Texts by W. Sharp set in Art Songs and Choral Works
Text Collections:
- Earth's Voices
- From the Hills of Dream
- Pharais: a Romance of the Isles
- Poems
- Romantic Ballads
- Sospiri di Roma
- The Hour of Beauty
- The Love Songs of Ian Mòr
- The Silence of Amor: Prose Rhythms
Texts set in art song or choral works (not necessarily comprehensive):
Legend:
The symbol [x] indicates a placeholder for a text that is not yet in the database.
A * indicates that a text cannot (yet?) be displayed on this site because of its copyright status.
Special notes: All titles and first lines are included in this index, including those used by composers.
Titles used by the text author appear in boldface. First lines appear in italics.
A language code in a blue rectangle like ENG indicates that a translation to that language is available.
A grey rectangle like FRE indicates a particular translation (usually one set to music) exists but isn't yet available.
- Above the shadowy woodlands (from The Silence of Amor: Prose Rhythms) - G. Bantock, J. Foulds (The shadowy woodlands)
- A cavalry catch (Up! for the bugles are calling) - H. Nelson, J. Sibelius
- A Celtic Lullaby (Lennavan-mo) (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax
- A Celtic Lullaby () - R. Boughton [x]
- Across the silent stream (Across the silent stream) (from From the Hills of Dream) - H. Eichheim
- Across the silent stream (from From the Hills of Dream) - C. Allen, A. Bax, H. Eichheim, C. Forsyth, H. Hopekirk, R. Redman (From the Hills of Dream)
- A crystal forest (The air is blue and keen and cold) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- A dead calm and mist (The slow heave of the sleeping sea) (from Earth's Voices) - F. Hart
- Against the dim hot summer blue (from Poems) - F. Hart (Wild roses)
- A hushing song (Eilidh, Eilidh) (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax
- Alona (Thou art the Daughter of the Sun) (from The Love Songs of Ian Mòr )
- A milking Sian (Give up thy milk to her who calls) (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax
- An autumnal evening (Deep black against the dying glow) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- A Sea Rune () - R. Boughton [x]
- A sky of whirling flakes of foam (from Poems) - F. Hart (Breaking billows at Sorrento)
- A star was loosed from heaven (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart, J. Hawes (The lost star)
- A summer air (O waving trees)
- At the last (She cometh no more) (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax, F. Hart, J. Hawes
- At the rising of the moon (At the rising of the moon) (from The Silence of Amor: Prose Rhythms) - G. Bantock
- Avalon (Song of Apple-trees, honeysweet and murmurous) (from The Hour of Beauty) - R. Boughton
- A winter hedgerow (The wintry wolds are white; the wind) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- Black swans on the Murray Lagoons (The long lagoons lie white and still) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- Blossom of snow (Sing a song of blossom,") (from Poems) - M. Besly
- Breaking billows at Sorrento (A sky of whirling flakes of foam) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- Brown birdeen (Eilidh, Eilidh) (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Buzzi-Peccia, R. Cox
- But this was in the old, old, far-off days [x] - A. Buzzi-Peccia (The Song of Ahez the Pale)
- By dim, mauve and. dream-white bushes of lilac (from The Silence of Amor: Prose Rhythms) - G. Bantock (Nocturne)
- Calm sea and mist (The slow heave of the sleeping sea) (from Earth's Voices) - A. Benjamin
- Closing doors (Eilidh, Eilidh, Eilidh, heart of me, dear and sweet) - A. Bax
- Closing doors (O sands of my heart, what wind moans low along thy shadowy shore?) (from From the Hills of Dream)
- Coming of the prince () - H. Loomis [x]
- Cor Cordium (Sweet Heart, true heart, strong heart, star of my life, oh never) (from The Hour of Beauty) - A. Thomas
- Dalua (I have heard you calling, Dalua) (from From the Hills of Dream) - R. Boughton, N. Fulton, E. Whithorne
- Daughter of the Sun (Thou art the Daughter of the Sun) (from The Love Songs of Ian Mòr ) - R. Boughton
- Day and night (From grey of dusk, the veils unfold) (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart
