322 |
To a bottle |
O then reprieved from Orwell's bed |
A BEACON OF THE TIMES |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
142-143 |
|
82.615 |
The smokeless chimney |
Traveller on the Northern Railway |
A LANCASHIRE LADY (E J B) |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
497-500 |
Author is Mrs E J Bellais also known as Mrs Serjeant Bellasis. 2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
241 |
Wedded bliss |
Wed chaps, t'wife sey, should spend ther brass |
A MEMBER OF WEIR W. I. |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
125-126 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
238 |
Wheer's Weir |
O' t' top o th' hill up Burnley Road |
A MEMBER OF WEIR W. I. |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
123 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
81.513 |
Fireworks poem |
Rockets set off with a bang |
ABBOTT, Andrew |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
119 |
|
190 |
The stream's song |
Make way, make way |
ABERCROMBIE, Lacelles |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
148-149 |
|
5.996 |
Christmas 1869 |
Thou goest, fateful Year! the passing bell |
ABRAM, William Alexander |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
176-177 |
|
5.894 |
Christmas retrospections: written in London on Christmas Eve, 1858 |
Closed are the shutters and the door |
ABRAM, William Alexander |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
165-167 |
|
5.895 |
Evening on Billinge |
Where Billinge, forest-clad and brown |
ABRAM, William Alexander |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
167-169 |
Written Blackburn, Midsummer, 1862 |
5.896 |
Hope |
Celestial Messenger! what graces twine |
ABRAM, William Alexander |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
169-170 |
Written Witton, October 14th, 1856 |
5.897 |
Invocation to spring |
Oh! we know thou art near us, Spirit of Spring |
ABRAM, William Alexander |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
171 |
|
5.995 |
Italy |
Where many a snowy Alpine summit gleams |
ABRAM, William Alexander |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
175-176 |
|
5.993 |
Psalm of love |
There is a Love that lasts through all |
ABRAM, William Alexander |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
173-174 |
|
5.992 |
Th' beddin's gooan |
Eh! Robbut! th' lan'lord's bin to-day |
ABRAM, William Alexander |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
172-173 |
Poverty |
5.994 |
The poetry of death |
Have ye not felt an influence rapt and holy |
ABRAM, William Alexander |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
174-175 |
|
84.051 |
The earth bond |
Surely both earth and heaven are God's; and so |
ADCOCK, St. John |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
6 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
82.710 |
Friendship |
Friendship is like a beautiful butterfly fluttering in the sky |
AFZAL, Khadijah |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
10 |
|
86.713 |
O Israel wake up and march on |
O Israel. you have been asleep for 4000 or more years |
AHMED, Masud |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
61 |
|
4.625 |
A year and a day |
A year and a day is the period named |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
Ballads: Romantic, fantastical and humorous |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
M0066298LC |
279.647 |
1.855 |
242-244 |
|
1.358 |
Black Bess |
Let the lover his mistress's beauty rehearse |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
38-40 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
5.648 |
Black Bess |
Let the lover his mistress's beauty rehearse |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
249-251 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
4.629 |
Elegy on the Cardinal Carlo Borromeo |
With black funeral robe, and tresses shorn |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
Ballads: Romantic, fantastical and humorous |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
M0066298LC |
279.647 |
1.855 |
259-268 |
Freely translated from the Latin of the Admirable Crichton |
4.623 |
Marlbrook to the wars is coming |
Marlbrook to the wars is coming! |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
Ballads: Romantic, fantastical and humorous |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
M0066298LC |
279.647 |
1.855 |
237-238 |
|
4.627 |
Old Grindrod's ghost |
Old Grindrod was hang'd on a gibbet high |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
Ballads: Romantic, fantastical and humorous |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
M0066298LC |
279.647 |
1.855 |
248-252 |
|
5.650 |
Old Grindrod's ghost |
Old Grindrod was hang'd on a gibbet high |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
253-257 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
4.626 |
The ballad of the beard |
In masculine beauty, or else I am wrong |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
Ballads: Romantic, fantastical and humorous |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
M0066298LC |
279.647 |
1.855 |
245-247 |
|
4.628 |
The barber of Ripon and the ghostly basin |
Since ghost-stories you want, there is one I can tell |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
Ballads: Romantic, fantastical and humorous |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
M0066298LC |
279.647 |
1.855 |
253-256 |
|
4.624 |
The boots of Marlbrook |
Four marshals of France vow'd their Monarch to guard |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
Ballads: Romantic, fantastical and humorous |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
M0066298LC |
279.647 |
1.855 |
239-241 |
|
2.182 |
The carrion crow |
The carrion crow is a sexton bold |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
24 |
|
5.632 |
The carrion crow |
The carrion crow is a sexton bold |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
232-233 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
4.630 |
The Gaspar Visconti |
When her fair land with grief o'erspread |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
Ballads: Romantic, fantastical and humorous |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
M0066298LC |
279.647 |
1.855 |
269-274 |
Freely translated from the Latin of the Admirable Crichton |
1.351 |
The mandrake |
The mandrake grows 'neath the gallows tree |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
26-27 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
5.635 |
The mandrake |
The mandrake grows 'neath the gallows tree |
AINSWORTH, William Harrison |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
235-237 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
80.807 |
A dreamer's prayer |
With slime and slum all gathered round |
ALAN |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
35-36 |
no surname |
81.364 |
On holiday |
I saw the waves looking like big, huge dolphins |
ALDER, Kyle |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
39 |
|
82.712 |
Vampire stew |
Have you tried my vampire stew |
ALI, Aftab |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
11 |
|
82.716 |
Beasts |
Beasts are scary and horrible |
ALI, Shakeel |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
12 |
|
79 |
Childhood |
Ah yes, it was a happy time! |
ALICK, Elizabeth |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
88-89 |
|
67 |
Cowpe Valley |
A little rugged valley, high and green |
ALICK, Elizabeth |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
74 |
|
84 |
Higher Hill (Cowpe) |
Across wide meadows and the yielding soil |
ALICK, Elizabeth |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
102 |
|
307 |
Life (1) |
To beat against the bitter wind |
ALICK, Elizabeth |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
198 |
|
308 |
Life (2) |
To wrestle with a boundless flood |
ALICK, Elizabeth |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
198 |
|
310 |
Little things |
A little smile upon a happy face |
ALICK, Elizabeth |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
191 |
|
71 |
Memories (1) |
Sometimes at quiet eventide |
ALICK, Elizabeth |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
79 |
|
72 |
Memories (2) |
The murmurous music of a silver stream |
ALICK, Elizabeth |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
80 |
|
313 |
The gloaming |
It is the hour of calm |
ALICK, Elizabeth |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
194 |
|
3.164 |
April |
Hidden fields with a misty hue |
ALICK, L |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
13 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.165 |
Chains |
The gay thrush sings me a jubilant lay |
ALICK, L |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
13 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
453 |
A child's eyes |
The worlds so big |
ALISON |
Young, single and pregnant |
M.O.T.O. |
M0129248LC |
491.674 |
1.992 |
30 |
Prose and poetry from members of the Burnley group "Mothers On Their Own" |
452 |
In and out of love |
In and out of love |
ALISON |
Young, single and pregnant |
M.O.T.O. |
M0129248LC |
491.674 |
1.992 |
28-29 |
Prose and poetry from members of the Burnley group "Mothers On Their Own" |
454 |
Reasons |
The reason's don't make sence (sic) |
ALISON |
Young, single and pregnant |
M.O.T.O. |
M0129248LC |
491.674 |
1.992 |
31-32 |
Prose and poetry from members of the Burnley group "Mothers On Their Own" |
87.857 |
Wond'rous Things |
Do you ever stop to think |
ALLAN, Mary |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
146 |
|
17 |
Old Pendle |
Old Pendle, old Pendle, thou standest alone |
ALLAN, Milton |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
117 |
|
81.538 |
Rocket |
I went in my rocket and I flew up to space |
ALLEN, Elisabeth |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
131 |
|
3.610 |
A bad sight |
Prostrate on the cold ground he lay |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
134-135 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.590 |
A birthday wish |
Brightly the sunbeam chases the night |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
82-83 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.629 |
A birthday wish to a friend |
Accept on this, thy natal day |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
180-181 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.636 |
A boat song |
Once more on the yielding wave |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
192-193 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.639 |
A communication hymn |
Humbly coming to Thy table |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
197-198 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.723 |
A farewell to the old year |
Ding dong! Ding dong! Toll deep, and loud, and long |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
319-320 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.640 |
A fly's secret |
Each dear little friend |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
199-201 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.892 |
A happy New Year |
A happy New Year! how the glad countless voices |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
354-355 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.611 |
A holiday song |
Away! away! 'tis a glad, free day |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
136-137 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.353 |
A valentine |
Thou camest like a vision bright |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
66-68 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.712 |
A wish |
Give me a fireside where sweet peace and love |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
295 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.593 |
Absalom |
Hark! the unusual sounds that greet the ear |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
88-91 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.643 |
After a night of thunder and lightning |
Welcome, morning! for the night hath been |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
206-207 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.711 |
An acrostic |
Joined in spirit and in heart |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
294 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.617 |
Annie: a simple life sketch |
Twas the early time of autumn, ere the russet tinged the leaves |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
149-153 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.727 |
Anniversary hymn |
Hark! how Nature's thousand voices |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
328-329 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.345 |
Are they not all ministering spirits |
How sweet the thought that when we wake or sleep |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
47-51 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.630 |
At sea |
Splashing and dashing, and ceaselessly bounding |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
182-183 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.718 |
Autumn musings |
Twas an early autumn morning |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
307-309 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.642 |
Beginning at Jerusalem |
Beginning at Jerusalem! that heaven-honoured place |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
204-205 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.626 |
Birds |
Bright, happy birds! what sorrow have ye |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
173-174 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.889 |
Birthday wishes |
Requested as a friend |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
348-349 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.891 |
Christmas |
We twine our Christmas wreaths |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
352-353 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.721 |
Christmas-tide |
There are seasons that call a glad nation out |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
315-316 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.695 |
Consolation |
Tired and weary of the twilight |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
250-251 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.682 |
Constancy |
Dearest! believe me still true to thee |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
216 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.570 |
Death's visits |
Death entered a peaceful dwelling |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
79-80 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.606 |
Dialogue: a mountain and a molehill |
Ann: Good morning Janet! have you heard the strange news |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
120-124 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.699 |
Dreams |
When the life of the day is over |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
259-262 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.349 |
Earth and heaven |
Child of frail mortality |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
58 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.689 |
Evelyn: a tale |
Darkly and deeply the night shades fell |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
233-237 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.339 |
Farewell to Albion |
Farewell, my native land! Blest Albion's happy strand |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
37 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.329 |
Forget me not |
Forget me not, loved one |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
20 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.694 |
Freedom |
Freedom! inspiring word to honest virtue's ear |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
247-249 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.608 |
Good-bye |
Whose lips have not breathed the familiar old word |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
130-131 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.692 |
He giveth his beloved sleep |
Smiling lay a little infant |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
243-244 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.619 |
Heart echoes |
There is a language of the heart |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
156-157 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.716 |
Hope |
I saw a mother weep for the loved one gone away |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
302-303 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.710 |
I miss thee |
Mother! I miss thee when the morn |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
292-293 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.635 |
I will lead the blind by a way that they know not |
Pleasant, happy way, for the little tender feet |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
190-191 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.352 |
I would not be forgot |
I would not be remembered, love |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
64-65 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.569 |
In memory of a beloved child |
Too beautiful promise-bud! sweetly expanding |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
77-78 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.589 |
In memory of a dear friend |
And is it so? and art thou then departed |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
81 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
2.887 |
In memory of a mother |
I will not forget thee, mother! when night's dark shadows flee |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
1-Feb |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.628 |
Intemperance |
Intemperance! accursed fiend |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
178-179 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.605 |
Intemperance - a vision |
Wrapped up in vision, strange sights I saw |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
114-119 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.350 |
Is a drunkard a man |
What! and is this a man? with godlike soul |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
59-61 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.638 |
It is I, be not afraid |
When my feet grow tired and weary |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
195-197 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.705 |
Jessy |
Where the bright Loddon's waters lave |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
278-283 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.687 |
Knocking at the gate of heaven |
Little blue-eyed Katie - little darling Belle |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
227-231 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.701 |
Lady Jane Grey |
Ill-fated Jane! could no less blow suffice |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
266-267 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.341 |
Lines accompanying a bible as a bridal gift |
Not costly gems I offer thee on this thy bridal day |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
39 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.720 |
Lines on the death of a home missionary |
A light hath beamed around us with more than earthly ray |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
313-314 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.607 |
Lines on the loss of the brig Favourite off Blackpool |
Not one to tell the tale of that dread night |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
125-126 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.602 |
Lines suggested by the lake scenery of Windermere |
And can it be that this sin-tainted earth |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
107-108 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.331 |
Lines to a friend: written at the age of ten years |
Forget me not, my dearest friend |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
23 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.355 |
Lines written in a churchyard |
Sweetly and peacefully rest the dead |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
70 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.567 |
Lines written in sadness |
So young, and yet so sad |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
73-74 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.342 |
Memory |
Oh, say not memory is a friend |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
40 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.683 |
Music |
Give music to the infant |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
217-219 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.631 |
My father's birthday |
How shall I tell thee, father |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
184-185 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.351 |
My peace I give unto you |
Peace to the troubled soul |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
62-63 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.326 |
Old age |
Tis sweet in life's earliest morn when the heart |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
13-15 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.684 |
Old letters |
Precious relics of by-gone years |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
220-221 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.693 |
On a balloon ascent |
God speed ye! airy voyagers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
245-246 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.618 |
On fancy |
Oh! there are currents in the human soul |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
154-155 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.324 |
On friendship |
Oh, breathe not thou lightly the name of a friend |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
9-Oct |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.336 |
On immortality |
Child! rejoice! To thee is given |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
28-29 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.709 |
On love |
Love not too fondly. Those thou lov'st may change |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
290-291 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.615 |
On receiving my brother's carte de visite |
Marvellous power, and wondrous art |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
145-146 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.598 |
On seeing the corpse of a sister |
Farewell, beloved one! 'tis hard to surrender |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
102 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.697 |
On the completion of the Atlantic cable |
Majestic triumph of the human mind |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
255-256 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.681 |
On the death of W R |
Happy spirit, now released |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
215 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.624 |
On the death of W R |
Yes! lay him to his rest! the man of God |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
168-169 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.337 |
On visiting a supposed hermitage: near Bakewell, Derbyshire |
Thy lot be mine! a peaceful, calm retreat |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
33-34 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.678 |
One is not |
One is not! There's a vacant seat |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
209-210 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.698 |
Queen Esther |
She stands in her regal dignity |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
257-258 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.702 |
Remembrance |
Forget not the holy dead |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
268-270 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.724 |
Requiem |
Another laid to sleep |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
321-322 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.707 |
Resignation |
Lord! restrain my wayward will |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
286-287 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.620 |
Retrospect and hope |
Toll! toll! mournfully, sadly |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
158-159 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.706 |
Returning spring |
Gay laughing over the mountains |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
284-285 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.696 |
Scenes of childhood |
Scenes of my childhood! as on memory's wing |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
252-254 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.623 |
Sea-side thoughts |
Mighty, majestic sea! bursting first upon the view |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
166-167 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.725 |
St Valentine |
Whate'er St Valentine could be |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
323-324 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.323 |
Stanzas |
Should the tear of affection bedew |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
8 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.679 |
Stanzas |
Whither, O trembling soul |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
211-212 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.609 |
Sunshine |
Sunshine on the mountains |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
132-133 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.340 |
The angel's song |
Sweetest of sounds e'er repeated by man |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
38 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.691 |
The boy of Haarlem |
Behold him, as with song and glee |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
240-242 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.330 |
The broken-hearted |
She hath passed away as some fair flower |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
21-22 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.717 |
The city bus |
A picture for the artist, a study for the sage |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
304-306 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.888 |
The dream of gold |
Wearied in foot, and hand, and heart, and brain |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
341-347 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.680 |
The farewell of the departing year |
Mortal! attend! for, ere we part |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
213-214 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.726 |
The firstborn |
Fond mother! blooming still in youth's first charms |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
325-327 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.613 |
The gate of heaven |
It was a lovely Sabbath afternoon |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
140-142 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.714 |
The heavenly race |
Runner in the heavenly race |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
297-299 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.597 |
The hoary head is a crown of glory |
Many sing in joyful measures |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
99-101 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.703 |
The house of prayer |
There are noble, towering palaces |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
271-272 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.595 |
The last of the family |
Beside a group of graves |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
94-96 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.708 |
The maiden's soliloquy |
If to hide away in the heart's deep core |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
288-289 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.715 |
The parting of friends |
Oh! the pain, the grief of parting |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
300-301 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.722 |
The pen and the press |
Strong is the might of the warrior's hand |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
317-318 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.690 |
The prodigal's return |
I will arise!' the prodigal said |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
238-239 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.568 |
The queen of May |
They twined a wreath of roses |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
75-76 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.685 |
The return of the Jews |
They are coming! they are coming! through the glass of prophecy |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
222-224 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.592 |
The sabbath |
Through the week the toiler, weary |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
86-87 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.686 |
The seasons |
For the promise sweet Spring bringeth |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
225-226 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.347 |
The sister's wish to an absent brother |
Thou art gone from our side, and we may not behold thee |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
54-55 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.704 |
The slave |
A lovely island in the western main |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
273-277 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.641 |
The sleeper awakened |
Sleeper! on the raging billow |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
202-203 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.344 |
The three welcomes to Christmas |
Welcome! welcome! merry Christmas |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
43-46 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.325 |
The trial of Abraham |
The morn arose in beauty and in light |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
11-Dec |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.328 |
The voice of temperance |
Britain's sons! securely dwelling |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
18-19 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.616 |
The voyage of life |
Sailing on - and ever on |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
147-148 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.594 |
The widow's lament |
Farewell, beloved one! my heart's dearest treasure |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
92-93 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.604 |
The winds |
Winds! gentle summer winds! sportive and free |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
112-113 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.338 |
The youthful poetess |
She sat by the taper's lessening light |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
35-36 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.348 |
Then he arose and rebuked the wind and the waves, and there was a great calm |
Hark! to the midnight tempest's sullen roar |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
56-57 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.627 |
Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself |
Sweet and pleasant is the duty |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
175-177 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.334 |
Thoughts by moonlight |
I love to gaze on the moonbeam fair |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
26 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.893 |
To a bride |
May He who honoured Cana's feast |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
356-357 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.322 |
To a departed sister |
My sister! how that name is twined |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
5-Jul |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.637 |
To a friend |
Jesus protect thee! His Spirit defend thee |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
194 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.354 |
To a young lady in decline |
Fair flower! this sweetly blown - thus early smitten |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
69 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.335 |
To an early friend |
Friends may part, and distance sever |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
27 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.632 |
To an early primrose |
Beautiful nursling of early spring |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
186 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.321 |
To an infant sleeping |
Sleep on, sweet innocent! and fondly dreaming |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
3-Apr |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.896 |
To April |
Still true to thy character, smiling and frowning |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
365-366 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.346 |
To consumption |
Ah! fell Consumption! with thy deadly power |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
52-53 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.713 |
To Cynthia |
Hail Cynthia! silver orb of night |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
296 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.677 |
To E on her birthday |
I suppose it 's your birthday sometime now about |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
208 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.603 |
To health |
Tell me where thou dwellest |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
109-111 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.621 |
To His Royal Highness Prince Alfred on visiting Liverpool |
Thrice welcome! noble Alfred |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
160-162 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.612 |
To Johnny, on wearing his first suit |
Young voyager! thus early cast |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
138-139 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.625 |
To Mary |
How shall we give thee up |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
170-172 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.622 |
To Mona |
Bright Isle of the Western sea |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
163-165 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.688 |
To my brother |
We once were three, but Death has been |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
232 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.890 |
To my father |
Again my willing heart and hand shall pay |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
350-351 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.599 |
To my father |
Welcome, thy natal day |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
103 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.614 |
To my husband, on his birthday |
Ever coming, ever going |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
143-144 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.332 |
To my mother |
Mother! farewell! thy transient race is run |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
24 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.897 |
To Spring |
Come! lovely spring-tide come |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
367-368 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.633 |
To the moon |
Calmly sitting in lonely splendour |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
187 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.591 |
To the new year |
Hail! mysterious, viewless thing |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
84-85 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.600 |
To the same |
Again, O long-forgotten Muse, thy sacred influence bring |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
104-105 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.333 |
To the same |
Farewell! but not for ever |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
25 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.596 |
To the sea-gulls |
Birds of the tireless wing |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
97-98 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.700 |
True glory |
What, I asked, is a man's highest glory |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
263-265 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.634 |
Twilight |
How sweet is the still, calm twilight |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
188-189 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.894 |
Unto Him every knee shall bow |
Yes! unto Him, the cradled babe of Bethlehem's lowly manger |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
358-361 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.601 |
Voice of the new year |
Mortal! my moments are quickly fleeting |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
106 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.343 |
Welcome to Spring |
Beautiful Spring! enrobed in smiles |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
41-42 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.895 |
Why cannot we all live as brethren |
Why cannot we all live as brethren |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
362-364 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.327 |
Wild flowers |
Wild flowers! wild flowers! beautiful are ye |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
16-17 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.728 |
Woman |
Woman! what is she? or what should she be |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
330-340 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.719 |
Work and wait |
Not all at once doth the broad flowing river |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
310-312 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
3.566 |
Written on a mother's grave |
Spirit of my sainted mother |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
Echoes of heart whispers |
ALLEN, Esther Charlotte Anne |
M0325178LC |
985.036 |
1.867 |
71-72 |
2nd ed. Poems by Bury author |
87.850 |
Oh Lord |
Oh Lord while on this earth You lived |
ALLEN, F |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
139 |
|
86.923 |
(Man) turn again |
Dancing to the music of a day gone by |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
31 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.924 |
A Lancashire sky |
A Lancashire sky, watching me |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
32 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.913 |
A Lancastrian question to life's sweet mystery |
Dust a ever wonther |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
16 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.922 |
A mother's lament |
A mother is weeping, crying alone |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
29 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.927 |
A sexton and verger |
I'm an ordinary chap, wi a rare sort a job |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
34 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.910 |
A thought for Jean |
A cruel word is spoken, yet not meant |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
14 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.951 |
All in a child's day |
Three small sailors in a banana skin boat |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
52 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.901 |
Camera catastrophe |
Flashlight photograph, find some funny features |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
5 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.946 |
Childhood days |
We would play in the soft glow of autumn |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
48 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.905 |
Cruel to be kind |
I went to the doctor's a few weeks ago |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
8 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.926 |
Daddy blue |
Stop all the presses, scrap the front page news |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
33 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.918 |
Darwen Moor |
Riding on a pony, over Darwen Moor |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
21 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.920 |
Dreams |
Dreams are figments of fancy |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
24 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.900 |
Dreamsong |
Feet tripping, knee banging, tumbledown day |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
4 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.908 |
Election promise |
Come striding, quick tempo, come march in proud style |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
12 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.904 |
Got to take our chances now |
We've got to take our chances now |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
7 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.943 |
H'm! |
If you have to speak today |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
46 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.921 |
If wishes were horses |
In sombre measure from it's lofty tower |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
25 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.928 |
Is this poetry |
A piston I would like to be |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
35 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.902 |
It's nice in Heaven |
It's nice in heaven Lyndsey said |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
5 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.935 |
Kilgard |
Have you heard the name of Kilgard? |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
42 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.925 |
Kims dream |
Mummy likes horses with long swishy tails |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
32 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.942 |
Knock at the door |
People are lonely, lovers are sad |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
45 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.903 |
Looking back |
When I look back into the past |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
6 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.937 |
Love |
Like a crazily drawn pattern that drifts in the sand |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
43 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.933 |
Lyndsey |
Lyndsey was our baby, there was no doubt of that |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
39 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.932 |
Lyndsey Lady |
My Lyndsey lady, are you coming south to London? |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
39 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.909 |
Man's best friend |
He came to us, one wintry day |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
12 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.919 |
My dog |
Pooch was a happy friendly dog |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
22 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.898 |
Nature's cycle |
Vast is the vision that meets the eye |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
3 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.934 |
Noah and the animals |
The animals came running to the ark |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
41 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.917 |
Not to-day I'm busy |
My Uncle Jim was standing in the back-yard |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
20 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.906 |
One day |
Hiddle diddle dum and fiddle diddle dee |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
9 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.949 |
Pharoah's pet |
The great sphinx of Gizeh still guards the Nile Valley |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
51 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.944 |
Puzzle |
The wind softly blowing, heard but unseen |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
46 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.895 |
Reminiscence |
I sit and think of bygone days |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
1 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.929 |
Shall we be partners in crime? |
Brady and Hindley killed poor Lesley Ann Downey |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
36 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.911 |
Sisters |
Lyndsey and Kim are sisters |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
14 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.945 |
Song |
Could I the moment live again |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
47 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.940 |
Spirit eternal |
Carry on brave spirit, never tire |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
44 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.914 |
Strange playmates |
He walks across the countryside in boots of solid lead |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
17 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.947 |
Tall tree |
With her hair flowing wildly |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
49 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.915 |
Telly tedium |
Sounds and coloured pictures on a bright and sunny day |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
18 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.916 |
The day the past was finally buried |
At three o'clock the gates were closed, the teams were set to play |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
19 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.936 |
The days begins |
A soft stirring in the butterfly wind |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
42 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.897 |
The deserted mill |
O silent symbol of a sombre past |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
2 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.939 |
The idle lover |
O would I could repair the mischief done |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
44 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.899 |
The Lesson |
We go to church each sunday |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
4 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.941 |
The mill canal |
No more the way for working craft |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
45 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.907 |
The owd cat |
In e' slinks wi' tail erect |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
10 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.912 |
The would-be emigrant |
Dad, I'm mekin no'eadway |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
15 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.938 |
There but for fortune |
My girl came home, her heart was sad |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
43 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.948 |
Th'owd knocker-up |
Th'owd knocker-up would come clattering down t'street |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
50 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.930 |
Timelock |
Reflections in a photograph |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
37 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.950 |
To those I love |
Remember me, not with a tear |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
51 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.952 |
Trial |
Fetch the man in, shut the crowd out |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
53 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.896 |
Triple question |
What was I? a minute silver dot waiting in the wings |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
1 |
Poems by Darwen author |
86.931 |
Why! |
Leaning on the parapeted trench |
ALLEN, John |
A Quiet Hour in Lancashire |
ALLEN, John |
M0063755LC |
273.662 |
0 |
38 |
Poems by Darwen author |
82.846 |
My monster |
My best friend is a monster |
ALLEN, Jordan |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
87 |
|
82.751 |
My pet dog, Keano |
Sometimes |
ALLEN, Kirsty |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
32-33 |
|
375 |
Recollection |
Is it a dream or fevered fantasy |
ALLEN, Maisie |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
28 |
|
4.008 |
Annie |
They told me that time would heal the pain |
ALLEN, Maurice |
Bay windowed and broad |
ALLEN, Maurice |
M0093060LC |
350.920 |
0 |
1 |
|
4.010 |
At eventide |
We often sit at evening time |
ALLEN, Maurice |
Bay windowed and broad |
ALLEN, Maurice |
M0093060LC |
350.920 |
0 |
3 |
|
4.019 |
Dougals dream |
I lie here in my basket musing |
ALLEN, Maurice |
Bay windowed and broad |
ALLEN, Maurice |
M0093060LC |
350.920 |
0 |
13-14 |
|
4.016 |
Fifty years on |
Of those carefree boys who went to war |
ALLEN, Maurice |
Bay windowed and broad |
ALLEN, Maurice |
M0093060LC |
350.920 |
0 |
10 |
|
4.014 |
Frank's corner |
On the wall, above the gate |
ALLEN, Maurice |
Bay windowed and broad |
ALLEN, Maurice |
M0093060LC |
350.920 |
0 |
8 |
|
4.018 |
Garden requiem |
A dear old friend has passed away |
ALLEN, Maurice |
Bay windowed and broad |
ALLEN, Maurice |
M0093060LC |
350.920 |
0 |
12 |
|
4.015 |
Laura |
There's so much joy that she still brings |
ALLEN, Maurice |
Bay windowed and broad |
ALLEN, Maurice |
M0093060LC |
350.920 |
0 |
9 |
|
4.017 |
Letter to Doreen |
I miss that busy little bee |
ALLEN, Maurice |
Bay windowed and broad |
ALLEN, Maurice |
M0093060LC |
350.920 |
0 |
11 |
|
4.024 |
Mondays 'n Fridays |
Owd Jem said t' me, laynin on 'is stick |
ALLEN, Maurice |
Bay windowed and broad |
ALLEN, Maurice |
M0093060LC |
350.920 |
0 |
20 |
|
4.021 |
Owd friends |
Come on in lad, sit thi deawn |
ALLEN, Maurice |
Bay windowed and broad |
ALLEN, Maurice |
M0093060LC |
350.920 |
0 |
16 |
|
4.023 |
Pleasures |
Wi wer sittin, waatchin t' fashions pass |
ALLEN, Maurice |
Bay windowed and broad |
ALLEN, Maurice |
M0093060LC |
350.920 |
0 |
19 |
|
4.011 |
St Anne's |
No Saxon font, or Norman towers |
ALLEN, Maurice |
Bay windowed and broad |
ALLEN, Maurice |
M0093060LC |
350.920 |
0 |
4 |
|
4.012 |
The old Plough and Harrow |
On each side of the doorway, an iron ring |
ALLEN, Maurice |
Bay windowed and broad |
ALLEN, Maurice |
M0093060LC |
350.920 |
0 |
5 |
|
4.020 |
The title |
Despite the noble efforts of our teachers at the Broad o' th' Lane |
ALLEN, Maurice |
Bay windowed and broad |
ALLEN, Maurice |
M0093060LC |
350.920 |
0 |
15 |
Called 'Explanation of the title' on the content page. It is prose doing exactly that. Maybe it should be omitted. |
4.009 |
The tonic |
My school chum lived in Berrys Row |
ALLEN, Maurice |
Bay windowed and broad |
ALLEN, Maurice |
M0093060LC |
350.920 |
0 |
2 |
|
4.013 |
The village pub |
It dominates the village scene |
ALLEN, Maurice |
Bay windowed and broad |
ALLEN, Maurice |
M0093060LC |
350.920 |
0 |
6-Jul |
|
4.025 |
Un away day I Wiggin |
I thowt ah'd stretch mi legs a bit |
ALLEN, Maurice |
Bay windowed and broad |
ALLEN, Maurice |
M0093060LC |
350.920 |
0 |
21-24 |
|
4.022 |
Wiggin pier |
Ah've bin t' hev a look reawnd t' pier |
ALLEN, Maurice |
Bay windowed and broad |
ALLEN, Maurice |
M0093060LC |
350.920 |
0 |
17-18 |
|
82.987 |
Amazing |
My mum's amazing, for she can |
ALLEN, Olivia and RELTON, Rosie |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
165 |
|
86.717 |
One summer day |
We waken early to see anotehr day of true heat |
ALLINSON, Margaret |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
65 |
|
82.785 |
Plot, plot, plot, plot |
When my brother gets hot |
ALLISTER, Gary |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
51 |
|
81.398 |
Space Odyssey |
Hello, I am an astronaut |
ALMOND, Olivia |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
60 |
|
81.383 |
Milky Way moon |
I went higher and higher in my little spaceship |
ALSTON, Charlotte |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
51 |
|
82.162 |
Just today |
Grieve not about sorrow's ring |
ALSTON, Fred |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
76 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
362 |
The leafy glade |
Cool and clear in the morning sun |
ALSTON, Fred |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
20 |
|
82.160 |
Th'owd lady remembers |
Yon cameo broach ah found in t'drawer |
ALSTON, Fred |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
70 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
82.933 |
A Victorian schoolroom |
A busy classroom |
ALTY, Kristopher |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
135 |
|
80.862 |
Heartache |
The boy I love has left me |
AMBROSE, Denise |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
143 |
|
2 |
Traits O' Accrington |
As Accrington's daily improving |
AN ACCRINGTONIAN |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
92-96 |
|
87.789 |
The Creator |
I thought I saw His tender smile |
ANDERSON, Kathy |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
76 |
|
710 |
Sally Gray |
Come, Dearie! I'll tell thee a secret |
ANDERSON, Robert |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
273-275 |
Cumberland |
695 |
The impatient lassie |
Deuce tek the clock; click-clackin' sae |
ANDERSON, W. |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
208-209 |
Tyneside |
6.224 |
Prologue to the Rudens of Plautus |
Tis said a little nonsense now and then |
ANDERSON, W. B. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
105-113 |
|
82.169 |
An ode to the pipes |
The battle had been fiercely fought |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L M |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
88 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
82.960 |
The man from Dundee |
There was a young man from Dundee |
ANNESLEY, Lauren |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
151 |
|
6.666 |
Tom Bobbin's Grave |
Good lordgus days! what hav 'e sin |
ANON H.O.S.? |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
10-Nov |
|
6.663 |
A balade of maryage |
In yonder wood there is a dene |
ANONYMOUS |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
5-Jun |
Traditional spelling modernised from Ballads and songs of Lancashire by Harland and Wilkinson |
6.750 |
A balade of maryage |
In yonder wood there is a dene |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
30-32 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.578 |
A balade of maryage |
In yonder wood there is a dene |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
30-32 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.687 |
A balade of maryage |
In yonder wood there is a dene |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
42-44 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
82.682 |
A charm |
Tak twea at's red an' yan at's blake |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
128-130 |
2nd ed rev |
82.673 |
A Christmas wassail |
Here we coom a-wessellin |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
122-123 |
2nd ed rev |
82.654 |
A dree neet |
