LiederNet logo

CONTENTS

×
  • Home | Introduction
  • Composers (20,102)
  • Text Authors (19,442)
  • Go to a Random Text
  • What’s New
  • A Small Tour
  • FAQ & Links
  • Donors
  • DONATE

UTILITIES

  • Search Everything
  • Search by Surname
  • Search by Title or First Line
  • Search by Year
  • Search by Collection

CREDITS

  • Emily Ezust
  • Contributors (1,114)
  • Contact Information
  • Bibliography

  • Copyright Statement
  • Privacy Policy

Follow us on Facebook

Texts to Art Songs and Choral Works by R. Beckett

 𝄞 Composer 𝄞 

Ronald A. Beckett

Website: http://www.ronaldbeckettmusic.com/

Legend:
The symbol [x] indicates a placeholder for a text that is not yet in the database.
The symbol ⊗ indicates a translation that is missing an original text.

A * indicates that a text cannot (yet?) be displayed on this site because of its copyright status.
Note: 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.

Song Cycles, Collections, Symphonies, etc.:

  • A Child's Vision
    • no. 1. Little Boy Blue (Text: Eugene Field)
    • no. 2. Wynken, Blynken, and Nod (A Dutch Lullaby) (Text: Eugene Field)
    • no. 3. Seven times one (Text: Jean Ingelow)
  • Because your voice was at my side
    • no. 1. Because your voice was at my side (Text: James Joyce) FRE
    • no. 2. Lean out of the window (Text: James Joyce) FRE IRI POL
    • no. 3. My love is in a light attire (Text: James Joyce) FRE
    • no. 4. O cool is the valley now (Text: James Joyce) FRE
  • By the roadside
    • no. 1. A farm picture (Text: Walt Whitman)
    • no. 2. A child's amaze (Text: Walt Whitman)
    • no. 3. Beautiful women (Text: Walt Whitman)
    • no. 4. Mother and babe (Text: Walt Whitman)
    • no. 5. The runner (Text: Walt Whitman)
  • Eight Poems of William Blake
    • no. 1. The lamb (Text: William Blake) CAT GER GER RUS
    • no. 2. The Tyger (Text: William Blake) CAT CHI FRE GER GER RUS
    • no. 3. Holy Thursday (Text: William Blake)
    • no. 4. Spring (Text: William Blake) GER
    • no. 5. A poison tree (Text: William Blake) CAT FRE GER
    • no. 6. London (1) (Text: William Blake) CAT FRE
    • no. 7. London (2) (Text: William Blake) CAT FRE
    • no. 8. The Little Vagabond (Text: William Blake)
  • Elegies for the 21st Century
    • no. 1. The Monteverde Toad (Costa Rica) (Text: Susan Glickman) [x]*
    • no. 2. The Baiji Dolphin (China) (Text: Susan Glickman) [x]*
    • no. 3. The Black-Faced Honey Creeper (Hawaii) (Text: Susan Glickman) [x]*
    • no. 4. The River Otter (Japan) (Text: Susan Glickman) *
    • no. 5. The Pyrenean Ibex (France and Spain) (Text: Susan Glickman) [x]*
  • Five Poems by Emily Dickinson
    • no. 1. I taste a liquor (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER
    • no. 2. Hope (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER GER
    • no. 3. So set its sun in thee (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER
    • no. 4. A drop fell on the apple tree (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER
    • no. 5. A bird came down the walk (Text: Emily Dickinson) GER
  • Five Poems of Emily Brontë
    • no. 1. Tell me, tell me, smiling child (Text: Emily Brontë)
    • no. 2. A little budding rose (Text: Emily Brontë)
    • no. 3. Still beside the dreary water (Text: Emily Brontë)
    • no. 4. I'll come when thou art saddest (Text: Emily Brontë)
    • no. 5. The evening sun (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • Flights of Fancy: Four Poems by Lydia Sharpe
    • no. 1. Thumbelina (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]
    • no. 2. The faeries (Text: Lydia Sharpe) *
    • no. 3. Words (Text: Lydia Sharpe) *
    • no. 4. The Land of Myth (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]
  • Four Poems of Lauren Peat
    • no. 1. Sublunar (Text: Lauren Peat) [x]
    • no. 2. Elemental (Text: Lauren Peat) [x]
    • no. 3. What passes through (Text: Lauren Peat) [x]*
    • no. 4. Green (Text: Lauren Peat) [x]
  • Four Romantic Songs
    • no. 1. When I was one and twenty (Text: Frederick E. Weatherly)
    • no. 2. Ozymandias (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley) CZE GER HUN ITA POL RUS
    • no. 3. When I heard the learn'd astronomer (Text: Walt Whitman)
    • no. 4. So we'll go no more a-roving (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron) FRE GER
  • Four songs for voice, violin, and cello from poems by Emily Brontë
    • no. 1. Love and Friendship (Text: Emily Brontë)
    • no. 2. O Evening (Text: Emily Brontë)
    • no. 3. She dried her tears (Text: Emily Brontë)
    • no. 4. The soft unclouded blue of air (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • Four Songs from 'A Man Young and Old'
    • no. 1. No second Troy (Text: William Butler Yeats) FRE
    • no. 2. On being asked for a War Poem (Text: William Butler Yeats)
    • no. 3. That crazed girl (Text: William Butler Yeats)
    • no. 4. My fiftieth year (Text: William Butler Yeats)
  • Hafez: Unaccompanied songs
    • no. 1. I wish I could speak like music (Text: Daniel Ladinsky after Hafis) [x] ⊗*
    • no. 2. I got kin (Text: Daniel Ladinsky after Hafis) [x] ⊗*
  • I'm Nobody!
    • no. 1. I'm nobody! Who are you? (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER GER ITA
