PAGE | ||
Sunshine on de medders | 168 | |
Sweetest of the flowers a-blooming | 237 | |
Swing yo' lady roun' an' roun' | 200 | |
Tek a cool night, good an' cleah | 150 | |
Tell your love where the roses blow | 238 | |
Temples he built, and palaces of air | 100 | |
The air is dark, the sky is gray | 65 | |
The change has come, and Helen sleeps | 58 | |
The cloud looked in at the window | 72 | |
The draft of love was cool and sweet | 252 | |
The gray dawn on the mountain top | 248 | |
The gray of the sea, and the gray of the sky | 93 | |
The lake's dark breast | 8 | |
The lark is silent in his nest | 61 | |
The little bird sits in the nest and sings | 67 | |
The Midnight wooed the Morning-Star | 99 | |
The mist has left the greening plain | 252 | |
The moon begins her stately ride | 276 | |
The moon has left the sky, love | 46 | |
The night is dewy as a maiden's mouth | 64 | |
The November sun invites me | 282 | |
The poor man went to the rich man's doors | 106 | |
The rain streams down like harpstrings from the sky | 270 | |
The river sleeps beneath the sky | 9 | |
The sand-man he's a jolly old fellow | 235 | |
The sky of brightest gray seems dark | 59 | |
The smell of the sea in my nostrils | 91 | |
The snow lies deep upon the ground | 105 | |
The sun has slipped his tether | 100 | |
The sun hath shed its kindly light | 281 | |
The sun is low | 285 |
[ xxix ]