- Dead love (From the Gaelic) (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart
- Deep black against the dying glow (from Poems) - F. Hart (An autumnal evening)
- Desires (The Desire of Love, Joy) (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart
- Down through the thicket, out of the hedges (from Poems) - A. Barnett, A. Benjamin, F. Hart (Nightingale Lane)
- Dream fantasy (There is a land of Dream) (from From the Hills of Dream) - J. Hawes
- Dream-wind (When, like a sleeping child) (from Poems) - H. Bath
- Each love-thought in thy mind doth rise (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart (White Star of Time)
- Easter (The stars wailed when the reed was born) (from The Hour of Beauty) - F. Hart, J. Hawes
- Eilidh, Eilidh, Eilidh, dear to me, dear and sweet (from From the Hills of Dream) - H. Hopekirk, T. Pearson (Mo-lennav-a-chree)
- Eilidh, Eilidh, Eilidh, heart of me, dear and sweet - A. Bax
- Eilidh, Eilidh, my bonny wee lass (from From the Hills of Dream) (Hushing song) - A. Anderson, H. Bath, A. Bax, A. Buzzi-Peccia, R. Cox, H. Hopekirk, W. Rummel, B. Thornley, W. Watts
- Eilidh, Eilidh (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Anderson, H. Bath, A. Bax, A. Buzzi-Peccia, R. Cox, H. Hopekirk, W. Rummel, B. Thornley, W. Watts (Hushing song)
- Eilidh my Fawn (Far away upon the hills at the lighting of the dawn) (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax, H. Hopekirk
- Eily () - H. Bath [x]
- Empire (Persepolis) (The yellow waste of yellow sands) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- Es ist ein Wind, der keinen Namen hat (Es ist ein Wind, der keinen Namen hat) - H. Genzmer (Text: Anonymous after William Sharp) [x]
- Es ist ein Wind, der keinen Namen hat (Text: Anonymous after William Sharp) [x] - H. Genzmer
- Evoë (Oceanward, the sea-horses sweep magnificently) (from The Silence of Amor: Prose Rhythms) - H. Bath, J. Foulds
- Faery song (How beautiful they are, the lordly ones) - R. Boughton
- Falias (In the frost-grown city of Falias lit by the falling stars) (from The Hour of Beauty) - M. Barnes
- Far away upon the hills at the lighting of the dawn (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax, H. Hopekirk (Eilidh my Fawn)
- Far away upon the hills (from From the Hills of Dream) (Eilidh my Fawn) - A. Bax, H. Hopekirk
- Far in the inland valleys (from Poems) - F. Hart (White rose)
- Far out in the grey murmurous twilight (from The Silence of Amor: Prose Rhythms) - G. Finzi (The Twilit Waters)
- Fate () - A. Buzzi-Peccia [x]
- Finias (In the torch-lit city of Finias) (from The Hour of Beauty) - M. Barnes
- Fireflies (Softly sailing emerald lights) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- From grey of dusk, the veils unfold (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart (Day and night)
- From oversea (From oversea) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- From the Gaelic (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart (Dead love)
- From the Hills of Dream (Across the silent stream) (from From the Hills of Dream) - C. Allen, A. Bax, C. Forsyth, H. Hopekirk, R. Redman
- From the Silence of Time, Time's Silence borrow (from Poems) - F. Hart (Triad)
- Give up thy milk to her who calls (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax, R. Boughton, J. Raynor, J. Read, E. Thompson (Milking Sian)
- Gorias (In Gorias are gems) (from The Hour of Beauty) - M. Barnes
- Green branches, green branches, I see you beckon; I follow! (from From the Hills of Dream) - H. Hopekirk (The lonely hunter)
- Green branches (Wave, wave, green branches, wave me far away) (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax, R. Boughton, F. Hart, W. Watts
- Grey pastures (In the grey gloaming where the white moth flies) (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart
- Heart o'Beauty (O where are thy white hands, Heart o' Beauty?) (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax
- Hedgerow (The wintry wolds are white; the wind) (from Poems) - A. Benjamin
- He laughed at Life's Sunset Gate (from Poems) - F. Hart (In Memoriam)
- His face was glad as dawn to me (from From the Hills of Dream) - R. Boughton, C. Lemont, B. Rawlinson, E. Thompson (Shule, Shule, Shule, agrah!)
