Texts to Art Songs and Choral Works by C. Parry
See Opus Order
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.
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 Garland of Shakesperian and Other Old-Fashioned Songs, op. 21
- no. 1. Love's perjuries (Text: William Shakespeare) FRE
- no. 2. A spring song (Text: William Shakespeare) FIN FRE GER GER GER
- no. 3. A contrast [x]
- no. 4. Love is a sickness (Text: Samuel Daniel; Thomas Maske) GER
- no. 5. A sea dirge (Text: William Shakespeare) DUT FIN FRE FRE FRE GER GER IRI ITA ITA NOR SPA SWE
- no. 6. Merry Margaret (Text: John Skelton)
- A Selection of Welsh Melodies
- Prince Madog's Farewell (Text: Felicia Dorothea Hemans)
- Eight Four-part Songs
- no. 1. Phillis (Text: Anonymous)
- no. 2. O Love, they wrong thee much (Text: Anonymous)
- no. 3. At her fair hands
- no. 4. Home of my heart (Text: Arthur Christopher Benson)
- no. 5. You gentle nymphs
- no. 6. Come pretty wag (Text: Anonymous)
- no. 7. Ye thrilled me once (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- no. 8. Better music ne'er was known (Text: Francis Beaumont; John Fletcher)
- English Lyrics, Eighth Set
- no. 1. Whence (Text: Julian Sturgis)
- no. 2. Nightfall in winter (Text: Langdon Elwyn Mitchell)
- no. 3. Marian (Text: George Meredith)
- no. 4. Dirge in woods (Text: George Meredith)
- no. 5. Looking backward (Text: Julian Sturgis)
- no. 6. Come, boy Bacchus (Text: Julian Sturgis)
- English Lyrics, Eleventh Set
- no. 1. One golden thread (Text: Julia Chatterton) [x]
- no. 2. What part of dread eternity (Text: Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, Sir)
- no. 3. The spirit of the Spring (Text: Alfred Perceval Graves)
- no. 4. The blackbird (Text: Alfred Perceval Graves)
- no. 5. The faithful lover (Text: Alfred Perceval Graves)
- no. 6. If I might ride on puissant wing (Text: Julian Sturgis) [x]
- no. 7. Why art thou slow (Text: Philip Massinger)
- no. 8. She is my love beyond all thought (Text: Alfred Perceval Graves)
- English Lyrics, Fifth Set
- no. 1. A stray nymph of Dian (Text: Julian Sturgis)
- no. 2. Proud Maisie (Text: Walter Scott, Sir)
- no. 3. Crabbed age and youth (Text: Anonymous) FRE
- no. 4. Lay a garland on my hearse (Text: Francis Beaumont; John Fletcher) DUT GER
- no. 5. Love and laughter (Text: Arthur Gray Butler, Reverend) [x]
- no. 6. A girl to her class (Text: Julian Sturgis) [x]
- no. 7. A Welsh lullaby (Text: E. O. Jones after Volkslieder )
- English Lyrics, First Set
- no. 1. My true love hath my heart (Text: Philip Sidney, Sir)
- no. 2. Good Night! ah! no; the hour is ill that severs those it should unite (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley) CZE ITA ROM RUS
- no. 3. Where shall the lover rest, whom the fates sever from his true maiden's breast (Text: Walter Scott, Sir)
- no. 4. Willow, willow, willow (Text: William Shakespeare after Volkslieder ) FRE GER GER GER GER RUS
- English Lyrics, Fourth Set
- no. 1. Thine eyes still shined for me (Text: Ralph Waldo Emerson)
- no. 2. When lovers meet again (Text: Langdon Elwyn Mitchell)
- no. 3. When we two parted (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron) CHI FRE
- no. 4. Weep you no more (Text: 16th century) FRE GER
- no. 5. There be none of Beauty's daughters (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron) CAT CZE DAN DUT FRE GER GER GER ITA RUS RUS
- no. 6. Bright star (Text: John Keats) GER ITA
- English Lyrics, Ninth Set
- no. 1. Three aspects (Text: Mary Coleridge)
- no. 2. A fairy town (Text: Mary Coleridge)
- no. 3. The witches' wood (Text: Mary Coleridge)
- no. 4. Whether I live (Text: Mary Coleridge)
- no. 5. Armida's garden (Text: Mary Coleridge) CAT
- no. 6. The maiden (Text: Mary Coleridge)
- no. 7. There (Text: Mary Coleridge)
- English Lyrics, Second Set
- no. 1. O mistress mine (Text: William Shakespeare) FIN FRE GER GER GER IRI ITA NOR POL