    • no. 2. Will there really be a morning (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER
    • no. 3. If I can stop one heart from breaking (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER ITA
  • John [opera]
    • Zechariah, do not fear (Text: Roger A. Bayley) *
  • My Letter to the world
    • no. 1. This is my letter to the world (Text: Emily Dickinson) GER
    • no. 2. The sky is low (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER GER
    • no. 3. I never saw a moor (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER GER ITA
  • Poems by A.E.Housman
    • no. 1. With rue my heart is laden (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
  • Poems of serenity and contemplation of Lydia Sharpe
    • no. 1. Not everything that breaks is broken (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]*
    • no. 2. Swan Lake (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]*
    • no. 3. Seeker (Text: Lydia Sharpe) *
    • no. 4. Solitude (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]*
    • no. 5. [Title unknown] (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]*
    • no. 6. Serenity (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]
  • Reflection: Three Poems by Emily Brontë
    • no. 1. Fall, leaves, fall (Text: Emily Brontë)
    • no. 2. The sun has set (Text: Emily Brontë)
    • no. 3. The sun has set (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • Ruth [opera]
    • Naomi, you shall not call me (Text: Roger A. Bayley) *
    • Your God shall be my God (Text: Roger A. Bayley) *
  • Sick song suite
    • no. 1. I love school (Text: Abigail Weinstock) [x]
    • no. 2. Please Miss, Let Me Go Home! (Text: Aimee Gray) [x]
    • no. 3. I don’t feel at all healthy today (Text: Evie Dwyer) [x]
    • no. 4. A Big Pill (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]
    • no. 5. We have to do a test at school (Text: Natasha Kotadia) [x]
    • no. 6. They say I'm sick (Text: Palvisha Khan) [x]
    • no. 7. Catch a cold and pass it on (Text: Nneka Cummins) [x]
    • no. 8. Love Bug (Text: Lizzie Oakley) [x]
  • Songs of Brotherhood
    • no. 1. The voice of God (Text: John Henry Newman; Louis Israel Newman)
    • no. 2. What was his creed? (Text: H. N. Fifer) [x]
    • no. 3. Who are my people? (Text: Rosa Zagnoni Marinoni) [x]*
  • Songs of fracture
    • no. 1. I was not permitted (Text: Michaela Chiste) [x]
    • no. 2. The sound surrounds (Text: Michaela Chiste) [x]
    • no. 3. If he stays (Text: Michaela Chiste) [x]
    • no. 4. I look for the cold (Text: Michaela Chiste) [x]
  • Songs of the Spirit
    • no. 1. What if? (Text: Samuel Taylor Coleridge)
    • no. 2. Sailing to Byzantium (Text: William Butler Yeats) GER ITA
    • no. 3. Who is this? (Text: Rabindranath Tagore after Rabindranath Tagore) ⊗ GER
    • no. 4. This quiet Dust (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER ITA
    • no. 5. To see the World in a Grain of Sand (Text: William Blake) CAT FRE GER GER ITA RUS
  • The creatures' call
    • no. 1. Animals (Text: Walt Whitman)
    • no. 2. The lamb (Text: William Blake) CAT GER GER RUS
    • no. 3. The Black-Faced Honey Creeper (Hawaii) (Text: Susan Glickman) [x]*
    • no. 4. The monkey speaks his mind [x]
    • no. 5. A bird came down the walk (Text: Emily Dickinson) GER
  • The Seasons: Four Poems of Emily Dickinson
    • no. 1. Winter: There’s a certain slant of light (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER
    • no. 2. Spring: A light exists in spring (Text: Emily Dickinson) GER ITA
    • no. 3. Summer: It will be Summer - eventually (Text: Emily Dickinson)
    • no. 4. Autumn: Besides the autumn poets sing (Text: Emily Dickinson)
  • Three inscriptions by Walt Whitman
    • no. 1. Beginning my studies (Text: Walt Whitman)
    • no. 2. A clear midnight (Text: Walt Whitman) CAT FRE GER GER
    • no. 3. Animals (Text: Walt Whitman)
  • Three Latin Poems by Catullus
    • no. 1. I hate and I love (Text: Gaius Valerius Catullus) ENG ENG GER ITA SPA
    • no. 2. Atalanta picks up the apples (Text: Gaius Valerius Catullus) ENG ITA
    • no. 3. To Diana (Text: Gaius Valerius Catullus)
  • Three Short Poems by Emily Brontë
    • no. 1. Lonely at her window (Text: Emily Brontë)
    • no. 2. Twas one of those dark and cloudy days (Text: Emily Brontë)
    • no. 3. There are two trees (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • Three songs for baritone, cello, piano
    • no. 1. Annabel Lee (Text: Edgar Allan Poe) FRE RUS
    • no. 2. Mild the mist (Text: Emily Brontë)
    • no. 3. The sun has set (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • Three spiritual poems of Nick Peros
    • no. 1. Sweet is the scent of sacred pine (Text: Nick Peros)
    • no. 2. The crystal water of endless life (Text: Nick Peros)
    • no. 3. Time is sleeping (Text: Nick Peros)
  • To One who has been Long in City Pent. Four Poems by John Keats
    • no. 1. To one who has been long in city pent (Text: John Keats) ITA
    • no. 2. On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer (Text: John Keats)
    • no. 3. Bright star (Text: John Keats) GER ITA
    • no. 4. A song about myself (Text: John Keats)