T'were a dree neet, a dree neet, as t' squire's end drew nigh |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
103-106 |
2nd ed rev |
6.273 |
A farewell song |
The tooth of Time has gnawed away the year |
ANONYMOUS |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
165-167 |
|
6.285 |
A fisherman's song |
Out of bed while the village sleeps |
ANONYMOUS |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
182 |
|
6.665 |
A Village song of May |
All in this pleasant evening together come are we |
ANONYMOUS |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
8-Sep |
|
82.549 |
A Yorkshire dialogue between an awd wife, a lass and a butcher |
Pretha now, lass, gang into t'hurn |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
3-Jun |
2nd ed rev |
524 |
A Yorkshire farmer's lament |
Rainin' ageean Ah deea declare |
ANONYMOUS |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
94 |
Yorkshire poetry |
82.560 |
Address to poverty |
Scoolin' maid o' iron broo |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
24-26 |
2nd ed rev |
82.681 |
An omen |
Blest is t' bride at t' sun shines on |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
128 |
2nd ed rev |
541 |
Aw'm a leet hearted chap |
Aw'm a leet hearted chap |
ANONYMOUS |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
115 |
Lancashire poetry |
236 |
Beef-Neet, December 1791 |
Jim O'Bella's kidney and loin cut |
ANONYMOUS |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
121-122 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers. Sub-title - Kesmus Week-List o'customers an' their lots as agreed to at th' Kirk |
5.713 |
Blakeley courtship |
There was a young lad in Blakeley did dwell |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
185-187 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
3.046 |
Blakeley courtship |
There was a young lad in Blakeley did dwell |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
132-133 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.776 |
Blakeley courtship |
There was a young lad in Blakeley did dwell |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
134-135 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.604 |
Blakeley courtship |
There was a young lad in Blakeley did dwell |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
132-133 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.605 |
Blakeley courtship |
There were a young lad in Blakeley did dwell |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
134-135 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Another version of the above. |
703 |
Bonny Tyneside |
Oh, bonny Tyneside, I see thee once more |
ANONYMOUS |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
216-217 |
Tyneside |
5.692 |
Brigadier Macintosh's farewell to the Highlands |
Macintosh is a soldier brave |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
75-78 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.755 |
Brigadier Macintosh's farewell to the Highlands |
Macintosh is a soldier brave |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
57-60 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.583 |
Brigadier Macintosh's farewell to the Highlands |
Macintosh is a soldier brave |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
57-60 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.743 |
Butler of Bewsey |
Listen, lords and ladies fair |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
13-14 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.680 |
Butler of Bewsey |
Listen, lords and ladies fair |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
17-19 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
5.675 |
Butler of Bewsey |
Listen, lords and ladies fair |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
13-14 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.664 |
Candlemas |
On Can'lemas, a February day |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
118 |
2nd ed rev |
82.675 |
Charms, 'nominies', and popular rhymes |
Wilful weaste maks weasome want |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
125-126 |
2nd ed rev |
82.671 |
Christmas |
I wish you a merry Kessenmas an' a happy New Year |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
121 |
2nd ed rev |
82.672 |
Cleveland Christmas song |
God rist you merry, gentlemen |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
121-122 |
2nd ed rev |
82.653 |
Cleveland lyke-warke dirge |
This ya neet, this ya neet |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
101-103 |
2nd ed rev |
868 |
Conclusion |
Well, now we've met and had our 'crack' |
ANONYMOUS |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
232 |
Probably Joan Pomfret |
6.231 |
Culled from a chemical notebook |
When cease thy sorrows, hapless NH3 |
ANONYMOUS |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
124 |
|
705 |
Cushie Butterfield |
Aa's a broke hairted keel man and Aa's ower heed in luv |
ANONYMOUS |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
218-219 |
Tyneside |
5.730 |
Death of an old huntsman |
Of Troy's famed walls, of Iliad's king |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
248-250 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.797 |
Death of an old huntsman |
Of Troy's famed walls, of Iliad's king |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
186-187 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.625 |
Death of an old huntsman |
Of Troy's famed walls, of Iliad's king |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
186-187 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.363 |
Derwentwater's fate |
King George did a letter write |
ANONYMOUS |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
50-52 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
5.654 |
Derwentwater's fate |
King George he did a letter write |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
266-269 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
5.712 |
Dick o' Stanley Green |
Last New-'Er's day, as I've heerd say |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
182-183 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.775 |
Dick o' Stanley Green |
Last New-'Er's day, as I've heerd say |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
131-132 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.603 |
Dick o' Stanley Green |
Last New-'Er's day, as I've heerd say |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
131-132 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.718 |
Droylsden wakes song |
It's Dreighlsdin wakes, un' wey're comin' to teawn |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
202-205 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.783 |
Droylsden wakes song |
It's Dreighlsdin wakes, un' wey're comin' to teawn |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
147-150 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
6.664 |
Droylsden wakes song |
It's Dreighlsdin wakes, un' wey're comin' to teawn |
ANONYMOUS |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
6-Aug |
Ballads and songs of Lancashire |
5.611 |
Droylsden wakes song |
It's Dreighlsdin wakes, un' wey're comin' to teawn |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
148-150 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.659 |
Elphi bandy-legs |
Elphi bandy-legs |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
114 |
2nd ed rev |
5.689 |
Fair Ellen of Radcliffe |
There was a lord of worthy fame |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
61-65 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
5.580 |
Fair Ellen of Radcliffe |
There was a lord of worthy fame |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
47-50 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.752 |
Fair Ellen of Radcliffe |
There was a lord of worthy fame |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
47-50 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
82.665 |
February fill-dyke |
February fill-dyke |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
118 |
2nd ed rev |
154 |
Flodden Field |
All Lancashire for the most part |
ANONYMOUS |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
4-May |
|
6.740 |
Fragment of an ancient ballad of a tyrannical husband |
O thou that art gentle, for joy of thy dame |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
2-Jun |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.677 |
Fragment of an ancient ballad of a tyrannical husband |
O thou that art gentle, for joy of thy dame |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
2-Aug |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
5.672 |
Fragment of an ancient ballad of a tyrannical husband |
O thou that art gentle, for joy of thy dame |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
2-Jun |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.662 |
Fragment of the Hagmena song |
To-night it is the New-year's night, to-morrow is the day |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
117 |
2nd ed rev |
82.680 |
Friday unlucky |
Dean't o' Friday buy your ring |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
128 |
2nd ed rev |
82.667 |
Good Friday |
On Good Friday rist thy pleaf |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
119 |
2nd ed rev |
5.735 |
Grimshaw's factory fire |
Come all ye country gentlemen |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
273-275 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.803 |
Grimshaw's factory fire |
Come all ye country gentlemen |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
203-204 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.644 |
Grimshaw's factory fire |
Come all ye country gentlemen |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
203-204 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.670 |
Guy Fawkes Day |
A stick and a stake |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
120-121 |
2nd ed rev |
82.687 |
Hallamshire |
When all the world shall be aloft |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
131 |
2nd ed rev |
5.731 |
Hand-loom v power-loom |
Come all you cotton-weavers, your looms you may pull down |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
251-253 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.798 |
Hand-loom v power-loom |
Come all you cotton-weavers, your looms you may pull down |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
188-189 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.626 |
Hand-loom v power-loom |
Come all you cotton-weavers, your looms you may pull down |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
188-189 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.688 |
Harrogate |
When lords an' ladies stinking water soss |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
131 |
2nd ed rev |
82.669 |
Harvest-home and the mell-sheaf |
We have her, we have her |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
119-120 |
2nd ed rev |
82.677 |
Hob-trush Hob |
Hob-trush Hob, wheer is thoo? |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
127 |
2nd ed rev |
82.553 |
I'm Yorkshire too |
By t'side of a brig, that stands over a brook |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
11-Dec |
2nd ed rev |
834 |
I'm Yorkshire too |
By t'side of a brig, that stands over a brook |
ANONYMOUS |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
47 |
|
869 |
Introduction |
We're apt to picture t' Pennine Way |
ANONYMOUS |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
11 |
Probably Joan Pomfret |
528 |
Johnny Sands and Betty Haigh |
A man whose name was Johnny Sands |
ANONYMOUS |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
98-99 |
Yorkshire poetry |
5.723 |
Jone o' Greenfeelt's ramble in search of th' green bag |
Says Jone to his wife, I've great news for t'tell |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
227-228 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.790 |
Jone o' Greenfeelt's ramble in search of th' green bag |
Says Jone to his wife, I've great news for t'tell |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
172-173 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.618 |
Jone o' Greenfeelt's ramble in search of th' green bag |
Says Jone to his wife, I've great news for t'tell |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
172-173 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.724 |
Jone o' Grinfilt going to the Rooshan war |
Yo Lankyshire lads, coom listen awhoile |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
228-230 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.791 |
Jone o' Grinfilt going to the Rooshan war |
Yo Lankyshire lads, coom listen awhoile |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
173-174 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.619 |
Jone o' Grinfilt going to the Rooshan war |
Yo Lankyshire lads, coom listen awhoile |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
173-174 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.722 |
Jone o' Grinfilt junior |
Aw'm a poor cotton-wayver, as mony a one knaws |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
223-227 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.789 |
Jone o' Grinfilt junior |
Aw'm a poor cotton-wayver, as mony a one knaws |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
169-172 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.617 |
Jone o' Grinfilt junior |
Aw'm a poor cotton-wayver, as mony a one knaws |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
169-172 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.721 |
Jone o' Grinfilt's return |
Aw'm Jone o' Marget's, fro' Grinfilt aw went |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
216-220 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.788 |
Jone o' Grinfilt's return |
Aw'm Jone o' Marget's, fro' Grinfilt aw went |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
167-169 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.616 |
Jone o' Grinfilt's return |
Aw'm Jone o' Marget's, fro' Grinfilt aw went |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
167-169 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.725 |
Jone o' Grinfilts visit to Mr Fielden |
Says Jone eawt o' Grinfilt, Aw tell you what, Nan |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
230-231 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.792 |
Jone o' Grinfilts visit to Mr Fielden |
Says Jone eawt o' Grinfilt, Aw tell you what, Nan |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
174-175 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.620 |
Jone o' Grinfilts visit to Mr Fielden |
Says Jone eawt o' Grinfilt, Aw tell you what, Nan |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
174-175 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.662 |
Kitty an' Robin |
Whear hast teh been roaming, Kitty? |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
283-284 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC). By the author of 'Scarsdale' |
5.693 |
Long Preston Peggy |
Long Preston Peg to proud Preston went |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
83-85 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.756 |
Long Preston Peggy |
Long Preston Peg to proud Preston went |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
62-63 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.584 |
Long Preston Peggy |
Long Preston Peg to proud Preston went |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
62-63 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.655 |
Love's evil choice |
I sow'd the seeds of love it was all in the spring |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
272-273 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
5.734 |
Mary Melvin of the Mersey side |
Give ear with patience to my relation |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
269-271 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.802 |
Mary Melvin of the Mersey side |
Give ear with patience to my relation |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
200-201 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.643 |
Mary Melvin of the Mersey side |
Give ear with patience to my relation |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
200-201 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.704 |
May eve song |
If we should wake you from your sleep |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
131 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.767 |
May eve song |
If we should wake you from your sleep |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
95 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.595 |
May eve song |
If we should wake you from your sleep |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
95 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.996 |
Mayer's May-day song |
On the Mayers deign to smile |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
96-97 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.705 |
Mayers' May-day song |
On the Mayers deign to smile |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
132-134 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.768 |
Mayers' May-day song |
On the Mayers deign to smile |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
96-97 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.596 |
Mayers' May-day song |
On the Mayers deign to smile |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
96-97 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.664 |
Meg or Jenny? |
Woe betide the evil eye |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
286-287 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC). By the author of 'Scarsdale' |
6.317 |
Midnight |
This is the hour of trial, - in the shade |
ANONYMOUS |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
214 |
|
2.044 |
Moi owd mon |
The storm that ma'es eawr chimley reek |
ANONYMOUS |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
185 |
By the author of Scarsdale |
82.508 |
Moi owd mon: song in the East Lancashire dialect |
The storm that ma'es eawr chimley reek |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
393 |
By the author of 'Scarsdale'. 2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.656 |
Nance and Tom |
I' t' merry taame o' harvestin |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
109-111 |
2nd ed rev |
82.678 |
Nanny Button-cap |
T'moon shines breet |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
127 |
2nd ed rev |
5.700 |
New May song - 2 |
Come and listen awhile unto what we shall say |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
120-121 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.763 |
New May song - 2 |
Come and listen awhile unto what we shall say |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
87-88 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.591 |
New May song - 2 |
Come and listen awhile unto what we shall say |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
87-88 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.663 |
New Year's day |
Lucky-bird,lucky-bird, chuck,chuck, chuck |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
118 |
2nd ed rev |
1.360 |
Old Grindrod's ghost |
Old Grindrod was hang'd on a gibbet high |
ANONYMOUS |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
42-44 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
5.699 |
Old May song - I |
All in this pleasant evening together come are we |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
118-119 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.762 |
Old May song - I |
All in this pleasant evening together come are we |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
86-87 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.590 |
Old May song - I |
All in this pleasant evening together come are we |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
86-87 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.221 |
On the occasion of Nansen's visit |
Of Nansen and the North |
ANONYMOUS |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
101-102 |
|
6.667 |
Over the hills and far away |
When growin' up, an' rayther smart |
ANONYMOUS |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
Nov-15 |
|
82.666 |
Palm Sunday |
Palm Sunday, palm away |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
119 |
2nd ed rev |
82.640 |
Pateley Races |
Attention all, baith great an' small |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
77-81 |
2nd ed rev |
83.863 |
Proem |
Far off in that 'wild, Pentecostal City |
ANONYMOUS |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
xiii-xv |
The author is probably the editor |
5.719 |
Radcliffe otter-hunt |
I am a bold otter, as you shall hear |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
206-211 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.784 |
Radcliffe otter-hunt |
I am a bold otter, as you shall hear |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
151-155 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.612 |
Radcliffe otter-hunt |
I am a bold otter, as you shall hear |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
151-155 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.658 |
Ridin t' stang |
Hey dilly, how dilly, hey dilly, dang |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
113 |
2nd ed rev |
82.668 |
Royal Oak Day |
It's Royal Oak Day |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
119 |
2nd ed rev |
239 |
Sadcake land |
Aw know a place o Burnley Road nod far fro' Bullas Trees |
ANONYMOUS |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
123 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
82.674 |
Sheffield mumming song |
Come all you jolly mummers |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
124-125 |
2nd ed rev |
1.470 |
Short time, come again no more |
Let us pause in life's pleasures, and count its many tears |
ANONYMOUS |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
186 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.613 |
Short time, come again no more |
Let us pause in life's pleasures, and count its many tears |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
493 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.661 |
Singing games |
Stepping up the green grass |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
115-117 |
2nd ed rev |
82.551 |
Snaith Marsh |
Alas! will Roger e'er his sleep forgo |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
7-Sep |
2nd ed rev |
5.708 |
Stonyhurst buck-hunt |
To Whalley Moor therefore he ran |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
153-160 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.771 |
Stonyhurst buck-hunt |
To Whalley Moor therefore he ran |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
110-116 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.599 |
Stonyhurst buck-hunt |
To Whalley Moor therefore he ran |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
110-116 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.701 |
Stretford and northern May song |
All on this pleasant evening together come are we |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
122-126 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
2.992 |
Stretford and northern May song |
All on this pleasant evening together come are we |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
91-92 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.764 |
Stretford and northern May song |
All on this pleasant evening together come are we |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
89-92 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.592 |
Stretford and northern May song |
All on this pleasant evening together come are we |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
91-92 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. There is yet another version printed under the title of 'The Cheshire May - song' |
6.292 |
Summer |
Now shadows have lifted |
ANONYMOUS |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
188 |
|
82.639 |
T' first o' t' sooart |
He shut his een and sank to rest |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
75-77 |
2nd ed rev |
6.668 |
Th' mon o' Meastur Grundy's |
Good law, heaw things are awter'd neaw |
ANONYMOUS |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
15-16 |
|
6.669 |
Th' Owdham Recruit |
When I're a young lad, sixteen years ago |
ANONYMOUS |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
16-18 |
From Ballads and songs of Lancashire |
82.685 |
The bat |
Black-black-bearaway |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
131 |
2nd ed rev |
181 |
The billmen of Bowland |
Against tenfold his numbers on Agincourt's plain |
ANONYMOUS |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
125-126 |
|
1.357 |
The billmen of Bowland |
Against tenfold his numbers on Agincourt's plain |
ANONYMOUS |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
37 |
From Ned of the fell - a Lancashire romance. Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
5.579 |
The blessed conscience |
Apollo, with his radiant beams |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
34-43 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.688 |
The blessed conscience |
Apollo, with his radiant beams |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
47-55 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.751 |
The blessed conscience |
Apollo, with his radiant beams |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
34-43 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.736 |
The bonny Gray |
Come all you cock-merchants far and near |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
276-277 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
3.074 |
The bonny Gray |
Come all you cock-merchants far and near |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
204-205 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.645 |
The bonny Gray |
Come all you cock-merchants far and near |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
204-205 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
696 |
The bonny pit laddie |
The bonny pit laddie, tha canny pit laddie |
ANONYMOUS |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
209-210 |
Tyneside |
82.655 |
The bridal bands |
Blushing, theer oor Peggy sits |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
106-107 |
2nd ed rev |
83.053 |
The bridal garter: a catch |
Here's to t' lass whea donn'd this band |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
108-109 |
2nd rev ed |
6.786 |
The Cockey Moor Snake |
Come listen to my sportive lay |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
157-161 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.614 |
The Cockey Moor Snake |
Come listen to my sportive lay |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
157-161 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.561 |
The Collingham ghost |
I'll tell ye aboot the Collingham ghost |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
26-31 |
2nd ed rev |
82.660 |
The dead pig |
T'owd pig's got mezzles an' she's deead, poor thing |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
114-115 |
2nd ed rev |
5.575 |
The famous history or song called Flodden Field |
There is Sir Edward Standley stout |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
25-27 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Fragment of a longer poem. |
6.747 |
The famous history or song called Flodden Field |
There is Sir Edward Standley Stout |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
25-27 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Fragment of a longer poem. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.684 |
The famous history or song called Flodden Field |
There is Sir Edward Standley stout |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
34-36 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland. Fragment of a longer poem. |
5.711 |
The frog and the crow |
There was a jolly fat frog liv'd in the river Swim, oh |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
178-180 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.774 |
The frog and the crow |
There was a jolly fat frog liv'd in the river Swim, oh |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
129-130 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.602 |
The frog and the crow |
There was a jolly fat frog liv'd in the river Swim, oh |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
129-130 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.732 |
The hand-loom weaver's lament |
You gentlemen and tradesmen, that ride about at will |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
259-262 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.800 |
The hand-loom weaver's lament |
You gentlemen and tradesmen, that ride about at will |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
193-195 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.641 |
The hand-loom weaver's lament |
You gentlemen and tradesmen, that ride about at will |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
193-195 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.683 |
The lady-bird |
Cow-lady, cow-lady, hie thy way wum |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
130 |
2nd ed rev |
5.739 |
The Lancashire bagpiper |
Blowzabella, my bouncing doxy |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
280-281 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
5.573 |
The Lancashire heroes |
Within ye northe contre |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
17-18 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Fragment of a longer poem. |
6.745 |
The Lancashire heroes |
Within ye northe contre |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
17-18 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Fragment of a longer poem. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.682 |
The Lancashire heroes |
Within ye northe contre |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
23-24 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
5.714 |
The Lancashire miller |
Owd Jeremy Gigg, a miller was he |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
188-190 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.778 |
The Lancashire miller |
Owd Jeremy Gigg, a miller was he |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
135-137 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
6.676 |
The Lancashire Miller |
Owd Jeremy Gigg, a miller was he |
ANONYMOUS |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
18-19 |
|
5.606 |
The Lancashire miller |
Owd Jeremy Gigg, a miller was he |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
135-137 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.738 |
The Lancashire witches |
In vain I attempt to describe |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
278-279 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
3.075 |
The Lancashire witches |
In vain I attempt to describe |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
205-206 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.627 |
The Lancashire witches |
In vain I attempt to describe |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
205-206 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.707 |
The Liverpool tragedy |
You tender parents that have children dear |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
138-151 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.770 |
The Liverpool tragedy |
You tender parents that have children dear |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
99-109 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.598 |
The Liverpool tragedy |
You tender parents that have children dear |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
99-109 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.729 |
The lover's leap |
Hard by the hall our master's house |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
245-247 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.796 |
The lover's leap |
Hard by the hall our master's house |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
184-185 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.624 |
The lover's leap |
Hard by the hall our master's house |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
184-185 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.684 |
The magpie |
I cross'd pynot, an' t' pynot cross'd me |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
130-131 |
2nd ed rev |
6.766 |
The Mayer's call |
Come, lads, with your bills |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
94-95 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.703 |
The Mayers' call |
Come, lads, with your bills |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
130 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
5.594 |
The Mayers' call |
Come, lads, with your bills |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
94-95 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.993 |
The Mayers song |
Remember us poor Mayers all |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
93-94 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.702 |
The Mayers' song |
Remember us poor Mayers all |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
128-129 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.765 |
The Mayers' song |
Remember us poor Mayers all |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
93-94 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.593 |
The Mayers' song |
Remember us poor Mayers all |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
93-94 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.733 |
The Middleton overseer and the madman |
It's of a clever overseer, as crafty as a mouse, sir |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
263-268 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.801 |
The Middleton overseer and the madman |
It's of a clever overseer, as crafty as a mouse, sir |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
196-199 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.642 |
The Middleton overseer and the madman |
It's of a clever overseer, as crafty as a mouse, sir |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
196-199 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.676 |
The miller's thumb |
Miller, miller, mooter-poke |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
126 |
2nd ed rev |
82.611 |
The mill-hands' petition |
We have come to ask for assistance |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
490 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.679 |
The new moon |
A Setterday's mean |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
127-128 |
2nd ed rev |
6.785 |
The Owdham recruit |
When i're a young lad, sixteen years ago |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
155-157 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.613 |
The Owdham recruit |
When i're a young lad, sixteen years ago |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
155-157 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.727 |
The praise of Lancashire men |
You Muses all assist my pen |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
238-241 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.794 |
The praise of Lancashire men |
You Muses all assist my pen |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
179-182 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.622 |
The praise of Lancashire men |
You Muses all assist my pen |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
179-182 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.695 |
The Preston prisoners to the ladies about Court and Town |
You fair ones, all at liberty |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
98-100 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.758 |
The Preston prisoners to the ladies about Court and Town |
You fair ones, all at liberty |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
71-73 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.586 |
The Preston prisoners to the ladies about Court and Town |
You fair ones, all at liberty |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
71-73 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.232 |
The registrar |
I wandered lonely as a cloud |
ANONYMOUS |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
125 |
|
82.689 |
The river Don |
The shelvin', slimy river Don |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
132 |
2nd ed rev |
697 |
The Sandgate girl's lamentation |
I was a young maiden truly |
ANONYMOUS |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
210-211 |
Tyneside |
153 |
The Scottish field |
He (the Erle of Surrey) made letters boldlie all the land over |
ANONYMOUS |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
3-Apr |
|
5.574 |
The Scottish Field, or Flodden Field |
He made letters boldly all the land over |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
21-24 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.746 |
The Scottish Field, or Flodden Field |
He made letters boldly all the land over |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
21-24 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC). Fragment of a longer poem |
5.683 |
The Scottish Field, or Flodden Field |
He made letters boldly all the land over |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
28-33 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland. Fragment of a longer poem. |
5.690 |
The Sir Loin |
Thee the god of plenty bore |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
66-67 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.753 |
The Sir Loin |
Thee the god of plenty bore |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
51-52 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.581 |
The Sir Loin |
Thee the god of plenty bore |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
51-52 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.686 |
The snail |
Sneel,sneel, put oot your horn |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
131 |
2nd ed rev |
1.365 |
The sprig of thyme |
You virgins far and near |
ANONYMOUS |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
55 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
5.656 |
The sprig of thyme |
You virgins far and near |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
274-275 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
6.203 |
The Syrens |
The gentle ripples of the deep |
ANONYMOUS |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
18-21 |
|
5.697 |
The three sisters |
There was a king of the north countree |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
106-112 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.760 |
The three sisters |
There was a king of the north countree |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
78-82 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.588 |
The three sisters |
There was a king of the north countree |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
78-82 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.709 |
The unfortunate love of a Lancashire gentleman |
Look, ye faithful lovers |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
161-172 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.772 |
The unfortunate love of a Lancashire gentleman |
Look, ye faithful lovers |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
116-125 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.600 |
The unfortunate love of a Lancashire gentleman |
Look, ye faithful lovers |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
116-125 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
114 |
The welcome song |
Aw'm a leet-hearted chap an' durnt care a rap, aw allus feel happy |
ANONYMOUS |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
200 |
Lancashire Traditional Song |
523 |
The Wensleydale lad |
When I were at home wi' mi father an' mother, I nivver had na fun |
ANONYMOUS |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
93-94 |
Yorkshire poetry |
82.554 |
The Wensleydale lad |
When I were at home wi' my fayther an' mother, I niver had na fun |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
Dec-13 |
2nd ed rev |
82.657 |
The witch's curse |
Fire coom |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
112 |
2nd ed rev |
82.562 |
The Yorkshire horse-dealers |
Bain to Clapham town-end lived an owd Yorkshire tyke |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
31-32 |
2nd ed rev |
240 |
Thi'n had to flit (Kirk Church clock sez a few words |
Aw'm lost beawt mi owd cronies |
ANONYMOUS |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
124 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
6.261 |
Tis distance lends enchantment |
The poet's soul was sad, and he would fain |
ANONYMOUS |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
153-154 |
|
82.330 |
To Andrew Houston |
Here's to th' lad! Eawr Forest Bard |
ANONYMOUS |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
132 |
Rossendale author |
237 |
To Rossendale poets |
There's just a few odd poets |
ANONYMOUS |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
122-123 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
5.696 |
Townley's ghost |
When Sol in shades of night was lost |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
104-105 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.759 |
Townley's ghost |
When Sol in shades of night was lost |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
76-77 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.587 |
Townley's ghost |
When Sol in shades of night was lost |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
76-77 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.318 |
Vain thoughts |
Sweet sang the thrush from the copper beech |
ANONYMOUS |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
215 |
|
5.691 |
Warrikin Fair |
Now, au yo good gentlefoak, an yo won tarry |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
68-69 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
2.982 |
Warrikin Fair |
Now, au yo good gentlefoak, an yo won tarry |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
52-54 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.662 |
Warrikin Fair |
Now, au yo good gentlefoak, an yo won tarry |
ANONYMOUS |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
3-Apr |
From Ballads and Songs of Lancashire by Harland and Wilkinson |
5.582 |
Warrikin Fair |
Now, au yo good gentlefoak, an yo won tarry |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
52-54 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.717 |
Warrington ale |
Your doctors may boast of their lotions |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
199-200 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.782 |
Warrington ale |
Your doctors may boast of their lotions |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
146-147 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.610 |
Warrington ale |
Your doctors may boast of their lotions |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
146-147 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.706 |
Wassail song |
Here we come a-wassailing |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
135-137 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.769 |
Wassail song |
Here we come a-wassailing |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
97-99 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
560 |
Wassail song |
Here we come a-wassailing |
ANONYMOUS |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
140-141 |
Christmas song/Lancashire poetry |
5.597 |
Wassail song |
Here we come a-wassailing |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
97-99 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.552 |
When at hame wi' dad |
When at hame wi' dad |
ANONYMOUS |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
9-Oct |
2nd ed rev |
5.728 |
Will, the ferryman |
Pale shone the moon on Mersey's flood |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
242-244 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.795 |
Will, the ferryman |
Pale shone the moon on Mersey's flood |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
182-184 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.623 |
Will, the ferryman |
Pale shone the moon on Mersey's flood |
ANONYMOUS |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
182-184 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.284 |
With rose or flame |
She sits in the scented chamber |
ANONYMOUS |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
181 |
|
82.792 |
My family |
My mum's name is Kath |
ARCHER, Laura |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
55 |
|
80.792 |
Euthanasiacally speaking |
Fingers gnarled, misty-eyed |
ARGENT, Bob |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
Dec-13 |
|
81.485 |
Burgers |
B is for burgers, lovely, yummy burgers |
ARMITAGE, Ryan |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
105 |
|
2.423 |
Aid crag |
High o'er wild Wanny's lofty crest |
ARMSTRONG, James |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
111-112 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.422 |
My muirland hame |
My bonnie, bonnie muirland hame |
ARMSTRONG, James |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
110-111 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
4.389 |
The expert |
Ah were workin' in t' gardin wi' mi spade |
ARROWSMITH, Allan |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
58 |
|
81.565 |
The little flying alien |
The little flying alien |
ASHALL, Stuart |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
148-149 |
|
81.466 |
Car |
The screeching brakes |
ASHCROFT, John |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
95 |
|
82.184 |
Dawn chorus |
Who selected him to be soloist |
ASHCROFT, Nell |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
111 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
418 |
Elocuted |
Ah durned know heaw id is wi owd Walt |
ASHCROFT, Nell |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
115 |
|
82.714 |
The cat |
The cat is sitting on the mat |
ASHFAQ, Aasma |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
12 |
|
82.704 |
Flowers, flowers |
Flowers can be big, flowers can be small |
ASHFAQ, Afshah |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
6 |
|
82.706 |
The monsters |
They are little, round and hairy |
ASHFAQ, Hennah |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
7 |
|
415 |
Pennine pastoral |
Aw've tramped o'er these 'ills sin' aw were a lad |
ASHTON, Stanley |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
112-113 |
|
2.842 |
A gradely hero |
This is as sad a tale |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
35 |
|
2.761 |
A gradely prayer |
Give us Lord |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
7 |
|
5.239 |
A gradely prayer |
Give us, Lord |
ASHTON, Teddy |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
50 |
|
2.660 |
A gradely preface |
Neaw what does this word 'gradely' mean? |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
5 |
|
2.846 |
A gradely psalm |
Praise God for aw we have |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
41 |
|
2.847 |
A gradely welcome to th' King an' Queen |
Hooray! a gradely welcome to eaur gradely King an' Queen |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
42-44 |
|
2.845 |
A lass fro' Chorlah |
Some says Chorlah's a sleepy tahn |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
40 |
Written in the Chorley brand of the Lancashire dialect |
2.853 |
A twothree lines to God |
Dear owd God - if God there be |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
57-58 |
|
2.856 |
A walk wi' th' wife |
I took the missis out today |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
61-62 |
|
2.840 |
Bury Hole Fowt |
Bury Hole Fowt is th' quietest place |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
32-33 |
|
2.844 |
Dialect writer's memorial |
Nay, this day shan't go songless by |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
38-39 |
|
2.841 |
Eawr Babby |
Never were e'en |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
34 |
|
2.838 |
Fiddle-diddle-dee |
Gie me my sweet and fiddle |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
22-23 |
Sam Crompton in his old age |
2.832 |
Gettin' wed |
It corn't be helped, it corn't be stopped |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
Dec-13 |
|
2.835 |
Gi'e me a day |
Gie me a day wi' two breet een |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
16 |
|
2.834 |
God help wed men! |
God help them husbands forced to rise |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
15 |
|
2.833 |
God help wed women! |
God help them wives that sit up late |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
14 |
|
334 |
God help wed women! |
God help them wives that sit up late |
ASHTON, Teddy |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
119 |
|
5.240 |
Gradely |
Once a gradely lad went to Liverpool |
ASHTON, Teddy |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
50 |
|
2.760 |
Gradely |
Once a gradely lad went to Liverpool |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
6 |
|
132 |
Henry Brierley |
Eaur Lancashire Authors' President |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
32-33 |
Allen Clarke (real name) |
2.762 |
In praise o' Lancashire |
Eaur lanky dialect's rough, but straight |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
8-Oct |
|
2.831 |
Rainin' |
On a little churchyard |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
11 |
In memory of Vinnie |
2.849 |
Some gradely advice |
Advice is seldom heeded |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
49 |
|
2.836 |
Swoppin' Sam |
This is t' story o' swoppin Sam |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
17-19 |
|
2.839 |
Th' boggart o' blue bonnet haw |
On a lonely road |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
24-31 |
|
2.850 |
Th' carol singers |
He lay in bed on Christmas Eve |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
50-52 |
|
2.855 |
Th' holiday inventor |
Th'chap as invented souldierin' |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
60 |
|
2.843 |
Th' nowty lad |
There once were a youth at th' sunday schoo' |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
36-37 |
|
2.848 |
Th' owd fiddler in Heaven |
Once I knowed a fiddler |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
45-48 |
|
2.851 |
Th' owd pon |
This owd pon, gettin' th' wuss for wear |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
53 |
|
2.852 |
Th' Rochdale boggart |
Rochdale Chucrh stands on a hill |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
54-56 |
|
2.837 |
The tripper's choice |
Oh! hek to yore scenery, yore blue skies an' greenery |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
20-21 |
|
2.854 |
Up th' nab |
If yo' want to walk by cloof an' brook |
ASHTON, Teddy |
Teddy Ashton's Lancashire poems |
CLARKE, Allen |
M0003354LC |
8.278 |
1.928 |
59 |
|
489 |
Better times |
I'm only an Ostrich feather in the royal wheelie-bin |
ASHWORTH, B. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
39 |
|
87.771 |
A Time To Die |
When Jesus entered Jerusalem the palms were waved on high |
ASHWORTH, Barbara |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
56 |
|
3 |
The Old Market |
When I was a child, it was my delight |
ASHWORTH, Florence |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
98-99 |
|
81.396 |
Books at bedtime |
Lying in bed |
ASHWORTH, Jessica |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
59 |
|
81.345 |
My horses |
My horse is called Otto |
ASHWORTH, Laura |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
29 |
|
86.732 |
Secunderabad snake charmer |
From the hospital to the baths a journey was made each day |
ASPDEN, Raymond Winston |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
80 |
|
81.414 |
The dragon |
The dragon jumps from tree to tree |
ATHERTON, Charles |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
68 |
|
87.751 |
Be By My Side |
Be by my side in my hour of need, oh Lord I |
ATHERTON, Dorothy |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
36 |
|
81.378 |
Alien |
I found a little alien last night |
ATHERTON, James |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
47 |
|
82.151 |
Nature's fost class show |
There are sich times I'm thinkin on as aw teck mi stroll at neet |
ATHERTON, James |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
56 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
3.904 |
Advice |
It's all very well, advice is |
ATHERTON, Rev. Robert |
Poems of skeletons in the cupboard |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
13 |
At Rawtenstall Library bound together with 'Poems of friendship and sympathy' by the same author |
3.908 |
Christmas bells |
Amid the snows that winter brings |
ATHERTON, Rev. Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
Inside front cover |
At Rawtenstall Library bound together with 'Poems of friendship and sympathy' by the same author |
3.899 |
Christmas time |
Oh, what is the sound that is heard from on high |
ATHERTON, Rev. Robert |
Poems of skeletons in the cupboard |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
Inside front cover |
At Rawtenstall Library bound together with 'Poems of friendship and sympathy' by the same author |
3.898 |
How 'the beggars' come down to my door |
How do the 'beggars' come down to your door? |
ATHERTON, Rev. Robert |
Poems of skeletons in the cupboard |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
1-Jul |
At Rawtenstall Library bound together with 'Poems of friendship and sympathy' by the same author |
3.900 |
Nelly day |
The bridegroom rings the Nell of parting Day |
ATHERTON, Rev. Robert |
Poems of skeletons in the cupboard |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
8-Oct |
At Rawtenstall Library bound together with 'Poems of friendship and sympathy' by the same author |
3.906 |
Night |
Twas night; for the darkness had come o'er my soul |
ATHERTON, Rev. Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
Inside back cover |
At Rawtenstall Library bound together with 'Poems of friendship and sympathy' by the same author |
3.901 |
The epitaph |
Here rests her head. Deny it if you dare |
ATHERTON, Rev. Robert |
Poems of skeletons in the cupboard |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
11 |
At Rawtenstall Library bound together with 'Poems of friendship and sympathy' by the same author |
3.902 |
The glass |
This is a glass of nut-brown beer |
ATHERTON, Rev. Robert |
Poems of skeletons in the cupboard |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
11 |
At Rawtenstall Library bound together with 'Poems of friendship and sympathy' by the same author |
3.903 |
The old curiosity shop |
There need be no verbosity |
ATHERTON, Rev. Robert |
Poems of skeletons in the cupboard |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
12 |
At Rawtenstall Library bound together with 'Poems of friendship and sympathy' by the same author |
2.920 |
A bit |
I've travelled up and down a bit |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
9 |
|
1.098 |
A helper |
If some turn their faces from friends as they lie |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
75-76 |
|
1.089 |
A man |
Ah! Can it be sir? Can it be? |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
57-59 |
|
3.905 |
A national anthem: ode to the King |