- no. 2. Take, o take those lips away (Text: Anonymous) CAT DUT DUT FIN FRE FRE GER GER GER POL
- no. 3. No longer mourn for me (Text: William Shakespeare) FRE GER HUN ITA RUS
- no. 4. Blow, blow thou winter wind (Text: William Shakespeare) CHI FIN FRE GER GER ITA ITA RUS SWE
- no. 5. When icicles hang by the wall (Text: William Shakespeare) FIN FRE GER RUS
- English Lyrics, Seventh Set
- no. 1. On a time the amorous Silvy (Text: Anonymous)
- no. 2. Follow a shadow (Text: Ben Jonson) GER
- no. 3. Ye little birds that sit and sing (Text: Thomas Heywood)
- no. 4. O never say that I was false of heart (Text: William Shakespeare) FRE RUS
- no. 5. Julia (Text: Robert Herrick)
- no. 6. Sleep (Text: Julian Sturgis)
- English Lyrics, Sixth Set
- no. 1. When comes my Gwen (Text: E. O. Jones after Richard Davies)
- no. 2. And yet I love her till I die (Text: Anonymous) GER GER
- no. 3. Love is a bable (Text: Anonymous)
- no. 4. A lover's garland (Text: Alfred Perceval Graves after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist) [x]
- no. 5. At the hour the long day ends (Text: Alfred Perceval Graves after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist) [x]
- no. 6. Under the greenwood tree (Text: William Shakespeare) DUT FIN FRE GER GER
- English Lyrics, Tenth Set
- no. 1. My heart is like a singing bird (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- no. 2. Gone were but the winter cold (Text: Allan Cunningham)
- no. 3. A moment of farewell (Text: Julian Sturgis) [x]
- no. 4. The child and the twilight (Text: Langdon Elwyn Mitchell) [x]
- no. 5. From a city window (Text: Langdon Elwyn Mitchell)
- no. 6. The ungentle guest (Text: Robert Herrick)
- English Lyrics, Third Set
- no. 1. To Lucasta, on going to the wars (Text: Richard Lovelace) GER
- no. 2. If thou would'st ease thine heart (Text: Thomas Lovell Beddoes) CAT
- no. 3. To Althea, from prison (Text: Richard Lovelace) GER
- no. 4. Why so pale and wan? (Text: John Suckling, Sir) GER
- no. 5. Through the ivory gate (Text: Julian Sturgis)
- no. 6. Of all the torments (Text: William Walsh)
- English Lyrics, Twelfth Set
- no. 1. When the dew is falling (Text: Julia Chatterton) [x]
- no. 2. To blossoms (Text: Robert Herrick)
- no. 3. Rosaline (Text: Thomas Lodge) GER
- no. 4. Resurrection (Text: Mrs. H. Warner) [x]
- no. 5. Dream-Pedlary (Text: Thomas Lovell Beddoes)
- no. 6. A lament (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley) CZE ITA RUS
- no. 7. The sound of hidden music (Text: Julia Chatterton) [x]
- Four Sonnets of Shakespeare
- no. 1. When in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes (Text: William Shakespeare) DUT FRE ITA
- no. 2. Farewell, thou are too dear for my possessing (Text: William Shakespeare) FRE ITA
- no. 3. Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? (Text: William Shakespeare) DUT FIN FRE FRE GER ITA RUS RUS
- no. 4. When to the sessions of sweet silent thought (Text: William Shakespeare) FRE GER ITA RUS
- Invocation to music - An Ode in Honour of Henry Purcell
- no. 1. Myriad voicèd Queen! (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- no. 2. Turn, O return! (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- no. 3. Thee, fair Poetry oft hath sought (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- no. 4. The monstrous sea (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- no. 5. Love to Love calleth (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- no. 7. Man, born of desire (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- no. 7. Dirge (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- no. 8. Rejoice, ye dead, where'er your spirits dwell (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- no. 9. O enter with me the gates of delight (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- no. 10. Thou, O Queen of sinless grace (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- Kookoorookoo and other songs [multi-composer]