All titles of vocal settings in Alphabetic order

  • A Big Pill (in Sick song suite) (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]
  • A bird came down the walk (in Five Poems by Emily Dickinson) (in The creatures' call) (Text: Emily Dickinson) GER
  • A child's amaze (in By the roadside) (Text: Walt Whitman)
  • A clear midnight (in Three inscriptions by Walt Whitman) (Text: Walt Whitman) CAT FRE GER GER
  • adam talks to temptation (Text: Hollie Dunkley) *
  • A drop fell on the apple tree (in Five Poems by Emily Dickinson) (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER
  • A farm picture (in By the roadside) (Text: Walt Whitman)
  • A little budding rose (in Five Poems of Emily Brontë) (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • Animals (in Three inscriptions by Walt Whitman) (in The creatures' call) (Text: Walt Whitman)
  • Annabel Lee (in Three songs for baritone, cello, piano) (Text: Edgar Allan Poe) FRE RUS
  • A noiseless, patient spider (Text: Walt Whitman)
  • A poison tree (in Eight Poems of William Blake) (Text: William Blake) CAT FRE GER
  • A shepherd band (Text: Anonymous)
  • A song about myself (in To One who has been Long in City Pent. Four Poems by John Keats) (Text: John Keats)
  • Atalanta picks up the apples (in Three Latin Poems by Catullus) (Text: Gaius Valerius Catullus) ENG ITA
  • Autumn: Besides the autumn poets sing (in The Seasons: Four Poems of Emily Dickinson) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
  • A woodland walk (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]
  • Beautiful women (in By the roadside) (Text: Walt Whitman)
  • Because your voice was at my side (in Because your voice was at my side) (Text: James Joyce) FRE
  • Beginning my studies (in Three inscriptions by Walt Whitman) (Text: Walt Whitman)
  • Bright star (in To One who has been Long in City Pent. Four Poems by John Keats) (Text: John Keats) GER ITA
  • Catch a cold and pass it on (in Sick song suite) (Text: Nneka Cummins) [x]
  • Doppelgänger (Text: James Albert Lindon) *
  • Elemental (in Four Poems of Lauren Peat) (Text: Lauren Peat) [x]
  • Fall, leaves, fall (in Reflection: Three Poems by Emily Brontë) (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • First Silver, Then Invisible (Text: Susan Glickman) [x]*
  • Go heart (Text: 5th century)
  • Green (in Four Poems of Lauren Peat) (Text: Lauren Peat) [x]
  • He is risen (Text: Fanny Alexander, née Fanny Humphry , as Cecil Francis Alexander, Mrs. )
  • Holy Thursday (in Eight Poems of William Blake) (Text: William Blake)
  • Hope (in Five Poems by Emily Dickinson) (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER GER
  • I don’t feel at all healthy today (in Sick song suite) (Text: Evie Dwyer) [x]
  • If he stays (in Songs of fracture) (Text: Michaela Chiste) [x]
  • If I can stop one heart from breaking (in I'm Nobody!) (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER ITA
  • If (Text: Rudyard Kipling) [x]
  • I got kin (in Hafez: Unaccompanied songs) (Text: Daniel Ladinsky after Hafis) [x] ⊗*
  • I hate and I love (in Three Latin Poems by Catullus) (Text: Gaius Valerius Catullus) ENG ENG GER ITA SPA
  • I know what the caged bird feels (Text: Paul Laurence Dunbar)
  • I'll come when thou art saddest (in Five Poems of Emily Brontë) (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • I look for the cold (in Songs of fracture) (Text: Michaela Chiste) [x]
  • I love school (in Sick song suite) (Text: Abigail Weinstock) [x]
  • I love to think that Jesus saw (Text: Ada Skemp)
  • I'm nobody! Who are you? (in I'm Nobody!) (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER GER ITA
  • I never saw a moor (in My Letter to the world) (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER GER ITA
  • In freezing winter night (Text: Robert Southwell) FRE GER
  • In the carpenter shop [x]