God Save old England's King today |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
Inside front cover |
At Rawtenstall Library bound together with 'Poems of friendship and sympathy' by the same author |
2.871 |
A national anthem: ode to the King |
God Save old England's King to-day |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
Flyleaf |
|
2.875 |
A plea |
Give the poor fellow |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
4-Jun |
|
1.086 |
A plea |
Give the poor fellow |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
Facing p 53 |
|
2.874 |
A poet's epitaph |
Beneath this stone, though few men know it |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
3 |
|
1.129 |
A simple story not grown up |
There was a little boy at school |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
158-159 |
|
1.079 |
Another phase of the moon |
The moon through the window came shining |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
41-43 |
|
3.907 |
Britannia, bravo, lads |
Britannia, bravo, lads! We'll conquer or die |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
Back cover |
At Rawtenstall Library bound together with 'Poems of friendship and sympathy' by the same author |
1.091 |
Britannia, bravo, Lads! New patriotic song and melody |
Britannia, bravo, lads! We'll conquer or die |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
61 |
|
2.928 |
Bumptiousness |
Wod are tha' talking about, mon |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
13 |
|
1.115 |
Canaan (Hymn) |
Canaan, blessed Canaan |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
107-108 |
|
1.143 |
Charley Brown |
What do you think her name was? |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
184-186 |
|
1.137 |
Christmas bells (song) |
Amid the snows that winter brings |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
172 |
Tune-Bolnhurst Bells |
1.136 |
Christmas time (song) |
Oh! What is the sound that is heard on high |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
171 |
Tune-Bolnhurst |
1.108 |
Come and dance at my wedding (song) |
Come and dance at my wedding today, sir, today |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
93-95 |
|
1.102 |
Come to the village feast, Mary |
Come to the village feast, Mary |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
82-84 |
Tune-The harp that once |
1.106 |
Courtship (ruffled) (song) |
Oh, my love! Oh, love! Why do you go, love! |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
90-91 |
|
1.107 |
Courtship (smooth) (song) |
Come to my arms, my darling! |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
91-92 |
|
1.131 |
Daybreak (song) |
Gone! Gone! Weary minutes, so sad and distressing |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
161-162 |
|
1.080 |
Despondency |
Is there no one to speak to me now? |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
43-44 |
Tune-I lo'e na a laddie but ane |
2.927 |
Doing |
Man is breaking manhood's yearnings |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
12 |
|
2.872 |
Failures |
Ah, never we sing inthe battle of life |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
1-Feb |
|
1.099 |
Footsore |
We should not in life make a bend in the roadway |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
76-77 |
|
1.081 |
Friendship - No I (song) |
Ah, yes, in thy sadness, I will not forget thee |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
44-46 |
|
1.084 |
Friendship No II (song) |
Ther's one heart beats for thee, although thou art absent |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
49-51 |
|
2.922 |
Friendship: no 1 |
Ah, yes, in thy sadness, I will not forget thee |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
10 |
|
2.925 |
Friendship: no 2 |
There's one heart beats for thee, although thou art absent |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
11 |
|
2.924 |
From how the beggars come down to my door |
Life is a careless run |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
10 |
|
2.873 |
Gone |
Gone! He has gone! From the Empire that loved him |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
3 |
|
1.112 |
Gone In memory of Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence |
Gone, in his youth, from the friends who have loved him |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
101-103 |
|
2.918 |
Grief |
It seems as if it couldn't be |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
8 |
|
1.096 |
Grief |
It seems as if it couldn't be |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
72-73 |
|
1.135 |
Harvest home (Harvest song) |
We plough the fields, we sow the grain |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
169-170 |
|
1.117 |
How 'the beggars' come down to my door Part I |
How do the 'beggars' come down to your door? |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
117-123 |
|
1.118 |
How 'the beggars' come down to my door Part II |
Asking a penny |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
123-127 |
|
1.119 |
How 'the beggars' come down to my door Part III |
Twenty times, yesterday |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
127-131 |
|
1.109 |
Husband and wife (song) |
Oh! My sweet love! My own dear dove! |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
95-96 |
|
2.916 |
I cannot forget |
I think of you darling - I cannot forget |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
7 |
|
1.105 |
I loved them, but (song) |
I loved them, but I had to go |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
88-89 |
|
870 |
In his steps |
Our lives should be lived where our duties are cast |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
11 |
Pseudonym was Robin O'Bobs |
1.088 |
In his steps |
Our lives should be lived where our duties are cast |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
56-57 |
|
1.100 |
John Barleycorn |
I drink to John's good memory, Bob |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
77-80 |
|
1.139 |
Kitty Keary (song) |
Her name, the sweet fairy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
175-177 |
|
1.126 |
Latest lay of old Badled Want-bread. By a loafer |
Oh, it's pass the old hat for your kind credit's sake |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
151-154 |
|
1.130 |
Lay of Mr Kerr - Mudgeon |
Some like to sing like anything |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
159-161 |
|
1.087 |
Likewise |
Why should you push a man who's pushed already |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
53-56 |
|
1.113 |
Lines written on an occasion |
Let grace and mercy flow! |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
103-104 |
|
1.078 |
Lingering and longing |
My peaceful hours have gone away |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
40-41 |
|
2.913 |
Lingering and longing: lines 8 and 9 |
Grief binds me with a hempen rope |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
6 |
|
1.144 |
Liverpool. Sept. Centenary, 1907 (a pageant song) |
I will sing you the song of a city |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
-187 |
|
1.124 |
Maudie |
Oh! Come into the garden, Maud |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
148-150 |
|
2.921 |
My garden |
And Robin Red-breast in this nook |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
9 |
|
1.142 |
My garden |
What should I do wer't not for thee |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
180-184 |
|
1.141 |
My study |
I lit my lamp at half-past four |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
179-180 |
|
2.926 |
Nelly Day |
But 'tis not so! In this our battleous life |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
11 |
|
1.120 |
Nelly day |
The bridegroom rings the Nell of parting Day |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
131-138 |
|
1.090 |
Nelson (an addition) Anniversary of Battle of Trafalgar, Oct 21 (song) |
To Nelson, the hero, the brave and the free |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
59-60 |
Written in Birmingham Oct 21 1905(use tune to Britannia, bravo, Lads!) |
1.082 |
Night |
Twas night; for the darkness had come o'er my soul |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
46-47 |
Tune-I lo'e na'a laddie, arranged |
1.077 |
Night lights |
I kissed my sweet child, and I left her to slumber |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
38-39 |
Tune-Patrick's Day |
2.914 |
Night: lines 17 and 18 |
But bye and bye, twinkling from out of a cloud |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
6 |
|
2.876 |
Nightlights: verse 2 |
And yet, thinking thus, there is something in sorrow |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
6 |
|
1.114 |
Original epitaphs |
Here lies Thomas - death took him from us |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
104-106 |
|
1.076 |
Other folks |
Oh! Did you say, sir, other folks |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
33-38 |
|
1.069 |
Our Alice |
There was a young lady called Alice |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
14-16 |
|
1.070 |
Our Johnny |
Have you heard all the latest of news? |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
16-19 |
|
1.072 |
Our Mary (song) |
Our Mary had a little tongue |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
22-23 |
|
1.123 |
Owed (ode) to St Valentine. New paid |
Poor old St Valentine |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
146-148 |
|
1.138 |
Pretty Polly |
My name is Peter Pop, my lads |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
173-175 |
|
3.163 |
Sir Harry de Lauder on the Ship Canal or the poet on Pendle Hill |
The poet stood up on Pendle Hill |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Ye Anciente Lancashire ballade of ye poete on Pendle Hill by Robin o' Bobs |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0129163LC |
628.805 |
0 |
1-Jul |
Pseudonym - Robin o' Bobs. In the catalogue as Sir Harry de Lauder on the Ship Canal, or, The poet on Pendle Hill: a collection of celebrities - Cover title: "Ye anciente Lancashire ballade of ye poete on Pendle Hill". This is identical with author's work "The oyster and the elephant" except for the first line. |
1.134 |
Song of the trees (song) |
Oh, sing me the song of the trees |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
167-168 |
|
1.111 |
Spring |
Dull winter's gone and left to spring his throne |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
99-101 |
|
1.140 |
The bachelor's tale |
I called her a duck and she called me a goose |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
177-178 |
|
1.075 |
The beggar's tale |
I wanted a penny, I went to a friend |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
27-33 |
|
2.917 |
The beggar's tale |
I've fallen in life as so many have done |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
7 |
|
1.083 |
The cross to the crown (song) |
I've few that will help me, or come when I call |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
47-49 |
|
2.915 |
The Cross to the Crown: last lines |
And then when 'tis ended, I'll just lay me down |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
6 |
|
1.071 |
The curious husband |
Oh! What a bad thing to get married |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
19-21 |
|
2.923 |
The ditty of the debtman |
We were so happy then |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
10 |
|
1.116 |
The ditty of the the debtman, or the lay of the latest loan-ee |
How do the creditors |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
108-116 |
|
1.127 |
The edge of abysses |
I have had my sad moments when sorrow has fallen |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
154-156 |
|
1.121 |
The epitaph |
Here rests her head. Deny it if you dare |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
138-139 |
|
1.074 |
The funny man |
There was a funny man |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
26-27 |
|
1.101 |
The glass |
This is a glass of nut-brown beer |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
81 |
|
1.132 |
The golden ray (song) |
I will sing the sweet song of the golden ray |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
163-164 |
|
1.103 |
The gossiper's tale |
Some there are in this our world |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
84-87 |
|
1.068 |
The hairs-at-law |
A hair upon our parson's head |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
Sep-14 |
|
1.110 |
The harvest festival |
The village now is all astir with mirth |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
96-99 |
|
1.085 |
The hermit's song |
They've left me alone, in my grief and my care |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
51-53 |
|
1.125 |
The latest lay of Impey Cuneous, Esq. By an empty purseon |
It's all very well to cry Pay, Pay, Pay! |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
150-151 |
|
1.128 |
The life and times of 'grandfather's clock' (song) |
He's a neat old clock, and a sweet old clock |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
156-158 |
|
2.919 |
The little folks |
The little lump of life is changed |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Poems of friendship and sympathy |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0172493LC |
628.485 |
0 |
8 |
|
1.073 |
The littlefolks |
The little folks are going |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
23-25 |
|
1.122 |
The painterman or, the check of the spooney whisperers |
it was the spooney whisperers |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
139-145 |
|
1.095 |
The petition |
Oh, come to me then loving heart |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
70-72 |
|
1.104 |
The ploughboy |
Oh, if I were the King of Tymbobyn! |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
87-88 |
|
1.092 |
The soldiers' address |
We've drawn the sword to stand for truth |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
62-65 |
|
1.133 |
The sunshine |
Once out from the sun there came shining |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
165-166 |
|
1.097 |
The vision |
Methough I saw a vision like |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
73-75 |
|
1.094 |
The wedding day |
The morning on which we were married was thus |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
69-70 |
|
1.066 |
To the reader Part I |
I am a ploughboy, bending forth with grace |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
1-Apr |
Author's pseudonym was Robin o'Bob's |
1.067 |
To the reader Part II |
Then to the world, I said; let no one scoff |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
4-Aug |
|
1.093 |
What father says |
Yes! Always love your father's name |
ATHERTON, Robert |
Village life and feeling: songs and poems |
ATHERTON, Robert |
M0063779LC |
273.704 |
1.907 |
65-69 |
|
81.380 |
Cosmic! |
I am lost among a maze of stars |
AUTY, Sam |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
48-49 |
|
6.678 |
Courtin' Toime |
Uv o' the toimes o' th' day an' neet |
AXON W.E.A. |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
24-25 |
|
128 |
Lincoln and the Brown Thrush |
When Lincoln was a boy |
AXON W.E.A. |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
11-Dec |
|
6.677 |
Owd Dan's fiddle |
Owd Dan had a fiddle 'at hung up o'th'wo' |
AXON W.E.A. |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
23-24 |
|
2.452 |
All is not gold that glitters |
Donosto to the public gave |
AXON, William E. A. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
162 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
872 |
Courtin' tune |
Uv o' the toimes o' th' day an' neet |
AXON, William E. A. |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
19 |
|
2.454 |
Epigram |
So full of graces is thy wife |
AXON, William E. A. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
163 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
871 |
Filey sands |
On the wide-speading sands of Filey Bay |
AXON, William E. A. |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
18 |
|
775 |
Owd Dan's fiddle |
Owd Dan had a fiddle 'at hung up o'th'wo' |
AXON, William E. A. |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
11 |
|
776 |
Owd Jone |
A pilgrim aw've bin o' mi days |
AXON, William E. A. |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
12 |
|
2.451 |
The Ancoats skylark |
The day was hot, the summer sun |
AXON, William E. A. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
160-162 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.453 |
The author of the 'Imitatio Christi' |
A solitary monk within his cell |
AXON, William E. A. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
163 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
86.877 |
Winter |
Winter's wind is cold, is cold |
AZHIR, Rebecca Louise (Aged 9 ) |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
129 |
|
82.784 |
I don't know |
Clawing and scratching like a pussy cat |
BAGGALEY, Melissa |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
50-51 |
|
577 |
I know that I won't forget you |
My party piece in the best room |
BAGLEY, Gwen |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
4 |
|
598 |
Illumination |
The street lamps shone bravely |
BAGLEY, Gwen |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
16 |
|
615 |
Impressions in the amphitheatre |
Smooth squat grey pillars line the way |
BAGLEY, Gwen |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
29 |
|
607 |
Initiation |
Nervously I approached her shrunken frame |
BAGLEY, Gwen |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
24 |
|
578 |
Know yourself |
Seek and you will find |
BAGLEY, Gwen |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
4 |
|
616 |
Sunday afternoon |
Monochrome images flickered on TV |
BAGLEY, Gwen |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
29 |
|
606 |
The abbey ruins |
Concerned with thoughts of death |
BAGLEY, Gwen |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
24 |
|
589 |
The darkened room |
We sat in the darkened room, arms around each other |
BAGLEY, Gwen |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
10 |
|
588 |
The unreal reality |
Who is this stranger, trapped in morphine sleep? |
BAGLEY, Gwen |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
10 |
|
84.218 |
Night in Seville |
A crescent moon with stars in train |
BAGSHAW, William |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
116 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.217 |
Pan |
Amid the thickets, by the secret ways |
BAGSHAW, William |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
115 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.216 |
The Backs (Cambridge) |
By banks where 'reverend Camus' foots it slow |
BAGSHAW, William |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
114 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
87.752 |
Love Everlasting |
I love you dear, no longer |
BAILEY, Dorothy |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
37 |
|
125 |
T'moors |
Hast e'er bin reight up on t' moors |
BAINBRIDGE, Arthur |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
224 |
|
81.376 |
I wish upon a star |
I wish I was an astronaut |
BAINES, Laura |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
45 |
|
86.654 |
A fools paradise |
To remember her |
BAJO |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
2 |
|
82.909 |
The blitz |
Planes bombing, bombing, bombing |
BAKER, Francis |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
122 |
|
5.163 |
To my daughter |
Hope of the future! pledge of promise past! |
BALL, John |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
32-33 |
|
82.947 |
Hidden treasures |
There was a diver |
BALL, Thomas |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
143 |
|
87.793 |
A Belief in Life |
Life can sometimes prove to be |
BALSHAW, Peter |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
80 |
|
87.838 |
A Tree in Changi |
Yet stands that tree outside a prison wall |
BAMBER, Eric G. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
126 |
|
84.137 |
Northen light |
Grey in the morning light |
BAMBER, George A. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
55 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.139 |
O Vigila |
O, Vigila! - the sun doth warm the plains |
BAMBER, George A. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
58-60 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.142 |
So be it |
A noble life may swiftly pass |
BAMBER, George A. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
63 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.136 |
Star songs |
Enthralled, I heard the stars sing on their way |
BAMBER, George A. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
54 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.140 |
The land where the rose is grown |
Give me the strength of an English breeze |
BAMBER, George A. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
61 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.138 |
The return of the yeomen |
O, our old English yeomen are living today |
BAMBER, George A. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
56-57 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.141 |
Ye sure belong to me |
Ye've often heard me rantin' |
BAMBER, George A. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
62 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
82.824 |
My cousin's horse |
The sound of his hooves |
BAMBER, Joanne Irene |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
72 |
|
3.500 |
A dialogue |
Peter - Well Zekil, hasto' yerd o' th' reawt |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
126-128 |
|
3.037 |
A dialogue |
Peter: Well Zekil, hasto' yerd o'th' reawt |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
65-67 |
|
6.682 |
A dialogue |
Well Zekil, hasto' yerd o' th' reawt |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
34-36 |
betwixt Peter Spinthreed, a Cotton manufacturer, and Zekil Lithewetur, a hand-loom weaver |
3.137 |
A dialogue |
Well, Zekil, hasto' yerd o'th' reawt |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
134-137 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.277 |
A fragment |
I'd rather live in desert wild |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
10-Nov |
|
3.092 |
A head piece |
I'll begin with her hair |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
54-55 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.371 |
A head piece |
I'll begin with her hair |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
36-38 |
|
3.161 |
A head piece |
I'll begin with her hair |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
85-87 |
|
3.314 |
A head-piece |
I'll begin with her hair |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
91-92 |
|
3.317 |
A scene in the King's Bench Prison |
Good night, the brave man said |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
96 |
On the night of May 16th, 1820 |
3.495 |
A scene in the same prison |
Good night the brave man said |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
114-115 |
|
3.124 |
A scene in the same prison |
Goodnight the brave man said |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
109-110 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.253 |
A sonnet |
My daisy sweet is drooping |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
198 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.315 |
A sonnet |
My daisy sweet is drooping |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
92-93 |
|
3.085 |
A view from Tandle Hills |
The eye of the morning is open wide |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
40-43 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
2.933 |
A view from the Tandle Hills |
The eye of the morning is open wide |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
5-Aug |
|
3.361 |
A view from the Tandle Hills (In the month of May) |
The eye of the morning is open wide |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
16-19 |
|
3.121 |
A voice from Spain |
Beneath the mighty span of Heaven |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
106-107 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.036 |
A voice from Spain |
Beneath the mighty span of Heaven |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
63-64 |
|
3.411 |
A voice from Spain |
Beneath the mighty span of Heaven |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
104-106 |
written previously to the invasion of that country, by the french Army under the Duke of Angouleme |
3.082 |
A winter's day and night |
First comes the white bearded frost at morn |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
28-30 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.359 |
A winter's day and night |
First comes the white bearded frost at morn |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
13-15 |
Supposed to be described by a Lancashire rustic |
3.132 |
An appeal written during the potato famine in Ireland |
Sons of England, noble England, listen to my verse awhile |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
123-125 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.113 |
Autumn and winter |
Autumn blithe is come again |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
90-92 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.400 |
Autumn and winter |
Autumn blythe is come again |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
79-81 |
|
3.115 |
Brandreth's soliloquy in prison |
I must die, but not like a slave |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
94-95 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.017 |
Brandreth's soliloquy in prison |
I must die, but not like a slave |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
26-28 |
|
3.403 |
Brandreth's soliloquy in prison |
I must die, but not like a slave |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
86-88 |
|
3.305 |
Brandreth's soliloquy in prison |
I must die, but not like a slave |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
66-68 |
|
3.126 |
Bright eyes |
Bright eyes! ye fatal ones |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
112-113 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.412 |
Bright eyes |
Bright eyes! ye fatal ones |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
107-108 |
|
3.034 |
Dialogue with fame |
Who art thou so wondrous fair |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
59-61 |
|
3.077 |
Dialogue with fame |
Who art thou so wondrous fair |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
20-22 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.358 |
Dialogue with fame |
Who art thou so wondrous fair |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
9-Nov |
|
3.258 |
Doctor Healey's address to his friends |
Burning fever I defy |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
210 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.030 |
Eclogue |
O'er the dark heath, and over wintry knowle |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
52-54 |
|
3.292 |
Eclogue |
O'er the dark heath, and over wintry knowle |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
34-37 |
Written during my confinement in the prison at Cold-bath Fields, London, under the Habeas Corpus Suspension in 1817 |
3.133 |
Epitaph |
Lie low, and then shalt have good rest, my child |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
125-127 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.503 |
Epitaph |
Lie low, and thou shalt have good rest, my child |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
132 |
On a boy, having suffered under a long and wasting sickness, was found unexpectedly dead. |
3.501 |
Epitaph |
Not human speech nor human wail can tell |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
129 |
|
3.138 |
Epitaph on a young man who was drowned |
Not human speech nor human wail can tell |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
137 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.131 |
Farewell to my cottage |
Farewell to my cottage that stands on the hill |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
120-122 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
1.402 |
Farewell to my cottage |
Farewell to my cottage that stands on the hill |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
99-100 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.485 |
Farewell to my cottage: written on leaving Blackley to live in London |
Farewell to my cottage that stands on the hill |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
353-355 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
3.401 |
Glenarfon |
Awake the voice of Arfon's praise |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
82-83 |
tune-'Y' Gadless', 'The camp of the Palace or 'of what a noble race was Shenkin' |
3.120 |
God help the poor |
God help the poor, who on this wintry morn |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
104-106 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.410 |
God help the poor |
God help the poor, who on this wintry morn |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
101-103 |
|
3.148 |
God save the Queen |
God save Queen Caroline |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
159-160 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.293 |
God save the Queen |
God save Queen Caroline |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
37-39 |
Lincoln Castle, June 21, 1820 |
3.152 |
Gowden - haired Hester |
O'er lofty Grange I once did range |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
170 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.093 |
Habakkuk Hyde |
I once did reside |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
55-56 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.038 |
Hannah |
Who is she o' form divine |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
68 |
|
3.108 |
Her epitaph |
To the gentle and blest |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
83 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.392 |
Her epitaph |
To the gentle and blest |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
68-71 |
|
3.393 |
Her epitaph |
To the gentle and blest |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
68 |
|
3.083 |
Homely rhymes on bad times |
Erewhile I sang of courtly dame |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
31-38 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.117 |
Hours in the bowers |
Hours more dear than drops of gold |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
98-100 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.028 |
Hours in the bowers |
Hours more dear than drops of gold |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
47-49 |
|
3.405 |
Hours in the bowers |
Hours more dear than drops of gold |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
92-94 |
|
3.029 |
Hymn to hope |
When freedom bade adieu |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
50-51 |
|
3.127 |
Hymn to hope |
When freedom bade adieu |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
113-114 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.496 |
Hymn to hope |
When freedom bade adieu |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
116-117 |
|
3.076 |
Hymn to spring |
Sweet bringer of new life |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
17-19 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.356 |
Hymn to spring |
Thou bringer of new life |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
1-Apr |
|
3.504 |
La Lyonnaise from the French of Beranger |
Misery our cup hath filled |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
133-143 |
Respectfully inscribed to Ebenezer Elliott, who,, of all the English Bards, has pleaded most eloquently and perseveringly the cause of the labouring millions. |
3.264 |
La Lyonnaise from the French of Beranger |
Misery our cup hath filled |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
221-227 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.107 |
Lament for my daughter |
My angel child! my angel child |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
82-83 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.390 |
Lament for my daughter |
My angel child! my angel child |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
67-68 |
Her epitaph |
3.255 |
Lines |
Bard, whose eye the tear hath shed |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
201-204 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.294 |
Lines |
Betsy, thou art sweet and fair |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
40 |
Inscribed to Miss Elizabeth S__d, of Middleton |
3.268 |
Lines |
Brave old Sam Bamford! Rolling years |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
232-233 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.260 |
Lines |
Come cease from his labour |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
213-215 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.404 |
Lines |
Dark is the day |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
89-91 |
|
3.242 |
Lines |
Fair is the prospect to my view |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
183-184 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.285 |
Lines |
Fair is the prospect to my view |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
23-24 |
Written in the Travellers' Room, Wolseley Arms Inn, Wolseley Bridge, Staffordshire, Nov 7, 1819 |
3.494 |
Lines |
I never will forget thee, love |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
112-113 |
|
3.394 |
Lines |
I saw the sun go down |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
69-71 |
occasioned by the death of Lord Byrom and by some circumstances connected therewith |
3.245 |
Lines |
O here is no repining |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
187 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.286 |
Lines |
O here is no repining |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
25-26 |
Written during my confinement in the Castle of Lancaster, in company with Saxton, Wilde and others, Sept 1819 |
3.298 |
Lines |
O! how sweet is solitude |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
51-53 |
Written in a rural Arbour, in Hopwood Clough, near Middleton |
3.502 |
Lines |
Oh death, how placid is thy sleep |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
130-131 |
On the death of my friend Joseph Taylor, of Oldham |
3.414 |
Lines |
Oh! here is no repining |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
109 |
written in Lancaster castle during my confinement yhere August 1819 |
3.498 |
Lines |
The youthful bard doth chant his lay |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
119-122 |
|
3.090 |
Lines |
Tomorrow's sun beholds me free |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
52 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.377 |
Lines |
What bard unknown hath deign'd to bring |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
44-48 |
Addressed to H___ In reply to the foregoing |
3.313 |
Lines addressed to H |
What bard unknown hath deign'd to bring |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
87-90 |
|
3.109 |
Lines occasioned by the death of Lord Byron |
I saw the sun go down |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
83-85 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.039 |
Lines occasioned by the death of Lord Byron |
I saw the sun go down |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
69-70 |
|
3.256 |
Lines on a quack doctor |
I sing of a doctor - doctor I sing |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
205 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.261 |
Lines on another doctor |
Behold yonder empiric strutting his rounds |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
215 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.139 |
Lines on the death of my friend, Joseph Taylor of Oldham |
Oh death, how placid is thy sleep |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
138-139 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.044 |
Lines on the death of my friend, Joseph Taylor of Oldham |
Oh death, how placid is thy sleep |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
77-78 |
|
3.319 |
Lines relating to a beautifully rural cottage in Hopwood |
Bard, whose eye the tear hath shed |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
97-100 |
|
3.266 |
Lines to a plotting person |
Come over the hills out of York, parson Hay |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
229-230 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.318 |
Lines to Jemima |
I never will forget thee, love |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
97 |
Written in the King's Bench Prison, May 16, 1820 |
1.427 |
Lines to my wife during her recovery from a long illness |
The youthful bard doth chant his lay |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
136-137 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.517 |
Lines to my wife: during her recovery from a long illness |
The youthful bard doth chant his lay |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
411-413 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
3.143 |
Lines written at the Blue Ball, Rochdale |
There's a little crude knot |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
145-147 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.160 |
Lines written at the Blue Ball, Rochdale |
There's a little crude knot |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
84-85 |
|
3.018 |
Lines written at the request of a young lady |
Good night; and if no more we meet |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
28 |
|
3.116 |
Lines written Oct 15, 1826, being the anniversary of my daughter's decease |
Dark is the day |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
96-97 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.099 |
Lines, addressed to HÓ., in reply to the foregoing |
What bard unknown hath deign'd to bring |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
64-67 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.129 |
Lines, addressed to my wife during her recovery from a long illness |
The youthful bard doth chant his lay |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
115-118 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.123 |
Lines, addressed to my wife from the King's Bench Prison, May 15, 1820 |
I never will forget thee, love |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
108-109 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.135 |
Lines, on the death of John Horsefield, botanist |
Another of the humble great departs |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
130-132 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.016 |
Lines, written at the Wolsely's Arms Inn |
Fair is the prospect to my view |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
25-26 |
|
3.134 |
Lines, written on reading of the death of a late worthy MP |
And so the good and fairhful one hath entered on his rest |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
126-130 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.096 |
London, fare thee well |
Sunny light is breaking |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
59-60 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.035 |
London, fare thee well |
Sunny light is breaking |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
61-62 |
|
3.373 |
London, fare thee well |
Sunny light is breaking |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
39-40 |
|
2.934 |
Lovely Mary |
Would ye view a bonny lass |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
9-Oct |
|
3.251 |
Lovely Mary |
Would ye view a bonny lass |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
194-195 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.301 |
Lovely Mary |
Would ye view a bonny lass |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
56-57 |
|
3.114 |
Morisa |
Ah me! that Morisa I never had seen |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
92-93 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.402 |
Morisa |
Ah me! that Morisa I never had seen |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
84-85 |
|
3.154 |
Morning |
See yon mildly beaming light |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
173-175 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.304 |
Morning |
See yon mildly beaming light |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
63-66 |
|
3.007 |
My winder |
Where Jarrat's stream with pearly gleam |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
13-14 |
|
3.084 |
My wynder |
Where Gerrard's stream, with pearly gleam |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
38-40 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
6.681 |
My wynder |
Where Gerrard's stream, with pearly gleam |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
33-34 |
|
850 |
My wynder |
Where Gerrard's stream, with pearly gleam |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
132-133 |
|
566 |
My wynder |
Where Gerrard's stream, with pearly gleam |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
147-148 |
Lancashire poetry |
5.666 |
My wynder |
Where Gerrard's stream, with pearly gleam |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
289-291 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
1.375 |
My wynder |
Where Gerrard's stream, with pearly gleam |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
68-69 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
3.043 |
Napoleon |
Visions of surpassing splendour |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
76-77 |
|
3.144 |
O'Connor's Michaelmas goose |
Sed goose unto gondor |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
147-150 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.130 |
October |
Now the dull and lazy hours |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
118-120 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.013 |
Ode |
My true lover told me when he went away |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
21 |
|
3.296 |
Ode to a plotting parson |
Come over the hills out of York, Parson Hay |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
44-48 |
Written Jan 1820 |
3.006 |
Ode to death |
Come not to me on a bed |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
12 |
|
3.300 |
Ode top death |
Come not to me on a bed |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
54-55 |
|
3.112 |
Penarfon |
Awake the voice of Arfon's praise |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
89-90 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.263 |
Reflection |
In the middle of life we are in death |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
218 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.284 |
Saint Helena |
Towering o'er the boundless deep |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
22-23 |
|
3.291 |
Serenade |
The grey dawn of morning is spreading on high |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
33 |
|
3.248 |
Song |
My true - lover told me, when he went away |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
190 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.299 |
Song |
My true-lover told me, when he went away |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
54 |
|
3.289 |
Song |
O! those locks of her's are bonny |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
29-30 |
|
3.159 |
Song |
Sweet is the bonny blushing rose |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
83 |
|
3.274 |
Song |
Sweet is the bonny blushing rose |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
2-Mar |
|
3.031 |
Song - Glenarfon |
Awake the voice of Arfon's praise |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
55-56 |
|
3.027 |
Song - Morisa |
Ah me! that Morisa I never had seen |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
45-46 |
|
3.019 |
Song - Oldham local |
Oh hark the rolling, rolling drum |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
29-30 |
|
3.244 |
Song - The despairing lover |
The winter wind is blowing |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
186 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.247 |
Song - The farewell |
Farewell, my native dells and bowers |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
189 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.262 |
Song - The Gonnor |
A Gonnor dwells o'th' Barrowfells |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
216-218 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.086 |
Song for the brave |
Say what is the life of the brave |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
43-44 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
873 |
Song for the brave |
Say, what is the life of the brave |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
21-22 |
|
1.463 |
Song for the brave |
Say, what is the life of the brave |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
178 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.599 |
Song for the brave |
Say, what is the life of the brave |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
479-480 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
3.122 |
Song of heroes |
What gain is life, unless it be |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
107-108 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.014 |
Song of the brave |
Oh what is the life of the brave |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
22-23 |
|
3.367 |
Song of the brave |
Oh what is the life of the brave |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
31-32 |
|
3.110 |
Song of the Polish Army on its retreat from Warsaw |
We meet at the home of our fathers no more |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
85-86 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.033 |
Song of the Polish Army on its retreat from Warsaw |
We meet at the home of our fathers no more |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
57-59 |
|
3.396 |
Song of the Polish Army on its retreat from Warsaw |
We meet at the home of our fathers no more |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
72-73 |
|
3.155 |
Song, Oldham local |
O hark! the rolling, rolling drum |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
176-177 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.306 |
Song, Oldham local |
O hark! the rolling, rolling drum |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
69-70 |
|
3.283 |
Song, to Jemima |
How happy may we be, my love |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
20-21 |
|
3.279 |
Song: the despairing lover |
The winter wind is blowing |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
13-14 |
|
3.288 |
Song: the farewell |
Farewell ye Middletonian bowers |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
28-29 |
|
3.010 |
Song: the winter wind is blowing |
The winter wind is blowing |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
17 |
|
3.022 |
Sonnet |
My daisy sweet is drooping |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
36 |
|
3.015 |
St Helena |
Tow'ring o'er the boundless deep |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
24 |
|
3.257 |
The arrest |
They came at night, and did surround |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
205-209 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.309 |
The arrest |
They came at night, and did surround |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
76-81 |
|
3.273 |
The Bacchanal |
Why is man, whose life is frail |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
1 |
|
3.147 |
The bard and his pupil |
Bard, I pray, come show to me |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
154-159 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.141 |
The bard's petition |
Most reverend sir, I pray permit |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
140-143 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.308 |
The bard's reformation |
Adieu to the Alehouse, where pounds I have spent |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
74-76 |
Tune 'London farewell' |
3.241 |
The bard's reformation |
Adieu to the alehouse, where pounds I have spent |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
181-183 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.009 |
The bee |
Ye lovers of nature attend unto me |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
16 |
|
3.246 |
The bee |
Ye lovers of nature attend unto me |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
188 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.280 |
The bee song |
Ye lovers of nature attend unto me |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
15-17 |
Sung at a meeting of bee-keepers in Middleton, March 27, 1815 |
3.008 |
The call of Wallace |
O come from the valley, O come from the plain |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
15 |
|
3.310 |
The call of Wallace |
O come from the valley, O come from the plain |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
81-82 |
|
3.091 |
The call of Wallace |
Oh! come from the valley, Oh! Come from the plain |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
53 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.360 |
The call of Wallace |
Oh! come from the valley, Oh! come from the plain |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
12 |
|
3.125 |
The day storm of thunder |
The black clouds hover |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
110-111 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.493 |
The day storm of thunder |
The black clouds hover |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
110-111 |
|
3.145 |
The Devil's court |
Now the Devil, saith report |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
150-151 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.011 |
The dying dragoon |
On Mount St John's too dearly purchas'd day |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
18-19 |
|
3.250 |
The dying dragoon |
On Mount St John's too dearly purchas'd day |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
192-193 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.290 |
The dying dragoon |
On Mount St John's too dearly purchas'd day |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
30-32 |
|
3.119 |
The dying poet to his dog |
My old companion, Rover |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
101-103 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.021 |
The dying poet to his dog |
My old companion, Rover |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
33-35 |
|
3.408 |
The dying poet to his dog |
My old companion, Rover |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
97-100 |
|
3.307 |
The dying poet to his dog |
My old companion, Rover |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
71-73 |
|
3.040 |
The farewell |
Farewell to Media's dells and bow'rs |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
71 |
|
3.156 |
The fray of Stockport |
Ha! han they ta'en our cap and flag |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
177-179 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.297 |
The fray of Stockport |
Ha! han they ta'en our cap and flag |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
49-51 |
|
6.679 |
The Gonner |
A Gonner dwelt o' th' Barrowfells |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
30-32 |
|
3.094 |
The labourer's orison at sun-rise |
How pure the air, how sweet the breeze |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
57-58 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.369 |
The labourer's orison at sun-rise |
How pure the air, how sweet the breeze |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
33-35 |
|
3.025 |
The Lancashire hymn |
Great God! Who did of old inspire |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
41-43 |
|
3.252 |
The Lancashire hymn |
Great God! Who did of old inspire |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
195-197 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.295 |
The Lancashire hymn |
Great God! Who did of old inspire |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
41-44 |
Tune - 'Falmouth', 1st Vol Harrison's Collection. Written in 1818 |
3.104 |
The landowner |
There was a famous landowner |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
78-79 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.153 |
The last parting |
And hast thou spoke the word Farewell |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
171-173 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.146 |
The lost ones |
Where the sun looks cold and shorn |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
152-153 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.032 |
The march of the Grand Army on its advance upon Moscow |
Glory, like the day |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
56-57 |
|
3.149 |
The parting |
Love, I can no longer stay |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
160 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.023 |
The pass of death |
Another's gone, and who comes next |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
37-40 |
|
3.089 |
The pass of death |
Another's gone, and who comes next |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
49-51 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.357 |
The pass of death |
Another's gone, and who comes next |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
5-Aug |
Written shortly after the decease of the Right Honourable George Canning, and with reference to that event |
1.466 |
The pass of death |
Another's gone, and who comes next |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
181-183 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.604 |
The pass of death: written shortly after the decease of the Right Hon. George Canning |
Another's gone, and who comes next |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
485-488 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
3.088 |
The patriot's hymn |
O thou Great Power Divine |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
47-48 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.151 |
The petition of Jammy's hen |
Ye Middletonian ladies fair |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
169-170 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.111 |
The poet's consolement of his wife in adversity |
Now to the wilderness away |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
87-88 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.398 |
The poet's consolement of his wife in adversity |
Now to the wilderness away |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
74-76 |
|
3.399 |
The prediction |
Babbler of St Stephen's Hall |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
77-78 |
|
3.267 |
The prediction |
Babbler of St Stephen's Hall |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
230-231 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.302 |
The prediction |
Babbler of St Stephen's Hall |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
57-58 |
|
3.316 |
The Queen's triumph |
Hail! to the lady fair |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
93-95 |
|
3.254 |
The Queen's triumph |
Hail! to the lady fair |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
199-200 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.087 |
The red rose and the white |
The red rose to the white rose |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