- Who has seen the wind?, composed by John Frederick Bridge (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- Fly away, fly away over the sea, composed by (Henry) Walford Davies, Sir (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti) GER
- Growing in the vale, composed by Alfred Jethro Silver (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- Hope is like a harebell trembling from its birth, composed by John Frederick Bridge (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- The horses of the sea, composed by Charles Villiers Stanford, Sir (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- If a pig wore a wig, composed by Walter Parratt (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- Ferry me across the water, composed by Charles Villiers Stanford, Sir (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti) GER
- I dug and dug amongst the snow, composed by Walter Galpin Alcock (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- If hope grew on a bush, composed by Thomas Frederick Dunhill (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- Is the moon tired? she looks so pale, composed by Alexander Campbell MacKenzie, Sir (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- Kookoorookoo, composed by Thomas Frederick Dunhill (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- Lullaby, oh lullaby!, composed by (Henry) Walford Davies, Sir (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- Mix a pancake, composed by Charles Wood (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- A motherless soft lambkin, composed by Alexander Campbell MacKenzie, Sir (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- Boats sail on the rivers, composed by Charles Wood (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- Brown and furry, composed by Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, Sir (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- The peacock has a score of eyes, composed by Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, Sir (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- A pin has a head but has no hair, composed by Charles Harford Lloyd (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- Sing me a song, composed by Walter Parratt (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- What do the stars do?, composed by Donald Francis Tovey (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- A rose has thorns as well as honey, composed by Charles Harford Lloyd (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- A white hen sitting, composed by Percy Carter Buck, Sir (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- Rosy maiden Winifred, composed by Walter Parratt (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- The summer nights are short, composed by Charles Villiers Stanford, Sir (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti) GER
- The wind has such a rainy sound, composed by Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, Sir (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- What is pink?, composed by Charles Wood (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- Ode to St. Cecelia's Day
- no. 1. Symphonia
- no. 2. Descend ye nine (Text: Alexander Pope) ITA
- no. 3. By music (Text: Alexander Pope) ITA
- no. 4. But when our country's cause provokes to arms (Text: Alexander Pope) ITA
- no. 5. But when through all the infernal bounds (Text: Alexander Pope) ITA
- no. 6. By the streams that ever flow (Text: Alexander Pope) ITA
- no. 7. He sung, and hell consented (Text: Alexander Pope) ITA
- no. 8. But soon, too soon, the lover turns his eyes (Text: Alexander Pope) ITA
- no. 9. Music the fiercest grief can charm (Text: Alexander Pope) ITA
- Seven Part Songs for Male-Voice Choir