  • I taste a liquor (in Five Poems by Emily Dickinson) (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER
  • I was not permitted (in Songs of fracture) (Text: Michaela Chiste) [x]
  • I wish I could speak like music (in Hafez: Unaccompanied songs) (Text: Daniel Ladinsky after Hafis) [x] ⊗*
  • Jabberwocky (Text: Charles Lutwidge Dodgson , as Lewis Carroll)
  • Judas to Jesus (Text: Hollie Dunkley) [x]*
  • Lean out of the window (in Because your voice was at my side) (Text: James Joyce) FRE IRI POL
  • Lies (Text: Radha Mehta) [x]
  • Little Boy Blue (in A Child's Vision) (Text: Eugene Field)
  • London (1) (in Eight Poems of William Blake) (Text: William Blake) CAT FRE
  • London (2) (in Eight Poems of William Blake) (Text: William Blake) CAT FRE
  • Lonely at her window (in Three Short Poems by Emily Brontë) (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • Love and Friendship (in Four songs for voice, violin, and cello from poems by Emily Brontë) (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • Love Bug (in Sick song suite) (Text: Lizzie Oakley) [x]
  • Lullaby - Ere the moon begins to rise (Text: Thomas Bailey Aldrich)
  • Maestro (Text: Hollie Dunkley) [x]*
  • Making a man (Text: Nixon Waterman) [x]
  • Mild the mist (in Three songs for baritone, cello, piano) (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • Mother and babe (in By the roadside) (Text: Walt Whitman)
  • My fiftieth year (in Four Songs from 'A Man Young and Old') (Text: William Butler Yeats)
  • My God, why hast thou forsaken me (Text: Bible or other Sacred Texts after Bible or other Sacred Texts) GER
  • My love is in a light attire (in Because your voice was at my side) (Text: James Joyce) FRE
  • Naomi, you shall not call me (in Ruth) (Text: Roger A. Bayley) *
  • Nature’s cry
  • No second Troy (in Four Songs from 'A Man Young and Old') (Text: William Butler Yeats) FRE
  • Not everything that breaks is broken (in Poems of serenity and contemplation of Lydia Sharpe ) (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]*
  • O clap your hands (Text: Bible or other Sacred Texts after Bible or other Sacred Texts) FRE GER
  • O cool is the valley now (in Because your voice was at my side) (Text: James Joyce) FRE
  • O Evening (in Four songs for voice, violin, and cello from poems by Emily Brontë) (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • O my dear heart (Text: The brothers Wedderburn after Martin Luther) DUT FRE GER
  • On being asked for a War Poem (in Four Songs from 'A Man Young and Old') (Text: William Butler Yeats)
  • On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer (in To One who has been Long in City Pent. Four Poems by John Keats) (Text: John Keats)
  • Ozymandias (in Four Romantic Songs) (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley) CZE GER HUN ITA POL RUS
  • Please Miss, Let Me Go Home! (in Sick song suite) (Text: Aimee Gray) [x]
  • Prayer of St. Francis (Text: Anonymous after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist) GER
  • Psalm 150 (Text: Bible or other Sacred Texts after Bible or other Sacred Texts) FRE GER ICE
  • Reading Gaol (Text: Oscar Wilde)
  • Rejoice today with one accord (Text: Henry Williams Baker, Sir)
  • Ring out, wild bells (Text: Alfred Tennyson, Lord) SWE
  • Sailing to Byzantium (in Songs of the Spirit) (Text: William Butler Yeats) GER ITA
  • Scarf and mittens (Text: Jessica Speziale) [x]*
  • Seeker (in Poems of serenity and contemplation of Lydia Sharpe ) (Text: Lydia Sharpe) *
  • Serenity (in Poems of serenity and contemplation of Lydia Sharpe ) (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]
  • Seven times one (in A Child's Vision) (Text: Jean Ingelow)
  • She dried her tears (in Four songs for voice, violin, and cello from poems by Emily Brontë) (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • She rested by the Broken Brook (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson)