45-47 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.259 |
The retrospection |
Ah! where are now our bonny white cockades |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
211-213 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.081 |
The rosy beauty |
A little rosy beauty |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
26-28 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.041 |
The rosy beauty |
A little rosy beauty |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
72-74 |
|
3.366 |
The rosy beauty |
A little rosy beauty |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
28-30 |
|
3.004 |
The serenade |
The grey dawn of morning is spreading on high |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
10-Nov |
|
3.265 |
The slanderer |
Steal but a crust, and by the law |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
228-229 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.287 |
The snow drop |
Welcome, thou modest little flower |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
26-27 |
Written upon finding that flower in a garden, on the 26th February, 1815 |
3.140 |
The snow white dove |
Oh, why should love, unearthly love |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
139-140 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.387 |
The song of freedom |
Parent of the wide creation |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
61-62 |
|
3.100 |
The song of slaughter |
Parent of the wide creation |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
67-68 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.311 |
The song of slaughter |
Parent of the wide creation |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
82-84 |
Tune - 'Sicilian Mariner's hymn' |
3.281 |
The song of the brave |
O what is the life of the brave? |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
16-17 |
|
3.142 |
The Stakehill ball |
Twas in the prime of summer time |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
144-145 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.020 |
The Union hymn |
Ye bards of Britain, strike the lyre |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
31-32 |
|
3.240 |
The Union hymn |
Ye bards of Britain, strike the lyre |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
179-180 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.278 |
The union hymn |
Ye bards of Britain, strike the lyre |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
Nov-13 |
|
3.118 |
The voice of Glendour |
Come to glory, come with Glendour |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
100-101 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.407 |
The voice of Glendour |
Come to glory, come with Glendour |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
95-96 |
|
3.158 |
The voice of Glendour |
Come to glory, come with Glendour |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
82 |
|
3.162 |
The wanderers |
The rain beat sore and the wind did roar |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
87-88 |
|
3.276 |
The wanderers |
The rain beat sore and the wind did roar |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
8-Oct |
|
3.103 |
The wanderer's song on Macclesfield Forest, 1828 |
Where is now my home, my home |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
77-78 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.097 |
The warrior's ode to death |
Come not to me on a bed |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
61 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.362 |
The warrior's ode to death |
Come not to me on a bed |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
20 |
|
3.150 |
The watch and ward |
Come, all ye votaries of fame |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
161-168 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.275 |
The way of the world |
When flattering fortune promis'd kind |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
3-Jul |
|
3.249 |
The way of the world |
When flattering fortune promised kind |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
190-191 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.106 |
The weaver boy |
Oh stay, oh stay, then lady gay |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
81-82 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.045 |
The weaver boy |
Oh stay, oh stay, then lady gay |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
78-79 |
|
3.389 |
The weaver boy |
Oh stay, oh stay, then lady gay |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
65-66 |
|
3.243 |
The welcome |
I hail thee, because in the day of our danger |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
184-185 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.378 |
The wild rider |
Now, unto fair Alkrington tidings there came |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
49-58 |
A legendary tale |
5.630 |
The wild rider |
Now, unto fair Alkrington tidings there came |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
220-226 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
3.102 |
The wild rider: a legendary tale |
Now, unto fair Alkrington tidings there came |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
70-77 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
177 |
The wild rider: a legendary tale |
Now, unto fair Alkrington tidings there came |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
87-92 |
|
1.348 |
The wild rider: a legendary tale |
Now, unto fair Alkrington tidings there came |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
14-19 |
In four parts. Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
3.079 |
The wind unbound |
God doth unbind the enchained wind |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
23-24 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.364 |
The wind unbound |
God doth unbind the enchained wind |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
23-24 |
|
3.136 |
The witch of Brandwood |
A Beldame came to lofty scout |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
132-134 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.282 |
Thw widow's lament |
Alas! the joys of life are o'er |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
18-19 |
For the loss of her two sons, slain at the Battle of Orthes, Feb 27, 1814 |
3.105 |
Tim Bobbin's grave |
I stoode beside Tim Bobbin's grave |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
80 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.026 |
Tim Bobbin's grave |
I stoode beside Tim Bobbin's grave |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
44 |
|
3.397 |
Tim Bobbin's grave |
I stoode beside Tim Bobbin's grave |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
63-64 |
|
4.879 |
Tim Bobbin's grave |
I stoode beside Tim Bobbin's grave |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
125-126 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
6.680 |
Tim Bobbin's grave |
I stoode beside Tim Bobbin's grave |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
32 |
|
657 |
Tim Bobbin's grave |
I stoode beside Tim Bobbin's grave |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
14 |
|
129 |
Tim Bobbin's grave |
I stoode beside Tim Bobbin's grave |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
15-16 |
|
3.078 |
To a snowdrop |
Welcome, thou little modest flower |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
22-23 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.363 |
To a snowdrop |
Welcome, thou little modest flower |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
21-22 |
|
3.101 |
To Jemima |
How happy may we be, my love |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
68-69 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.012 |
To Jemima |
How happy may we be, my love |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
20-21 |
|
3.386 |
To Jemima |
How happy may we be, my love |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
59-60 |
|
3.042 |
To my father |
Dark comes the louring storm with savage yell |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
74-76 |
|
3.098 |
To Samuel Bamford |
Bamford, an unknown friend would bring |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
62-63 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.376 |
To Samuel Bamford |
Bamford, an unknown friend would bring |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
41-43 |
Now prisoner in lincoln castle, for having led a number of his fellow Townsmen, bearing a banner inscribed, 'Unity and Strength,' to the peaceable meeting of Englishmen at Manchester, on the sixteenth of August, 1819. Manchester, June 5th, 1820 |
3.024 |
To the snowdrop |
Welcome, thou little modest flow'r |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
40-41 |
|
3.320 |
Touch him! |
Touch him, aye! touch him, if you dare |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
100-102 |
Or, verses occasioned by the outrage committed upon Mr Hunt, and his friends. at the Theatre, Manchester, on the evening of Friday, January 22, 1819, by Lord Uxbridge, Captain Frazer, George Torr, and twenty or thirty 'gemmen' of the same stamp |
3.303 |
Waterloo |
Hark! I hear the shout of war |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
59-62 |
|
3.128 |
Winter |
How fearful, yet how mournful, is the tone |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
115 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.005 |
Winter |
How fearful, yet how mournful, is the tone |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
11 |
|
3.497 |
Winter |
How fearful, yet how mournful, is the tone |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
118 |
|
3.499 |
Witch o' Brandwood |
A beldame came to lofty Scout |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
123-125 |
|
3.080 |
Wolsey's grave |
Now Wolsey was, in olden time |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
24-26 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
3.365 |
Wolsey's grave |
Now Wolsey was, in olden time |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067309LC |
281.873 |
1.843 |
25-27 |
Written after visiting the ruins of Leicester Abbey, September 1829 |
3.157 |
Wolsey's grave |
Now Wolsey was, in olden time |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Hours in the bowers: poems etc |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067289LC |
281.849 |
1.834 |
80-81 |
|
3.095 |
Written at Farley, 1828 |
It was the dusk of as fine an evening as ever closed |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
Homely rhymes, poems and reminiscences |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0018034LC |
78.931 |
1.864 |
59 |
Revised and enlarged edition of 1843 edition. Many of these poems also appear in BAMFORD, Samuel, Hours in the bowers; poems etc |
86.748 |
The champions |
At last, the title Rovers have won |
BANKS, Edna |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
96 |
|
1.742 |
Ah, me! |
I measure life by gravestones, not by years |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
5-Jun |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
874 |
Bridal robes |
A bridal robe should be |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
23-24 |
|
1.741 |
Bridal robes |
A bridal robe should be |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
4-May |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.774 |
Day is breaking: a song of progress |
Day is breaking |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
55-56 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
82.444 |
Deceived |
On the shores of a tranquil lake |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
300 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.167 |
Deceived |
On the shores of a tranquil lake |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
92 |
|
875 |
Falling leaves |
The wind its trump hath blown |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
25 |
|
1.743 |
Falling leaves |
The wind its trump hath blown |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
7 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.740 |
Industria et probitate: (To my son) |
Our ancestor at Hastings fought |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
2-Apr |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.773 |
Lay of the captive lark: a plaintive plea for our poor birds of song |
Deep in the thick of a tuft of clover |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
51-54 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.408 |
Mine! (a wife's song) |
I love thee, I love thee, as dearly as when |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
108 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.493 |
Mine! (a wife's song) |
I love thee, I love thee, as dearly as when |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
364-365 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.531 |
The good spirit |
Of all the good spirits that brighten the earth |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
433-434 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.438 |
The good spirit |
Of all the good spirits who brighten the earth |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
151 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.581 |
The lesson of the leaves |
Glancing in the sunlight |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
448-449 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.446 |
The lesson of the leaves |
Glancing in the sunlight |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
159 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.603 |
The tried and true |
I pass unregarded the selfish and vain |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
484-485 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.465 |
The tried and true |
I pass unregarded the selfish and vain |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
180 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.772 |
What I live for |
I live for those who love me |
BANKS, Mrs. George Linnaeus |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
49-50 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
83.570 |
Autumn |
O Autumn, bright and golden |
BANKS, Sam |
SKETCHES and poems by local writers, edited by John U. Smith |
|
M0129272LC |
491.715 |
18 |
13 |
Editor was member of the Burnley Literary and Philosophical Society |
2.007 |
Lines to a robin |
Come Dick, Come Dick |
BANKS, Samuel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
79 |
|
2.228 |
The Martins prepare to leave us |
The martins are twitting |
BANKS, Samuel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
76-77 |
|
2.343 |
Who made you? |
Who made you, little birdies? |
BANKS, Samuel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
77-78 |
|
2.360 |
Young robin |
Aw' wer' reyt suited this morning |
BANKS, Samuel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
74-76 |
|
3.729 |
To Edwin Waugh |
Thanks, Edwin Waugh |
BARBER, Samuel |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
207-209 |
On a copy of his poems, presented to the writer |
5.266 |
Eatin' eawt Armada style |
Neaw t' sea were high, an' t' wind were strung |
BARCLAY, John C. |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
15-16 |
|
5.265 |
Wiggin Pier |
It's orwell time i' Wiggin neaw |
BARCLAY, John C. |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
14 |
Wigan |
82.770 |
My monster |
My monster is stronger than |
BARKER, Cameron |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
43 |
|
1.963 |
Hebden Bridge, past and present, and its bygone worth |
Could I the poet's aid invoke |
BARKER, Thomas |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
35-38 |
|
1.964 |
Hebden Vale |
Sweet Hebden vale |
BARKER, Thomas |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
32-35 |
|
2.054 |
My native vale |
Vale of Caldene, my nature vale |
BARKER, Thomas |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
38-40 |
|
2.138 |
Sketches from life |
Methinks, as I look around me |
BARKER, Thomas |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
41-45 |
|
81.352 |
The flaming curry |
There was a young woman from Surrey |
BARNES, Anthony |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
32 |
|
87.820 |
Divine Wisdom |
Look, said the Saviour, at this bud |
BARNES, D. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
108 |
|
82.914 |
Cheetah and the hog |
The grass is long and tall, Hog |
BARNES, George |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
125 |
|
82.864 |
The kitten |
It wanders night and day |
BARNES, Sophie |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
98 |
|
3.166 |
Immunity |
When this dear tumult of our love is dust |
BARNES, Sydney Jean |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
14-15 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
87.761 |
What Is Life? |
Life is a beginning, a seed newly sown |
BARON, Edna |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
46 |
|
86.876 |
What is life? |
Life is....a beginning, a seed newly born |
BARON, Edna |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
128 |
|
82.796 |
How strange |
How strange to think that someone else |
BARON, Emma |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
57 |
|
5.778 |
A fragment |
The angels leaned upon their harps and sang |
BARON, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
94-95 |
A fragment from a satire |
5.781 |
From 'Cypress leaves' |
I am going on a journey, Jimmy, where there is no night |
BARON, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
99-100 |
Death;John Baron's last poem; twelve stanzas only |
5.780 |
Kitty Lowe Well |
There once was a fountain called Kitty Lowe Well |
BARON, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
98 |
|
546 |
Some fooak |
There's some fooak are olez on t' chunner |
BARON, John |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
121-122 |
Lancashire poetry |
5.777 |
Sonnet |
Tis midnight! among youth-frequented nooks |
BARON, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
94 |
|
5.774 |
Stanzas from 'The farewell' |
It flow'd from my heart in the language of sorrow |
BARON, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
88-89 |
Five stanzas only |
5.773 |
The exile's lamentation |
A damsel of Israel was pensively gazing |
BARON, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
86-88 |
|
6.689 |
The old holly in Brandy Brow field |
How green grew the holly in Brandy Brow field |
BARON, John |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
58-59 |
|
5.776 |
The old holly in Brandy Brow Field: addressed to Thomas Clough, Esq of Holly Bush, Blackburn |
How green grew the holly in Brandy Brow field |
BARON, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
91-92 |
|
5.779 |
The poet's prayer |
Incomprehensible, Eternal Being |
BARON, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
95-97 |
|
5.775 |
To Nancy |
Oh, listen, fond Nancy |
BARON, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
90 |
|
1.239 |
A big burglar |
I' Accrington ther's bin sitch gram as ne'er wur known afooar |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
28 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.322 |
A bit abeawt th' Cup |
Ther's nooan o' yer buckram an' sterch abeawt me |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
76 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.250 |
A biter bitten |
Owd Pratocake keeps t Buttercup |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
34 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.266 |
A bonfire-neet stor |
Young Jud o'long Joanie's war just twenty one |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
43 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.240 |
A champion pro |
Bi th' footbo lot co'd Splashers we'd bin licked well once or twice |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
28-29 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
6.690 |
A comfortable smook |
Aw'm bothered noan wi' acres broad, nor burdened mitch wi' wealth |
BARON, John Thomas |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
64-65 |
|
6.526 |
A comfortable smook |
Aw'm bothered noan wi' acres broad, nor burdened mitch wi' wealth |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
367 |
John Thomas Baron also known as John o' Ann's |
661 |
A comfortable smook |
Aw'm bothered noan wi' acres broad, nor burdened mitch wi' wealth |
BARON, John Thomas |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
22-23 |
|
1.292 |
A fishin' catch |
Yo've read no deawt, i' thrillin' tales |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
59 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.237 |
A gradely surpriser! |
Heigh, Billy! Wod meks thee so quate? |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
27 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.286 |
A harthstooam flust |
Twur geddin' tort Kesmas, an th' wind whistled cowd |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
55 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.320 |
A legend of Brookhouse Well |
In days long ago, ere the great might of steam |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
75 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.231 |
A mother's love |
There is a flame, more pure and holy |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
24 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
6.520 |
A mother's love |
There is a flame, more pure and holy |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
363 |
John Thomas Baron also known by pseudonym Jack o' Ann's |
1.331 |
A peep at Ingleton |
Aw like to see a country loyne |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
80-81 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.244 |
A pirate chief |
When aw wur but a keerless lad |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
31 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.217 |
A plain streytforrud mon |
Aw've trodden t'rooad o' life a while |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
17 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.311 |
A poacher's dodge |
Ther used to live up Forgate Way |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
70-71 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.226 |
A pow ut twice |
Aw've just heeard a buzz o'er a barber |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
22 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.326 |
A rough tooth - drawin' |
If ever yo've hed toothwartch 'at's |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
78 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
658 |
A sope o' good strong tay |
Some chaps are fond o' aleheawse nooks, an' pots o' frothy ale |
BARON, John Thomas |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
17-18 |
|
6.563 |
A sope o' good strong tay |
Some chaps are fond o' aleheawse nooks, an' pots o' frothy ale |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
380-381 |
Tea; John Thomas Baron also known by pseudonym Jack o' Ann's |
1.208 |
A sope o' good strong tay |
Some chaps are fond o'ale-heawse nooks |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
11 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.273 |
A toffy party |
One bon-fire neet a party met |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
49 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.259 |
A Valentine buzz |
Hey dear o' me! Wod gam ther's a bin |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
39 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.242 |
A weddin' trip |
Smart Bill o'Dan's fro' Top o' th' Heights |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
30 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.211 |
A workin' mon's creed |
Awm sure as Tum Carlyle wur reet |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
14 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
6.525 |
Art and song |
Young Art had travelled far and wide a lovely spot to find |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
365-366 |
John Thomas Baron also known by pseudonym Jack o' Ann's |
1.247 |
Art and song |
Young art had travelled far and wide a lovely spot to find |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
33 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.269 |
Aw'm livin' i' Poverty Row |
Aw've getten owd an' connut wark |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
47 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
660 |
Blackburn Easter Fair |
Hey! Fair time draws creawds onto th' market streoms |
BARON, John Thomas |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
20-22 |
|
1.295 |
Bless the children |
Bless the children! Happy children! |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
60 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.224 |
Blind Bobby |
Yo' may seech i' vain to find |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
21 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.312 |
Bonny blue een |
Come here, an' tha'st peeark o' mi knee |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
71 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.310 |
Brass! |
Wod meks a fella tew an' slave |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
70 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.257 |
Brossen Bill |
When Brossen Bill 'listed i' th' pleece |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
38 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
6.522 |
By the wave |
I have watched the rose of beauty |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
364 |
John Thomas Baron also known by pseudonym Jack o' Ann's |
1.282 |
Campin' th' wife |
Aw wur campin' wi' th' wife t' other neet |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
53 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.338 |
Captain Rutchut |
Mi cuzzen Rutchut's t' boss o'er t' ship |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
86 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.215 |
Carlo! |
Wod! part wi Carlo - never, he's too good to be ill-used |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
16 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.324 |
Carter Bill |
A gradely chap is Carter Bill |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
77 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
6.562 |
Coldest of all |
Tis bitterly cold when the trees in mid Winter |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
379-380 |
John Thomas Baron also known by pseudonym Jack o' Ann's |
1.276 |
Cooartin' |
Eawr Jud's agate cooartin' aw'm sartin |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
50 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.298 |
Curin' th' rheumatic |
Jem Whistler lived for mony a year |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
62 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.280 |
Curiosity Dick |
Aw dorn'd think as Time's left another mon wick |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
46 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.336 |
Deawn bi th' well |
Young Clinker wur limber an' gay |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
84 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.229 |
Deod! |
An empty chear's bi th' hearthstooan |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
23 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.249 |
Deof Peter |
Owd Peter's booath hearty an' hardy |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
34 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.260 |
Don't give up! |
Weary brothers, bravely toiling |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
39 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.305 |
Eawr new baby |
We've getten a babby, a bonny 'un too |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
65 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.278 |
Eawr new tackler |
Th'owd tackler yon's finished his nooatis |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
51 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.253 |
Erin's lovely isle |
O, Erin's isle is lovely |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
36 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.302 |
Fair an' square |
Some fooak, to serve ther ends |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
63 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.283 |
Fireside thowts |
A nor-east wind's bitterly blowin |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
53 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
6.556 |
Friendship and hatred |
I once heard a toast from the lips of a stranger |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
370 |
John Thomas Baron also known by pseudonym Jack o' Ann's |
1.317 |
Grab o' as yo con! |
When nobbut a youngster, aw often were towd |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
74 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.330 |
Grin an' bide |
Some foak'll sob an' sigh an' fret |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
80 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
6.559 |
Grin an' bide id |
Some fooak'll sob an' sigh an' fret |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
375-377 |
John Thomas Baron also known by pseudonym Jack o' Ann's |
1.233 |
Harmony Tum |
Dud yo' ever know Harmony Tum? |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
25 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.261 |
Health's better than wealth |
This world's a place |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
40 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.342 |
Homeward bound |
Give me the love of an English lass |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
87 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.318 |
I won't |
Some fellas tell me I'm a poet |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
74 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.325 |
If wimmin hed ther way! |
Aw've lately thowt, an' thinkin's browt |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
77 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
6.597 |
In memoriam' poem |
There's a shadow grim which exiles Mirth afar, and leaves its smart |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
416-417 |
|
1.300 |
Jealousy |
Grim Jealousy, that broods with venomed mind |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
62 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.289 |
Jemmy o' Pee's clock |
Up Grimshaw Park Loyne, just a bit aboon t'brig |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
57 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.263 |
Jerry's mishap |
Neaw, young Jerry wur allus a swell |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
41 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.245 |
Jinker's meawse trap |
Thers nod a single day goes o'er |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
32 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
6.554 |
Johnny's clogs |
Howd on, theer! Dunnot use 'em rough, but put 'em gently deawn |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
368 |
John Thomas Baron also known by pseudonym Jack o' Ann's |
1.265 |
Jowler's dog |
Hev yo' a nice quate hooamly dog, 'at's full o' harmless play |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
42 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.243 |
Let's go to t' watter side |
Tha'rt lookin' powsey worn, an' ill |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
31 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.274 |
Linked sweetness |
I do love Ma - a little boy |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
49 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.333 |
Locin' time |
When fooak's bin peylin' at their wark |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
82 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.296 |
Love signs |
When Love fost toins a fella's brain |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
61 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.346 |
Marriage |
Wedlock's a strange and curious thing |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
88 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.267 |
Mashin' ned |
Neddy o' Joan's, fro' th' Four Loyne Ends |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
43 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.306 |
Mi grondad's hat |
Neaw then! Keep eawt o'mischief, do |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
68 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.248 |
Mi gronfayther's swoard |
Thad swoard hung up theer wur mi grondad's |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
33 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.209 |
Mi Gronny's Bible |
Aw know tha'rt a bit ov a bookworm |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
Dec-13 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.334 |
Mi mother-in-law's getten wed |
Mi mother-in-law's getten wed - hip hooray! |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
82 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.345 |
Mi Rooasey |
O, ther's mony a posy i' yon green fields |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
88 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.287 |
My books |
Give me my books |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
55 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.303 |
My hero |
Tell me not of mighty heroes of the mystic long ago |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
64 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.297 |
My owd lass! |
Aw wodn'a swap, for a King's creawn |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
61 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.291 |
Ned o' Lol's axia's |
Ther's lot o' happy fooak i' th' world |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
58 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.340 |
Nervous Jud |
Fooak 'at's upset a bit i'th nerves |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
87 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.251 |
Nobby con do't like a wife |
Sum chaps think ther sharp un discernin |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
35 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.219 |
Owd friends are th' best |
Snub th' owden time notions whoa will |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
18 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.270 |
Owd Fuddler's freet |
Owd Fuddler's signed teetotal |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
47 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.220 |
Owd mates |
Hello! Come in, un shut thad door |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
19 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.230 |
Owd Rachel's lad |
Sitho, Molly! That's hor i'thad carriage |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
24 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.232 |
Pat's correction |
Pat Donovan was a recruit, who but recent |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
24 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.246 |
Pleasure |
Away with the goblet of sorrow! |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
32 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.304 |
Plenty o' brass! |
A pocket's th' barometer gauge |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
64 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.315 |
Poo together! |
Sages i' ther wisdom tell us |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
73 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.238 |
Poor Johnny |
Ther's summat sprinjin' at mi heart |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
27 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.272 |
Practise wod yo' preych |
Aboon, a' else beside, advice |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
48 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
659 |
Quare doins |
Eawr hearwse is like a doctor's shop |
BARON, John Thomas |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
18-20 |
|
1.268 |
Quateness is t' best after o |
Some maxins hev echoed i' th' earhoyles o'time |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
46 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.309 |
Sailor Bill |
Shud yo' meet a chap wi' an awkwerd wawk |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
69 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.290 |
Scamps o' trade |
Work co's Capital id naybur |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
58 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.327 |
Sharper Joe! |
Hello theer! Mester consequence |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
79 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.294 |
Skeeomin' a sup |
Sly Dicky stood bi th' end o' t' street |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
60 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.341 |
Song the maid I love |
One evening I met a pretty charmer |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
87 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.221 |
Sunda' afternoon |
A workin' mon's to face a deol |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
19 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.335 |
Sweepin' a chimbley |
Tum o'Lib's wur rayther leet |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
84 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.279 |
Tekkin' th' doctor's advice |
Owd Enoch o' Nabs wur a chap o' th' reight sooart |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
52 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.255 |
Th' engine - driver's mate |
Doin'd talk to me abeawt heroes, whoa swagger wi' medals an' stars |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
37 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.275 |
Th' hooam fireside |
Just hearken to th' wind! Heaw id roars |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
50 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
6.557 |
Th' hooam fireside |
Just hearken to th' wind! Heaw id roars |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
372-373 |
John Thomas Baron also known by the pseudonym Jack o' Ann's |
662 |
Th' hooam fireside |
Just hearken to th' wind! Heaw id roars |
BARON, John Thomas |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
23-25 |
|
1.277 |
Th' husband's greetin' |
Hey! Nancy, lass, aw'm gradely fain |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
51 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.293 |
Th' influenza |
Th'owd life destroyer - Grim Disease |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
59 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.207 |
Th' owd fooak |
In a bit ov a plain whitewashed cottage |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
11 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
82.020 |
Th' owd Lankysher twang |
Thers nooan aw like better nor Lankysher fooak |
BARON, John Thomas |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
67-68 |
|
876 |
Th' owd Lankysher twang |
Thers nooan aw like better nor Lankysher fooak |
BARON, John Thomas |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
27-29 |
|
1.323 |
Th' owd parson |
No mon's better known than th' owd parson |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
76 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.307 |
Th' owd pump |
Th'ows pump stan's yon i' th' nook o' t' fowd |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
68 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.281 |
Th' owd ragmon |
Ther's nooan better know than th' owd ragmon |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
52 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.235 |
Th' owd rockin' chear |
A glint at owd familiar things |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
26 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.262 |
Th' owd tree i' th' loyne |
Thers a loyne up yon at th' foot o' th' hill |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
40 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.339 |
Th' Royal visit |
Bravo! Owd smokky teawn, tha's done |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
86 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.313 |
Thad bull feight |
A tooathrey year sin, so aw'm towd |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
72-73 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.254 |
Thad husband o' mine! |
Thad husband o' mine he's as keerless as owt |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
36 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.337 |
Thad Little Harrod goose! |
Ther wor some gam i' Drunken Row |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
85 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.218 |
Thad weyver! |
Yon weyver on t' four narro' looms is a swell |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
18 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.299 |
the blind orphan's song |
The winterly snow on the roses of June |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
62 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.256 |
The children at my knee |
What though I win my bread with toil |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
37 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
6.561 |
The children at my knee |
What though I win my bread with toil, and face a swarm of cares |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
379 |
John Thomas Baron also known by pseudonym Jack o' Ann's |
1.321 |
The invalid's story |
Why, Charley, old pal! Don't you know me? |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
75 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.319 |
The judgment of Jove |
Gay Bacchus invited the gods to a feast |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
75 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.328 |
The loved of life |
I love to see the ocean |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
79 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
6.555 |
The mountain - nightfall |
Yon kingly mountain, like a wearied knight |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
369-370 |
John Thomas Baron also known by pseudonym Jack o' Ann's |
1.258 |
The peerless maid |
In days of old, as poets sing |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
38 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
6.560 |
The peerless maid |
In days of old, as poets sing |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
377-378 |
John Thomas Baron also known by pseudonym Jack o' Ann's |
6.558 |
The street singer |
Sad and lone, with weary feet |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
374-375 |
John Thomas Baron also known by pseudonym Jack o' Ann's |
1.212 |
The toiler's song |
They tell me I am lowly born |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
14 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
6.567 |
The western singer |
A voice came over the Western sea |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
385-386 |
John Thomas Baron also known by pseudonym Jack o' Ann's |
877 |
The world will never know |
The world, that seems so just and wise |
BARON, John Thomas |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
29-30 |
|
6.564 |
The world will never know |
The world, that seems so just and wise |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
382-383 |
John Thomas Baron also known by pseudonym Jack o' Ann's |
1.213 |
Them cats! |
They may swagger o'er musical art |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
15 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.214 |
Ther's nowt as quare as fooak |
We read o'er quare things oft i' books |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
15 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.271 |
Thi fayther's on t' fuddle ageon |
Thi fayther's on t' fuddle ageon, aw believe |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
48 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.234 |
Th'last farewell |
Eh, Joan! Heaw ill th'art lookin'! |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
25 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.228 |
Th'owd case clock |
Aye, that's a relic ov owd times |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
23 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.225 |
Th'owd creddle |
It's nobbut a battered own creddle |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
21 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.332 |
Th'owd skoo |
Wod a pleashur id is |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
81 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.344 |
Three meetings |
We met, it was at a gay watering place |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
88 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.206 |
To Edwin Waugh |
Ther's nowt 'at pleoses th' hooamly heart |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
8 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.343 |
To my mother |
I've love for my father, my sister and brother |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
88 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
6.565 |
To one in bliss |
Sadly I wander without thee, divided |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
383-384 |
Death; John Thomas Baron also known by pseudonym Jack o' Ann's |
1.284 |
To Pendle Hill |
Pendle, freawnin' stern an' sollum |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
54 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.223 |
To t' weather clerk |
Aw'll tell thee wod it is, owd mon! |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
20 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.329 |
To the skylark |
Welcome hither, little bird |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
79 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.227 |
To Whalley Abbey |
Lonely, grim owd crumblin' ruin |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
22 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.347 |
Trustful |
Aw know a green, sunshiney loyne |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
13 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.252 |
Twirler's trick |
Jem Pincher keered for nowt but brass |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
35 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.288 |
Uncle Bobby's pictur! |
Id isn'd varra bonny, that owd pictur' theer on t' wo |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
56-57 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
6.566 |
Under the snow |
Under the snow, in the vale below |
BARON, John Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
384-385 |
John Thomas Baron also known by pseudonym Jack o' Ann's |
82.040 |
Under the snow |
Under the snow, in the vale below |
BARON, John Thomas |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
141 |
|
1.236 |
Up, lads, an' strive! |
Be up, lads, an' strive! wodever yo'r station |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
26 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.264 |
Weyver Bob's philosophy |
Tho' nobbut a poor workin' mon |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
41 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.316 |
When eawt o' wark |
Its strange to see wod playing does! |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
74 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.210 |
While British hearts are true |
Aloft Britannia's banners wave |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
13 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.241 |
Winter's comin' fast |
O's lookin' rad, an dull, an' bare |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
29 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.301 |
Winter's comin' on! |
Days are shortenin' fast |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
63 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.216 |
Wod mon aw do wi' eawr Tum? |
Wodever i'th' world mon aw do wi' eawr Tum? |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
17 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.314 |
Work and wage |
Trade had two sons who plagued his life |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
73 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.308 |
Worn eawt |
Owd Jemmy's gooin' deawn broo fast |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
69 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.285 |
Yon likeness on t' wo |
Aw've looked o' famous pictures |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
54 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
1.222 |
Yon tyrant at looam |
Hey, aw'm weary as weary con be |
BARON, John Thomas |
A Cotton Town Chronicle |
BARON, John Thomas |
M0014527LC |
64.559 |
1.978 |
20 |
Poems, mainly in dialect, by Blackburn author. Pseudonym-Jack O'Ann's |
2.506 |
A ballade of memorie |
When from Pandora's fateful box |
BARON, Joseph |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
233-234 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
6.569 |
As happy as a king |
Aw'm happier nor a King |
BARON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
389 |
Joseph Baron also known by pseudonym Tum o' Dick o' Bobs |
2.507 |
Ballade of foote-balle |
Ye jollie game wych alle creacyon lycks |
BARON, Joseph |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
234-235 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
6.576 |
Ballade of perfect happiness |
When summer days all blue and gold |
BARON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
396-397 |
Joseph Baron also known by pseudonym Tum o' Dick o' Bobs |
6.571 |
Cuttin' id teeth |
For weeks it's slavvered o' th' day on hankitcher an' bib |
BARON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
392-393 |
Babies teething; Joseph Baron also known by pseudonym Tum o' Dick o' Bobs |
663 |
Cuttin' id teeth |
For weeks it's slavvered o' th' day on hankitcher an' bib |
BARON, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
29 |
|
6.687 |
Dedication of Blegburn dickshonary to John Morland |
Tha's written books 'at's browt tha fame |
BARON, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
41 |
from Tum o' Dick o' Bob's |
664 |
Dedication of Blegburn Dickshonary to John Morley |
Tha's written books 'at's browt tha fame |
BARON, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
29 |
|
6.579 |
Father's old stick |
No, it's hardly the latest that's going, this shabby old bamboo of mine |
BARON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
399-402 |
Joseph Baron also known by pseudonym Tum o' Dick o' Bobs |
82.047 |
He olez dud his nook |
If trouble comes unto a friend |
BARON, Joseph |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
175-176 |
|
6.568 |
He olez dud his nook |
Iv trouble comes unto a friend |
BARON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
388 |
Joseph Baron also known by pseudonym Tum o' Dick o' Bobs |
666 |
He olez dud his nook |
Iv trouble comes unto a friend |
BARON, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
31 |
|
878 |
He olez dud his nook |
Iv trouble comes unto a friend |
BARON, Joseph |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
32 |
Pseudonym was Tum o' Dick o' Bobs. |
665 |
His cake's baked |
Heaw th'owd fooak slaved |
BARON, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
30 |
|
6.573 |
Oirish wut |
Shure Fin McCoul was a throubled soul |
BARON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
393-394 |
Joseph Baron also known by pseudonym Tum o' Dick o' Bobs |
6.574 |
Serenade |
Thou art high above me, lady |
BARON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
395 |
Joseph Baron also known by pseudonym Tum o' Dick o' Bobs |
6.578 |
Tennyson's death |
Deep silence in the chamber reigns |
BARON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
398 |
Joseph Baron also known by pseudonym Tum o' Dick o' Bobs |
879 |
Tennyson's death |
Deep silence in the chamber reigns |
BARON, Joseph |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
32-33 |
|
6.570 |
Th' butcher an' th' lawyer |
You may go to a Jew and buy things cheap |
BARON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
389-392 |
Joseph Baron also known by pseudonym Tum o' Dick o' Bobs |
6.688 |
Th' dule upo' dun |
Aw read a stoory t' other neet |
BARON, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
41-54 |
from Tum o' Dick o' Bob's |
6.580 |
The ball |
Fill the goblet again! for I never before |
BARON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
402-403 |
Joseph Baron also known by pseudonym Tum o' Dick o' Bobs |
6.577 |
The conqueror of Mars |
Twas not the goblet Bacchus gave |
BARON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
397-398 |
Joseph Baron also known by pseudonym Tum o' Dick o' Bobs |
6.575 |
The mistress of the seas |
Ho, a bumper to the brave, our defenders on the wave |
BARON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
395-396 |
Joseph Baron also known by pseudonym Tum o' Dick o' Bobs |
6.572 |
To onybody |
Yo' may nod do as others do, becose yo're nod inclined |
BARON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
393 |
Joseph Baron also known by pseudonym Tum o' Dick o' Bobs |
2.508 |
Two seeds |
As the fallen seed of a former flower |
BARON, Joseph |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
235-236 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
6.683 |
Some fooak |
There's some fooak are olez on t' chunner |
BARON, Joseph (Tum o' Dick o' Bob's) |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
39-41 |
|
1.798 |
A bit o' th' owden time |
We're ramblin' reawnd th' owd spot ageean |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
90-92 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.759 |
A coronation ode |
Sovereign lord of the Empire! King of our Isle of the Sea |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
205-208 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
6.617 |
A coronation ode |
Sovereign lord of the Empire! King of our Isle of the Sea |
BARON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
438-439 |
William Baron also known by pseudonym Bill o' Jack's |
2.738 |
A neetmare romance |
O' readin' wild tales an' romances |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
164-166 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.744 |
A peace offerin' |
War no longer wields its sway |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
180-182 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.699 |
A peep at mi birthplace |
Aw've bin deawn to Blackpool to look at th' ocean |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
73-75 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.687 |
A ramble i' t' country |
When summer-time comes wi' its fruits an' its fleawers |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
43-45 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.717 |
A ramble i' t' Lancashire lanes |
O, give me a ramble i' t' Lancashire lanes |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
113-114 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
1.819 |
A seeat at yor own fireside |
Ther's nowt like a seeat at yor own fireside |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
43-45 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.746 |