- no. 1. Hang fear, cast away care (Text: Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, Sir) [x]
- no. 2. Love wakes and weeps (Text: Walter Scott, Sir)
- no. 3. The mad dog (Text: Oliver Goldsmith)
- no. 4. That very wise man, Old Aesop (Text: Charles Dickens) [x]
- no. 5. Orpheus (Text: Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, Sir) [x]
- no. 6. Out upon it! (Text: John Suckling, Sir)
- no. 7. An analogy (Text: Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, Sir) [x]
- Six Modern Lyrics
- no. 1. How sweet the answer (Text: Thomas Moore) CAT FRE GER
- no. 2. Since thou, O fondest and truest (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- no. 3. If I had but two little wings (Text: Samuel Taylor Coleridge , as Cordomi)
- no. 4. There rolls the deep (Text: Alfred Tennyson, Lord)
- no. 5. What voice of gladness (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- no. 6. Music, when soft voices die (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley) CZE FRE GER GER RUS
- Six Partsongs
- My delight and thy delight (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- Songs of Farewell
- no. 1. My soul, there is a country (Text: Henry Vaughan) FRE
- no. 2. I know my soul hath power (Text: John Davies, Sir)
- no. 3. Never weather-beaten sail (Text: Thomas Campion)
- no. 4. There is an old belief
- no. 5. At the round earth's imagin'd corners (Text: John Donne) FRE GER
- no. 6. Lord, let me know mine end (Text: Bible or other Sacred Texts)
- Three Odes of Anacreon
- no. 1. Away, away, you men of rules (Text: Thomas Moore after Anacreon)
- no. 2. Fill me, boy, as deep a draught (Text: Thomas Moore after Anacreon) GER
- no. 3. Golden hues of life are fled (Text: Thomas Moore after Anacreon)
- Three Songs, op. 12
- no. 1. The Poet's Song (Text: Alfred Tennyson, Lord)
- no. 2. More fond than Cushat dove (Text: Richard Harris Barham , as Thomas Ingoldsby)
- no. 3. Music (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley) CZE FRE GER GER RUS
All titles of vocal settings in Alphabetic order
- Absence, hear my protestation (Text: John Hoskins, Serjeant)
- A contrast, op. 21 no. 3 (in A Garland of Shakesperian and Other Old-Fashioned Songs) [x]
- A fairy town (in English Lyrics, Ninth Set) (Text: Mary Coleridge)
- A girl to her class (in English Lyrics, Fifth Set) (Text: Julian Sturgis) [x]
- Ah! woe is me! (Text: John Keats)
- A lament (in English Lyrics, Twelfth Set) (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley) CZE ITA RUS
- A lover's garland (in English Lyrics, Sixth Set) (Text: Alfred Perceval Graves after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist) [x]
- A moment of farewell (in English Lyrics, Tenth Set) (Text: Julian Sturgis) [x]
- An analogy (in Seven Part Songs for Male-Voice Choir) (Text: Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, Sir) [x]
- And Did Those Feet in Ancient Time, op. 208 (Text: William Blake) GER SPA
- And wilt thou leave me thus? (Text: Thomas Wyatt, Sir)
- And yet I love her till I die (in English Lyrics, Sixth Set) (Text: Anonymous) GER GER
- An Epigram (Text: Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, Sir) [x]
- An Evening Cloud (Text: John Wilson)
- Angel hosts, sweet love, befriend thee (Text: Francis Hervey, Lord) [x]
- Arise (Text: Mrs. H. Warner) [x]
- Armida's garden (in English Lyrics, Ninth Set) (Text: Mary Coleridge) CAT
- A sea dirge, op. 21 no. 5 (in A Garland of Shakesperian and Other Old-Fashioned Songs) (Text: William Shakespeare) DUT FIN FRE FRE FRE GER GER IRI ITA ITA NOR SPA SWE
- A shadow (Text: Adelaide Anne Procter)
- A Song of Darkness and Light [multi-text setting] (Text: Bridges)
- A spring song, op. 21 no. 2 (in A Garland of Shakesperian and Other Old-Fashioned Songs) (Text: William Shakespeare) FIN FRE GER GER GER
- As thro' the land at eve we went (Text: Alfred Tennyson, Lord) GER
- A stray nymph of Dian (in English Lyrics, Fifth Set) (Text: Julian Sturgis)