  • Snowflakes fall softly (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]*
  • Solitude (in Poems of serenity and contemplation of Lydia Sharpe ) (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]*
  • Song of thanks [x]
  • So set its sun in thee (in Five Poems by Emily Dickinson) (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER
  • So we'll go no more a-roving (in Four Romantic Songs) (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron) FRE GER
  • Spring: A light exists in spring (in The Seasons: Four Poems of Emily Dickinson) (Text: Emily Dickinson) GER ITA
  • Spring (in Eight Poems of William Blake) (Text: William Blake) GER
  • Still beside the dreary water (in Five Poems of Emily Brontë) (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • Sublunar (in Four Poems of Lauren Peat) (Text: Lauren Peat) [x]
  • Summer: It will be Summer - eventually (in The Seasons: Four Poems of Emily Dickinson) (Text: Emily Dickinson)
  • Swan Lake (in Poems of serenity and contemplation of Lydia Sharpe ) (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]*
  • Sweet is the scent of sacred pine (in Three spiritual poems of Nick Peros) (Text: Nick Peros)
  • Tell me, tell me, smiling child (in Five Poems of Emily Brontë) (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • That crazed girl (in Four Songs from 'A Man Young and Old') (Text: William Butler Yeats)
  • The Accompanist (Text: Miriam Richards) [x]
  • The Baiji Dolphin (China) (in Elegies for the 21st Century) (Text: Susan Glickman) [x]*
  • The Black-Faced Honey Creeper (Hawaii) (in Elegies for the 21st Century) (in The creatures' call) (Text: Susan Glickman) [x]*
  • The brain is wider than the sky (Text: Emily Dickinson) GER
  • The Burning Babe (Text: Robert Southwell)
  • The cat and the moon (Text: William Butler Yeats) FRE
  • The City (Text: Michaela Chiste) [x]*
  • The crystal water of endless life (in Three spiritual poems of Nick Peros) (Text: Nick Peros)
  • The evening sun (in Five Poems of Emily Brontë) (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • The faeries (in Flights of Fancy: Four Poems by Lydia Sharpe) (Text: Lydia Sharpe) *
  • The golden mean (Text: M. M. Smith after Horace ) [x]
  • The human seasons (Text: John Keats)
  • The lamb (in Eight Poems of William Blake) (in The creatures' call) (Text: William Blake) CAT GER GER RUS
  • The Land of Myth (in Flights of Fancy: Four Poems by Lydia Sharpe) (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]
  • The Little Vagabond (in Eight Poems of William Blake) (Text: William Blake)
  • The monkey speaks his mind (in The creatures' call) [x]
  • The Monteverde Toad (Costa Rica) (in Elegies for the 21st Century) (Text: Susan Glickman) [x]*
  • The night before Christmas (Text: Clement Clarke Moore)
  • The Poet sings of Ruth (Text: Thomas Hood)
  • The Pyrenean Ibex (France and Spain) (in Elegies for the 21st Century) (Text: Susan Glickman) [x]*
  • There are two trees (in Three Short Poems by Emily Brontë) (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • The Record of John [x]
  • The River Otter (Japan) (in Elegies for the 21st Century) (Text: Susan Glickman) *
  • The runner (in By the roadside) (Text: Walt Whitman)
  • The Savior must have been (Text: Emily Dickinson)
  • The sky is low (in My Letter to the world) (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER GER
  • The soft unclouded blue of air (in Four songs for voice, violin, and cello from poems by Emily Brontë) (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • The sound surrounds (in Songs of fracture) (Text: Michaela Chiste) [x]
  • The sun has set (in Reflection: Three Poems by Emily Brontë) (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • The sun has set (in Reflection: Three Poems by Emily Brontë) (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • The sun has set (in Three songs for baritone, cello, piano) (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • The traveler (Text: Jessica Speziale) [x]*
