory waits thee (fl) |
124-125 |
3 |
| Soft as yon silver ray that sleeps (fl) |
126 |
2 |
| What do I love? a polish'd mind (fl) |
126-127 |
3 |
| Fair Geraldine each charm of spring possess'd (fl) |
127 |
2 |
| Gentle as the breath of morn (fl) |
128 |
3 |
| When the midnight of absence the day scene pervading (fl) |
128-129 |
2 |
| Harp that once through Tara's halls, The (fl) |
129-130 |
2 |
| In sorrow's sad and gloomy hour (fl) |
130 |
2 |
| If then to love thee be offence (fl) |
131 |
2 |
| O, Marian the merry, who gave you that fairing (fl) |
131-132 |
3 |
| In Fairy Hill's embower'd retreat (fl) |
132-133 |
3 |
| Blessing unknown to ambition and pride, A (fl) |
133-134 |
2 |
| Bird upon the summer spray, The (fl) |
134 |
2 |