“I'm not & Singh Raanes written in a young Lady's Album, John Day A Pachucu Fallmi, 320 Lament for the Dedime of Chivalry, 323 Letter of Remonstrama Fem Bridget Jones. (An Address to the Lieutenant Lad det Lines to a Lady on her Departure for India, 134 Lines to Mary. Old Bury Balads, 158 Mary's Ghost. A Pachete Ballad, 330 Morning Meditations 249 Ode to Captain Parry, N Ode to Joseph Grimaldi, Senior, 26 Ode to Mr. Graham, the Aervant, 1 Ode to Peace. Written on the night of my Mistress's Grand Ode to Richard Martin, Esq., M.P. for Galway, 14 Ode to Sir Andrew Agnew, Bart, 181 Ode to the Advocates for the Removal of Smithfield Market, 138 Ode to the Great Unknown, 17 Ode to W. Kitchener, M.D., 46 Our Village. By a Villager, 171 Playing at Soldiers, 326 Queen Mab, 274 Rural Felicity, 260 Sally Simpkin's Lament; or, John Jones's Kit-cat-astrophe, 179 The Angler's Farewell, 136 The Assistant Drapers' Petition, 255 The Bachelor's Dream, 257 The Broken Dish, 319 The Curelesse Nurse Mayd, 305 The Chola Mender, 315 The Epping Hunt, 107 The Fall, 169 The Forge. A Tale of the Iron Age, 381 The Forlorn Shepherd's Complaint. An Unpublished Poem, from Sydney, 245 The Fox and the Hare. A Fable, 190 The Ghost. A very Serious Ballad, 167 The Green Man, 228 The Irish Schoolmaster, 69 The Last Man, 52 The Lost Heir, 185 The Mermaid of Margate, 287 The Poacher. A Serious Ballad, 193 The Progress of Art, 301 The Stag-Eyed Lady. A Moorish Tale, 64 "The Sun was slumbering in the West," 223 The Sweep's Complaint, 201 The University Feud, 396 The Volunteer, 103 A Pathetic Ballad, 148 The Water Peri's Song (The Stag-Eyed Lady), 68 The Widow, 332 Those Evening Bells, 304 Tim Turpin. A Pathetic Ballad, 95 To Henrietta, on her Departure for Calais, 276 To Mary Housemaid on Valentine's Day, 322 414 John Day he was the biggest man, 310 Let Taylor preach upon a morning breezy, 249 Mary, you know I've no love nonsense, 322 0 Andrew Fairservice, but I beg pardon, 181 Oh multifarious man, 46 Oh Peace, oh come with me and dwell, 319 "Oh what is that comes gliding in, 179 Oh what's befallen Bessy Brown, 63 Kate! my dear Partner, through joy and through strife, 222 O May, I believed you true, 158 One close of day-'twas in the Bay, 160 One day, as I was going by, 185 One day, or night, no matter where or when, 190 One day the dreary old King of Death, 98 One morning, ere my usual time, 201 m-it was the very morn, 235 Seday morning-service done, 216 De widow at a grave will sob, 332 How Heath-and close beside the road. 291 that arst Saturday in May, 154 sahropic men, 138 , that's to say, not Miss Mitford's village, but our my man! has thy brave leg, 39 sorrows of a class of men, 255 one September, 265 story of human-kind to trace, 341 s some is born with their straight legs by natur, 100 was slumbering in the West, 223 evening bells, those evening bells, 304 Great Unknown, 17 happy, happy elf, 224 Purpin he was gravel blind, 95 'Tis strange how like a very dunce, 295 man, 228 'Twas August-Hastings every day was filling, 126 'Twas in the middle of the night, 330 'Twas in the wilds of Lebanon, amongst its barren hills, 206 'Twas in the year two thousand and one, 52 'Twas off the Wash-the sun went down-the sea look'd black and grim, 91 'Twas twelve o'clock by Chelsea chimes, 148 Two swains or clowns-but call them swains, 312 "Vell! Here I am-no Matter how it suits, 245 Well hast thou cried, departed Burke, 323 Well! I think it is time to put up, 136 Well, the country's a pleasant place, sure enough, for people that's country born, 260 What little urchin is there never, 326 What! shut the gardens! lock the latticed gate, 336 What's life but full of care and doubt, 319 When I reflect with serious sense, 321 When little people go abroad, wherever they may roam, 276 Who does not know that dreadful gulf, where Niagara falls, 169 Young Ben he was a nice young man, 60 THE END Printed by R. & R. CLARK, LIMITED, Edinburgh. |