  • The twinkling moon (Text: Jessica Speziale) [x]*
  • The Tyger (in Eight Poems of William Blake) (Text: William Blake) CAT CHI FRE GER GER RUS
  • The voice of God (in Songs of Brotherhood) (Text: John Henry Newman; Louis Israel Newman)
  • The wild waters (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]*
  • The woman beside the lake is reading (Text: Susan Glickman) [x]*
  • They say I'm sick (in Sick song suite) (Text: Palvisha Khan) [x]
  • This is my letter to the world (in My Letter to the world) (Text: Emily Dickinson) GER
  • This quiet Dust (in Songs of the Spirit) (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER ITA
  • Thumbelina (in Flights of Fancy: Four Poems by Lydia Sharpe) (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]
  • Time is sleeping (in Three spiritual poems of Nick Peros) (Text: Nick Peros)
  • To Diana (in Three Latin Poems by Catullus) (Text: Gaius Valerius Catullus)
  • To one who has been long in city pent (in To One who has been Long in City Pent. Four Poems by John Keats) (Text: John Keats) ITA
  • To see the World in a Grain of Sand (in Songs of the Spirit) (Text: William Blake) CAT FRE GER GER ITA RUS
  • Twas one of those dark and cloudy days (in Three Short Poems by Emily Brontë) (Text: Emily Brontë)
  • Villanelle (Text: Saffron Aldred) *
  • Vow (Text: Susan Holbrook) [x]
  • We have to do a test at school (in Sick song suite) (Text: Natasha Kotadia) [x]
  • What if? (in Songs of the Spirit) (Text: Samuel Taylor Coleridge)
  • What passes through (in Four Poems of Lauren Peat) (Text: Lauren Peat) [x]*
  • What was his creed? (in Songs of Brotherhood) (Text: H. N. Fifer) [x]
  • When I heard the learn'd astronomer (in Four Romantic Songs) (Text: Walt Whitman)
  • When I'm lost and when I'm weary (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]*
  • When I was one and twenty (in Four Romantic Songs) (Text: Frederick E. Weatherly)
  • When Mary goes walking (Text: Patrick Reginald Chalmers)
  • When roses cease to bloom, dear (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE
  • Who are my people? (in Songs of Brotherhood) (Text: Rosa Zagnoni Marinoni) [x]*
  • Who is this? (in Songs of the Spirit) (Text: Rabindranath Tagore after Rabindranath Tagore) ⊗ GER
  • Will there really be a morning (in I'm Nobody!) (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER
  • Winter: There’s a certain slant of light (in The Seasons: Four Poems of Emily Dickinson) (Text: Emily Dickinson) FRE GER
  • With rue my heart is laden (in Poems by A.E.Housman) (Text: Alfred Edward Housman)
  • Words (in Flights of Fancy: Four Poems by Lydia Sharpe) (Text: Lydia Sharpe) *
  • Wynken, Blynken, and Nod (A Dutch Lullaby) (in A Child's Vision) (Text: Eugene Field)
  • Your God shall be my God (in Ruth) (Text: Roger A. Bayley) *
  • Zechariah, do not fear (in John) (Text: Roger A. Bayley) *
  • [Title unknown] (in Poems of serenity and contemplation of Lydia Sharpe ) (Text: Lydia Sharpe) [x]*

Last update: 2025-05-30 04:32:45

Gentle Reminder

This website began in 1995 as a personal project by Emily Ezust, who has been working on it full-time without a salary since 2008. Our research has never had any government or institutional funding, so if you found the information here useful, please consider making a donation. Your help is greatly appreciated!
–Emily Ezust, Founder

Donate

We use cookies for internal analytics and to earn much-needed advertising revenue. (Did you know you can help support us by turning off ad-blockers?) To learn more, see our Privacy Policy. To learn how to opt out of cookies, please visit this site.

I acknowledge the use of cookies

Contact
Copyright
Privacy

Copyright © 2025 The LiederNet Archive

Site redesign by Shawn Thuris