A song of cheer |
What's the use of sadly sighing, or of giving way to grief |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
185-186 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.734 |
A toffy-neet buzz |
Tum Twister is a tackler bowd |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
154-156 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
1.823 |
A warkin' mon's reflections |
Sometimes, when wearied eawt at neet |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
21-23 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
6.613 |
A warkin' mon's reflections |
Sometimes, when wearied eawt at neet |
BARON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
433-434 |
William Baron also known by pseudonym Bill o'Jacks |
1.826 |
A winter's neet |
Hearken to t' wind heaw id whistles past |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
78-80 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.710 |
Aim to do t' best for yorsels |
If ther's one thing 'at's chep, it's a bit uv advice |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
98-100 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.669 |
Allus speyk eawt what yo think |
Back-bitin's a thing aw detest |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
31-33 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
6.694 |
At hooam |
Th'wintry wind blows bitter cowd |
BARON, William |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
74-75 |
From Bit's o broad Lancashire |
1.846 |
At hooam |
Th'wintry wind blows bitter cowd |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
34-36 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.711 |
At my father's grave |
Treyd gently o'er that new-filled grave |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
100-101 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.723 |
At the grave of Tim Bobbin |
Aw'm stood beside thi restin' pace, owd bard o' bygone times |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
127-129 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
1.850 |
Aw'm gooin' a cooartin' to-neet |
This heart o' mine's o' in a flutter |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
41-43 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.662 |
Be jannock |
Be jannock, mi lads, as yo journey throo life |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
15-16 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
1.860 |
Betty's Valentine |
Aw feel some an' pottered this mornin' |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
16-18 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
82.051 |
Carr wood |
Yo 'at con find true enjoyment an' pleasure |
BARON, William |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
199 |
|
2.671 |
Changin' his mind |
Owd Lolly o' Jem's seet him deawn in his cheear |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
35-37 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.701 |
Childless |
Put o thoose little skips an' things away |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
77-78 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.698 |
Come, raise thoose droopin' een |
Come, raise thoose droopin' een, lass |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
71-73 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.721 |
Dick Pringle's Kesmas hamper |
Yo'll know owd Dick Pringle 'at lives up on t' broo |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
123-125 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
1.910 |
Do thad as is reet |
We've oft heeard id sed, 'at a chap, to ged on |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
4-May |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.741 |
Dunnot stan' in yor own leet |
Ther's a lot o' things wrong, folks, ' at owt to be reight |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
172-173 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.722 |
Eawr childer |
When th' owd sun sinks o'er t' distant hills |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
125-127 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
1.918 |
Eawr little Jane |
Come lass! Sit deawn at side o' me |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
66-68 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
1.919 |
Eawr moll's hed a row wi' hur chap |
Eawr Moll's hed a row wi' hur chap |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
71-72 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.727 |
Eawr Nell's bin axed eawt for t' first time |
Eh dear! aw'm upset aw con tell yo |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
135-137 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.693 |
Eawr Teddy's a sowjer bowd |
Aw've allus bin preawd uv eawr Teddy |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
58-60 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
6.695 |
Eawr Tum's getten tacklin' today |
This owd heart o' mine fair goo as bumpity-bump |
BARON, William |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
75-77 |
From Bit's o' broad Lancashire |
1.920 |
Eawr Tum's getten tacklin' today |
This owd heart o' mine fair goo as bumpity-bump |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
31-33 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
669 |
Eawr Tum's getten tacklin' today |
This owd heart o' mine fair goo as bumpity-bump |
BARON, William |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
37-39 |
|
1.933 |
Feniscliffe Gate |
We're stood bi th' owd gate, wheer we oft used to meet |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
52-54 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.718 |
Giles Bumbleton's dummy |
Ther's a policemon reawnd eawr way, weel known as Long Joe |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
115-117 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
6.692 |
Gooin' ewat a-mayin' |
When t' risin' sun peeps eawt o'er th' hills |
BARON, William |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
71-72 |
from Echos from the loom |
2.691 |
Gooin' ewat a-mayin' |
When t' risin' sun peeps eawt o'er th' hills |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
53-55 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.709 |
Gooin' to t' fair |
It's a day 'at aw'st never forget |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
96-98 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
1.956 |
Hawf past five at neet |
For fooak at's slaves to t' factory bell |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
45-47 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
4.856 |
Hawf past five at neet |
For fooak at's slaves to t' factory bell |
BARON, William |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
91-92 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
6.614 |
Hawf-past five at neet |
For fooak at's slaves t' factory bell, lifes's nooan so breet nor gay |
BARON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
435 |
William Baron also known by pseudonym Bill o' Jack's |
6.616 |
Healey Dell |
O, sweet to the vision is Healey's famed dell |
BARON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
437-438 |
William Baron also known by pseudonym Bill o' Jack's |
312 |
Healey Dell |
O, sweet to the vision is Healey's famed dell |
BARON, William |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
193 |
|
2.747 |
Healey dell |
O, sweet to the vision is Healey's famed dell |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
187-188 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
85.222 |
Healy, Dell |
O, sweet to the vision is Healey's famed dell |
BARON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
437-438 |
|
2.673 |
Heaw Joe Tinker saved his bate |
Joe Tinker's a bit uv a softey |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
40-42 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
1.959 |
Heaw Johnny kept his promise |
Young Johnny o' th' Heights wur a frolicsome blade |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
36-38 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
1.960 |
Heaw owd Jerry geet a wife |
Owd Jerry o'Tums led a bachelor life |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
87-89 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.749 |
How Trooper Baxter died: a tale of Buluwayo |
He was only a simple Trooper! one of Grey's Scouts that's all |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
190-192 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.754 |
If sorrow were a captive |
If Sorrow were a captive |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
199-200 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.688 |
In a sweater's den: an appeal to t' masses |
In t' dingiest room uv a dingy court, shut eawt bi buildin's fro' t' leet o' day |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
45-48 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.733 |
In memoriam: Edwin Waugh |
Tha'rt gone, sweet singer! o this sufferin's past |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
152-153 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.753 |
In memoriam: Her Most Gracious Majesty Queen Victoria |
Britannia weeps! Our Empress-Queen is dead |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
197-198 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.748 |
In memoriam: Samuel Laycock, the Lancashire poet |
Another singer from our midst has gone |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
188-190 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
1.988 |
It's Kesmas ageean |
It's Kesmas ageean, an' ther's joy-nooates i' t' bells |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
59-61 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.728 |
Jim Trueman's trust: mi gronny's tale |
Put t' thresher up to t' dooar, Bill! for t' draught comes reawnd that speer |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
137-140 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.696 |
Keep on t' look-eawt |
Keep on t' look-eawt! for ther's never no knowin' |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
64-66 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.672 |
Little Neddy's prayer |
Spring hed come wi' o its gladness |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
38-40 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.668 |
London: fro' t' Monument |
O, what a mighty pictur' lies below! |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
28-31 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.024 |
Luv in a chimley |
Aw've a bit uv a tale 'at aw'll tell ye |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
23-27 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.757 |
Maid of Lodore |
Maid of Lodore, 'tis long years since we met |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
204 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
670 |
Mi Gronfeyther's cooat |
That's mi gronfeyther's cooat as is hung up i' t' nook |
BARON, William |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
39-40 |
|
2.037 |
Mi gronfeyther's cooat |
That's mi gronfeyther's cooat as is hung up i' t' nook |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
80-82 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.038 |
Mi Robin |
Mi heart beeats time to a merry tune |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
47-49 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.039 |
Mi sweetheart Nell |
At t' corner o' th' owd loyne, yo'll see |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
6-Aug |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.703 |
Mind who yo pick for yor friends |
Ther's plenty o' folks i' this world neawadays |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
81-83 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.702 |
Monda' afternoon |
When Monda' dinner time gets o'er, just tek a ramble eawt |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
79-81 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.665 |
Monda' mornin' |
It's grond, when Monda' mornin' comes around |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
22-24 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.732 |
Nell Morton's pluck: an episode o' t' long strike |
Ther's a cottage stan's deawn i' yon hollow |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
147-151 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.061 |
News fro' th' owd quarters |
Hello! is thad thee, Jack? Wod's browt tha deawn here? |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
96-98 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.751 |
Night: a reverie |
The gentle zephyrs croom the dirge of day |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
194-195 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.758 |
Norcliffe Wood, Styal |
Ne'er since Creation's dawn, did mortal eyes |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
205 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.706 |
Off to t' top o' th' hill |
Let's tek a last long look at th' heawse |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
89-91 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.743 |
On an owd folks' treat |
Aw've just heeard, wi' feelin's of pleasure |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
178-179 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
880 |
Owd Ailse's thrift |
What meks tha sit so quate, to-neet? Come, hesta nowt to say? |
BARON, William |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
35-37 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jacks |
6.611 |
Owd Ailse's thrift |
What meks tha sit so quate, to-neet? Come, hesta nowt to say? |
BARON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
430-431 |
William Baron also known by pseudonym Bill o' Jack's |
668 |
Owd Ailse's thrift |
Wod meks tha sit so quate, to-neet? |
BARON, William |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
36-37 |
|
2.088 |
Owd Ailse's thrift |
Wod meks tha sit so quate, to-neet? |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
14-16 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.090 |
Owd comrades |
We're two owd comrades - thee an' me |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
49-52 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.716 |
Owd cronies |
Weel met, weel met, owd crony |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
111-112 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.663 |
Owd Darby's mare |
Owd Darby's a bit uv a sharp in his way |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
17-19 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.091 |
Owd Isaac an' t' bum-bailiffs |
Yo'll hardly find one deawn i' Longshaw |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
73-75 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.093 |
Owd Putty's race |
Yo may talk abeawt Hutchens or Cummin's, an George |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
101-103 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.704 |
Parted |
Parted, alas! for ever; gone fro' mi side for aye |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
83-85 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
6.693 |
Poorly |
Daddy's comin' whoam, luv, soon |
BARON, William |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
72-74 |
from Echos from the loom |
550 |
Poorly |
Daddy's comin' whoam, luv, soon |
BARON, William |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
126-127 |
Lancashire poetry |
2.670 |
Poorly |
Daddy's comin' whoam, luv, soon |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
33-35 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.103 |
Puttin' t' childer to bed |
At neet, when aw hear th' engine slacken |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
99-100 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.109 |
Raisin' t' wind |
Owd Jonas Lee were ceawered i' t' nook |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
68-70 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.134 |
Shootin' Owd Turpin |
No deawt yo've heeard speyk uv Owd Turpin |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
63-66 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
4.857 |
Six o'clock at mornin |
When t'factory loces uv a neet |
BARON, William |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
93-94 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
2.136 |
Six o'clock at mornin |
When t'factory loces uv a neet |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
54-56 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
545 |
Six o'clock at mornin' (Bits o'broad Lancashire) |
When t'factory loces uv a neet |
BARON, William |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
119-120 |
Lancashire poetry |
2.736 |
Smashed: a tale o' t' corner |
Owd Solomon Grab wur a greedy soul, an' as selfish as mon could be |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
159-161 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.735 |
Some folks 'at are nowt i' mi way |
Ther's o sooarts o' folk to be met wi' i' t' world |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
157-159 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.756 |
Stanzas: on the death of President McKinley |
Affliction's tempest rends Columbia's breast |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
202-203 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.162 |
Tek things as mild as yo con |
This world's full o' trouble an' pain |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
105-107 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.719 |
Th' bonniest seet uv o |
What's t' bonniest seet 'at tha ever seed |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
118-120 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.712 |
Th' cricket on th' hearth |
Sing on, merry cricket, sing on |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
102-103 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.165 |
Th' empty cheear |
Come, Sally, put some coyl on t' fire |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
94-96 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.715 |
Th' first o' May |
It's t' first o' may to-day, owd lad, sooa draw thi cheear to mine |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
107-110 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.729 |
Th' joys o' winter time |
What's that yo say o'er winter time |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
141-143 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.720 |
Th' owd clothes box |
That clothes box wur mi gronny's, but it's welly twenty year |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
120-122 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
4.293 |
Th' owd cobbler |
Th'owd cobbler's well liked bi his nayburs |
BARON, William |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
8 |
Bill o' Jack's - pseudonym of William Baron |
2.730 |
Th' owd corner cubbort |
If that owd corner cubbort could speyk for itsel' |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
143-145 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.740 |
Th' owd doctor |
Owd Doctor Dunn's a reet good sooart |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
169-171 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.166 |
Th' owd family bible |
Ther's an owd family relic on t' bookshelf up theer |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
1-Mar |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
6.612 |
Th' owd family bible |
Ther's an owd family relic on t' bookshelf up theer |
BARON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
431-433 |
William Baron also known by pseudonym Bill o' Jack's |
2.167 |
Th' owd fiddler |
They're layin th' owd fiddler to rest |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
27-29 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.168 |
Th' owd neetwatch |
If any o' yo' lives tort Griffin |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
92-94 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.169 |
Th' owd parson |
Th'owd parson's preyched i' t' village church |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
76-77 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.700 |
Th' owd postmon |
Th'owd Postmon's a nice kindly chap |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
75-77 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.726 |
Th' owd singer |
Th'owd singer's welly gone |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
133-135 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.690 |
Th' owd teycher |
Th'owd teycher's lookin' varra bad, for years th' owed mon's bin ainlin' |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
51-53 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.708 |
Th' owd village inn |
It's a plain lookin' buildin' is th' owd village inn |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
94-95 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.667 |
Th' owd wag-bi-th'-wo' |
It's getten a bit eawt o' fashion, aw know |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
26-28 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.697 |
Th' parson's deed |
Yo'd see that young chap 'at just passed us? Well, he's t' parson at the chapel below |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
66-70 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.170 |
Th' Pell Mell boggart |
Aw heeard a queer tale up at Pinchem last neet |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
Oct-13 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.714 |
Th' pride o' rachda' teawn |
Eh! aw'm allus glad when week-end comes |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
106-107 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.707 |
Th' stranger i' t' bars |
Ther's a stranger i' t' bars o' th' owd fire-place, to neet |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
92-94 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.661 |
Th' vagabond son: a tale o' Kesmas Eve |
Twur nearin' on for Kesmas, an' bitter cowd it wur |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
Nov-14 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.666 |
Th' witches o' Pendle |
When Jemmy as ruler o' th' land wur proclaimed |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
24-26 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.739 |
That young chap 'at wyves acoss th' alley |
Yo should see that new weyver we've getten deawn yon |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
167-169 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.755 |
The Gipsy's prophecy |
When the second son of a second son |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
200-201 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.752 |
The loss of the Drummond Castle |
The ship Drummond Castle was fast homeward steaming |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
196 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.689 |
Ther's summat gone wrong wi' eawr Joe |
Aw wonder what's up wi' eawr Joe? |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
48-50 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.282 |
Thi mother's geddin owd |
Speyk kindly to thi mothe, Dick |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
85-86 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.305 |
To Hoghton Tower |
Scene o' long departed glories |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
29-31 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.695 |
To t' cotton corner crew |
Sooa yo've med a 'corner', hev yo |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
62-64 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.745 |
To t' new year 1903 |
Well, what hesta browt us, like, neaw 'at tha'rt here |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
182-184 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.312 |
To t' Royal babby |
Bless tha' little Alexandra! |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
57-59 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.313 |
To th' Owd Year, 1887 |
Tha'rt gooin' to leeave us soon, Owd Year |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
61-63 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.750 |
To the memory of Burns: a toast |
To the memory of Burns! fill each glass to the brim |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
193-194 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.320 |
Trickin' a masher |
I' t' street wheer aw live, ther's a masher |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
107-110 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.705 |
Trickin' th' owd barber |
Aw daresay yo'll o know th' owd barber |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
86-89 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.742 |
Vanquished heroes: an appeal for t' sufferers o' th' Audley mining disaster |
A bitter wail uv anguish rings wild on t' wintry air |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
174-177 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.330 |
Waitin' |
Come, Joe, side thi playthings away |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
8-Oct |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.737 |
Watchin' |
Th'breezes blow soft across t' meadows |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
162-163 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.692 |
Weyvin' up |
Th'kettle's singin' on to th' hob |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
55-57 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
402 |
What could aw say (extract) |
Aw'd just stopped to rest me, a bit past th'owd farm |
BARON, William |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
104 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jacks |
2.664 |
What could aw say? |
Aw'd just stopped to rest me |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
19-21 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
6.691 |
What could aw say? |
Aw'd just stopped to rest me, a bit past th'owd farm |
BARON, William |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
70 |
|
667 |
What could aw say? |
Aw'd just stopped to rest me, a bit past th'owd farm |
BARON, William |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
35 |
|
6.615 |
What could aw say? |
Aw'd just stopped to rest me, a bit past th'owd farm |
BARON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
436-437 |
William Baron also known by pseudonym Bill o' Jack's |
130 |
What could aw say? |
Aw'd just stopped to rest me, a bit past th'owd farm |
BARON, William |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
19-20 |
|
2.694 |
When t' childer's asleep |
Aw'm sittin' bi th' fire meditatin' |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
60-62 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.724 |
Why should monkind be so cruel to mon |
Oh! why should monkind be so cruel to mon |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
129-131 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.355 |
Yon cottage uv eawrs |
Aw've a snug little cot, an' a sweet-tempered wife |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
39-40 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.356 |
Yon lass as aw'm teckin' to t' fair |
For clooase on a year, aw've bin cooartin' |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
82-84 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.725 |
Yon Mally |
When neet-fo' comes on, an' mi day's wark is done |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
131-133 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.713 |
Yon musical folks at t' next dooar |
Aw've bin pestered to deeath for this last month or two |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
104-106 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.357 |
Yon troublesome lad |
Aw'm sure 'at ther's nobry mooar hampered than me |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
19-21 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
2.358 |
Yon weyver as warks t' beeam to me |
I' t' shed, wheear aw'm toilin' an' slavin |
BARON, William |
Bits o' broad Lancashire |
BARON, William |
M0003220LC |
8.017 |
1.888 |
103-105 |
Pseudonym was Bill o'Jack's. Blackburn author |
4.837 |
Yon weyver as warks t'beeam to me |
I't'shed, wheer aw'm toilin' an' slavin |
BARON, William |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
56-57 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
2.731 |
Yo're treydin' on dangerous greawnd |
Beware what yo do! for this world's full o' snares |
BARON, William |
Echoes from the loom: a collection of poems, chiefly in the dialect |
BARON, William |
M0003219LC |
8.015 |
1.903 |
145-147 |
Bill-o-Jack's. Blackburn author |
80.815 |
Keep that candle burning |
It might have been a 'Pool of Light' for Carl Jung |
BARR, Robin |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
49 |
|
81.307 |
Thunder and lightning |
The lightning flashes |
BARRIE, Scott |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
12 |
|
5.679 |
A Trafford and Byron feud |
In our Fourth Edward's fickle days |
BARRITT, Thomas |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
11-Dec |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.742 |
A Trafford and Byron feud |
In our Fourth Edward's fickle days |
BARRITT, Thomas |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
9 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.674 |
A Trafford and Byron feud |
In our Fourth Edward's fickle days |
BARRITT, Thomas |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
9 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.827 |
Water |
The water is cold, the water is hot |
BARTON, Danny |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
74 |
|
82.893 |
Buried treasure |
Right at the bottom of the deep blue sea |
BARTON, Thomas |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
113 |
|
82.913 |
Helpless |
I fell down, down, down |
BASQUILL, Joe |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
124 |
|
81.330 |
Spicy meatballs on a plate |
Spicy meatballs on a plate |
BATCHELOR, Mattlew |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
23 |
|
2.769 |
A bit er mi schooldays |
Wen Ah ask yer 'Did ter gu tert Grove' |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
3-Apr |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.771 |
A Social at Chapil |
Ah've towd yer abairt Chapil |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
5-Jun |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.774 |
A weyver's day |
Evry Mornin' yer knew they wer gooin' |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
10-Nov |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.776 |
Ah think ther's summat in it |
On Sundys, like a lot moor chaps |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
12 |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.775 |
All around the maypole |
Mi Sister, wen Ah wer three er four |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
11-Dec |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.785 |
Charleston days |
Burnley lads er gradely lads |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
23-24 |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.789 |
Delicate Bob |
Wi' 'ed a chap it village once |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
28-29 |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.786 |
Detective Libby-Ann |
Wi used ter ev a Bobby |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
24-25 |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.772 |
Dutch courage |
A'hll tell yer a tale abairt Blackpool |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
7-Aug |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.792 |
Friends indeed |
Joe Heaton wife, Susannah |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
13 |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.791 |
Gooin' up West End |
Wi'd all meet at Wesleyan's corner |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
31-32 |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.778 |
Id meks ner difference ter Jonty |
Wi wor tawkin' it Barber's tother day |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
14-15 |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.784 |
Inter each life |
Yer'll remember mi tellin' ower t'Motorway |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
22-23 |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.790 |
Jimmy Steadfast |
Religion is a funny thing |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
29-31 |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.788 |
John Eddie's Xmas Eve |
Yer'll remember John Eddie, air joiner |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
27-28 |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.777 |
Keep in touch |
Thers a special feelin' ter churches |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
14 |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.773 |
Let's et table nockin' |
In't days bifoor t'Telly an't Wireless |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
8-Sep |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.782 |
Little big eyd |
Ah wor i' Mary Ellen's campin' one day |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
19-20 |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.770 |
Nivver ner moor |
Ah'm gooin' back nair, tert Genral Strike |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
4-May |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.780 |
Owd stop atooam |
It's cummin' up tert holidys |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
17 |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.783 |
T' Royal Show |
Ah've cum on 'ere tert Royal Show |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
20-22 |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.779 |
T'bun and coffee day |
Wen Ah wer four, er 'appen three |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
15-16 |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.787 |
Thumb Pegs angel |
Wi' 'ed a chap i't Village once |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
26 |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.793 |
Wotever next |
Ah see int' paper, t'other day |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
6-Jul |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
2.781 |
Yer Maggie |
Yer Maggie's Mam wer Lib o' Nan's |
BATES, Willie |
Even fresher |
BATES, Willie |
M0037113LC |
136.393 |
1.977 |
18-19 |
Third collection of poems in Lancashire dialect |
5.221 |
Industrial river |
Fro' heigh up yon, bi Thievley Pike |
BATTERSBY, Dan |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
43 |
|
5.222 |
The gladiators |
When Bickershaw Hornets played Ince Aw' Blacks |
BATTERSBY, Dan |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
44 |
Rugby football |
23 |
Gossip |
Bright the sun and keen the frost |
BATTERSBY, Edmund |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
176-177 |
|
47 |
Little Mary |
Just up th' loin ther's a few owd hou |
BATTERSBY, Edmund |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
196-197 |
|
5.171 |
Sharon's rose |
I've stray'd amid the garden bowers |
BATTYE, Eliza |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
55-56 |
|
81.409 |
In space |
One day I went up in a rocket |
BAXENDALE, Matthew |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
66 |
|
82.984 |
My mum's amazing |
My mum is amazing for she can |
BAXTER, Heather |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
163 |
|
86.752 |
The forsaken garden |
This garden, tended once with love and skill |
BAXTER, Mary J. |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
100 |
|
1.796 |
21st century voices from space |
How was the earth destroyed? |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
24-26 |
|
1.813 |
A moment in time |
The voice on the radio murmered on |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
54 |
|
1.816 |
A rainbow in Cairo |
They said, 'It never rains in Cairo' |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
39 |
|
1.827 |
A wish |
I wish you had told me |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
35 |
|
1.829 |
Abu Simbel |
On dusty ground, under a sun scorched sky |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
40-41 |
|
1.830 |
Accident |
Shocked and confused, the pain competes |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
32 |
|
1.831 |
After the storm |
Last spring this tree stood tall against the sky |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
47 |
|
1.832 |
After the tsunami |
Utter devastation |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
34 |
|
1.833 |
Aftermath of the tsunami |
Shock waves |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
35 |
|
1.834 |
Aliens on the moors |
Alien beings, fugitives from space |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
17 |
|
1.835 |
All in the mind |
A complex maze of interconnections |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
33 |
|
1.843 |
April song |
Early one April morning |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
49 |
|
1.847 |
Autumn |
Just a few weeks ago, the leaves were green |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
55 |
|
1.862 |
Blackbird's song |
A blackbird sings. In the dull atmosphere |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
51 |
|
1.872 |
Butterfly |
Just a short time ago |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
45 |
|
1.873 |
Call of the rainforests |
Do you hear the voices pleading? |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
28 |
|
1.875 |
Call to prayer |
As night ends, shadowy grey skies |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
42 |
|
1.877 |
Canopy of colour |
Moonbeams drift through leaf-bare trees |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
2 |
|
1.880 |
Castle in the air |
Today I passed the place where years ago |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
26-27 |
|
1.881 |
Cat |
Inscrutable Sphinx |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
6 |
|
1.887 |
Christmas |
There is a feeling in the air |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
57 |
|
1.890 |
Christmases remembered |
I remember Christmas |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
58-59 |
|
1.897 |
Country dancers |
I heard the music in the village street |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
13 |
|
1.903 |
Dancing in air |
In kaleidascope movement |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
3 |
|
1.904 |
Dark places |
There are dark places hidden |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
22 |
|
1.908 |
Desert storm |
Through the heat haze of a desert day |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
11 |
|
1.913 |
Dreaming |
Clouds drifting slowly move across the sky |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
56 |
|
1.922 |
Elusive Dreams |
My dreams seem real until I wake |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
36 |
|
82.158 |
Falling |
Petals falling |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
67 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
1.928 |
Falling |
Raindrops falling |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
6 |
|
1.932 |
Father of fear |
Once hidden by the shifting desert sands |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
38 |
|
1.936 |
Footprints in sand |
The years seem endless since you went away |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
34 |
|
1.950 |
Haiku |
In the dark night sky |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
65 |
|
1.951 |
Hale-Bopp comet |
Was it like this? That brilliant starry lights |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
32 |
|
1.953 |
Hallowe'en |
Hallowe'en and mist lies |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
7 |
|
1.967 |
Hidden depths |
No one has seen |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
29 |
|
1.968 |
High rise flats |
This site was once a field of flowers |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
4 |
|
1.970 |
Himalayan challenge |
Cloud shrouded mountains dominate the land |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
60 |
|
1.976 |
Icefield to ocean |
Ice, iron hard, freezing snow falls |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
52-53 |
|
1.978 |
In an eastern temple |
While latticed walls reflect unclouded skies |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
16 |
|
1.986 |
Industrial landscape |
From the hillside |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
2 |
|
2.026 |
Magic |
This is magic: to see a soft green haze |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
3 |
|
2.028 |
Man in the ice |
High on the glacier, freezing wind |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
14-15 |
|
2.035 |
Memories of war |
I remember |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
18 |
|
2.041 |
Minutes |
One single minute in an hour |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
7 |
|
2.043 |
Mist over Pendle |
Across the fields the grey mist drifts |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
1 |
|
2.045 |
Moonlight on the Nile |
It might have happened in some other world |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
37 |
|
2.049 |
Motorway madness |
Season of mists and fogbound motorways |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
31 |
|
2.051 |
My dream |
I had no will to say what I should do |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
64 |
|
2.065 |
Night Flight |
All through a long and dreary flight |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
28 |
|
2.066 |
Night song |
In the west, the last faint flames |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
43 |
|
2.067 |
Nightmare |
Sometimes when I wake up |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
40 |
|
2.087 |
Our world |
In space our world shines out with glorious light |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
27 |
|
2.095 |
Parting |
I took your hand |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
19 |
|
2.101 |
Prisoners of time |
Concealed among the jungle trees |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
16-17 |
|
2.114 |
Remembrance Day |
Grey pavements, wet, awash with rain |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
14 |
|
2.115 |
Remembrance poppies |
In summertime the poppy flowers |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
20 |
|
2.116 |
Return of spring |
It seemed that spring would never come again |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
50 |
|
2.118 |
Riches of age |
When one by one years pass and we grow old |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
62 |
|
2.124 |
Route march |
Steps slow, each move accounted for |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
38-39 |
|
2.125 |
Rural pageant |
Through the meadows brooklets flow |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
36 |
|
2.129 |
Seasons of life |
Spring came with promises but could not stay |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
5 |
|
2.130 |
Second chance |
A river in its hidden ways |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
22 |
|
2.132 |
Shadows |
Shadows in the early morning |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
21 |
|
2.140 |
Snowfall |
This morning all the world is white |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
61 |
|
2.149 |
Spring's return |
Why did I think that spring could not return? |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
18 |
|
2.156 |
Summer school |
The dreary lecturer droned on and on |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
44 |
|
2.161 |
Tangled roots |
Behind a churchyard where a woodland grew |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
48 |
|
2.173 |
The angel's song |
It was no dream, the night the angels came |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
30-31 |
|
2.195 |
The exile |
Home is not here but far away |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
21 |
|
2.203 |
The forgotten village |
Escaping from noisy motorway |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
5 |
|
2.204 |
The forsaken garden |
This garden, tended once with love and skill |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
23 |
|
2.212 |
The hard shoulder |
Use the hard shoulder directed the sign |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
30 |
|
2.219 |
The last spring |
I must enjoy each moment of each day |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
37 |
|
2.234 |
The passage of time |
When I was young time always moved too slow |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
9 |
|
2.241 |
The price of ecstacy |
Only ten pounds to buy the pill |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
23 |
|
2.246 |
The restless sea |
While waves beat ceaselessly upon the shore |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
8 |
|
2.247 |
The riches of age |
When one by one years pass and we grow old |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
42 |
|
2.248 |
The road to nowhere |
The road that leads to nowhere |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
24 |
|
2.252 |
The seasons |
Four seasons give a pattern to each year |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
1 |
|
2.262 |
The spoils of war |
Give me adventure he said to his friend |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
Dec-13 |
|
2.266 |
The temple treasure |
In the courtyards of an Eastern temple |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
29 |
|
2.267 |
The tsunami |
Soft, subdued sounds |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
33 |
|
2.268 |
The unknown ones |
Long rigid lines of snow white stones |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
15 |
|
2.269 |
The village brook |
Under an old stone bridge |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
25 |
|
2.289 |
Time and tide |
Time and tide wait for no man |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
10-Nov |
|
2.321 |
Turn back the clock |
Turn back the clock: why will time never wait |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
41 |
|
2.322 |
Twentieth century world |
Twentieth century people, what have they done |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
8-Sep |
|
2.324 |
Unknown worlds |
Along a river, many worlds exist |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
46 |
|
2.326 |
View from a hill |
Far below the hill a town lies sleeping |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
19 |
|
2.327 |
Visions in smoke |
Bonfire smoke rises in the sky |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
10 |
|
2.328 |
Voices from the deep |
From ocean depths, sounds rise and fall |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
63 |
|
2.331 |
Water under the bridge |
It seemed the world stood still when we were young |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
12 |
|
2.336 |
What might have been |
We will not know their future, those who died |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
20 |
|
2.347 |
Winter landscape |
Under a frozen sky |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Reflections: a collection of poetry |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722617 |
1.055.724 |
2.005 |
4 |
|
2.348 |
Winter mist |
I could be anywhere |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
Moments in time |
BAXTER, Mary Joyce |
1898722072 |
555.026 |
1.995 |
66 |
|
2.133 |
Ship ahoy! |
Slant across the straits of Effort |
BAYES, A. B. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
59 |
|
1.771 |
Song to the rainbow |
Flashing form, so fair and fleeting! |
BAYLDON, Arthur A. D. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
47 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.770 |
The Sphinx |
Alone upon the desert wild and bare |
BAYLDON, Arthur A. D. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
47 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.769 |
The two worlds |
Sprung as from mist two rolling worlds I view'd |
BAYLDON, Arthur A. D. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
46 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
82.167 |
Donkey stooans |
Ah geet to thinking t'other neet |
BAYLISS, Betty |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
85-86 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
82.858 |
My dog Norman |
He's always jumping about |
BEAGHAN, Lee |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
95 |
|
488 |
A life taken |
They taped her dreams |
BEALE, L. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
38 |
|
1.420 |
Eawr Bessy |
Eawr Bessy's gone to th' Sunday schoo' |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
124-126 |
From After-business jottings. Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.505 |
Eawr Bessy |
Eawr Bessy's gone to th' Sunday schoo' |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
385-390 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.507 |
Edith |
Two years old, and so bonny and fair |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
392 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.410 |
Edith |
Two years old, and so bonny and fair |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
109 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.459 |
Friends do not die |
One card more |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
174 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.600 |
Friends do not die |
One cord more |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
480-481 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.456 |
Maggie |
Oh, thou bonny rose-lipp'd lassie |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
321 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.388 |
Maggie |
Oh, thou bonny rose-lipp'd lassie |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
82 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.169 |
Mally |
When fust aw seed thee, Mally, lass |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
95-101 |
|
82.447 |
Mally |
When fust aw seed thee, Mally, lass |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
303-309 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
131 |
Mi piece is o' bu' wovven eawt |
Mi piece is o' bu' wovven eawt |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
23 |
|
5.671 |
My Johnny |
My Johnny is the bonniest lad |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
295-297 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
1.378 |
My Johnny |
My Johnny is the bonniest lad |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
72-73 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
671 |
My Johnny |
My Johnny is the bonniest lad |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
43-44 |
|
82.582 |
My piece is o' bu' woven eawt |
My piece is o' bu' woven eawt |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
449-451 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.447 |
My piece is o' bu' woven eawt |
My piece is o' bu' woven eawt |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
160-161 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
672 |
My piece is o' bu' woven eawt |
My piece is o' bu' woven eawt |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
44-45 |
|
5.652 |
The keeper's son |
No braver lad e'er walk'd the wood |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
260-262 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
1.361 |
The keeper's son |
No braver lad e'er walk'd the wood |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
45-46 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.525 |
There's no chap should ever lose pluck |
Aw'll try to be merry, aw will |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
425-426 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
673 |
There's no chap should ever lose pluck |
Aw'll try to be merry, aw will |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
46 |
|
1.433 |
Therre's no chap should ever lose pluck |
Aw'll try to be merry, aw will |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
145 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.509 |
To Little Angel "Charlie" |
Often have I been to see thee |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
394-395 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.422 |
To Little Angel "Charlie" |
Often have I been to see thee |
BEALEY, Richard R. |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
128-129 |
From After-business jottings. Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
85.954 |
A Dirge For The Cotton Famine |
Thousands of eyes look out into the west |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
1456-147 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.950 |
A Marriage Lay |
Loving lovers once I saw you |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
136-140 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.913 |
A Merry Christmas and a Happy Year |
To you, the blacken'd sons of toil |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
22-26 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.932 |
A valentine |
My dear little sweetheart, good and kind |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
88-89 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.583 |
A valentine |
There is a place they call Oak Brook |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
158-159 |
|
2.550 |
Abraham Lincoln |
The deed is done! and God who reigns above |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
67-70 |
|
85.926 |
An Invitation |
Come, Minnie, you and I |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
70-72 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.933 |
An Invocation |
Now! it is night, and the pale crescent moon |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
90-92 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.966 |
Autumn |
The Varied tints upon the tree |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
182-184 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.543 |
Birthday Sonnet |
Oh! days and deeds, life's warp and woof |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
51 |
|
2.558 |
Christmas |
Welcome! Welcome! Christmas, welcome! |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
88-92 |
|
2.552 |
Come, Sally |
Come, Sally, come in to thy supper |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
71-73 |
|
2.556 |
Consistent 'Brown' |
Ever have I held one creed |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
82-84 |
|
2.540 |
Courtin' neet |
Wednesday looks like th' longest day |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
37-40 |
|
85.952 |
Death |
Thank God for Death! that splendid golden gate |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
142-143 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.959 |
Desolate |
I've seen the leaves in autumn falling |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
159-160 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
4.449 |
Eawr Bessy |
Eawr Bessy's gone to th' Sunday schoo' |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
15-17 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
85.919 |
Eawr Bessy |
Eawr Bessy's gone to th' Sunday schoo' |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
39-46 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.917 |
Edith |
Two years old, and so bonny and so fair |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
35-36 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.562 |