- Holy, Holy, Holy, Christ upon the Cross (from From the Hills of Dream) (The bird of Christ) - R. Boughton, H. Hopekirk
- Holy, Holy, Holy (from From the Hills of Dream) - R. Boughton, H. Hopekirk (The bird of Christ)
- How beautiful they are, the lordly ones - R. Boughton
- Hushing song (Eilidh, Eilidh) (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Anderson, H. Bath, H. Hopekirk, W. Rummel, B. Thornley, W. Watts
- I-Brasîl (Liegt Trauer auf dem Wind, mein Gram) - F. Delius
- I-Brasîl (There's sorrow on the wind, my grief) (from The Hour of Beauty) - F. Delius, D. Moule-Evans, J. Raynor GER
- I dreamed of Orchil, the dim goddess who is under the brown earth (from The Silence of Amor: Prose Rhythms) - J. Foulds (Orchil)
- I go where the sheep go (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax, P. Glanville-Hicks, F. Hart, J. Hawes, J. Raynor, F. Titherington (Sheiling song)
- I have heard the sea-wind sighing (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart (The voice among the dunes)
- I have heard you calling, Dalua (from From the Hills of Dream) - R. Boughton, N. Fulton, E. Whithorne (Dalua)
- I have seen all things pass and all men go (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax (Leaves, shadows, and dreams)
- I hear the little children of the wind (from From the Hills of Dream) - S. Barber, F. Hart (Little children of the wind)
- I hear the sea-song of the blood in my heart (from From the Hills of Dream) - H. Eichheim, F. Hart (The Undersong)
- In a fair place of whin and grass (from From the Hills of Dream) (The vision) - F. Hart
- In a fair place (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart (The vision)
- In Gorias are gems, and pale gold (from The Hour of Beauty) (Gorias) - M. Barnes
- In Gorias are gems (from The Hour of Beauty) - M. Barnes (Gorias)
- In Memoriam (He laughed at Life's Sunset Gate) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- In the fern (The feathery fern-trees make a screen) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- In the frost-grown city of Falias lit by the falling stars (from The Hour of Beauty) - M. Barnes (Falias)
- In the grey gloaming where the white moth flies (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart (Grey pastures)
- In the hollow of quiet places (In the hollows of quiet places we may meet) (from The Silence of Amor: Prose Rhythms) - G. Bantock
- In the hollows of quiet places we may meet (from The Silence of Amor: Prose Rhythms) - G. Bantock
- In the night (O wind, why break in idle pain) (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart
- In the secret Valley of Silence (from From the Hills of Dream) - G. Bantock, F. Hart, W. Rummel (The Valley of Silence)
- In the silences of the woods (In the silences of the woods) (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax, F. Hart
- In the sunken city of Murias (from The Hour of Beauty) - M. Barnes (Murias)
- In the torch-lit city of Finias (from The Hour of Beauty) - M. Barnes (Finias)
- Invocation (Play me a lulling tune, O Flute-Player of Sleep) (from The Hour of Beauty) - J. Raynor
- I saw a happy Spirit that wandered among flowers (from The Hour of Beauty) (Time) - F. Hart
- I saw a happy Spirit (from The Hour of Beauty) - F. Hart (Time)
- I saw one put a hollow reed to his lips (from The Silence of Amor: Prose Rhythms) - G. Bantock, G. Finzi, J. Foulds (The Reed Player)
- Isla, Isla, heart of my heart, it is you alone I am loving (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax, W. Stephens (Isla)