- At her fair hands (in Eight Four-part Songs)
- At the hour the long day ends (in English Lyrics, Sixth Set) (Text: Alfred Perceval Graves after Anonymous/Unidentified Artist) [x]
- At the round earth's imagin'd corners (in Songs of Farewell) (Text: John Donne) FRE GER
- Autumn (Text: Thomas Hood)
- Away, away, you men of rules (in Three Odes of Anacreon) (Text: Thomas Moore after Anacreon)
- A Welsh lullaby (in English Lyrics, Fifth Set) (Text: E. O. Jones after Volkslieder )
- Bed in summer (Text: Robert Louis Stevenson) ITA
- Better music ne'er was known (in Eight Four-part Songs) (Text: Francis Beaumont; John Fletcher)
- Bitter sweet (Text: Henry Newbolt, Sir)
- Blest pair of sirens (Text: John Milton)
- Blow, blow thou winter wind (in English Lyrics, Second Set) (Text: William Shakespeare) CHI FIN FRE GER GER ITA ITA RUS SWE
- Bright star (in English Lyrics, Fourth Set) (Text: John Keats) GER ITA
- Brown and furry (in Kookoorookoo and other songs) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- But soon, too soon, the lover turns his eyes (in Ode to St. Cecelia's Day) (Text: Alexander Pope) ITA
- But when our country's cause provokes to arms (in Ode to St. Cecelia's Day) (Text: Alexander Pope) ITA
- But when through all the infernal bounds (in Ode to St. Cecelia's Day) (Text: Alexander Pope) ITA
- By music (in Ode to St. Cecelia's Day) (Text: Alexander Pope) ITA
- By the streams that ever flow (in Ode to St. Cecelia's Day) (Text: Alexander Pope) ITA
- Come, boy Bacchus (in English Lyrics, Eighth Set) (Text: Julian Sturgis)
- Come pretty wag (in Eight Four-part Songs) (Text: Anonymous)
- Crabbed age and youth (in English Lyrics, Fifth Set) (Text: Anonymous) FRE
- Crossing the Bar (Text: Alfred Tennyson, Lord) CHI
- Dainty form, so firm and slight [x]
- Descend ye nine (in Ode to St. Cecelia's Day) (Text: Alexander Pope) ITA
- Dirge in woods (in English Lyrics, Eighth Set) (Text: George Meredith)
- Dirge (in Invocation to music - An Ode in Honour of Henry Purcell) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- Does the road wind upwards (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- Dream-Pedlary (in English Lyrics, Twelfth Set) (Text: Thomas Lovell Beddoes)
- Eton Memorial Ode (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- Eton (Text: Algernon Charles Swinburne)
- Fair is my Love (Text: Edmund Spenser)
- Farewell, thou are too dear for my possessing (in Four Sonnets of Shakespeare) (Text: William Shakespeare) FRE ITA
- Fear no more the heat o' the sun (Text: William Shakespeare) FIN FRE GER GER ITA SPA
- Fill me, boy, as deep a draught (in Three Odes of Anacreon) (Text: Thomas Moore after Anacreon) GER
- Follow a shadow (in English Lyrics, Seventh Set) (Text: Ben Jonson) GER
- From a city window (in English Lyrics, Tenth Set) (Text: Langdon Elwyn Mitchell)
- Golden hues of life are fled (in Three Odes of Anacreon) (Text: Thomas Moore after Anacreon)
- Gone were but the winter cold (in English Lyrics, Tenth Set) (Text: Allan Cunningham)
- Good Night! ah! no; the hour is ill that severs those it should unite (in English Lyrics, First Set) (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley) CZE ITA ROM RUS
- Grapes (in English Lyrics, Eighth Set) (Text: Julian Sturgis)
- Hang fear, cast away care (in Seven Part Songs for Male-Voice Choir) (Text: Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, Sir) [x]
- Her eyes the glow-worm lend thee (Text: Robert Herrick)
- He sung, and hell consented (in Ode to St. Cecelia's Day) (Text: Alexander Pope) ITA
- High on the throne of golden light [x]
- Hollow and vast starr'd skies are o'er us [x]
- Home of my heart (in Eight Four-part Songs) (Text: Arthur Christopher Benson)
- How sweet the answer (in Six Modern Lyrics) (Text: Thomas Moore) CAT FRE GER
- I arise from dreams of thee (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley) CHI CZE FRE GER GER ITA