Encouragement |
Down in a cellar drunk |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
101-104 |
|
85.953 |
Fear Thee |
Fear thee; my god, fear thee! |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
144-145 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.573 |
Flowers |
Flowers are more than simple beauties |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
128-129 |
|
85.963 |
Forgiveness |
Forgive your enemies, forgive them all |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
171-172 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.949 |
Free-Will Controlled |
No life is lived in vain |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
132-135 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.911 |
Friends do not die |
One cord more |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
18-19 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.581 |
Grief |
Wherefore the power so wonderful in man |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
152-154 |
|
85.964 |
He Swore By The Ring |
He swore by the ring that he would be true |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
173-175 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.955 |
Humility |
When my soul,aspiring high |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
148 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.591 |
I am a little valentine |
I am a little valentine |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
182-183 |
|
2.568 |
I am sad |
The summer-time is full of flowers |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
117-119 |
|
2.577 |
If I make my bed in hell, behold, thou art there |
Why there, thy presence Lord, why there |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
143-149 |
|
85.961 |
If Thy Brother Offend Thee |
We are brethren, every one |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
165-167 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.956 |
In THe Morning |
The night watch is run |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
149-150 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.590 |
I've known the rich man die |
I've known the rich man die |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
179-181 |
|
2.564 |
Justice |
Our God is just, and will have right |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
105-106 |
|
85.951 |
Life |
Gertrude, hast thou ever thought about what life is? |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
141 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.553 |
Life's a game |
Life's a game, and all are playing |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
74-77 |
|
85.940 |
Lifes A Poem |
Life's a poem in us all |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
109-111 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.945 |
Lines (On the Death of Mr E. S) |
From house to house a rumour moved |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
122-124 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.935 |
Lines (To A Little Girl ) |
A little fair one came each morning |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
95 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.931 |
Lines (To Mr Samuel Bamford) |
Brave old Sam Bamford! Rolling years |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
85-87 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.582 |
Lines on returning a pocket handkerchief to a lady |
And can I really let thee go |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
155-157 |
|
2.585 |
Lines to a lady who sent her 'carte' to the author |
As sure as I am 'Pretty Dick' |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
162-163 |
|
2.584 |
Lines to a lady with the author's 'carte' |
Enclosed you'll see my shadow lies |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
160-161 |
|
2.548 |
Little child upon my knee |
Little child upon my knee |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
61-63 |
|
85.947 |
Little Nell |
Merry, laughing little Nell |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
127-129 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.547 |
Maggie |
Oh, thou bonny rose-lipp'd lassie |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
59-60 |
|
2.539 |
Mally |
When fust aw seed thee, Mally, lass |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
26-36 |
|
2.559 |
Man and Monkey |
There are some despise the doctrine |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
93-95 |
|
2.570 |
Marriage |
When mortals marry - angels sing |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
122 |
|
2.580 |
Marriages and deaths |
On such a day, at such a place |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
150-151 |
|
2.576 |
Morning hymn |
Great God, thou giver of my days |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
137-138 |
|
85.912 |
Music |
Music in the twilight |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
20-21 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.565 |
Music and colours |
Oh, could we see the sounds we hear |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
107-108 |
|
2.542 |
Musings |
Tis sweet to walk at eventide |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
47-50 |
|
2.554 |
My Johnny |
My Johnny is the bonniest lad |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
78-81 |
|
6.696 |
My Johnny |
My Johnny is the bonniest lad |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
81-83 |
|
4.450 |
My Johnny |
My Johnny is the bonniest lad |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
18-19 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.451 |
My piece is o' bu' woven eawt |
My piece is o' bu' woven eawt |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
19-20 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
6.697 |
My piece is o' bu' woven eawt |
My piece is o' bu' woven eawt |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
83-84 |
From After-business jottings |
4.878 |
My piece is o' bu' woven eawt |
My piece is o' bu' woven eawt |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
124-125 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
854 |
My piece is o' bu' woven eawt |
My piece is o' bu' woven eawt |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
151-152 |
|
549 |
My 'piece' is o'bu' woven eawt |
My 'piece' is o'bu' woven eawt |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
124-125 |
Lancashire poetry |
85.927 |
My 'piece' is o'bu' woven eawt |
My 'piece' is o'bu' woven eawt |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
73-75 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.921 |
Natures Loves and Teachings |
I love old nature everywhere |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
50-56 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.561 |
Oh, What yet unopen'd chambers |
Oh, what yet unopen'd chambers |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
98-100 |
|
85.946 |
On A Buttercup |
Modest little buttercup, bloom away |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
125-126 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.569 |
On a late spring |
Oh, how I long for the spring - sweet spring |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
120-121 |
|
85.960 |
On The Death Of A Canary |
And so it is, we set our hearts |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
161-164 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.557 |
On the lake |
Annie, let us on the water |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
85-87 |
|
2.538 |
Parkside Cottage |
Peaceful was the Sabbath morning |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
Jan-25 |
|
85.957 |
Past And Future Glory |
Sights like these take back my spirit |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
151-155 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.929 |
Portending Storm |
Big drops of sorrow fall upon my soul |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
79-80 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.578 |
Praise |
For all the flowers that bloom and smile |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
139-142 |
|
2.567 |
Praise not other lands to me |
The switzer boasts his mountains grand |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
114-116 |
|
85.915 |
Resolution |
And now, my soul, the day's begun |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
31-32 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.928 |
Revealed, Not Discovered |
Great Sceptre-bearer of the universe |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
76-78 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.545 |
Richard Cobden |
He sought not glory, nor yet courted fame |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
54-55 |
|
2.544 |
Richard Cobden |
O death! thou hast been hard with us to-day |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
52-53 |
|
2.549 |
Song |
Mary, when comes the evening |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
64-66 |
|
2.575 |
Sonnet |
Awake! ten thousand times ten thousand lyres |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
136 |
|
2.560 |
The blighted flower |
Oh, it was sad in the bright young spring |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
96-97 |
|
85.925 |
The Eccentric Wheel |
Said a child to his father one day, and he |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
68-69 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.944 |
The Feather And The Friend |
I've seen a feather, sailing |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
120-121 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.922 |
The Foundling |
Love the dear one, love her well |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
57-58 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.546 |
The Keeper's Son |
No braver lad e'er walk'd the wood |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
56-58 |
|
85.937 |
The Lord is Good to Every one |
The lord is good to everyone |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
98-101 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.588 |
The man who is kind to another |
This world is so hard and so stony |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
170-172 |
|
2.541 |
The mountains |
Oh, the massive, mighty mountains |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
41-46 |
|
85.943 |
The Old Year |
Pr'ythee, old man, pr'ythee stay |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
117-119 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.572 |
The old year to a little girl |
I've just come to say 'good-bye' to you Millie |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
126-127 |
|
85.930 |
The Owd Mons Sunday |
Aw'll tell thee what, Sally wench, th' owder aw get |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
81-84 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.918 |
The Pebble and the Diamond |
The pebble to the diamond said |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
37-38 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.571 |
The sexton and his spade |
Dig away, dig! goo on owd spade |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
123-125 |
|
85.924 |
The Valley of the Don |
Flow'd the streams adown the mountains |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
62-67 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.938 |
The Wheel |
Watch a wheel upon the road |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
102 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.566 |
The widower |
Oh, leave me alone and be silent |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
109-113 |
|
85.907 |
The Winters comin on |
Th'winter's comin on, mi lass |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
1-Jun |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.936 |
The Workman |
Contented and cheerful, the workman's way |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
96-97 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.941 |
Theres No Chap Should Ever Lose Pluck |
Aw'll try to be merry, aw will |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
112-113 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.914 |
Theyre Weel Off Ut Con Wark For Their Livin |
They're weel off ut con wark for their livin' |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
27-30 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.962 |
Thoose Bonny Bells At Stond |
Mony a toime aw've stood an' listen'd |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
168-170 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.910 |
To "Charlies" Mother |
His face on earth was wondrous bright |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
14-17 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.923 |
To a Lady |
I would not laud thee to the skies |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
59-61 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.939 |
To an Infant |
If all the love that's pour'd on thee |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
103-106 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.909 |
To Little Angel "Charlie" |
Often have I been to see thee |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
Nov-13 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.908 |
To Little Infant "Charlie" |
Canst thou tell us, O thou little stranger |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
7-Oct |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.574 |
To little 'Willie' |
I wounder where thy brother is |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
130-135 |
|
2.587 |
To my mother |
Mother, I've gather'd from my heart |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
167-169 |
On her seventy-first birthday |
85.965 |
To The Thrush In My Garden |
I love the song of every bird |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
176-181 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.586 |
Twinkle, twinkle, tiny brooklet |
Twinkle, twinkle, tiny brooklet |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
164-166 |
|
85.958 |
Waiting |
Waiting-Dawn for noontide |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
156-158 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.920 |
Washbrook Clough |
In Washbrook Clough, where the wild fowers grow |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
47-49 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.934 |
Watchman What of the Night? |
Watchman, what of the Night? |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
93-94 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.948 |
Weep (Lines Addressed to a Widow) |
Weep not! nay, this I dare not say |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
130-131 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
2.589 |
Welcome to Garibaldi |
Britannia, get thy helmet on |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
Field flowers and city chimes |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0066276LC |
279.620 |
1.866 |
173-178 |
|
85.916 |
What Is Seen Most? |
Take a full view, look wide, look high |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
33-34 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
85.942 |
Whitsuntide Hymn For Children |
See the lilies how they grow |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
After Business Jottings - Poems |
BEALEY, Richard Rome |
M0067292LC |
281.852 |
1.865 |
114-116 |
M0154778LC and M0154785LC are the isbns for After Business Jottings |
496 |
Death is |
Smooth notes, cold coins |
BEARDSWORTH, J. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
47 |
|
480 |
New horizons |
Goodbye my fried, it's time to leave |
BEARDSWORTH, J. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
32 |
|
4.160 |
A game of hop flag |
Aa went eawt back rooad this mornin' |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
10-Nov |
|
4.185 |
Appy slimmin |
Na' Mary Breawn geet reet upset |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
53 |
|
4.186 |
Blue eyes an' gowden hair |
Neaw t' tale ah'm gooin fer t'tell yer |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
54-55 |
|
4.167 |
Christmas 1910 |
Aa've bin rememberin' a Christmas |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
25-27 |
|
4.164 |
Clugger's shop |
Aa went theer every Sat'day 'morn |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
16-17 |
|
4.171 |
Coo-ertin' |
Eawr Bill started coo-ertin' |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
33 |
|
4.159 |
Co-op field day |
Childer came from aw o'er town |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
8 |
|
4.177 |
Dreams come true |
Eawr Bill an' Nell came reawd last neet |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
42-43 |
|
4.178 |
Em's corner shop |
Aa'm glad we've still geet corner shop |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
44 |
|
4.193 |
Feelin' owd |
It gives you a shock, when you first realise |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
64 |
|
4.191 |
Good-neet luv |
Tha didn't mek it, did tha, luv |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
61-62 |
|
4.174 |
Gowlden junk |
Aaw think we'el clear yon attic |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
37-38 |
|
4.162 |
Grannie's specials |
Naw ah 'ave a Grannie Bradshaw |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
13-14 |
|
4.190 |
Irons in t' fire |
Ee, th' owd mon, he retired last wik |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
59-60 |
|
4.175 |
It's under stairs |
Wee'n geet a cuboard under stairs |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
38-39 |
|
4.170 |
Larnin' violin |
There wer somdy playin' t' violin |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
31-32 |
|
4.187 |
Made to measure |
Last Sat'day morn, thowd Mon an' me |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
56 |
|
4.163 |
Mam's parlour |
Aa remember time when I wer' young |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
15-16 |
|
4.184 |
Martha's towffee |
Last, neet, while watchin' telly |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
52 |
|
4.183 |
Mi cherry cake |
Eee ah've bin upset t'day |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
50-51 |
|
4.157 |
Mi favourite day |
It were allus on a Thursday |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
5-Jun |
|
4.161 |
Mi Grondad's watch |
Naw mi Grondad 'ad a silver watch |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
11-Dec |
|
4.192 |
Mi owd two up two deawn |
Ya can see it 'appenin' every day |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
62-63 |
|
4.166 |
Never agin |
Eaw Bill's bowt a motor car |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
22-24 |
|
4.169 |
Owd New Year memories |
Th'owd mon sed he'd tek mi eawt |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
29-30 |
|
4.165 |
Sat'day neet |
When I wer' a lass, aa'r went wi mi Mam |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
18-19 |
|
4.181 |
Silver weddin' |
It's five an' twenty yer ago |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
47-48 |
|
4.282 |
T' fust day i't' mill |
Twere on mi thirteenth birthday |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
20-21 |
|
4.189 |
Th' owd mon's cowd |
Aa've bin sittin' ere all bi misen |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
58-59 |
|
4.188 |
Th' owd mon's cup |
Ee's bin an' gone an' done it |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
57 |
|
4.179 |
Th'airdresser's cheair |
When thowd mon goos t' th' 'airdressers |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
45 |
|
4.176 |
Th'olidays |
Aa wer' in t' corner shop this mornin' |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
40-41 |
|
4.182 |
Those bacon butties |
Aa've a widow friend across the rooad |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
48-49 |
|
4.168 |
Two Christmases |
I remember nineteen-twenty-nine |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
28 |
|
4.173 |
We an' well blessed |
Ah durn't know if ah'm stonnin' |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
35-36 |
|
4.172 |
Weddin' preawd |
Our Bill an' Nell geet wed t'-day |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
34-35 |
|
4.158 |
When I wert queen |
Oh aye, it's true, Aave bin a queen |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
7 |
|
4.180 |
Wi'v bin modernised |
Th'ouse, it's bin reet upside deawn |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
Poems in the Lancashire dialect |
BEARMAN, Louisa |
852064233 |
82.886 |
1.977 |
46 |
|
377 |
Compensations |
I pray that I'll remember |
BEARMAN, Louise T. |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
29-30 |
|
81.481 |
McDonald's |
M is for Big Mac as big as a skyscraper |
BEAVERS, Charlie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
103 |
|
80.801 |
You |
I'd sat so close to you then |
BEBBINGTON, Deborah |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
28 |
|
87.732 |
Set My Spirit Free |
All alone when my heart is crying all alone |
BELL, Anne |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
17 |
|
2.465 |
A Leste sunrise in Madeira |
Many-hued the sky this morn |
BELL, H. T. Mackenzie |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
180-181 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.463 |
Death of Captain Hunt |
The bold crew of the Unicorn discern at dawn of light |
BELL, H. T. Mackenzie |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
178-179 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.466 |
Old year leaves |
The leaves which in the autumn of the year |
BELL, H. T. Mackenzie |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
181 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.464 |
Quietude |
Quietude, O quietude |
BELL, H. T. Mackenzie |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
179-180 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.471 |
The smokeless chimney |
Traveller on the Northern Railway |
BELLASIS, Mrs. E. J. |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
187-189 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
81.389 |
Spice Girls |
Spice Girls are an all-girl band |
BENCE, Lucy |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
54-55 |
|
3.169 |
Encounter |
Night is falling over the town and the wind |
BENNETT, Alfred Gordon |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
19 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.167 |
Melody |
Daffodillies filled with dew |
BENNETT, Alfred Gordon |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
16-17 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.168 |
Memory |
Ah, give me not a rose - they are too red |
BENNETT, Alfred Gordon |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
18 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.174 |
A song for England |
Beautiful Mother England, I who was nursed on thy bosom |
BENNETT, Arthur |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
29-31 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.173 |
Memories |
Upon the night my mother died |
BENNETT, Arthur |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
28 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.171 |
Other worlds than ours |
If this poor wandering little star |
BENNETT, Arthur |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
23-24 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.172 |
The city of my dreams |
I can see the city of my dreams arising |
BENNETT, Arthur |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
25-27 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.170 |
The earthly paradise |
The fabled voyagers, in years long fled |
BENNETT, Arthur |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
20-22 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
82.923 |
The blitz |
Do you remember |
BENNETT, Joshua |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
130 |
|
82.983 |
Ismucha! |
Also called 'luxury', Ismucha is cool |
BENNETT, Kate |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
163 |
|
82.862 |
My dad |
My dad is cool, he likes to play pool |
BENTHAM, George |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
97 |
|
81.297 |
Home time |
People talking |
BENTLEY, Natasha |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
7 |
|
82.853 |
My friend |
My friend is funny |
BENTLEY, Ryan |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
92 |
|
881 |
Waugh's well |
Amidst wild moor and wind-swept hill |
BENTLEY, William |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
38-39 |
|
82.046 |
Waugh's well |
Amongst wild moor and wind-swept hill |
BENTLEY, William |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
169-170 |
|
361 |
Bird song |
A blackbird on a thorny brier |
BERRY, Ann |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
19 |
|
82.183 |
Return of the swallows |
How do they find their way home again |
BERRY, Ann |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
111 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
86.766 |
The Recluse |
Midst wooded copse, and whispering stream |
BERRY, Geoff |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
110 |
|
87.803 |
Alone With God |
I walked one day in the morning sun |
BERRY, H. M. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
89 |
|
86.711 |
Never wish time away |
Do you know that when you say |
BERRY, John (Snr.) |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
59 |
|
81.404 |
Space travel |
I am a famous astronaut |
BERRY, Rachel |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
63 |
|
5.737 |
Gorton Town |
Gosh dang it, lads, we're coming again |
BESWICK, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
255-258 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland. Pseudonym 'Parish Jack' |
6.799 |
Gorton Town |
Gosh dang it, lads, we're coming again |
BESWICK, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
190-193 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Pseudonym Parish Jack. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.640 |
Gorton Town |
Gosh dang it, lads, we're coming again |
BESWICK, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
190-193 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Pseudonym 'Parish Jack' |
81.291 |
Home time sounds |
Lights going on and off |
BETTY, Simon Colin |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
4 |
|
113 |
Th' Deighn Layrocks |
Naah, all yo foak uts fond o'lore |
BI ONE - O'TH'BREED EM |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
198 |
|
80.824 |
Carnivores |
So it's you again |
BIDSTON, Lester |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
59-60 |
|
339 |
A gradely Lancashire toast |
Gradely good health |
BILL O' BOWS |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
105 |
Pseudonym of Clifford Heyworth |
327 |
Eawr Bob |
Eawr Bob has started workin' neaw |
BILL O' BOWS |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
127-128 |
|
826 |
Green fingers? |
It's grand to get eawt yon in t' garden |
BILL O' BOWS |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
111 |
|
315 |
Heaw aheawt thee? |
There's some as doesn't talk, as should |
BILL O' BOWS |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
149 |
|
647 |
Rossendale Male Voice Choir |
Aw met a mon eawt t'other neet |
BILL O' BOWS |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
34-36 |
Pseudonym of Clifford Heyworth |
329 |
Th' owd parson |
Th'owd parson's preyched i' t' village church |
BILL O' JACKS |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
134 |
Pseudonym of William Baron |
82.419 |
A blessing |
Mild be the aspect of thy ruling power |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
151 |
|
1.802 |
A Christmas chime |
Tis Christmas time! |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
105-107 |
Blackburn author |
1.805 |
A day out |
Out in the flush of the morn |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
120-121 |
Blackburn author |
82.345 |
A dirge |
Tis midnight's still mysterious noon! |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
34-36 |
|
82.351 |
A life-lyric |
My heart always pure homage will pay |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
47-49 |
|
5.866 |
A lyric life |
My heart always pure homage will pay |
BILLINGTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
119-121 |
|
1.810 |
A merited retort |
Once on a time as it happened by chance |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
146 |
Blackburn author |
1.820 |
A summer morning |
The sky above like banner brave unrolled |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
86 |
Blackburn author |
82.369 |
A voice from the country |
Come forth, sons of toil, from the mines and the mills |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
79-80 |
|
82.357 |
A voice from the old church tower |
I, who have stood unharmed through one long week |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
63-64 |
|
82.365 |
A winter's morning walk |
Weird silence round the Earth her robe had wound |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
73-74 |
|
82.339 |
A woodland walk |
I wandered forth to watch the infant day |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
21-22 |
|
82.404 |
Alexander Smith |
A summer sky, flushed with Auroral splendours |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
140-141 |
|
82.377 |
All will be well in the end |
This world is a world of glory and gloom |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
95-96 |
|
5.863 |
All will be well in the end |
This world is a world of glory and gloom |
BILLINGTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
117 |
|
82.335 |
An hour with nature and with night |
I stood upon a steep cloud-haunted hill |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
7-Sep |
|
82.348 |
Apostrophe to hope |
Pure un, which round my darkened orb of being |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
41-42 |
|
4.870 |
Aw wod this war wur ended |
There's nobuddy knows wod we'n gooan through |
BILLINGTON, William |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
112-113 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
1.849 |
Aw wod this war wur ended |
There's nobuddy knows wod we'n gooan through |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
27-28 |
Blackburn author |
1.852 |
Bad times |
Sed Tom to Dick, the other day |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
41-43 |
Blackburn author |
1.854 |
Be brave in the battle of life |
Stand firm in the phalanx of life |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
87 |
Blackburn author |
82.343 |
Beauty |
Let us sing the praise of beauty |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
31-32 |
|
82.376 |
Better late than never |
We may have run the race of life |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
94-95 |
|
882 |
Better late than never |
We may have run the race of life |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
41-42 |
|
1.863 |
Blackburn as it is |
Tis morn, 'tis Spring,! The bard, mid blooming fields |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
75-78 |
Blackburn author |
1.864 |
Blackburn to the fore |
When the Commonwealth was struggling with |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
143-144 |
Blackburn author |
674 |
Blegburn Bill at Preston Gill |
On programmes one kornd olus build |
BILLINGTON, William |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
49 |
|
1.865 |
Blegburn Bill at Preston Gill |
On programmes one korned olus build |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
29 |
Blackburn author |
82.407 |
Bliss behind the grave |
Tis sweet to see the rainbow's prismal arch |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
142-143 |
|
1.867 |
Bob an' Sal; or drink - sellin grocers |
Bob an' Sally, a weyver and rover |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
38-41 |
Blackburn author |
82.392 |
Britons, be brothers |
Britons, be brothers and true to your trust! |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
130-132 |
|
82.400 |
Burns |
As from the dark womb of a labouring cloud |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
138 |
|
82.401 |
Byron |
Vast, deep and gloomy! Wild, and bright, and strong |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
138-139 |
|
1.878 |
Capital and Labour |
Once Capital and Labour pulled |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
114 |
Blackburn author |
1.882 |
Chatterton |
Old as the world, the tale, yet ever new |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
145 |
Blackburn author |
82.394 |
Chaucer |
Quaint-thoughted Chaucer, sire of English song! |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
134 |
|
82.366 |
Christmas |
Old Christmas cometh round |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
74-76 |
|
1.886 |
Christmas |
The sun is nearing now the winter solstice |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
135-136 |
Blackburn author |
1.889 |
Christmas thoughts |
Another year, another link |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
139 |
Blackburn author |
1.896 |
Confidence carries the key of success |
Hope is an angel, but fear is a fiend |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
91-92 |
Blackburn author |
82.409 |
Coniston Water and The Old Man |
I've trod thy woodland shore, wild Coniston! |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
144 |
|
1.898 |
Cowd winter is comin once moor |
It's wearin tort t' back end o' t' year |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
10-Dec |
Blackburn author |
5.867 |
Dedicatory sonnet |
To whom shall I with such a perfect grace |
BILLINGTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
121 |
|
1.914 |
Dryden |
How great among the great of former days |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
136 |
Blackburn author |
1.915 |
Duty |
Adventurous youth, who go with glee |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
110-111 |
Blackburn author |
82.361 |
Elery |
A brother dear hath mingled with the dust! |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
64-65 |
|
5.324 |
Eulogistic verses on Richard Dugdale, poet |
The selfish world is playing out its hard |
BILLINGTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
38 |
|
1.925 |
Even so |
The wind must blow |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
88 |
Blackburn author |
1.931 |
Farewell to the old year |
Again the light-and-life-dispensing sun |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
108-109 |
Blackburn author |
82.367 |
Farwell to the old year |
Farewell, old year, for thy death-knell has rung! |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
76-77 |
|
1.934 |
Festal Christmas |
Festal Christmas |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
100-101 |
Blackburn author |
1.937 |
Fraud, the evil of the age |
With what unutterable shame and scorn |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
124 |
Blackburn author |
5.868 |
Fraud, the evil of the age |
With what unutterable shame and scorn |
BILLINGTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
123-124 |
|
1.938 |
Friends are few when foak are poor |
When aw hed wark, an' brass to spend |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
1-Feb |
Blackburn author |
677 |
Friends are few when fooak are poor |
When aw hed wark, an' brass to spend |
BILLINGTON, William |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
53-54 |
|
82.414 |
Friendship |
Right glad am I to know that there is one |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
148 |
|
1.939 |
Garfield |
Once more the world, by one of those dread crimes |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
92 |
Blackburn author |
82.405 |
Gerald Massey |
Sweet numbered poet, proudly we thy name |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
141 |
|
1.943 |
Goo in to win |
We're rattlin along at a wonderful rate |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
16-18 |
Blackburn author |
1.961 |
Heaw to ged rich |
Aw've just neaw bin puttin' mi studdyin cap on |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
3-Apr |
Blackburn author |
1.966 |
Henry Kirke White |
Deep in the hidden chambers of the heart |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
145 |
Blackburn author |
1.973 |
Hypocrisy |
Hypocrisy, thou hollow-hearted fiend |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
87 |
Blackburn author |
1.974 |
I can't make it out, can you? |
My name is Blackburnus, I'm one of that class |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
140-142 |
Blackburn author |
1.991 |
John Critchley Prince |
The might of right, the love of love, the fire |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
109 |
Blackburn author |
1.993 |
June |
When woods are decked and domed with leaves |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
119 |
Blackburn author |
82.403 |
Keats |
Like some bright vision from the land of dreams |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
139 |
|
82.424 |
Leisure moments |
Tis night! Once more my daily task is done |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
158-160 |
|
2.003 |
Let the lords beware |
We boast of English liberty |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
128-130 |
Blackburn author |
82.383 |
Let us help each other onward |
Let us help each other onward |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
108-110 |
|
82.385 |
Let us hope for better days |
In true men's lives it is not true |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
114-115 |
|
82.384 |
Let us labour one and all |
Toling, hoping, suffering Brothers |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
110-113 |
|
2.011 |
Longfellow |
A light has faded from the western skies |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
132 |
Blackburn author |
2.013 |
Look under t'leeoves if yo'want ony nuts |
This world is a wood, an' it's plain to be sin |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
6-Aug |
Blackburn author |
675 |
Look under t'leeoves if yo'want ony nuts |
This world is a wood, an' it's plain to be sin |
BILLINGTON, William |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
50-51 |
|
5.864 |
Love |
O this fair world were dreary, dull, and dark |
BILLINGTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
118 |
|
82.406 |
Love |
Oh this fair world were dreary, dull and dark |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
142 |
|
82.353 |
Loved and lost |
A flower hath faded from my heart's own garden |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
50-51 |
|
82.364 |
Love's labour lost |
I met with a wild and wayward fawn |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
71-73 |
|
2.019 |
Love's triumph |
O lady love, wilt thou be mine? |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
115 |
Blackburn author |
2.022 |
Lucette (Dear and Dead) |
The rose of beauty burned upon her cheek |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
112 |
Blackburn author |
2.030 |
March |
A rude and roystering bluserer thou |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
113-114 |
Blackburn author |
82.379 |
Mate me with children or leave me alone! |
The sapling more gracefully grows than the tree |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
98-100 |
|
84.727 |
Mate me with children or leave me alone! |
The sapling more gracefully grows than the tree |
BILLINGTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
118-119 |
|
2.031 |
May |
Welcome May, the month of flowers |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
117-118 |
Blackburn author |
82.340 |
May-day morn |
The morning sun was hid behind the mountains |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
23-24 |
|
2.032 |
Me an' mysel |
Aw've seldom bin deawn hearted |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
21-22 |
Blackburn author |
82.397 |
Milton |
Of Homer's fire, and Virgil's majesty |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
136 |
|
2.050 |
My beautiful Jay |
I've no babes of my own, all my children are grown |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
122-123 |
Blackburn author |
82.372 |
Never despair |
Never desapir, though skies gloom over thee |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
85-86 |
|
2.063 |
Night |
Mysterious Night! Dark-featured solemn queen |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
101-102 |
Blackburn author |
2.064 |
Night |
Tis night! 'Tis solitude that truly tries |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
142 |
Blackburn author |
6.699 |
Nobudy knows bud mysel |
When nobbut a bit ov a lad |
BILLINGTON, William |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
89-91 |
|
2.068 |
Nobudy knows bud mysel |
When nobbut a bit ov a lad |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
4-Jun |
Blackburn author |
82.354 |
Not here but hereafter |
When all the world with wonder teemed |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
51-52 |
|
2.070 |
Nowty Ned |
Nowty Ned wur a reet bonny lad |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
44-67 |
Blackburn author |
2.079 |
Old Stydd, Ribchester |
Lonely as some proud pyramid |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
103-104 |
Blackburn author |
82.417 |
One smile of thine |
More than blind chance directed our first meeting |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
150 |
|
2.089 |
Owd Bass Dick |
Aw was browt up, an orphan boy, without a parent's care |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
18-19 |
Blackburn author |
2.092 |
Owd Poncake John |
Aw're keawrt i' th' corner, yusterneet |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
35-37 |
Blackburn author |
82.373 |
Pause not on the path of duty |
Pause not on the path of duty! |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
86-88 |
|
82.423 |
People's colleges |
Dear Sir: - I need make no apologies |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
156-158 |
|
82.337 |
Poesy |
As the bud is to the bee |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
15-17 |
|
82.393 |
Poetry and the present age |
How often have we heard some shallow sage |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
133 |
|
82.398 |
Pope |
What would our English verse have been without |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
136-137 |
|
82.374 |
Press forward and prevail |
Our hope is in our effort, and |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
89-90 |
|
82.342 |
Recollections of childhood |
Inhabitant of mine own native vale |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
28-31 |
|
5.862 |
Recollections of childhood: suggested by being presented with a honeysuckle from my birthplace |
Inhabitant of mine own native vale |
BILLINGTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
114-116 |
|
676 |
Rooas o' t' river side |
Bi yon bonk side at t' nook o' t' wood |
BILLINGTON, William |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
51-53 |
|
6.698 |
Rooas o' t' river side |
Bi yon bonk side at t' nook o' t' wood |
BILLINGTON, William |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
87-89 |
|
4.452 |
Rooas o' t' river side |
Bi yon bonk side at t' nook o' t' wood |
BILLINGTON, William |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
21-22 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
2.123 |
Rooas o' t' river side |
Bi yon bonk side at t' nook o' t' wood |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
19-21 |
Blackburn author |
5.870 |
Rooas o' t' river side |
Bi yon bonk side at t' nook o' t' wood |
BILLINGTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
126-128 |
Tune: When Molly and' me gets wed |
82.412 |
Salford Bridge |
Blakewater hath a broad bridge strected across |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
146 |
|
82.396 |
Shakspear |
What muse but must with diffidence advance |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
135 |
|
2.135 |
Shortening days |
Tis dark! how fast the days are shortening! Mine |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
123 |
Blackburn author |
82.416 |
Singular but so |
Maiden, with what sweet, strange mind-music fraught |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
149 |
|
2.137 |
Six weeks i' lodgins |
Aw bin six weeks i' lodgins, an' six weeks too long |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
31-33 |
Blackburn author |
2.142 |
Song:- The market - house clock |
It was on a starry night |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
137-138 |
Blackburn author |
82.395 |
Spencer |
Bright-fancied bard, who like some seraph winged |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
134-135 |
|
2.145 |
Spring |
When rosy-fingered Morning bright |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
89 |
Blackburn author |
82.356 |
Stanzas |
The withered leaves are from the branches falling |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
61-63 |
Written on the opening of Blackburn Corporation Park October 22nd 1857 |
2.160 |
Take care o' number one |
A regular owd stager, wot's |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
8-Oct |
Blackburn author |
2.163 |
Tel-el-Kebir |
Lives there a mon on British greawnd |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
30-31 |
Blackburn author |
2.171 |
Th' Surat weyver's song |
We're warkin lads frae Lankysheer |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
25-26 |
Blackburn author |
82.349 |
The angel's tomb |
Oh! Conscience will evermore sleep |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
43-44 |
|
2.174 |
The Anti-Malthusian's song |
At twenty an' one aw geet married |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
23-25 |
Blackburn author |
82.355 |
The autumn spirit |
Now the autumn-spirit reigneth over mountain, vale and plain |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
53-60 |
|
5.871 |
The bird's nest |
One moody April even |
BILLINGTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
128-129 |
|
2.176 |
The bird's nest |
One moody April even |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
73-74 |
Blackburn author |
82.350 |
The coffin and the shroud |
Who hath not seen an Eagle, plumed with fine |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
45-46 |
|
82.371 |
The cottage of discontent |
As I sat at my window pane |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
82-84 |
|
2.191 |
The cry of the crowd |
God of the suffering, yet silent crowd |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
78-79 |
Blackburn author |
82.391 |
The death of the old year, 1856 |
Farwell, old year! While round thy dying bed |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
128-129 |
|
82.352 |
The faded flower |
On the rough roadside of wintry life |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
49-50 |
|
2.202 |
The flowers |
While maiden Morn may blush and burn |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
116-117 |
Blackburn author |
82.381 |
The golden god |
Oh! This is a steam-born and iron-bound age |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
103-105 |
|
2.213 |
The harvest |
Again the glowing year hath rolled its round |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
107 |
Blackburn author |
2.218 |
The Indian famine |
A death wail from the dusky sons of Ind |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
100 |
Blackburn author |
82.421 |
The infirmary |
O thou, that sittest in the civic chair |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
153-154 |
|
82.370 |
The lost jewel |
Oh! I have lost a jewel Time can never |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
80-82 |
|
82.411 |
The Malthusian Philosophy |
Her population multiples so fast |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
145 |
|
82.420 |
The mother to her child |
My little darling, Mary Jane |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
152 |
|
2.236 |
The peers and the people |
The People and the Peers now stand |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
130-132 |
Blackburn author |
82.410 |
The People's park |
Perambulating 'Blackburn People's Park' |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
144-145 |
|
2.239 |
The pilot Maxwell |
As down the western welkin rode |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
96-99 |
Blackburn author |
82.363 |
The poet's mission |
As an heir doomed to wait for a princely estate |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
67-70 |
|
82.408 |
The rising sun |
Though midnight heavens a-glow with stellar light |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
143 |
|
2.254 |
The singer |
A singer there dwelt in a city of yore |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
84-86 |
Blackburn author |
2.261 |
The spinner's home |
I can easily fling |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
80-81 |
Blackburn author |
5.869 |
The spinner's home |
I can easily fling |
BILLINGTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
124-126 |
|
82.386 |
The spirit of the age |
There's a principal at work, and neither silently nor slow |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
116-117 |
|
82.388 |
The sunny side of life |
Life has a side which I term sunny |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
121-123 |
|
82.415 |
The sweets of love |
Sweet is the breath of Spring through roses blowing |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
148-149 |
|
82.380 |
The task of to-day |
To love all that is lovely, and truthful, and pure |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
100-102 |
|
82.334 |
The trinity of life |
Ring out, my humble harp! Exalt |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
1-Jul |
|
82.387 |
The uncrowned conqueror |
Though numberless lays are resounding praise |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
118-120 |
|
82.336 |
The world of dreams |
The world of dreams is strange, and I a dreamer |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
Sep-14 |
|
2.276 |
The worship of wealth |
Tis not the gifted, good, or skilled |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
104-105 |
Blackburn author |
82.375 |
There's danger in delay |
Time travels on a timeless steed |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
91-93 |
|
82.382 |
They crush because we cringe |
Oh! Wherefore are the people thus oppressed? |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
106-107 |
|
82.378 |
This bad world is a better place than good men allow |
How oft with dismay do good men think and say |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
96-98 |
|
82.399 |
Thomson |
Sweet poet of the seasons! Who shall peer |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
137 |
|
82.341 |
Thou art coming, fruitful summer |
Thou art coming fruitful summer |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
25-28 |
|
4.860 |
Th'Surat weyver |
we're werkin lads frae Lankisheer |
BILLINGTON, William |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
98-99 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
82.368 |
Time |
What a mighty illusion is time! |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
77-78 |
|
2.290 |
Time is on the wing |
My lot is cast amid the lowly masses |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
82-84 |
Blackburn author |
82.418 |
Time will tell |
Malignant is the aspect of that star |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
150-151 |
|
82.422 |
To a poet-friend |
Thanks! My dear friend for your humorous letter |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
155-156 |
|
2.297 |
To a transatlantic friend |
Dear George, it's a task and a heart-touching duty |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
133-134 |
Blackburn author |
82.413 |
To a young poet |
Greatness, dear friend, is destined for the few |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
147 |
|
2.304 |
To George Salisbury |
Dear friend, and when I say dear friend |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
146-148 |
Blackburn author |
82.362 |
To Mary |
When, weary with the labours of the day |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
65-66 |
|
2.314 |
To the departing emigrants |
True hearts beat high when friends depart from friends |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
91 |
Blackburn author |
2.316 |
To the memory of Edward Walker |
Eternally the tide of time rolls on |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
136 |
Blackburn author |
2.317 |
To the memory of John Whalley |
Bold, bluff and blunt, impatience of pretence |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
134 |
Blackburn author |
2.318 |
To the memory of Mr James Huffman |
Drape deep the hearse that bears the honoured dead! |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
90 |
Blackburn author |
2.332 |
Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning |
Though weeping may endure the livelong night |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
93-95 |
Blackburn author |
2.333 |
What are we hoping for? |
What are we hoping for? For room to rise |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
127 |
Blackburn author |
82.390 |
What have we to fear? |
At the footstool of the Future, while the Present kneels in prayer |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
126-128 |
|
82.389 |
When will the good time come? |
What rhapsodies were written, and what paeans sang in praise |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
124-125 |
|
5.865 |
Where are the Blackburn poets gone? |
I met an acquaintance a day or two since |
BILLINGTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
130-131 |
Written Poets' Corner, Nab Lane, Blackburn May 2nd 1882 |
2.340 |
Where are the Blackburn poets gone? |
I met an acquaintance a day or two since |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
125-127 |
Blackburn author |
82.344 |
Where doth beauty dwell? |
Where, o where doth beauty dwell? |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
32-34 |
|
2.342 |
Where will t' goose come fro? |
Where shall we ged a goose this time? |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
Dec-14 |
Blackburn author |
2.345 |
Why do I rhyme? |
Why do I rhyme? Ask the wind why it blows |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
144 |
Blackburn author |
82.346 |
Wilt thou not weep for me? |
Companion of my early days |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
37-39 |
|
2.350 |
Wod con a weyver do? |
Booath careful and sober aw am |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
14-16 |
Blackburn author |
2.352 |
Wonst |
When hearts flung off their cleawdy fear |
BILLINGTON, William |
Lancashire songs, with other poems and sketches |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0000434LC |
1.062 |
1.883 |
33-34 |
Blackburn author |
82.347 |
Would I were no more! |
From worlds of bliss for ever dleft |
BILLINGTON, William |
Sheen and shade |
BILLINGTON, William |
M0002873LC |
7.341 |
1.861 |
39-40 |
|
883 |
Birthday sonnets |
Thou art my God and I will praise Thy name! |
BILSBOROUGH, Thomas |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
42-43 |
|
81.296 |
Bonfire night |
A crystal clear sky |
BINKS, Kayleigh |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
6 |
|
885 |
For the fallen |
With proud thanksgiving, a mother for her children |
BINYON, Laurence |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