- Isla (Isla, Isla, heart of my heart, it is you alone I am loving) (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax, W. Stephens
- It is not when the seamew cries above the grey-green foam (from The Hour of Beauty) - J. Raynor (The Exile)
- It is the grey rock I am (from From the Hills of Dream) (Dead love) - F. Hart
- It lies not on the sunlit hill (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax, F. Hart, J. Raynor (The White Peace)
- King of the winds, O Wind of the Sea (from Poems) - A. Shepherd (The Song of the Sea-Wind)
- Lances of gold (The afternoon has drowsed through the sun-flood) (from The Silence of Amor: Prose Rhythms) - J. Foulds
- Lay me to sleep in sheltering flame (from The Hour of Beauty) - F. Hart (The mystic's prayer)
- Leaves, shadows, and dreams (I have seen all things pass and all men go) (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax
- Lennavan-mo, lennavan-mo, who is it swinging you to and fro (from From the Hills of Dream) (Lullaby) - A. Bax, B. Burrows, P. Whitehead
- Lennavan-Mo (Lennavan-mo) (from From the Hills of Dream) - B. Burrows, P. Whitehead
- Lennavan-mo (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax, B. Burrows, P. Whitehead (Lullaby)
- Let loose the hounds of war (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax, C. Griffes (The War-Song of the Vikings)
- Liegt Trauer auf dem Wind, mein Gram - F. Delius
- Little children of the wind (I hear the little children of the wind) (from From the Hills of Dream) - S. Barber, F. Hart
- Little wild-rose of my heart (from The Hour of Beauty) - E. Bainton, H. Clough-Leighter (Ròseen-dhu)
- Longing (O would I were the cool wind that's blowing from the sea) (from From the Hills of Dream) - G. Bantock, S. Barber, A. Bax, A. Buzzi-Peccia, G. Ferrari, F. Hart, K. Lucke, W. Rummel, E. Thompson
- Love came in at the door one day - R. De Koven, R. Edwyn (Love came in at the door one day)
- Love came one day (Love came in at the door one day) - R. De Koven
- Love in a cottage () - H. Bath [x]
- Love is a beautiful dream (from The Hour of Beauty) (Cor Cordium) - A. Thomas
- Low laughing, blithely scorning (from Poems) - F. Hart (The Sun Lord)
- Lullaby (Lennavan-mo) (from From the Hills of Dream)
- Milking Sian (Give up thy milk to her who calls) (from From the Hills of Dream) - J. Raynor, J. Read, E. Thompson
- Mo Bròn! (A song on the wind) (O come across the grey wild seas) (from The Hour of Beauty)
- Mo Bròn! (O come across the grey wild seas) (from The Hour of Beauty) - F. Hart, K. Lucke
- Mo-lennav-a-chree (Eilidh, Eilidh, Eilidh, dear to me, dear and sweet) (from From the Hills of Dream) - H. Hopekirk, T. Pearson
- Moonrise (The first snows of the year lie white) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- Murias (In the sunken city of Murias) (from The Hour of Beauty) - M. Barnes
- My birdeen (On bonnie birdeen) (from From the Hills of Dream) - J. Black
- My grief () - R. Boughton [x]
- My robe is of green (from From the Hills of Dream) - H. Hopekirk, C. Taylor, N. Wood (The Bandruidh)
- Nightingale Lane (Down through the thicket, out of the hedges) (from Poems) - A. Barnett, A. Benjamin, F. Hart
- Nocturne (By dim, mauve and. dream-white bushes of lilac) (from The Silence of Amor: Prose Rhythms) - G. Bantock
- No more: let there be no more said (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart, J. Raynor (Remembrance)
- Oceanward, the sea-horses sweep magnificently (from The Silence of Amor: Prose Rhythms) - H. Bath, J. Foulds (Evoë!)