- If I had but two little wings (in Six Modern Lyrics) (Text: Samuel Taylor Coleridge , as Cordomi)
- If I might ride on puissant wing (in English Lyrics, Eleventh Set) (Text: Julian Sturgis) [x]
- If thou survive my well-contented day (Text: William Shakespeare) FRE ITA
- If thou would'st ease thine heart (in English Lyrics, Third Set) (Text: Thomas Lovell Beddoes) CAT
- I know my soul hath power (in Songs of Farewell) (Text: John Davies, Sir)
- I praise the tender flower (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges) DUT
- Jerusalem, op. 208 (Text: William Blake) GER SPA
- Julia (in English Lyrics, Seventh Set) (Text: Robert Herrick)
- La belle dame sans merci (Text: John Keats , as Caviare) CZE GER HUN ITA RUS
- Lay a garland on my hearse (in English Lyrics, Fifth Set) (Text: Francis Beaumont; John Fletcher) DUT GER
- Looking backward (in English Lyrics, Eighth Set) (Text: Julian Sturgis)
- Lord, let me know mine end (in Songs of Farewell) (Text: Bible or other Sacred Texts)
- Love and laughter (in English Lyrics, Fifth Set) (Text: Arthur Gray Butler, Reverend) [x]
- Love is a bable (in English Lyrics, Sixth Set) (Text: Anonymous)
- Love is a sickness, op. 21 no. 4 (in A Garland of Shakesperian and Other Old-Fashioned Songs) (Text: Samuel Daniel; Thomas Maske) GER
- Love not me (Text: Anonymous)
- Love's perjuries, op. 21 no. 1 (in A Garland of Shakesperian and Other Old-Fashioned Songs) (Text: William Shakespeare) FRE
- Love the tyrant (Text: Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, Sir) [x]
- Love to Love calleth (in Invocation to music - An Ode in Honour of Henry Purcell) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- Love wakes and weeps (in Seven Part Songs for Male-Voice Choir) (Text: Walter Scott, Sir)
- Man, born of desire (in Invocation to music - An Ode in Honour of Henry Purcell) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- Marian (in English Lyrics, Eighth Set) (Text: George Meredith)
- Merry Margaret, op. 21 no. 6 (in A Garland of Shakesperian and Other Old-Fashioned Songs) (Text: John Skelton)
- Miss Agnes had two or three dolls [x]
- More fond than Cushat dove, op. 12 no. 2 (in Three Songs) (Text: Richard Harris Barham , as Thomas Ingoldsby)
- Music the fiercest grief can charm (in Ode to St. Cecelia's Day) (Text: Alexander Pope) ITA
- Music, when soft voices die (in Six Modern Lyrics) (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley) CZE FRE GER GER RUS
- Music, op. 12 no. 3 (in Three Songs) (Text: Percy Bysshe Shelley) CZE FRE GER GER RUS
- My delight and thy delight (in Six Partsongs) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- My heart is like a singing bird (in English Lyrics, Tenth Set) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- My passion you regard with scorn [x]
- Myriad voicèd Queen! (in Invocation to music - An Ode in Honour of Henry Purcell) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- My soul is like a bird, singing in fair weather [x]
- My soul, there is a country (in Songs of Farewell) (Text: Henry Vaughan) FRE
- My true love hath my heart (in English Lyrics, First Set) (Text: Philip Sidney, Sir)
- Never weather-beaten sail (in Songs of Farewell) (Text: Thomas Campion)
- Newfoundland (Text: Cavendish Boyle, Sir) [x]
- Nightfall in winter (in English Lyrics, Eighth Set) (Text: Langdon Elwyn Mitchell)
- Noble of air (Text: Paul England) [x]
- No longer mourn for me (in English Lyrics, Second Set) (Text: William Shakespeare) FRE GER HUN ITA RUS
- Not unavailing [x]
- O enter with me the gates of delight (in Invocation to music - An Ode in Honour of Henry Purcell) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- Of all the torments (in English Lyrics, Third Set) (Text: William Walsh)
- Oft in the stilly night (Text: Thomas Moore) CAT FRE GER GER