44-45 |
|
884 |
O World, be nobler |
O World, be nobler, for her sake! |
BINYON, Laurence |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
44 |
|
84.052 |
Surrender |
Pale was the early day |
BINYON, Laurence |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
7-Aug |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
81.564 |
My favourite colours |
What is white |
BIRCH, Rebecca |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
148 |
|
81.524 |
Aliens |
We make such a fuss |
BIRD, Michael |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
124 |
|
81.399 |
In space |
In the darkness the space rockets zoom by |
BIRDSALL, Emily Jane |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
61 |
|
81.462 |
C G B |
My initials are C G B |
BIRKETT, Colin |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
93 |
|
82.755 |
Bin liner |
The bin liner flies in the air |
BIRKS, Laura |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
34-35 |
|
81.537 |
Cosmic stars |
Shooting stars |
BISHOP, Naomi |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
130 |
|
638 |
September love |
And when t'was springtime |
BISHOP, Norah |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
5 |
|
656 |
A different view |
I'm caught among these sombre hills |
BISHOP, Norah E. |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
63 |
|
82.572 |
Coom, don on thy bonnet an' shawl |
Coom, don on thy bonnet an' shawl |
BLACKAH, Thomas |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
51-52 |
2nd ed rev |
82.573 |
My awd hat |
I'll wear thee yet awhile, awd hat |
BLACKAH, Thomas |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
52-53 |
2nd ed rev |
4.358 |
Evenin' service |
Wi'd set off t' chapil, mi Grandad an' me |
BLACKBURN, Renee P. |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
40 |
|
86.684 |
Grandma's Cupboard |
I opened the cupboard, inside there I'd find |
BLACKBURN, Renee P. |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
32 |
|
5.217 |
Lankyshire twang |
When tha's witchert tha's getten thi feet wet |
BLACKBURN, Renee P. |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
39 |
|
82.136 |
Lankyshire twang |
When tha's witchert tha's getten thi feet wet |
BLACKBURN, Renee P. |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
24 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
5.216 |
Mi grandad's cap |
Ah'll allus remember mi Grandad's cloth cap |
BLACKBURN, Renee P. |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
39 |
|
5.218 |
Th' owd fam'ly album |
Wi've this owd fam'ly album in t' cupboard |
BLACKBURN, Renee P. |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
40 |
|
4.359 |
When Ah were a lass |
Ah laiked eawt in t' back yard when Ah were a lass |
BLACKBURN, Renee P. |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
41 |
|
82.859 |
The weather |
Dark clouds in the sky |
BLACKSTOCK, Danielle |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
95 |
|
81.418 |
Wishes |
I wish I could be at Old Trafford watching Man United v Barnsley |
BLAGBROUGH, Charles |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
70 |
|
388 |
Mount Everest |
Sagarmatha, Head of the Earth, the natives call you |
BLAINEY, Stella |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
36 |
|
87.849 |
Inspirations |
One year ago to this day |
BLAKEY, Keith and Susan |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
138 |
|
80.258 |
A star in my street |
Before I go any further |
BLANDLANA, Ana |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
4-May |
Poems about cats |
82.930 |
Dolphins |
Beautiful creatures |
BLOWER, Alix |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
133 |
|
84.054 |
The advance |
Then march! and think the bleak wind means no wrong |
BLUNDEN, Edmund |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
10 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
82.696 |
A day at the beach! |
The towering cliffs stand up high |
BOBER, Sean |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
3 |
|
82.798 |
How strange |
How strange to think that someone else |
BOLLARD, Joshua |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
58 |
|
87.847 |
Thank You God |
God has given me so many years |
BOLTON, A. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
135 |
|
86.002 |
A Day at Fleetwood |
It were pourin' down as usual |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
40-41 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
85.996 |
A Lancashire Lass |
I'll always be a Lancashire lass |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
28-29 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
86.013 |
A Testament of Love |
Why am I never lonely? |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
64-65 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
85.997 |
Annual Coffee an' Bun |
It seems like only yesterday |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
30-31 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
85.995 |
Cooartin' Days |
What happened to t'old fashioned cooartin' |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
26-27 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
85.984 |
Dancing Words |
Words are dancing in my head |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
1 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
85.994 |
Doin' Me Bit in T'War |
I left mi job at t' Paper Mill |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
23-25 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
85.989 |
Father Christmas is Poor |
I allus wanted a baby doll |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
10-Nov |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
86.000 |
Help! |
Oh! What a grand invention |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
36-37 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
86.011 |
I Can't Let Go |
I see the eyes that still hold love for me |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
61 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
86.004 |
I'm a New Baby |
I don't know what I must favour |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
44-45 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
85.991 |
It's Never Too Late |
I wish I could tell you I studied hard |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
14-15 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
86.008 |
Magic Moments |
When you're feeling lonely and out of touch |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
52-53 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
86.005 |
May Sunday Procession |
It wally nearly allus rained |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
46-47 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
85.990 |
Memory Lane |
Would you like to come wi' me |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
Dec-13 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
85.985 |
Nostalgia |
I took a stroll the other day |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
2-Mar |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
85.986 |
Owd Rishton |
I don't hear t'chatter o'clogshod feet |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
4-May |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
85.999 |
Phantom of the Keyboard |
It were Friday neet as I recall |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
34-35 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
86.007 |
Pink Shampoo |
Nay this owd chap as lived next door |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
50-51 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
86.012 |
Ruby Wedding |
I brought you a bunch of flowers |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
62-63 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
86.003 |
The Hot Seat |
Battling along one winter's day |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
42-43 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
86.756 |
The impossible dream |
I had a little peep today |
BOLTON, Alice |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
104 |
|
85.993 |
The Last Tango |
Saturday neet at t'local dance |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
19-20 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
86.010 |
The Ring of Barbed Wire |
There are no words that can express |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
59 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
86.014 |
The Shy Boy |
Long ago when I was young |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
66-68 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
85.998 |
Them Were T'Days |
Remember when there were no trolleys? |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
32-33 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
85.988 |
Things of the Past |
It's hard to find in a modern home |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
8-Sep |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
85.987 |
Twilight Years |
There's a song we all remember |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
6-Jul |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
86.001 |
Two Penn'oth O' Dark |
There were no such thing as televisions |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
38-39 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
85.992 |
Wakes Week - War-Time |
I'm gooin' back when t'war were on |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
16-18 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
86.006 |
What a Performance |
Some folks called it 'Big Hut' |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
48-49 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
86.009 |
Winter |
Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter |
BOLTON, Alice |
Recollections: a collection of poetry |
BOLTON, Alice |
M0337685LC |
1.050.453 |
1.994 |
57-58 |
Poems some in Lancashire dialect, by Blackburn author |
86.785 |
The weather |
It really is amusing when people get together |
BOLTON, E. M. |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
117 |
|
86.714 |
Ode to a bird |
How sweet it is to hear a bird |
BOLTON, Peggy |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
62 |
|
6.604 |
An evening at sunset |
The sun sets angry; and, volcano-like |
BOLTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
423 |
|
6.600 |
Astley Hall |
By the grass-grown roadway leading through the lonesome woodlands green |
BOLTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
419-420 |
|
85.173 |
Boyhood's home |
Home of my boyhood! memory's ivied leaf |
BOLTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
422 |
|
6.598 |
My father's home |
The low-built cot, and the familiar sight |
BOLTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
418 |
|
6.601 |
My mother's face |
Observe the furrow lines, upon that face |
BOLTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
420-421 |
|
6.603 |
The child's query |
What are those like fires, father, burning in the midnight sky |
BOLTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
421 |
|
6.599 |
The vale of rest |
The shining river flows along that happy, peaceful vale |
BOLTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
418-419 |
|
6.602 |
Virtue |
Sweet virtue hath a good reward on earth |
BOLTON, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
421 |
|
4.138 |
Dugdale's day trip to the sea |
In 'istory there's bin meny 'eroes |
BOND, Alan and BOND, Les |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
53-56 |
|
4.150 |
T' seawnd o' t' sea: a conversation between father and son |
What's yon seawnd, Ah'm 'earin' fayther |
BOND, Alan and BOND, Les |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
71-72 |
|
4.120 |
The King's visit to Hoghton Tower - 'a reyt good do |
On a parky wet mooarnin i' Owt'n |
BOND, Alan and BOND, Les |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
37-39 |
|
81.432 |
Space |
Up, up in space |
BOND, Nicola |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
76 |
|
81.484 |
Sweets |
Sweets are delicious |
BONNEY, Julie Louise |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
105 |
|
81.406 |
Candle |
A candle lights up in the dark |
BONSOR, Mark |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
64 |
|
82.041 |
The bonny wild moors |
Tis pleasant to rove through some green shady woodland |
BOOTH, Thos |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
146-147 |
|
81.382 |
There was an alien whom I knew |
There was an alien whom I knew |
BOOTH, William |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
50 |
|
490 |
For pudding, chips and gravy |
I went to a chippy when I was down South |
BOSWELL, A. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
40 |
|
189 |
New Year's Eve, 1913 |
O, Cartmel bells ring soft to-night |
BOTTOMLEY, Gordon |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
147-148 |
|
81.469 |
Caretaker needed |
Caretaker needed for St Mark's CE School |
BOULTON, Jack |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
96 |
|
82.814 |
Colours |
Gold is the brightness of the sun |
BOWES, Dale |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
67 |
|
82.631 |
Away from thee |
The moonbeams fall on golden sheaves |
BOWKER, James |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
546-547 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.623 |
Hard times; or, th' weyvur to his wife |
Draw up thy cheer, owd lass, we'n still a bit o' fire |
BOWKER, James |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
512-514 |
Pseudonym of author 'A Lancashire Lad'. 2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Cotton weavers; unemployment; poverty |
1.477 |
Hard times; or, th' weyvur to his wife |
Draw up thy cheer, owd lass, we'n still a bit o' fire |
BOWKER, James |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
197-198 |
Pseudonym A Lancashire Lad. Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
81.434 |
Dreaming in space |
Up, up, up in space |
BOWMAN, Katherine |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
77 |
|
360 |
Nightingale's song |
I heard him when the sky was pearly grey |
BOYD, Florence |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
18 |
|
81.420 |
Wishes |
I wish I could have a £1,000 |
BRACKETT, Elizabeth |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
71 |
|
87.742 |
Peace, Perfect Peace |
Peace, perfect peace - the choir was softly singing |
BRADLEY, Alice |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
27 |
|
87.855 |
The Light of your Shadow |
Trying to make my own way through this world |
BRAITHWAITE, Paul |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
144 |
|
158 |
Barnabees Journall |
Faustilus! Happily returned |
BRAITHWAITE, Richard |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
27-29 |
|
84.213 |
Lady Moon |
No beauty rarer than the moon |
BRAND, Beryl |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
111 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
87.723 |
This World Of Ours |
God looked down on this earth of ours |
BRANDON, Wendy K. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
9 |
|
81.468 |
Caretaker needed |
Caretaker need |
BRANNON, Paul |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
96 |
|
80.816 |
Waiting to advance into no-man's land |
There he lays waiting in silence |
BRENNAN, Gregory Quinn |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
49 |
|
4.320 |
To grandmas (and grandads) |
Eeh, it's grand to be a Grandma (or a Grandad, come to that) |
BRIDGES, Winnie |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
14 |
|
82.851 |
My town |
My town |
BRIDSON, Ben |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
90 |
|
1.983 |
In memoriam - Charles Swain |
Another vacant chair! Another guest |
BRIERLEY, Benjamin |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, (part 2, modern). Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
715811827 |
79.254 |
1.976 |
552-554 |
Reprinted from 3rd edition, first published 1882. Revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.793 |
In memoriam: Annie, only child of Ben and Esther Brierley; Born November 7th, 1866; Died June 13th, 1875 |
We thought she was our own for yet awhile |
BRIERLEY, Benjamin |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
83 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
4.454 |
Owd pigeon |
Owd pigeon wur as droy a bird |
BRIERLEY, Benjamin |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
24-25 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
6.700 |
Th' wayver o' Wellbrook |
Yo gentlemen o with yor heawnds an' yor park |
BRIERLEY, Benjamin |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
90-91 |
|
186 |
Th' wayver o' Wellbrook |
Yo gentlemen o with yor heawnds an' yor park |
BRIERLEY, Benjamin |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
140-141 |
|
679 |
Th' wayver o'Wellbrook |
Yo gentlemen o with yor heawnds an' yor park |
BRIERLEY, Benjamin |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
59 |
|
1.794 |
The wayver of Welbrook |
Yo gentlemen o wi' yor heawnds and yor parks |
BRIERLEY, Benjamin |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
84-85 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.445 |
The weaver of Wellbrook |
To gentlemen o with yor heawnds an' yor parks |
BRIERLEY, Benjamin |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
158 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.580 |
The weaver of Wellbrook |
Yo gentlemen o with yor heawnds an' yor parks |
BRIERLEY, Benjamin |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
447-448 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
4.815 |
The weaver of Wellbrook |
Yo gentlemen o with yor heawns an' yor parks |
BRIERLEY, Benjamin |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
19 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
83.264 |
To Edwin Waugh |
Tis over thirty years, friend Waugh |
BRIERLEY, Benjamin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
187-188 |
On his 70th birthday |
85.404 |
To Edwin Waugh |
What ails thee, Ned? Theawr't not as 'twur |
BRIERLEY, Benjamin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
100-109 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P.Note new page sequence at back of book |
3.676 |
To Edwin Waugh on his 70th birthday |
Tis over thirty years, friend Waugh |
BRIERLEY, Benjamin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
204-206 |
appendix |
1.795 |
Waverlow bells |
Old Jammie and Ailse went adown the brook side |
BRIERLEY, Benjamin |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
85-86 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
886 |
We are on our journey home |
The church-bells rang with cheerful chime |
BRIERLEY, Benjamin |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
47-49 |
|
678 |
Whoam - brewed |
Ther's nowt i' this wo'ld like my own chimley-nook |
BRIERLEY, Benjamin |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
57-58 |
|
4.453 |
Whoam-brewed |
Ther's nowt i' this wo'ld like my own chimlynook |
BRIERLEY, Benjamin |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
23-24 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
386 |
Ultima Optima (let our last be our best) |
How e'er so small the deed thou do'st |
BRIERLEY, Henry |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
35 |
|
887 |
Ultima-Optima (Let our last be our best) |
How e'er so small the deed thou do'st |
BRIERLEY, Henry |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
51-52 |
|
83.006 |
In memoriam - Charles Swain |
Another vacant chair! Another guest |
BRIERLEY, James |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
552-554 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
86.741 |
Summer 95 |
Summer finally came this year |
BRIERLEY, Martha |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
88 |
|
680 |
A lad about whoam |
He may be a good blacksmith, an' hondle his tools |
BRIERLEY, Thomas |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
63-64 |
|
82.594 |
Fame |
There is a simple thing on earth |
BRIERLEY, Thomas |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
471-472 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.464 |
Fame |
There is a simple thing on earth |
BRIERLEY, Thomas |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
179 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.513 |
God bless these poor wimmen that's childer |
God bless these poor wimmen that's childer |
BRIERLEY, Thomas |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
402-403 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.424 |
God bless these poor wimmen that's childer |
God bless these poor wimmen that's childer |
BRIERLEY, Thomas |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
132-133 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
4.456 |
God bless these poor wimmen that's childer |
God bless these poor wimmen that's childer |
BRIERLEY, Thomas |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
27 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
683 |
Heaw quare is this loife |
Heaw quare is this loife - could we live uppo love |
BRIERLEY, Thomas |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
67 |
|
4.457 |
Heaw quare is this loife |
Heaw quare is this loife! Could we live upo' love |
BRIERLEY, Thomas |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
28 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
82.529 |
Heaw quare is this loife |
Heaw quare is this loife! Could we live upo' love |
BRIERLEY, Thomas |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
430-431 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.436 |
Heaw quare is this loife |
Heaw quare is this loife. Could we live up |
BRIERLEY, Thomas |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
149 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
681 |
Help one another |
Slur on one another through life |
BRIERLEY, Thomas |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
64-65 |
|
82.584 |
Help one another |
Slur on one another through life |
BRIERLEY, Thomas |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
454-455 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.451 |
Help one another |
Slur on one another through life |
BRIERLEY, Thomas |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
165-166 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.468 |
In a snug little nook |
In a snug little nook, by a rippling brook |
BRIERLEY, Thomas |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
338-339 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.394 |
In a snug little nook |
In a snug little nook, by a rippling brook |
BRIERLEY, Thomas |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
90 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
682 |
Love |
First time 'at he talked abeawt love |
BRIERLEY, Thomas |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
65-66 |
|
4.455 |
Love |
Fust time 'at he talked abeawt love |
BRIERLEY, Thomas |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
26 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
1.432 |
The child |
See the nurse her charge attending |
BRIGGS, John |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
144 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.524 |
The child |
See the nurse her charge attending |
BRIGGS, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
423-424 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.302 |
To falsehood |
Hail, falsehood! jaundiced gossip, hail! |
BRIGGS, John |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
259-261 |
|
82.591 |
To falsehood |
Jail, Falsehood! jaundiced gossip, hail! |
BRIGGS, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
467-469 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1 |
Vintage Years |
At twelve years old our toil began |
BRINDLE, Betty |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
36 |
|
82.743 |
My grandad |
I love my grandad very much |
BRITTLETON, Amy |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
26 |
|
82.870 |
Space |
I want to go to space to do a race |
BROADBENT, Jessica |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
101 |
|
6.280 |
Evensong |
Like some tired bird that home at evening hies |
BROCKBANK, James |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
177 |
Aella - nom de plume |
82.968 |
The vanilla ice cream kid |
My hair is the colour of vanilla ice cream |
BROCKEN, Liam |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
155 |
|
1.757 |
Eternal records |
The world is not a passing show |
BROCKIE, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
24 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.756 |
Love |
Love is a friendly bark on the deep |
BROCKIE, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
23-24 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.755 |
The mighty |
Where are the graves of the Mighty? |
BROCKIE, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
21-23 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
82.043 |
My good owd pipe |
My good owd pipe, theawr't nayther strong |
BRODIE, R. H. |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
152-154 |
|
888 |
A lay o' Lancashire |
There's a lot o'folk tor't London |
BRODIE, R. Henry |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
53-55 |
|
82.993 |
My bedroom at night |
I get into bed and feel the soft warm covers |
BROOKE, Sophie H. |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
168-169 |
|
82.920 |
The football match |
Got up one morning, all ready to go |
BROOKS, Jordan |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
128 |
|
87.733 |
Who |
Who broke their word, when he said |
BROOKS, R. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
18 |
|
82.801 |
How strange |
How strange to think that someone else |
BROPHY, Daniel |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
59 |
|
82.749 |
Pet poems |
Sometimes |
BROUGHTON, Ryan |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
31 |
|
831 |
Light |
Give us some leet |
BROWN, Fred |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
32 |
|
520 |
Old servants |
What ails mi loom |
BROWN, Fred |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
90-91 |
Yorkshire poetry |
842 |
The little piecer |
The little piecer |
BROWN, Fred |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
87-89 |
|
471 |
Deep night moves |
A million centuries have gone |
BROWN, I. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
19 |
|
336 |
Farewell to Rossendale |
Farewell Rossendale, the time's come at last |
BROWN, James |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
67-68 |
|
82.778 |
You're one in a million, Mum |
You're one in a million, Mum |
BROWN, Lee |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
47 |
|
80.793 |
Mirror image |
She looked at me this morning |
BROWN, M. |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
13 |
|
82.925 |
My brother David |
My big brother is called David |
BROWN, Patrick |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
131 |
|
82.823 |
Swimming |
Splashing in the water, getting soaking wet |
BROWN, Ryan |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
72 |
|
50 |
Th' Institute |
Of a' the world's pleasures, that is as cheap |
BROWNBILL, William |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
199-200 |
|
82.556 |
A song |
When I was a wee laatle totterin' bairn |
BROWNE, Thomas |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
15-16 |
2nd ed rev |
82.555 |
A song |
Ye loit'ring minutes faster flee |
BROWNE, Thomas |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
14-15 |
2nd ed rev |
82.557 |
The invasion: an eclogue |
A wanton wether had disdain'd the bounds |
BROWNE, Thomas |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
16-19 |
2nd ed rev |
1.762 |
The cry of the children |
Do ye hear the children weeping, O my brothers |
BROWNING, Elizabeth Barrett |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
34-38 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.763 |
The lady's yes |
Yes! I answered you last night |
BROWNING, Elizabeth Barrett |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
38-39 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.764 |
The sleep: |
Of all the thoughts of God that are |
BROWNING, Elizabeth Barrett |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
39-41 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.765 |
The soul's expression |
With stammering lips and insufficient sound |
BROWNING, Elizabeth Barrett |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
41 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
80.267 |
Midday cats of the Colosseum - Rome 1989 |
The waste land |
BROWNING, Stella |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
14-15 |
Poems about cats |
80.278 |
Of cats and of pigeons |
Children: I seriously thought |
BROWNING, Stella |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
26 |
Poems about cats |
976 |
All this |
Did something happen |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
Dec-13 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
992 |
Arrow |
Arrow like a pop song |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
28 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
997 |
Barley |
Here sits dreaming |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
32 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
989 |
Bent trees |
The larches put on sleeves as the child appears |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
25 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
974 |
Clinic |
This was the battlefield on which the death wish died |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
9 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
990 |
Conception |
There's a rush, the sound of passing trains |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
26 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
988 |
Darling |
Darling |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
24 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
973 |
Dear good Nanny Weetman |
We bore the Messiah and hymns, Friday night |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
8-Sep |
The author was born in Blackburn |
448 |
Derelict house by the Brook |
You can see where he laid the first stones down |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
35 |
|
447 |
Dinosaur |
War |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
35 |
|
972 |
Doll |
She was a pretty child with long blonde hair |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
7 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
971 |
Draining |
In this cross-flowing of the grass he stood |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
6 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
970 |
Exit Pop |
It swept, stretched, spread, extended infinite |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
5 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
994 |
Flow |
It came before dark |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
29 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
996 |
Good women |
I dislike Good Women |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
31 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
982 |
Gull in the wind |
A gull glides on the wind |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
18 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
987 |
Hallow'een |
Hallow'een tomorrow |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
23 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
985 |
Horse |
You slap my bottom and hurry me off |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
21 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
978 |
Immigrant children |
Habibul has a worried, furrowed brow |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
14 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
991 |
Laughter at the sea |
The sea is charged with laughter |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
27 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
983 |
Mad March Hare |
In old days this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
19 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
979 |
Madge's bosom |
Madge wore a yellow sweater, embracing, shrunk |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
15 |
Madge looked after us during the war as evacuees in Canada. The author was born in Blackburn |
1.000 |
Mill town |
Father ate bread and dripping |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
36-38 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
977 |
Moorland |
Beyond trivial hurt, cautious |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
13 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
981 |
Night rain in June |
You can hear the shape of leaves |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
17 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
1.002 |
Old ship |
Summer billows and I sail out |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
40 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
975 |
Randolph |
They hate you, you know |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
10-Nov |
The author was born in Blackburn |
980 |
Red Admiral |
Tattered clouds, slipshod, dawdling |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
16-17 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
984 |
Rhododendron |
I can only pour it out this way |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
20 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
1.001 |
Snake grass |
Snake grass says that murderers must hang |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
39 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
993 |
Snap |
You were the extra beat, the upward surf |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
29 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
998 |
Spring |
Ferment of activity like the wine stuttering |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
33 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
999 |
The cave painter |
In his little pouch he had |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
34-35 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
995 |
The white rug |
He sits on |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
30 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
986 |
Woodwell |
Through the wood |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
All this |
BRUGGEN, Carol |
M0011124LC |
41.903 |
1.981 |
22 |
The author was born in Blackburn |
84.145 |
Florence |
A tragedy! The thunder, friend |
BRUMM, Charles |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
65 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.144 |
Under the cherry tree |
The sky feathery-white, fragrant the air |
BRUMM, Charles |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
64 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
194 |
Good friends |
Unto my lib'ry shelf I creep |
BUCKLEY, Betty |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
10-Nov |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
193 |
My lady's garden |
I peeped into a garden |
BUCKLEY, Betty |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
9 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
81.325 |
Planets |
There are lots of planets |
BUCKLEY, Lauren |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
20 |
|
810 |
Journey's end |
They pledged their love in Haslingden |
BUCKLEY, W. S. |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
39 |
|
86.746 |
The awakening |
Old Fred's house was dark and dank |
BULCOCK, Kathleen |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
93 |
|
81.455 |
I wonder |
One day I heard my mum on the phone |
BULLEN, Paul |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
90 |
|
81.509 |
Summer sun |
Another hot day |
BUOEY, Paul |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
117 |
|
81.246 |
Aldabra giant tortoise ('Speedy') |
Could he become the county's oldest citizen |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
30 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.236 |
Commanding heights |
This is life's summit, not in measured feet |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
19 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.237 |
Dunes:midwinter in the Dunes |
Silent upon a peak in Ainsdale Dunes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
20 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.229 |
Emmanuel Church, Southport |
Rose-red temple, twice as old as me |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
13 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.248 |
Envoi |
The moonbeams flit and shimmer, I seemed to see below |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
32 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.238 |
February greeting: crocuses at Poulton-Le-Fylde |
This is the day when the crocuses open their hearts to the world |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
21 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.247 |
Five Italian highlights |
There was an old man in a coach |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
31 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.240 |
Flamingos |
Flamingos as wildfowl are certainly odd |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
24 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.233 |
For Nan |
We planted primulas this afternoon |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
17 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.244 |
In a railway station waiting room |
How horrible a sight, a man who's eating |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
28 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.226 |
Mancunians |
Into St Peter's Fields, Mancunians came |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
10 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.228 |
Marsh-side |
The air above the marsh is full of wings |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
12 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.235 |
Martin Mere: water-birds |
Lovers look with love on birds |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
18 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.245 |
Mr Sharp, a blue and yellow macaw |
Said Sharp to Sharp (he's our macaw) |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
29 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.241 |
Neo-Elizabethan conceit |
Our Rosalind doth lovely things |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
25 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.224 |
Pink-foots |
The Geese lie peacefully at Ribbleside |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
8 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.227 |
Red rose in October |
One seldom speaks of mountain peaks |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
11 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.243 |
Rufford Old Hall, Lancashire |
The Rufford manuscript is truthful, clear |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
27 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.230 |
Ruth |
We needs must speak the truth |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
14 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.223 |
Stonyhurst College |
There was a flower festival that day |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
7 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.232 |
Towards Formby Point |
Here be lonely, little-trodden lands |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
16 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.242 |
Tribute to the Rossendale Ladies Choir |
Thirty scarlet ladies |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
26 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.231 |
Water-music |
The sound and sight both give delight |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
15 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.225 |
Whalley Abbey |
Three rivers, Ribble, Calder, Hodder, flow |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
9 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.239 |
Which Lancashire town had these starters? |
Ay, that were where it started - a long time ago |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
23 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.221 |
Wigan Pier |
When Orwell took the road to Wigan Pier |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
3-Apr |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.234 |
Winter-reise |
When traveller's joy is bearded, old, and grey |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
18 |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
81.222 |
Wycoller |
We took the gently curving path |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
Red rose rhymes |
BURCHETT, Philip J. |
M0154322LC |
549.964 |
1.995 |
5-Jun |
Poems about Lancashire by Southport author |
417 |
Bi t' fire leet |
Eawr Jack's job wer to cleyn all t'clogs |
BURGE, Mary |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
114 |
|
4.112 |
Nearly famous |
Ned Barlow, could fairly play t' trumpet |
BURGE, Mary |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
28-30 |
|
86.497 |
Sonnets on life 111 |
The life of man ranks far above the rest |
BURGESS, A. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
117 |
|
6.652 |
The mummy of Israel: 'and the physicians embalmed Israel' - Gen, i. 2 |
In some lone cave the Patriarch still |
BURGESS, Henry |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
458 |
|
6.651 |
The slighted lock: on finding a lock of hair of a deceased friend |
I took thee from the hand that gave |
BURGESS, Henry |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
457-458 |
|
6.653 |
Truth |
I sought her in the haunts of men |
BURGESS, Henry |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
459 |
|
86.473 |
A Dream Of Delight |
Philosophers, tell me one thing, if you can |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
47-52 |
|
86.470 |
A Peep At Political Parties |
England, my country! |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
26-38 |
|
86.490 |
A reminder |
Friend Joseph, I've heard people say in a joke |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
104-106 |
|
86.505 |
A valentine |
Dear Sarah, as this is Saint Valentine's Day |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
129-132 |
|
86.468 |
A Vision And Its Fulfilment |
I was weary and sad with the toil of the mill |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
May-20 |
|
86.481 |
A Voluntary Tribute |
How great the fame of England's chiefs |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
76-78 |
|
86.469 |
An Address |
When thus we meet, I hold it right we try |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
20-26 |
|
86.487 |
An address to my daughter sophia |
Dear daughter, while thy youthful friends |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
95-96 |
|
86.507 |
An affectionate address to a new-born babe |
Poor babe! thou hast entered a troublesome world |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
135-140 |
|
86.488 |
Complementary to Miss C., of Cressbrook |
I've seen thee in thy father's hall |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
97-99 |
|
86.479 |
Confess Your Faults |
Should you offend a fellow-man |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
68-70 |
|
86.506 |
Early courtship |
I saw her glide along the mead |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
132-135 |
|
86.504 |
Hurrah for the light |
One autumn eve, as through the street |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
126-128 |
|
86.489 |
Labour and capital |
Although a stranger I appear to-night |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
99-102 |
|
86.485 |
May Day |
Come, Clarinda, let's a Maying |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
94 |
|
86.491 |
My taste and desire |
A man of toil, my leisure hours are few |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
107-108 |
|
86.484 |
Ode To Laughter |
Excuse me, friends, I cannot help but laugh |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
87-93 |
|
86.474 |
Poetical Address |
Dear sir, As pilgrims travel to a distant shrine |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
52-56 |
|
86.477 |
Social Communion |
I live to hold communion with men |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
63-64 |
|
86.495 |
Sonnets on life |
Life is the essence of this lower world |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
115-116 |
|
86.496 |
Sonnets on life 11 |
Ascend the scale of being, and behold |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
116 |
|
86.498 |
Sonnets on life 1V |
Tell us what sage life's mystery can reveal |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
117-118 |
|
86.499 |
Sonnets on life V |
Strange that, from elements so simple, few |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
118 |
|
86.500 |
Sonnets on life V1 |
Tis well life's secret is concealed from man |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
118-119 |
|
86.501 |
Sonnets on life V11 |
How every sentient being clings to life! |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
119 |
|
86.503 |
Sparrows in the snow |
Cold was the air, the frost was keen |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
123-126 |
|
86.471 |
Sympathy |
Ye talented and gitfed ones |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
38-42 |
|
86.467 |
Thanksgiving |
When we survey the world's wide, vast expanse |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
1-May |
|
86.472 |
The Last Dying Speech And Defence Of The Old Dog, Rattler Birch, |
Dear friends, ere you level the rifle, permit me to speak |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
42-47 |
|
86.492 |
The mothers of Oxford |
How blessed the day our favoured eyes behold |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
108-110 |
|
86.482 |
The Patriot Chief |
Alas! for England - Cobden is no more! |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
78-84 |
|
86.480 |
The Power Of God Displayed In His Works |
A theme so vast as God's display of power |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
70-75 |
|
86.478 |
The Sunday School |
In virtue's cause once more I tune my lyre |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
64-68 |
|
86.483 |
The Third Annual Poem Addressed To The Angola Winders, Of Droylsden, For Christmas 1865 |
Well, Old Father Christmas is with us again |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
84-87 |
|
86.475 |
The Working Men Of The World |
The working men of all the world |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
56-58 |
|
86.486 |
To Clarinda |
Thy form was cast in Nature's choicest mould |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
95 |
|
86.476 |
To Lord Brougham |
My lord, permit an unknown bard |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
59-62 |
|
86.494 |
To Miss M J C of Gorton |
So thou hast reached thy womanhood |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
111-113 |
|
86.493 |
To Miss Whitham |
An old man's blessing on yoy |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
|
|
86.502 |
Welcome greeting to the bards |
Welcome here, ye band of brothers! |
BURGESS, J. |
Pictures of social life, being select poems |
BURGESS, J. |
M0067279LC |
281.838 |
1.869 |
119-123 |
|
3.831 |
A dream |
I, in my troubled sleep, a vision saw |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
80 |
|
3.856 |
A factory honeymoon |
O, it's wary, wary wark |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
117-118 |
|
3.871 |
A May-Day Measure |
Brightly o'er the mountains |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
139-140 |
|
3.870 |
A Night With The Denshaw Navvies |
This a race of hardy men |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
138-139 |
|
3.836 |
A rum un tay kessunin' |
Aw're kessunin' mi fifteenth babby |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
89-91 |
|
4.029 |
A Shipley Glen Wedding Party |
As I entered Shipley Glen |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
175 |
|
3.844 |
A Valentine. Found amongst my wife's letters |
As thou art far above the crowd |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
101-102 |
|
3.842 |
A Whit-Saturday sketch |
Among the many places seen |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
98-99 |
|
3.835 |
A word for husbants |
Neaw, wimmen, if yo'll howd yo'r clack |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
87-89 |
|
3.829 |
Address to death |
O Death! when will thy ravages be stayed |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
79 |
|
3.824 |
Advice to a friend |
If thou by right intentions art imbued |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
70-71 |
|
3.837 |
An address to th' owd yer |
Ther's sum 'at never are content |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
91-93 |
|
686 |
An owd maid's lament |
It's terribly cowd |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
75-76 |
|
3.833 |
An owd maid's lament |
It's terribly cowd |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
82-83 |
|
4.057 |
Armageddon |
Comes Armageddon! As a lightning flash |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
200-201 |
|
4.041 |
Back to the Land |
Hail to the Yeoman, the Yeoman of England! |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
185-186 |
|
3.847 |
Beauty and virtue |
Beauty is like the ever-changing moon |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
104 |
|
3.880 |
Betty describes her courtship |
When I was young and bonny |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
155-156 |
|
3.879 |
Betty on a breach of promise case |
She was a modest servant |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
154-155 |
|
3.882 |
Betty on Lazarus and Dives |
Only a pauper; no honours are due |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
157-158 |
|
3.878 |
Betty On Simeon Twigg Ans Soltykoff |
If he'd the wealth of Soltykoff |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
153-154 |
|
3.883 |
Betty On The Fate Of Hypocrites |
The parson who's a hypocrite |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
158-159 |
|
3.885 |
Betty on the translation of spurgeon |
I see a rolling river |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
160-161 |
|
3.881 |
Betty sings of how Bernard Shaw was ragged at Magdalen College, Oxford |
Bernard Shaw went one day |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
156-157 |
|
3.877 |
Betty Twigg's Explanations And Apologies |
Kind friends, I'm the Errand Boy's Mamma |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
150-153 |
|
3.852 |
Blighted love |
Once in his time 'tis given to man to know |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
111 |
|
4.037 |
Colne Valley |
Assembled here to jubilate |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
180-183 |
|
3.816 |
Dedication |
In memory's mirror I behold |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
Opposite frontispiece |
|
4.460 |
Failsworth revisited |
Come, sister, lay thy work aside |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
34-35 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
3.818 |
Failsworth revisited |
Come, sister, lay thy work aside |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
31-33 |
|
3.832 |
Fame |
I liken crazy millions following fast |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
81 |
|
4.039 |
Feed and speed |
Feed and Speed! |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
184-185 |
|
3.841 |
Finery for Whitsuntide |
Now Whitsuntide is drawing nigh |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
97-98 |
|
3.840 |
Five o'clock a.m |
What! is it five o'clock? Oh, dear! |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
95-96 |
|
3.850 |
God bless thee, Fayther Kesmus |
God bless thee, Fayther Kesmus! coam |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
106-108 |
|
3.875 |
Good-Bye To Edwin Wright |
Good-bye, sweet singer, eldest of our band |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
143 |
|
3.843 |
Gratitude |
Could we but understand the birds |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
99-100 |
|
3.825 |
Hope and resignation |
When the Spring sun beams upon the glad earth |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
71-72 |
|
3.864 |
I have no heart to sing |
You ask, Where are your friends? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
127-128 |
|
3.861 |
I used to love my Sundays |
I used to love my Sundays before I lost my wife |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
123-124 |
|
3.869 |
I would not be young again |
I remember the sanguine thrill |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
138 |
|
4.056 |
I. L. P. 1893 - 1914 |
One and Twenty years have vanished |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
193 |
|
3.865 |
I'll nurse my griefs no more |
Come to my itching fingers |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
133 |
|
3.860 |
I'm sick of this confinement |
Inside a factory casement, four storeys from the ground |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
123 |
|
4.043 |
It is Coming! |
I look into the future and this is what I see |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
187 |
|
3.988 |
John Burn's Thirty Third Birthday |
Here's a health to thee, John |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
165-166 |
|
3.867 |
Latter-Day Heroes |
Who says that the chivalrous knight |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
135-136 |
|
4.033 |
Let victory grace the colours of my cause |
Some veterans lag superfluous on the stage |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
178 |
|
3.863 |
Lines addressed to Ben Brierley |
A brother in affliction is oft' more qualified |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
126-127 |
|
3.874 |
Lines Addressed To Sim Schofield On His Wife's Death |
Poor, stricken friend, how shall I comfort thee? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
141-142 |
|
3.851 |
Lines on a rainy sunday |
Twill make sore shipwreck of my peace |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
109-110 |
|
3.872 |
Lines On The Czar's Assassination |
Swinburne! thou Lucifer of Letters, hence |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
140-141 |
Addressed to Algernon Charles Swinburne |
3.873 |
Lines On The Death Of Lord Beaconsfield |
I see a banquet of the Mighty Dead |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
141 |
|
3.868 |
Lines to Pauline |
Dear lady, do not smile on me |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
136-138 |
|
3.858 |
Lines written after my wife's death |
There's an isle in eternity's sea |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
120-121 |
|
4.459 |
Mi owd bonnet |
Yo're leyfin' at mi bonnet, eh? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
31-34 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
3.853 |
My love is not an angel |
My love is not an angel, for |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
111-113 |
|
3.834 |
My owd bonnet |
Yo're leyfin' at mi bonnet, eh? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
84-87 |
|
3.855 |
Neaw aw'm a married mon |
When faythur an' mother wed |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
114-116 |
|
4.836 |
Neaw aw'm a married mon |