- O come across the grey wild seas (from The Hour of Beauty) - F. Hart, K. Lucke (Mo Bròn! (A song on the wind))
- O'er sandy tracts the shea-oak trees (from Poems) - F. Hart (Shea-oak trees on a stormy day)
- O far away upon the hills (from From the Hills of Dream) (Eilidh my Fawn) - A. Bax, H. Hopekirk
- Oh, Baby Christ, so dear to me (from From the Hills of Dream) - R. Boughton, H. Hopekirk (St. Bride's lullaby)
- On bonnie birdeen, sweet-bird of my heart (from From the Hills of Dream) (My birdeen) - J. Black, H. Hopekirk
- On bonnie birdeen (from From the Hills of Dream) - J. Black, H. Hopekirk (My birdeen)
- On bonnie birdeen (On bonnie birdeen) (from From the Hills of Dream) - H. Hopekirk
- Orchil (I dreamed of Orchil, the dim goddess who is under the brown earth) (from The Silence of Amor: Prose Rhythms) - J. Foulds
- O sands of my heart, what wind moans low along thy shadowy shore? (from From the Hills of Dream) (Closing doors) -
- O sweet St. Bride of the yellow, yellow hair (from From the Hills of Dream) (The Kye-Song of St. Bride) - C. Edmunds
- O sweet St. Bride of the (from From the Hills of Dream) - C. Edmunds (The Kye-Song of St. Bride)
- O thou that on the hills and wastes of Night art Shepherd (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax (The Rune of Age)
- Out on the waste, a little lonely bird, I flit and I sing [x] - G. Bantock (The yellowhammer's song)
- O waving trees - G. Peel (A summer air)
- O waving trees (O waving trees) - G. Peel
- O where are thy white hands, Heart o' Beauty? (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax (Heart o' Beauty)
- O wind, why break in idle pain (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart (In the night)
- O would I were the cool wind that's blowing from the sea (from From the Hills of Dream) - G. Bantock, S. Barber, A. Bax, A. Buzzi-Peccia, H. Clough-Leighter, G. Ferrari, F. Hart, K. Lucke, W. Rummel, E. Thompson (Longing)
- Phosphorescent sea (The sea scarce heaves in its calm sleep) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- Play me a lulling tune, O Flute-Player of Sleep (from The Hour of Beauty) - J. Raynor (Invocation)
- Poor little songs, children of sorrow, go (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart, W. Rummel (The secret dews)
- Prelude () - G. Bantock [x]
- Red poppies (Through the seeding grass) (from Sospiri di Roma) - S. Fraser
- Remembrance (No more: let there be no more said) (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart, J. Raynor
- Ròseen-dhu (Little wild-rose of my heart) (from The Hour of Beauty) - E. Bainton, H. Clough-Leighter
- Rune of the Burden of the Tide (The tide was dark an' heavy with the) (from From the Hills of Dream) - G. Peterkin
- Shea-oak trees on a stormy day (O'er sandy tracts the shea-oak trees) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- She cometh no more (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax, F. Hart, J. Hawes (At the last)
- Sheiling song (I go where the sheep go) (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax, P. Glanville-Hicks, F. Hart, J. Hawes, J. Raynor, F. Titherington
- Shule agrah (His face was glad as dawn to me) (from From the Hills of Dream) - R. Boughton, B. Rawlinson
- Shule, Shule, agrah! (His face was glad as dawn to me) (from From the Hills of Dream) - E. Thompson
- Shule, Shule, Shule, agrah! (His face was glad as dawn to me) (from From the Hills of Dream) - C. Lemont
- Sing a song of blossom," (from Poems) - M. Besly (Blossom of snow)
- Sleep, sleep, brothers dear, sleep and dream (from From the Hills of Dream) - G. Peterkin (The Song of Fionula)
- Softly sailing emerald lights (from Poems) - F. Hart (Fireflies)