- O Love, they wrong thee much (in Eight Four-part Songs) (Text: Anonymous)
- O mistress mine (in English Lyrics, Second Set) (Text: William Shakespeare) FIN FRE GER GER GER IRI ITA NOR POL
- On a time the amorous Silvy (in English Lyrics, Seventh Set) (Text: Anonymous)
- One golden thread (in English Lyrics, Eleventh Set) (Text: Julia Chatterton) [x]
- O never say that I was false of heart (in English Lyrics, Seventh Set) (Text: William Shakespeare) FRE RUS
- Orpheus (in Seven Part Songs for Male-Voice Choir) (Text: Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, Sir) [x]
- Out upon it! (in Seven Part Songs for Male-Voice Choir) (Text: John Suckling, Sir)
- Phillis (in Eight Four-part Songs) (Text: Anonymous)
- Prince Madog's Farewell (in A Selection of Welsh Melodies) (Text: Felicia Dorothea Hemans)
- Proud Maisie (in English Lyrics, Fifth Set) (Text: Walter Scott, Sir)
- Rejoice, ye dead, where'er your spirits dwell (in Invocation to music - An Ode in Honour of Henry Purcell) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- Resurrection (in English Lyrics, Twelfth Set) (Text: Mrs. H. Warner) [x]
- Rosaline (in English Lyrics, Twelfth Set) (Text: Thomas Lodge) GER
- Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? (in Four Sonnets of Shakespeare) (Text: William Shakespeare) DUT FIN FRE FRE GER ITA RUS RUS
- She is my love beyond all thought (in English Lyrics, Eleventh Set) (Text: Alfred Perceval Graves)
- She thought by heaven's high wall that she did stray [x]
- Since thou, O fondest and truest (in Six Modern Lyrics) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- Sleep, my love, untouched by sorrow [x]
- Sleep (in English Lyrics, Seventh Set) (Text: Julian Sturgis)
- Symphonia (in Ode to St. Cecelia's Day)
- Take, o take those lips away (in English Lyrics, Second Set) (Text: Anonymous) CAT DUT DUT FIN FRE FRE GER GER GER POL
- That very wise man, Old Aesop (in Seven Part Songs for Male-Voice Choir) (Text: Charles Dickens) [x]
- The blackbird (in English Lyrics, Eleventh Set) (Text: Alfred Perceval Graves)
- The child and the twilight (in English Lyrics, Tenth Set) (Text: Langdon Elwyn Mitchell) [x]
- The chivalry of the sea (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- The Choric Song from "The Lotos Eaters" (Text: Alfred Tennyson, Lord)
- The Day of Life (Text: Hamilton Aïdé) [x]
- Thee, fair Poetry oft hath sought (in Invocation to music - An Ode in Honour of Henry Purcell) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- The faithful lover (in English Lyrics, Eleventh Set) (Text: Alfred Perceval Graves)
- The feather (Text: Walter De la Mare) [x]
- The four brothers (Text: Walter De la Mare) [x]
- The Laird of Cockpen (Text: Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne) [x]
- The mad dog (in Seven Part Songs for Male-Voice Choir) (Text: Oliver Goldsmith)
- The maiden (in English Lyrics, Ninth Set) (Text: Mary Coleridge)
- The Maid of Elsinore (Text: Harold Boulton, Sir)
- The monstrous sea (in Invocation to music - An Ode in Honour of Henry Purcell) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- The moon has cast her soft pale light [x]
- The North Wind (Text: William Ernest Henley)
- The owl (Text: Alfred Tennyson, Lord) GER GER
- The peacock has a score of eyes (in Kookoorookoo and other songs) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- The Poet's Song, op. 12 no. 1 (in Three Songs) (Text: Alfred Tennyson, Lord)
- There be none of Beauty's daughters (in English Lyrics, Fourth Set) (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron) CAT CZE DAN DUT FRE GER GER GER ITA RUS RUS
- There is an old belief (in Songs of Farewell)
- There rolls the deep (in Six Modern Lyrics) (Text: Alfred Tennyson, Lord)
- There (in English Lyrics, Ninth Set) (Text: Mary Coleridge)
- The River of Life (Text: George Robert Charles Herbert, 13th Earl of Pembroke; George Henry Kingsley)
- The Soldier's Tent (Text: Alma Strettell; Elisabeth Pauline Ottilie Luise zu Wied, Prinzessin after Volkslieder )
- The sound of hidden music (in English Lyrics, Twelfth Set) (Text: Julia Chatterton) [x]
- The spirit of the Spring (in English Lyrics, Eleventh Set) (Text: Alfred Perceval Graves)
- The ungentle guest (in English Lyrics, Tenth Set) (Text: Robert Herrick)
- The wind has such a rainy sound (in Kookoorookoo and other songs) (Text: Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- The witches' wood (in English Lyrics, Ninth Set) (Text: Mary Coleridge)
- Thine eyes still shined for me (in English Lyrics, Fourth Set) (Text: Ralph Waldo Emerson)
- Thou, O Queen of sinless grace (in Invocation to music - An Ode in Honour of Henry Purcell) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- Three aspects (in English Lyrics, Ninth Set) (Text: Mary Coleridge)
- Through the ivory gate (in English Lyrics, Third Set) (Text: Julian Sturgis)
- Tired are mine eyes of the world [x]
- To Althea, from prison (in English Lyrics, Third Set) (Text: Richard Lovelace) GER
- To blossoms (in English Lyrics, Twelfth Set) (Text: Robert Herrick)
- To Lucasta, on going to the wars (in English Lyrics, Third Set) (Text: Richard Lovelace) GER
- Turn, O return! (in Invocation to music - An Ode in Honour of Henry Purcell) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- Twilight, op. 23 no. 1 (Text: George Robert Charles Herbert, 13th Earl of Pembroke) [x]
- Under the greenwood tree (in English Lyrics, Sixth Set) (Text: William Shakespeare) DUT FIN FRE GER GER
- Weathers (Text: Thomas Hardy)
- Weep not over poets wrong [x]
- Weep you no more (in English Lyrics, Fourth Set) (Text: 16th century) FRE GER
- Welcome sweet treasure [x]
- What part of dread eternity (in English Lyrics, Eleventh Set) (Text: Charles Hubert Hastings Parry, Sir)
- What voice of gladness (in Six Modern Lyrics) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- Whence (in English Lyrics, Eighth Set) (Text: Julian Sturgis)
- When comes my Gwen (in English Lyrics, Sixth Set) (Text: E. O. Jones after Richard Davies)
- When icicles hang by the wall (in English Lyrics, Second Set) (Text: William Shakespeare) FIN FRE GER RUS
- When in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes (in Four Sonnets of Shakespeare) (Text: William Shakespeare) DUT FRE ITA
- When lovers meet again (in English Lyrics, Fourth Set) (Text: Langdon Elwyn Mitchell)
- When stars are in the quiet skies (Text: Edward George Earle Lytton Bulwer-Lytton)
- When the dew is falling (in English Lyrics, Twelfth Set) (Text: Julia Chatterton) [x]
- When the grey skies are flushed [x]
- When to the sessions of sweet silent thought (in Four Sonnets of Shakespeare) (Text: William Shakespeare) FRE GER ITA RUS
- When we two parted (in English Lyrics, Fourth Set) (Text: George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron) CHI FRE
- Where Claribel low-lieth (Text: Alfred Tennyson, Lord) GER
- Where shall the lover rest, whom the fates sever from his true maiden's breast (in English Lyrics, First Set) (Text: Walter Scott, Sir)
- Whether I live (in English Lyrics, Ninth Set) (Text: Mary Coleridge)
- Why art thou slow (in English Lyrics, Eleventh Set) (Text: Philip Massinger)
- Why does azure deck the sky?, op. 2 no. 1 (Text: Thomas Moore)
- Why so pale and wan? (in English Lyrics, Third Set) (Text: John Suckling, Sir) GER
- Willow, willow, willow (in English Lyrics, First Set) (Text: William Shakespeare after Volkslieder ) FRE GER GER GER GER RUS
- Wine and water (Text: Gilbert Keith Chesterton)
- Ye flowering banks of bonny Doon (Text: Robert Burns)
- Ye little birds that sit and sing (in English Lyrics, Seventh Set) (Text: Thomas Heywood)
- Ye thrilled me once (in Eight Four-part Songs) (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- You gentle nymphs (in Eight Four-part Songs)
Last update: 2024-12-14 05:00:37