- Song of Apple-trees, honeysweet and murmurous (from The Hour of Beauty) - R. Boughton, P. Fletcher, J. Raynor (Song of apple-trees)
- Song of Apple Trees (Song of Apple-trees, honeysweet and murmurous) (from The Hour of Beauty) - P. Fletcher, J. Raynor
- Song of Easter (The stars wailed when the reed was born) (from The Hour of Beauty) - R. Boughton
- St. Bride's Cradle Song (Oh, Baby Christ, so dear to me) (from From the Hills of Dream) - R. Boughton
- St. Bride's lullaby (Oh, Baby Christ, so dear to me) (from From the Hills of Dream) - H. Hopekirk
- St. Bride's milking song (Give up thy milk to her who calls) (from From the Hills of Dream) - R. Boughton
- Sunrise above broad wheatfields (The pale tints of the twilight fields) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- Sweet Heart, true heart, strong heart, star of my life, oh never (from The Hour of Beauty) - A. Thomas (Cor Cordium)
- Swiftly the dews of the gloaming are falling (from From the Hills of Dream) - H. Bath (The bugles of Dreamland)
- The afternoon has drowsed through the sun-flood (from The Silence of Amor: Prose Rhythms) - J. Foulds (Lances of gold)
- The air is blue and keen and cold (from Poems) - F. Hart (A crystal forest)
- The Bandruidh (My robe is of green) (from From the Hills of Dream) - H. Hopekirk, N. Wood
- The Bell-Bird (The stillness of the Austral noon) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- The Bells of Youth are ringing in the gateways of the South (from The Hour of Beauty) - G. Bantock, H. Bath, H. Clough-Leighter, P. Fletcher, N. Fulton, J. Hawes, J. Raynor, O. Speaks (The bells of youth)
- The bells of youth (The Bells of Youth are ringing in the gateways of the South) (from The Hour of Beauty) - G. Bantock, H. Bath, H. Clough-Leighter, P. Fletcher, N. Fulton, J. Hawes, J. Raynor, O. Speaks
- The bird of Christ (Holy, Holy, Holy) (from From the Hills of Dream) - R. Boughton, H. Hopekirk
- The bugles of Dreamland (Swiftly the dews of the gloaming are falling) (from From the Hills of Dream) - H. Bath
- The bugling of the summer wind (from Poems) - F. Hart (The summer wind)
- The burthen of the tide (The tide was dark an' heavy with the) (from From the Hills of Dream)
- The creatures with the shining eyes (from The Hour of Beauty) - F. Hart (The shrewmouse)
- The dark rose of thy mouth (from The Hour of Beauty) FRE - C. Griffes (The Rose of the Night)
- The day is now gone (from Pharais: a Romance of the Isles) - G. McKay
- The Desire of Love, Joy (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart (Desires)
- The dream-wind (When, like a sleeping child) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- The Exile (It is not when the seamew cries above the grey-green foam) (from The Hour of Beauty) - J. Raynor
- The feathery fern-trees make a screen (from Poems) - F. Hart (In the fern)
- The first snows of the year lie white (from Poems) - F. Hart (Moonrise)
- The Green Lady (My robe is of green) (from From the Hills of Dream) - C. Taylor
- The Isle of Lost Dreams (There is an Isle beyond our ken) (from Romantic Ballads) - W. Browne, F. Hart FRE
- The Kye-Song of St. Bride (O sweet St. Bride of the) (from From the Hills of Dream) - C. Edmunds
- The Lament of Ian the Proud (What is this crying that I hear in the wind?) (from From the Hills of Dream) - H. Eichheim, C. Griffes FRE
- The lonely hunter (Green branches, green branches, I see you beckon; I follow!) (from From the Hills of Dream) - H. Hopekirk
- The long lagoons lie white and still (from Poems) - F. Hart (Black swans on the Murray Lagoons)
- The lost star (A star was loosed from heaven) (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart, J. Hawes
- The Mourners (When they had made the cradle) - J. Raynor
- The mystic's prayer (Lay me to sleep in sheltering flame) (from The Hour of Beauty) - F. Hart
- The pale tints of the twilight fields (from Poems) - F. Hart (Sunrise above broad wheatfields)
- The prayer of Fiona Macleod (The day is now gone) (from Pharais: a Romance of the Isles) - G. McKay
- The Reed Player (I saw one put a hollow reed to his lips) (from The Silence of Amor: Prose Rhythms) - G. Bantock, G. Finzi, J. Foulds
- There is a land of Dream (from From the Hills of Dream) - J. Hawes (Dream fantasy)
- There is a lonely stream afar in a lone dim land (from From the Hills of Dream) - G. Bantock (The Washer of the Ford)
- There is an Isle beyond our ken (from Romantic Ballads) FRE - W. Browne, F. Hart (The Isle of Lost Dreams)
- There is peace on the sea to-night (from The Hour of Beauty) - F. Hart (When there is peace)
- There's sorrow on the wind, my grief (from The Hour of Beauty) GER - F. Delius, D. Moule-Evans, J. Raynor (I-Brasîl)
- The Rose of the Night (The dark rose of thy mouth) (from The Hour of Beauty) - C. Griffes FRE
- The Rune of Age (O thou that on the hills and wastes of Night art Shepherd) (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax
- The sea scarce heaves in its calm sleep (from Poems) - F. Hart (Phosphorescent sea)
- The secret dews (Poor little songs, children of sorrow, go) (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart
- The shadowy woodlands (Above the shadowy woodlands) (from The Silence of Amor: Prose Rhythms) - G. Bantock, J. Foulds
- The shrewmouse (The creatures with the shining eyes) (from The Hour of Beauty) - F. Hart
- The singer in the woods (Where moongrey-thistled dunes divide the woods from the sea) (from From the Hills of Dream) - G. Bantock
- The slow heave of the sleeping sea (from Earth's Voices) - A. Benjamin, F. Hart (A dead calm and mist)
- The Song of Ahez the Pale (But this was in the old, old, far-off days) - A. Buzzi-Peccia [x]
- The Song of Fionula (Sleep, sleep, brothers dear, sleep and dream) (from From the Hills of Dream) - G. Peterkin
- The Song of the Sea Wind (King of the winds, O Wind of the Sea) (from Poems) - A. Shepherd
- The Sons Of Sîr () - J. Raynor [x]
- The stars wailed when the reed was born (from The Hour of Beauty) - R. Boughton, F. Hart, J. Hawes (Easter)
- The stillness of the Austral noon (from Poems) - F. Hart (The Bell-Bird)
- The summer wind (The bugling of the summer wind) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- The Sun Lord (Low laughing, blithely scorning) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- The tide was dark an' heavy with the (from From the Hills of Dream) - G. Peterkin (The burthen of the tide)
- The Twilit Waters (Far out in the grey murmurous twilight) (from The Silence of Amor: Prose Rhythms) - G. Finzi
- The Undersong (I hear the sea-song of the blood in my heart) (from From the Hills of Dream) - H. Eichheim
- The unknown wind (When the day darkens) (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart GER
- The Valley of Silence (In the secret Valley of Silence) (from From the Hills of Dream) - G. Bantock, F. Hart, W. Rummel
- The vision (In a fair place) (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart
- The voice among the dunes (I have heard the sea-wind sighing) (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart
- The War-Song of the Vikings (Let loose the hounds of war) (from From the Hills of Dream) - C. Griffes
- The Washer of the Ford (There is a lonely stream afar in a lone dim land) (from From the Hills of Dream) - G. Bantock
- The wasp (Where the ripe pears droop heavily) (from Poems) - A. Benjamin, J. Hawes
- The west wind lifts the plumes of the fir (from Poems) - F. Hart (When the greenness is come again)
- The white merle () - J. Foulds [x]
- The White Peace (It lies not on the sunlit hill) (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax, F. Hart, J. Raynor
- The wintry wolds are white; the wind (from Poems) - A. Benjamin, F. Hart (A winter hedgerow)
- The yellowhammer's song (Out on the waste, a little lonely bird, I flit and I sing) - G. Bantock [x]
- The yellow waste of yellow sands (from Poems) - F. Hart (Empire (Persepolis))
- Thou art the Daughter of the Sun (from The Love Songs of Ian Mòr ) - R. Boughton (Alona)
- Through the seeding grass (from Sospiri di Roma) - S. Fraser (Red poppies)
- Thy dark eyes to mine, Eilidh (from From the Hills of Dream) FRE - A. Bax, H. Fletcher, C. Griffes, F. Hart, H. Hopekirk (Thy dark eyes to mine)
- Thy dark eyes to mine (Thy dark eyes to mine, Eilidh) (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax, H. Fletcher, C. Griffes, F. Hart, H. Hopekirk FRE
- Time (I saw a happy Spirit) (from The Hour of Beauty) - F. Hart
- Tragic lullaby () - R. Boughton [x]
- Triad (From the Silence of Time, Time's Silence borrow) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- Under Song (I hear the sea-song of the blood in my heart) (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart
- Under the Evening Star (Poor little songs, children of sorrow, go) (from From the Hills of Dream) - W. Rummel
- Up! for the bugles are calling - H. Nelson, J. Sibelius (A cavalry catch)
- Vale, Amor! (We do not know this thing) (from The Hour of Beauty) - F. Hart
- Venitia () - J. Raynor [x]
- Viking-Battle-Song (Let loose the hounds of war) (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax
- Wave, wave, green branches, wave me far away (from From the Hills of Dream) - A. Bax, R. Boughton, F. Hart, W. Watts (Green branches)
- We do not know this thing by the spoken word (from The Hour of Beauty) (Vale, Amor!) - F. Hart
- We do not know this thing (from The Hour of Beauty) - F. Hart (Vale, Amor!)
- What is this crying that I hear in the wind? (from From the Hills of Dream) FRE - H. Eichheim, C. Griffes (The Lament of Ian the Proud)
- When, like a sleeping child or a bird in the nest (from Poems) (The dream-wind) - H. Bath, F. Hart
- When, like a sleeping child (from Poems) - H. Bath, F. Hart (The dream-wind)
- When the day darkens, when dusk grows light (from From the Hills of Dream) GER (The unknown wind) - F. Hart
- When the day darkens (from From the Hills of Dream) GER - F. Hart (The unknown wind)
- When the dew is falling (When the dew is falling) (from From the Hills of Dream) - H. Eichheim, F. Hart, H. Hopekirk, H. Howells, W. Johnson, D. Moule-Evans, E. Schneider
- When the greenness is come again (The west wind lifts the plumes of the fir) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- When there is peace (There is peace on the sea to-night) (from The Hour of Beauty) - F. Hart
- When they had made the cradle - J. Raynor (The Mourners)
- Where moongrey-thistled dunes divide the woods from the sea (from From the Hills of Dream) - G. Bantock (The singer in the woods)
- Where the ripe pears droop heavily (from Poems) - A. Benjamin, J. Hawes (The wasp)
- White rose (Far in the inland valleys) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- White Star of Time (Each love-thought in thy mind doth rise) (from From the Hills of Dream) - F. Hart
- Wild roses (Against the dim hot summer blue) (from Poems) - F. Hart
- Would I were the Cold Wind (O would I were the cool wind that's blowing from the sea) (from From the Hills of Dream) - H. Clough-Leighter
Last update: 2024-11-24 04:58:21