When mi fayther fust wur wed |
BURGESS, Joseph |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
54-55 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
3.821 |
Never complain |
I always am pleasant |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
61-62 |
|
4.031 |
Notoriety and Fame |
Up and down, down and up |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
176-177 |
|
4.049 |
Nulli Secundus |
Out in the unclouded air |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
189 |
|
4.034 |
Oastler Memorial Day 1907 |
Why this sweet festival of song? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
178-179 |
|
4.042 |
Opening of Ruskin Hall |
Oxford city, by the Thames |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
186-187 |
|
3.876 |
Owdham wakes |
Owdham is a bonny teawn |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
144-145 |
|
4.050 |
Peace conference at the Hague |
Assembled at the Hague, the papers tell us is |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
189 |
|
4.058 |
Political Economy and Political Partisans |
This Labour poet's muses when finished was the frieght |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
212-296 |
|
4.035 |
Reflections on a Yorkshire Miners' annual demonstration |
I stood on Wakefield Bridge, beside |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
179 |
|
3.989 |
Rouken Glen, Glasgow |
Oh Father, ain't it lovely? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
168-169 |
|
3.838 |
Snow in March |
Within the upper storey of a mill |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
93 |
|
3.866 |
Sonnets to Pauline |
Thou art not what the vulgar call a belle |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
134-135 |
|
3.859 |
Sweets to the sweet |
Sweets to the sweet |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
121-122 |
|
3.887 |
Taking A Walk In Aldgate |
Taking a walk in Aldgate |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
163-164 |
(october 23, 1891.) |
685 |
Ten heawrs a day |
As aw wur hurryin' on i' th' dark |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
72-74 |
|
3.817 |
Ten heawrs a day |
As aw wur hurryin' on i' th' dark |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
26-28 |
|
4.028 |
The 1907 Servants' Compensation Act |
My servants served me well |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
173-174 |
|
4.051 |
The accolade of randall Cremer |
In bygone days, ambitios squires |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
191 |
|
4.026 |
The Cottage Homes of England |
The cottage homes of England |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
170-171 |
|
3.830 |
THe cry of the aged |
How long, O Lord! how long |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
79-80 |
|
4.038 |
The Engineers' Strike |
On the banks of Tyne and Wear |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
184 |
|
4.052 |
The Entent Cordiale |
Uncle Edward tells the Kaiser |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
191-192 |
|
3.862 |
The graves of those we love |
There is a sacred place |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
124-126 |
|
3.823 |
The land of the living |
We mortals survive by a daily reprieving |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
70 |
|
4.054 |
The lust for colonies |
There are three nations in the West |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
192 |
|
4.053 |
The lust for colonies |
There are three nations in the West |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
|
|
4.032 |
The Marathon of 1907 |
Dorando, Hail! |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
177 |
|
4.027 |
The May of 1907 |
Sing the festive roundelay |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
172-173 |
|
4.036 |
The Miners' Eight Hours Day |
Into the bowels of the earth |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
179-180 |
|
3.849 |
The mystery of love |
Beneath a mighty oak tree's shade |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
106 |
|
3.846 |
The old man at the grave of his young wife |
As where once flourished many a stately tree |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
103 |
|
4.048 |
The passing of Joseph Chamberlain |
Pass to thy rest, brave Chamberlain, nor trouble |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
188 |
|
3.826 |
The sun and the sky |
His bride, the sky, bewails her lot of sorrow |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
72-73 |
|
3.828 |
The thunderstorm |
The lately-smiling face of Heaven is now |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
78 |
|
4.040 |
The unemployed |
Workless and weary of waiting we stand |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
185 |
|
4.854 |
There's nowt loike spinnin' shoddy |
Shoddy, shoddy, shoddy, that's the soart to spin |
BURGESS, Joseph |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
89-90 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
4.458 |
Ther's nowt loike spinnin' shoddy |
Shoddy, shoddy, shoddy, that's the soart to spin |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
29-31 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
684 |
Ther's nowt loike spinnin' shoddy |
Shoddy, shoddy, shoddy, that's the soart to spin |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
71-72 |
|
3.820 |
Ther's nowt loike spinnin' shoddy |
Shoddy, shoddy, shoddy, that's the soart to spin |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
58-60 |
|
4.046 |
Thy Kingdom Come! |
Thy Kingdom Come! The Churches daily pray |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
187 |
|
3.857 |
To my friends |
The inspiration and the voice of song |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
118-119 |
|
3.822 |
To the memory of Spencer S Suthers, Esq |
For those who can with cold indifference look |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
69 |
|
3.854 |
Twas often said |
Twas often said when I got wed |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
113-114 |
|
3.819 |
Was this my earliest time on Earth? |
Olympia! thy resounding name |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
33-34 |
|
3.827 |
What I saw |
Methought, in an imaginary dream |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
76-77 |
|
3.845 |
What is more sweet? |
What is more sweet - when the queen of the night |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
102-103 |
|
3.987 |
What will the verdict be? |
Waterlow Park in London City |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
164-165 |
|
4.059 |
When my good ship comes home |
When my good ship comes safe to land |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
297-298 |
|
3.848 |
Where I first met my wife |
I met her not beneath the shade |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
105 |
|
4.030 |
Whit-Week |
Who are these in dainty dress |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
175-176 |
|
4.047 |
Why stand ye idle ? |
Why stand ye idle all the day ? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
188 |
|
3.839 |
Your voices have a pleasant ring |
Your voices have a pleasant ring |
BURGESS, Joseph |
A Potential Poet? |
BURGESS, Joseph |
M0018012LC |
78.831 |
1.927 |
94 |
|
81.493 |
Must I write a poem, Mum? |
Must I write a poem, Mum |
BURNELL, Hannah |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
109 |
|
2.486 |
Ah's Yorkshire |
Ah's Yorkshire! bi mi truly! |
BURNETT, William Hall |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
208-210 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.488 |
An awd man's confession |
There was yance a tarm i' mi like when Ah was soft as suds need be |
BURNETT, William Hall |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
210-213 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
6.452 |
Far out at sea: a lyric |
Far out at sea |
BURNETT, William Hall |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
316-317 |
|
6.451 |
Mary's in the shippon: a Mellor Fields' ballad |
Mary's in the shippon, milking the cows |
BURNETT, William Hall |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
316 |
|
6.450 |
On the unveiling of a window dedicated to St Michael and All Angels |
How oft in painted windows we admire |
BURNETT, William Hall |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
314-315 |
|
6.453 |
Stokesley |
I've read in story books full oft |
BURNETT, William Hall |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
318-319 |
|
2.490 |
Stokesley |
I've read in story books full oft |
BURNETT, William Hall |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
213-215 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.437 |
At Scarborough |
The castle crag, with ruin crowned |
BURNLEY, James |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
131-133 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
82.606 |
Jim's letter |
What's this? A letter thro' Jim |
BURNLEY, James |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
67-69 |
2nd ed rev |
2.436 |
T'Yorkshireman i' London |
I' this city o' millions to-neet |
BURNLEY, James |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
129-131 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.438 |
Waiting for the swallows |
When the swallows fled to the sultry south |
BURNLEY, James |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
133-134 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
82.723 |
My monster |
My monster has |
BURR, Gareth |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
16 |
|
80.850 |
Window shopping |
In the fashion shop in town |
BURROWS, Dianne |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
128 |
|
82.867 |
Friendship flowers |
I went to the flowerbed at number 63 |
BURTON, Kirsty |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
99 |
|
476 |
Pendle heritage |
The house has an old photograph |
BURTON, P. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
26 |
|
492 |
The high road |
No mistake, a sheep on a high stone wall |
BURTON, P. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
41 |
|
81.388 |
London |
We saw the Starlight Express |
BURY, Edward |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
53 |
|
82.910 |
The man who tried to be like Buzz |
One day Neil Armstrong |
BURY, James |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
122-123 |
|
196 |
High wind over Holcombe |
There's a high wind over Holcombe, comes a-prancing down the hill |
BUTTERWORTH, Edith |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
13 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
195 |
Holcombe Hill |
Beloved hill! |
BUTTERWORTH, Edith |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
12 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
5.720 |
Jone o' Grinfilt's ramble |
Says Jone to his woife on a whot summer's day |
BUTTERWORTH, James |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
216-220 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
5.615 |
Jone o' Grinfilt's ramble |
Says Jone to his woife on a whot summer's day |
BUTTERWORTH, James |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
165-167 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.787 |
Jone o' Grinfilt's ramble |
Says Jone to his woife on a whot summer's day |
BUTTERWORTH, James |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
165-167 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
80.843 |
Anron and the universe |
Upon a glistening rock, Anron cooled his form |
BUTTERWORTH, M. J. |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
111-112 |
|
81.303 |
Animals |
Leopards leap |
BUTTERWORTH, Mark |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
10 |
|
82.143 |
Through a dictionary darkly |
You have the feel of an old and trusted friend |
BUTTERWORTH, Patricia |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
39 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
133 |
To my wife |
Sweetheart of these thirty years |
BUTTERWORTH, Walter |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
36-37 |
|
1.371 |
Kitty an' Robin |
Whear hast the been roaming, Kitty? |
BY THE AUTHOR OF SCARSDALE |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
63 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.372 |
Meg or Jenny? |
Woe betide the evil eye |
BY THE AUTHOR OF SCARSDALE |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
64-65 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
164 |
A dialogue between Sir John Jobson and Harry Homespun |
Was ye not sadly frightened, honest Harry |
BYROM, John |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
36-40 |
|
5.710 |
Careless content |
I am content, I do not care |
BYROM, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
173-177 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
6.773 |
Careless content |
I am content, I do not care |
BYROM, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
125-127 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.601 |
Careless content |
I am content, I do not care |
BYROM, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
125-127 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
889 |
Christians, Awake! |
Christians, awake! Salute the happy morn |
BYROM, John |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
60-61 |
|
5.657 |
Colin and Phebe |
My time, O ye Muses, was happily spent |
BYROM, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
275-278 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
134 |
Colin and Phebe |
When walking with Phebe, what sights have I seen |
BYROM, John |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
38 |
|
1.366 |
Colin and Phoebe |
My time, O ye Muses, was happily spent |
BYROM, John |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
56-58 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
6.779 |
Contentment |
I am a poor workman, as rich as a Jew |
BYROM, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
137-139 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
165 |
Contentment or, the happy workman's song |
I am a poor workman, as rich as a Jew |
BYROM, John |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
40-42 |
|
5.607 |
Contentment. The happy workman's song |
I am a poor workman, as rich as a Jew |
BYROM, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
137-139 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.715 |
Contentment. The happy workman's song |
I am a poor workman, as rich as a Jew |
BYROM, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
192-194 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
1.192 |
The hermit |
A hermit there was and he lived in a grot |
BYROM, John |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
218-219 |
|
82.526 |
The hermit |
A hermit there was and he lived in a grot |
BYROM, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
426-427 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.431 |
Why, prithee now |
Why prithee now, what does it signify |
BYROM, John |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
143 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.522 |
Why, prithee now |
Why, prithee now, what does it signify |
BYROM, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
421-422 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.559 |
Sheffield cutler's song |
Coom all you cutlin' heroes, where'ersome'er you be |
BYWATER, Abel |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
22-24 |
2nd ed rev |
4.473 |
Peggy's lantern: th' Crime Lake boggart |
A friend o' mine - aw'll co him Tom |
C. F. C. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
51-52 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.474 |
Th' owd gardener |
Aw know a quiet garden |
C. F. C. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
53 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.472 |
Thowts i' springtime |
Does 'ta remember, owd lad, heaw we wandert |
C. F. C. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
51 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
5.298 |
Sonnet to benevolence |
Bright as the Star that o'er the Mountain's brow |
C. M. |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
6-Jul |
An early fugitive poem written Blackburn 10 April 1797 |
5.296 |
Domestic felicity |
Though grandeur flies my humble roof |
C. V. L. |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
4-May |
An early fugitive poem written 1 May 1795 |
81.505 |
Imaginary pony |
Brown, chestnut pony |
CAINE, Victoria |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
115 |
|
81.435 |
Aliens on the moon |
Off we go to work |
CALDERBANK, Grace |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
77 |
|
82.944 |
Hidden treasure |
Treasure out, treasure there |
CALDWELL, Sherene |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
141 |
|
84.233 |
From earth to thee |
In lonely darkness, long I've wandered far |
CALLIGAN, William |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
135 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.232 |
November wind's soliloquy |
Ha, Ha! I'm free again |
CALLIGAN, William |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
133-134 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.234 |
Universal greeting |
Peace, prosperity and plenty, these I crave |
CALLIGAN, William |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
136 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
460 |
Shanken sheils |
Anticipation of still uplands |
CALVERT, J. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
6 |
|
1.899 |
Crowhill |
I heed not your chiding, I crave not your pity |
CALVERT, Lily |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
196-198 |
|
1.940 |
Gentle maid |
Gentle maid, is your dear little fragile hand |
CALVERT, Lily |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
187-188 |
|
1.942 |
Go forward |
Go forward! ye loyal, ye brave sons of Britain |
CALVERT, Lily |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
190-191 |
|
1.979 |
In Jowler Vale |
I leave my humble cot behind |
CALVERT, Lily |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
191-196 |
|
2.012 |
Look higher yet |
March breezes blow |
CALVERT, Lily |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
185-186 |
|
2.060 |
Never a morrow |
Never a morrow but can borrow |
CALVERT, Lily |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
187 |
|
2.111 |
Recollections |
Again I recall my musings |
CALVERT, Lily |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
189 |
|
2.319 |
To the sad |
Have you watched your little garden |
CALVERT, Lily |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
184-185 |
|
510 |
Causing an obstruction |
Pleading, he stood at the crossroads |
CAMERON, Bella |
Preston Writers '72 |
PRESTON WRITERS |
M0017962LC |
78.606 |
1.972 |
39 |
|
506 |
Miniature |
And the day smote the ears |
CAMERON, Bella |
Preston Writers '72 |
PRESTON WRITERS |
M0017962LC |
78.606 |
1.972 |
7 |
|
380 |
Northern elms |
Eh, my lovelies, my northern elms! |
CAMERON, Bella |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
31 |
|
82.152 |
Trees making love |
I've never seen trees |
CAMERON, Bella |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
61 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
82.761 |
The firelight |
The firelight ever so bright |
CAMERON, Charles |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
37 |
|
2.858 |
A look at London |
How swift the soul from faith's clear heights may fall |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
8-Dec |
From the dome of St Peter's Church |
2.868 |
A shining moment |
To-day a power from worlds beyond the sky |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
28 |
|
4.602 |
A to Z |
Oh, had I met thee when my soul pursued |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
186 |
|
4.608 |
A word on the worm-theory |
There be who tell us the world's Lord began |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
192 |
|
2.862 |
After a thunderstorm |
The storm is o'er - how glorious is the glee! |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
20 |
|
4.568 |
Amy Ancher |
I love a maid, the flower of maids |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
118-120 |
|
4.537 |
Analogies |
The bad is here, the better lies a far |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
50-51 |
|
3.372 |
Another Nautilus |
Another shell! (now let fond fancy run) |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
35 |
|
3.382 |
Art |
Hail to the power that stirreth from the rude |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
43 |
|
3.375 |
Art's adjustments |
Who brings, emancipate from mill or mart |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
37 |
|
4.562 |
B. B. On his infant sister |
To-day I found a nest, a nest |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
87-89 |
|
4.569 |
Barney Swedenborg and Paddy Lingo |
Hah! Who says that I'm benighted? |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
121-122 |
|
4.546 |
Brother sovereigns |
Is there a man great by the glorious boon |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
71 |
|
4.540 |
Christ an dthe Magdalen |
There are who clearly see the millions grope |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
63-65 |
|
4.539 |
Christ and the Sabbath |
We are to character the Potter's wheel |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
55-62 |
|
3.380 |
Cupid |
Haste to the Art-Treasures, haste away - oh joy! |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
41 |
|
4.542 |
Elizabeth Fry |
Hers was a life devine that cannot die |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
67 |
|
4.541 |
Elizabeth Fry |
Show not the roll of sainted nature's one |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
66 |
|
2.863 |
Hope |
When streameth to the gale hope's banner bright |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
21 |
|
2.861 |
Hope |
Who live to hope they surely live to fear |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
14-19 |
|
3.385 |
In presence of a storm picture |
Divine is the dominion of the ear |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
46 |
|
2.859 |
Invitation |
Ye who would see with truth-revealing eye |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
13 |
|
4.565 |
Little Isabella Cameron to little Watty Pochini |
St Valentine's Day - all things are gay |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
96-98 |
|
4.538 |
Nature |
As the scared child flies to its mother's arms |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
52-54 |
|
4.582 |
Paddy O'Connel's courtship |
There be some fall in love at the sight of a daisy |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
151-154 |
|
3.381 |
Picture of a little girl |
Sweet soul of innocence and childly grace |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
42 |
|
4.588 |
Playing the Deil |
Our Jeanie, she gaed out yestreen |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
164-165 |
|
4.574 |
R. M. Milnes esq, M P |
Haste, haste to the poll - up, up with the banner |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
129-131 |
|
4.573 |
R. M. Milnes esq, M P |
Sing who will to the rich - I sing to the poorest |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
127-128 |
|
4.599 |
Running off with the moon |
The day has come to pour the bitter tear! |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
183 |
|
2.867 |
Science and art |
Science for ever sees her limits fly |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
27 |
|
4.536 |
Sequence |
Man is Time's Heir; the old geoic force |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
49 |
|
3.384 |
Sir Charles Napier |
A soul heroic of teh ancient mould |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
45 |
|
4.575 |
Sir Robert Peel |
A man was our lost One of earnest beholding |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
132 |
|
4.604 |
Tailor Twaddles contribution |
Bad dreams, oh dear! bad dreams are dreadful things! |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
188 |
|
2.864 |
The baffled artist |
Mother divine of Christ! My strenght is spent |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
22-24 |
|
4.534 |
The biggest blind asylum in the world |
Is there a town that boasts not sometjing rare? |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
47 |
|
4.535 |
The blacksmith's contribution |
I am at best a bellows-blowing Blade |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
48 |
|
3.368 |
The blind |
Legion's the name of this large family |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
33 |
|
3.383 |
The Cedar Tree |
The cedar of trees the happiest one |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
44 |
|
4.589 |
The chess player |
Were human life a game of chess |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
166-169 |
|
4.567 |
The dancing transcendentalists |
She will be here, she's sure to some |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
105-117 |
Miss Fanny Spindle and Tom Talkative |
2.866 |
The discontents |
For ever we would fly from that we are! |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
26 |
|
4.605 |
The enamoured whale |
Oh bliss supreme when radiant summer's sheen |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
189 |
|
2.869 |
The functions of art |
Into the ideal world Art soareth free |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
29 |
|
4.557 |
The great fir tree |
Dear little heaven-eyed creature softly fair |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
82 |
|
4.547 |
The great fir tree |
The oldest old can gentle Redhill climb |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
72 |
|
4.560 |
The great fir tree |
Were there not what to seek, and what to shun |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
85 |
|
4.543 |
The great fir tree and the Crystal Palace |
Kent has her wonders - Sussex to may deem |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
68 |
|
4.555 |
The great fir tree to |
Ere time's sure axe shall lay thy servant low |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
80 |
|
4.561 |
The great fir tree to |
He would be a champion of the night |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
86 |
|
4.544 |
The great fir tree to |
How old am I?' oh, my dear Lady pray |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
69 |
|
4.551 |
The great fir tree to |
I fall in love a hundred times a day! |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
76 |
|
4.558 |
The great fir tree to |
I saw thee roam, as nature-lovers roam |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
83 |
|
4.552 |
The great fir tree to |
My soul is sick of Helen - her of Troy! |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
77 |
|
4.548 |
The great fir tree to |
No impulse needs the enamoured soul to chase |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
73 |
|
4.549 |
The great fir tree to |
Oh doubt it not, dear Lady mine, that I |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
74 |
|
4.550 |
The great fir tree to |
Oh, ne'er do I behold thee passing by |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
75 |
|
4.556 |
The great fir tree to |
Who roams afoot will aftentimes beguile |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
81 |
|
4.545 |
The great fir tree to his admirers |
How old am I?' a veteran to old Parr! |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
70 |
|
4.600 |
The ideal and the real |
Carve me, rapt Sculptor, from th' impatient stone |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
184 |
|
4.597 |
The interview on St. Valentine's day |
Annette, to day I have the right |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
181 |
|
3.370 |
The Nautilus |
Of all the sea-shells silver, gold and green |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
34 |
|
4.598 |
The nutcrackers |
Nutcrackers! yes, by Cupid's beard I swear! |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
182 |
|
4.577 |
The omnibus |
Swift I ran - the buss was standing |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
135-137 |
|
2.865 |
The poor indeed |
Who are the poor? They are who never climb |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
25 |
|
4.590 |
The Rev Sir Callaghan O'Brallaghan |
Good people all, both great and small |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
170-172 |
|
4.606 |
The Rev. Mr Legion |
Thy creed is Shilly Shally, Pulpiteer |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
190 |
|
4.607 |
The Rev. Mr Makebelieve |
He takes his twilight dim for noon of day |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
191 |
|
4.592 |
The sobbing swain |
Oh hear me, Lady, hear and understand |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
175-176 |
|
2.857 |
The two cradles |
The infant stranger to life's troubled lot |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
7 |
|
4.578 |
This sea piece |
Oh hear me sing a little while |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
138 -144 |
|
2.870 |
To a child |
Mutation only is perennial here |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
30-32 |
|
4.571 |
To a Welsh girl |
How long the time from now ill then! |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
124 |
|
4.576 |
To a Welsh girl |
My sweet Weslh girl, my sweet Welsh girl |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
133-134 |
|
4.596 |
To Annette, Higher Broughton |
The fourteenth of the month! Oh, ay! |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
179-180 |
a valentine |
4.564 |
To Annie Florence Simpson |
Come to me blue-eyed little girl |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
93-95 |
|
4.581 |
To Belliza Pippin, Didsbury |
St. Valentine's day, St. Valentine's day |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
149-150 |
|
4.593 |
To Bessy Brown, of Salford |
Stay Bessy Brown, sweet Bessy Brown |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
177 |
|
4.580 |
To Cupid |
Oh love, my patience you abuse |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
147-148 |
|
4.586 |
To Fanny Rosenberg |
Come, Fanny Rosenberg - Fan, Fan! |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
160-161 |
|
4.595 |
To Fanny Teazle |
Oh, bend on me the sunny beam |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
178 |
|
4.594 |
To Fanny Teazle |
Oh, bend on me the sunny beam |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
178M0003229LC |
|
4.584 |
To Ida Gerst |
She loves! - sad is their lot who seek |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
156-157 |
|
3.379 |
To Jenny Lind |
Tis said thy voice leaps kindling to the core |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
38 - 40 |
|
4.583 |
To Katy Clegg |
Sweet Katie Clegg, dear Katy hear |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
155 |
|
4.566 |
To Katy Cockshoot |
O Katy Cockshoot, Katy I |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
99-104 |
|
4.587 |
To Lotty Laverock |
Once I thought I'd live a lover |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
162-163 |
|
4.570 |
To Margaret Blackett singing an anthem |
Now would I sing one song to thee |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
123 |
|
4.603 |
To Mary B. |
Bright Mary 'till I saw thee, saw I ne'er |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
187 |
|
4.585 |
To Mary Peaflower |
I cannot sing - oh no, not I |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
158-159 |
|
4.579 |
To Minnie |
As a river to a rill |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
145-146 |
|
3.374 |
To Mrs B |
The Martha and the Dorcas of the page |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
36 |
|
4.591 |
To Nelly Trefoil, Manchester |
Dear Nelly Trefoil, Nelly I |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
173-174 |
|
4.563 |
To Polly Corbett |
Sweet Polly Corbett, pretty Poll |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
90-92 |
|
4.572 |
To Susannah |
Who will may sings the joys of wine |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
125-126 |
|
4.554 |
To the great fir tree |
Giant of bolwark knee and stalwart arm |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
79 |
|
4.559 |
To the great fir tree |
Giant that lookest as if thou ne'er could'st die |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
84 |
|
4.553 |
To the great fir tree |
Imperial tree, child of the centuries |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
78 |
|
4.601 |
To the Rev. Dr. B- |
The limited - they are a countless crew |
CAMERON, John |
Yarns by a Manchester Spinner |
CAMERON, John |
M0003229LC |
8.037 |
0 |
185 |
|
87.811 |
Fellow feeling |
Try to do a little act of kindness every day |
CAMPBELL, Annie |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
99 |
|
84.071 |
A young girl |
She is most like a lute that lies |
CAMPBELL, Archibald Y. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
27 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.072 |
The bird and the bell |
Oh peaceful is the August noon |
CAMPBELL, Archibald Y. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
28 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
82.872 |
The rocket |
The rocket goes as fast as a motorbike |
CAMPBELL, Dayhl |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
101 |
|
451 |
Dream theme |
I listened to the dream of the man in the bar |
CAMPBELL, Sheila |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
39 |
|
6.267 |
Autumn |
Autumn appeared in perfect bloom of youth |
CANDLER, A. H. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
157 |
|
6.266 |
Sonnet III |
The Poets thro' the ages all along |
CANDLER, A. H. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
157 |
|
6.269 |
St Peter's Day |
I sometimes fear (and hideous is the fear) |
CANDLER, A. H. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
158 |
|
6.214 |
The Dee |
The slowly setting sun with ruddy glow |
CANDLER, A. H. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
66-71 |
|
6.264 |
To- |
Thy hand did pluck this rose - a dainty thing |
CANDLER, A. H. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
155-156 |
|
6.270 |
To a spray of mignonette |
I found thee on the path, sweet mignonette |
CANDLER, A. H. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
159 |
|
6.265 |
To my father (on his birthday) |
They were the comfort of his hoary hairs |
CANDLER, A. H. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
156 |
|
6.268 |
Winter and spring |
The winter wedded Autumn, but she died |
CANDLER, A. H. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
158 |
|
81.431 |
Aliens |
Aliens are green |
CAREFOOT, Rebecca |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
75 |
|
521 |
An honest Yorkshireman |
I is i' truth a coontry youth |
CAREY, Henry |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
91-92 |
Yorkshire poetry |
82.550 |
An honest Yorkshireman |
I is i' truth a coontry youth |
CAREY, Henry |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
6-Jul |
2nd ed rev |
82.649 |
Love and pie |
When I gor hoired et Beacon Farm a year last Martinmas |
CARLILL, J. A . |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
94-95 |
2nd ed rev |
890 |
The bookworm |
I own no grand baronial hall |
CARNIE, Ethel |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
70-72 |
|
80.795 |
Leaving never comes easy |
Leaving you doesn't come easy to me |
CARPENTER, Erica |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
21 |
|
1.955 |
Hark to the voice |
Hark to the voice, 'tis calling |
CARR, A. J. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
142 |
|
1.965 |
Helpless man |
Cradled when young, watched by with tender care |
CARR, A. J. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
147 |
|
2.015 |
Love is a ship |
Love is a ship, in harbour fair |
CARR, A. J. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
144-145 |
|
2.029 |
Man, know thyself |
Man, know thyself! eke out thy destiny |
CARR, A. J. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
144 |
|
2.122 |
Roll On! Roll On! |
Roll on, sweet tune, o'er this vast universe |
CARR, A. J. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
143 |
|
2.175 |
The bait |
He arose and with the sun's bright rays |
CARR, A. J. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
146-147 |
|
2.229 |
The May pole, Warley |
Gone, yet returning, within the glorious spring |
CARR, A. J. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
145-146 |
|
80.808 |
Abuse of life |
I'm going to gaol. I'm out on bail |
CARR, Paul |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
38-39 |
|
87.772 |
A Prayer |
Dear God you took my son John the youngest one, and though I know it's true |
CARROLL, Ethel |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
57 |
|
515 |
Ill done to |
Aye dear, tha looks fair hearty |
CARTER F. A. |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
87 |
Yorkshire poetry |
3.175 |
An old house |
Enclosed within a garden of old flowers |
CARTER, William N. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
32 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.176 |
White magic |
With noiseless pace |
CARTER, William N. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
33-34 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
82.724 |
The old man |
Cold, wet day as he shuffles along |
CARTWRIGHT, Christian |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
16 |
|
197 |
The call of the hills |
If thou would'st sweet contentment find |
CARTWRIGHT, James |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
14-15 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
198 |
To the robin |
The joys that crowd the summer hours |
CARTWRIGHT, James |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
15-16 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
82.563 |
The lucky dream |
Ya Kessmas neet, or then aboot |
CASTILLO, John |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
33-35 |
2nd ed rev |
82.979 |
The cave poem |
The cave was as dark as night |
CASWELL, Charlotte |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
160-161 |
|
468 |
Your hands |
Graceful and slender waving in the |
CATLOW, M. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
17 |
|
5.161 |
The lover of nature's farewell |
There is a cooling freshness in the wind |
CAULTON, Mrs. |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
28-30 |
|
84.151 |
A birthday song |
I would give you music, the music of great trees |
CAVILL, Dorothy |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
73 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.155 |
At St. Moritz |
There are rose-flushed mountains splendid, long fields of shining snow |
CAVILL, Dorothy |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
77 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.156 |
Devon ladies |
In Devon lanes the primrose grows |
CAVILL, Dorothy |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
78 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.152 |
Give me a moth-white mist |
I do not want the thing that men call love |
CAVILL, Dorothy |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
74 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.153 |
I know a stream |
I know a stream that silverly doth flow |
CAVILL, Dorothy |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
75 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.154 |
Siting alone |
A sound without stirred the night's solitude |
CAVILL, Dorothy |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
70 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
82.939 |
Hidden treasure |
I was told |
CAYZER, Laura |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
137 |
|
6.022 |
I'd rather hold that men are true |
I'd rather hold that men are true |
CHADBURN, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
216 |
|
6.021 |
In memoriam |
How fair a thing is Friendship! and how sweet |
CHADBURN, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
214-216 |
|
6.026 |
Life |
There is a nobler and a truer life |
CHADBURN, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
219 |
|
6.023 |
Lines |
Lay her where the sunbeams rest |
CHADBURN, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
217 |
Death |
6.025 |
Maud |
As I have heard a clear melodious voice |
CHADBURN, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
218-219 |
|
6.027 |
Sonnet |
Dear Friend, perhaps when you are far away |
CHADBURN, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
219 |
|
6.028 |
The poet's call |
In the deep and solemn night |
CHADBURN, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
219-220 |
|
6.024 |
The woodland spirit |
I stood within a woodland glen, ere Summer's days were flown |
CHADBURN, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
218 |
|
81.377 |
I was on my way to Jupiter |
It was the month of May |
CHAGGER, Margaret |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
46 |
|
86.682 |
Fun Run |
In May we went on a Country Run |
CHAMBERLAIN, Marjorie J. |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
30 |
|
87.768 |
The Dream |
One night as I lay in my bed fast asleep |
CHAPPELL, Michael |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
53 |
|
608 |
Apology |
I wish I'd never said it |
CHARLESWORTH, Glenda |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
25 |
|
619 |
End |
Fire, Water, Earth and Air |
CHARLESWORTH, Glenda |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
30 |
|
592 |
Ethereal |
There's a dream dancing in my head |
CHARLESWORTH, Glenda |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
11 |
|
610 |
Gift from above |
It fell in the night, when the wind blew |
CHARLESWORTH, Glenda |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
25 |
|
590 |
Green |
Green; surely no artist could capture |
CHARLESWORTH, Glenda |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
11 |
|
580 |
Inventing |
In another world |
CHARLESWORTH, Glenda |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
5 |
|
618 |
Leaflike |
A winter tree |
CHARLESWORTH, Glenda |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
30 |
|
609 |
Life after death |
Wait |
CHARLESWORTH, Glenda |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
25 |
|
599 |
Motherlove |
Don't watch me through your window |
CHARLESWORTH, Glenda |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
17 |
|
579 |
Now I will fly |
The world turned on its axis |
CHARLESWORTH, Glenda |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
5 |
|
591 |
Tapestry |
I will weave a tapestry |
CHARLESWORTH, Glenda |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
11 |
|
617 |
Tunnel vision |
Is there light at the end of this tunnel? |
CHARLESWORTH, Glenda |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
30 |
|
4.089 |
A blighted family |
Come with me, ye whose every wish parturient |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
Poems |
CHARLESWORTH, E. G. |
M0325180LC |
985.041 |
1.856 |
41-42 |
Author was curate of Tosside |
4.092 |
A Magdalene |
Since the curtain of the womb withdrew |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
Poems |
CHARLESWORTH, E. G. |
M0325180LC |
985.041 |
1.856 |
47 |
Author was curate of Tosside |
4.082 |
Dissolution |
Ye spirits from eternity's abyss |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
Poems |
CHARLESWORTH, E. G. |
M0325180LC |
985.041 |
1.856 |
25-26 |
Author was curate of Tosside |
2.425 |
Faith's transfiguration |
The still air moved not stem or leaf |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
114 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
4.094 |
Farewell to craven |
Farewell ye aerial castles, circumventing shield |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
Poems |
CHARLESWORTH, E. G. |
M0325180LC |
985.041 |
1.856 |
49-50 |
Author was curate of Tosside |
4.095 |
Hymn to God |
Father; grant me thro' all this vale of life to feel |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
Poems |
CHARLESWORTH, E. G. |
M0325180LC |
985.041 |
1.856 |
52 |
Author was curate of Tosside |
4.087 |
Love |
Whilst Stoics take her name in vain |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
Poems |
CHARLESWORTH, E. G. |
M0325180LC |
985.041 |
1.856 |
37-39 |
Author was curate of Tosside |
4.079 |
Meditations |
It breeds a pang to see once stately corn |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
Poems |
CHARLESWORTH, E. G. |
M0325180LC |
985.041 |
1.856 |
13-20 |
Author was curate of Tosside |
4.086 |
Mitford |
Sweet Mitford! loveliest village of the hill |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
Poems |
CHARLESWORTH, E. G. |
M0325180LC |
985.041 |
1.856 |
35-36 |
Author was curate of Tosside |
4.078 |
Short story |
It is that favour'd time of year |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
Poems |
CHARLESWORTH, E. G. |
M0325180LC |
985.041 |
1.856 |
1-Dec |
Author was curate of Tosside |
4.085 |
Solemn thoughts |
The portals to eternity are never shut |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
Poems |
CHARLESWORTH, E. G. |
M0325180LC |
985.041 |
1.856 |
32-34 |
Author was curate of Tosside |
4.084 |
Spring morn |
Sweet minstrel of the dawning day |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
Poems |
CHARLESWORTH, E. G. |
M0325180LC |
985.041 |
1.856 |
29-31 |
Author was curate of Tosside |
4.091 |
The dungeon |
Thro' the casement iron-rafted |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
Poems |
CHARLESWORTH, E. G. |
M0325180LC |
985.041 |
1.856 |
45-46 |
Author was curate of Tosside |
4.088 |
The dying girl to her sister |
Sing, sweet sister, sing to me |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
Poems |
CHARLESWORTH, E. G. |
M0325180LC |
985.041 |
1.856 |
40 |
Author was curate of Tosside |
4.093 |
The dying swan: in articulo mortis cygnus cantabit |
What sounds are these that agitate |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
Poems |
CHARLESWORTH, E. G. |
M0325180LC |
985.041 |
1.856 |
48 |
Author was curate of Tosside |
4.081 |
The evening of life |
Tell us pilgrim, now that Even fast draws on |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
Poems |
CHARLESWORTH, E. G. |
M0325180LC |
985.041 |
1.856 |
23-24 |
Author was curate of Tosside |
4.080 |
The morning of life |
How glorious is life's sunrise, when childhood's dawn |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
Poems |
CHARLESWORTH, E. G. |
M0325180LC |
985.041 |
1.856 |
21-22 |
Author was curate of Tosside |
4.090 |
The robin |
Sweet Bard of autumn, that com'st to cheer |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
Poems |
CHARLESWORTH, E. G. |
M0325180LC |
985.041 |
1.856 |
43-44 |
Author was curate of Tosside |
2.424 |
The skylark |
Higher and higher to heavens rising |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
114 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
4.083 |
The widower |
When light and darkness meet to kiss |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
Poems |
CHARLESWORTH, E. G. |
M0325180LC |
985.041 |
1.856 |
27-28 |
Author was curate of Tosside |
2.429 |
To a snowdrop on a grave |
Sweet flower, first of spring - Spring nursed |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
116 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.426 |
To J B C - in memoriam |
His grave is by a shore he loved |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
115 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.428 |
To love |
A streak of reddening light on fallen leaves |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
116 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.427 |
To memory |
Oh Memory, thou hast one bright page |
CHARLESWORTH, Rev E. G. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
115 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
5.888 |
(no title) |
The Muse in distant days of yore to Chaucer gave the key |
CHARLTON, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
157 |
Untitled, written 17th March 1860; John Charlton known as 'Little John the Poet' |
5.886 |
(no title) |
What care the great for menial slave |
CHARLTON, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
154 |
John Charlton known as 'Little John the Poet' |
5.887 |
The old oak in Blackburn Park |
One morning I took a stroll |
CHARLTON, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
155-157 |
Six stanzas only; John Charlton known as 'Little John the Poet' |
5.889 |
Tis winter with robin |
The cold winter wind whistles o'er the wild moor |
CHARLTON, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
158-159 |
John Charlton also known as 'Little John the Poet' |
86.769 |
The Ribchester Highwayman |
He rode the lanes of Ribchester astride his trusty steed |
CHARNLEY, William |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
113 |
|
80.791 |
The secret thoughts of a plant |
Happy but grieved |
CHARNOCK, Barry |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
7 |
|
86.667 |
Belated Valentine |
And of Spring, and Resurrection |
CHARNOCK, Charles |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
15 |
|
700 |
Elsdon |
Hae ye iver been at Elsdon |
CHATT, George |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
213-214 |
Tyneside |
701 |
The reply: Hev ye ivvor been at Elsdon? |
Hev ye ivvor been at Elsdon? |
CHATT, George |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
214-215 |
Tyneside |
4.212 |
A Victorian dress |
This is a dress that I want you to see |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
22 |
Dialect. Rawtenstall author |
4.201 |
Blackpool |
Have you ever been to Blackpool, sin travelling wer bad |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
9 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.208 |
Britain's bonny babies |
Take a walk one day with me |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
17 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.194 |
Edwin Waugh Society at Waterfoot 1957 |
They come every year, dry or weet |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
2 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.214 |
For a social at St Pauls |
Have you had your measurements taken tonight |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
24 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.211 |
For O A P rooms |
I went on Saturday night, and recited |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
21 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.215 |
For Townsendfold Methodist, Bring and Buy |
There's summat on at Townsendfold today |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
25-26 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.213 |
Grandmother's wedding dress |
Carefully wrapped and put away |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
23 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.206 |
Lost opportunities |
Have you ever felt like smiling at a stranger on the road |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
14 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.203 |
New shopping centre |
When it was first made known that a lot of houses |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
11 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.207 |
Rations marketing |
I've been down to t'market, and I've been to t'Co-shop |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
15-16 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.216 |
Said at Olive's wedding |
I don't want to take up so much of your time |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
27-28 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.209 |
Spring cleaning |
Now, this is a story of spring cleaning time |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
18-19 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.195 |
The dentist |
Ee I was scared of him in my youth |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
3 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.196 |
The moon |
As I walked home the other night |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
4 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.200 |
The nurse |
Have you ever watched the Nurse |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
8 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.217 |
The old mothers of Constablelee |
Ee, I didn't know, right what to say |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
29-30 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.198 |
The Royal Air Force |
Upward Soaring |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
6 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.197 |
The Royal Navy |
Have you ever realised |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
5 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.204 |
The subway |
We'n getten a subway now in t' town |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
12 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.199 |
To a young girl called up |
The days are exciting, you feel in a whirl |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
7 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.210 |
Vitamins |
Do you Mothers ever read them books and magazines |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
20 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.205 |
Watching t' scholars |
I went a watching scholars walk, one Saturday afternoon |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
13 |
Rawtenstall author |
4.202 |
Wet summer of 1956 |
Did you ever see such a summer |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
Poems for recitation on special occasions |
CHEESMAN, Beatrice |
M0325300LC |
986.834 |
1.973 |
10 |
Say in dialect. Rawtenstall author |
86.660 |
Alphabet of Cumbria |
Ambleside is so well known |
CHEETHAM, Ethel |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
8 |
|
81.397 |
Planet X |
Planet X is the tenth planet |
CHERRY, Lucy |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
60 |
|
82.779 |
Ha! Ha! It's the mini car! |
Minis, Minis go so fast |
CHIDLOW. Amy |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
47 |
|
6.517 |
Pluckin' th' pa'son's geese |
Aw wer allus a chap as wer feeord |
CHIPPENDALE, Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
356-358 |
|
6.518 |
Song: the cot in the dell |
There's a sweet sylvan cot nestles low in yon dell |
CHIPPENDALE, Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
359 |
|
6.519 |
The lads of Ribblesdale |
How oft I've heard of Tiber's stream where Rome's fair city stands |
CHIPPENDALE, Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
359-360 |
|
6.516 |
The ruined oak tree |
O'er yon daisy-fleck'd lea, stood a sturdy oak tree |
CHIPPENDALE, Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
365-366 |
|
6.220 |
May 4th, 1897 |
This opening May saw Pleasure's flag unfurled |
CHORLTON. J. D. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
100-101 |
|
84.166 |
Romance |
If you are steeped in the lore of ancient days |
CHURCHILL, Ruby M. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
88 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.167 |
Sanctuary |
Amid the silence of the ancient hills |
CHURCHILL, Ruby M. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
89 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.168 |
Snowdrops |
Lovely, pale, and pure they stand |
CHURCHILL, Ruby M. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
90 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
86.720 |
Paws for thought |
Me and Tom are having a change |
CIRINO, Joan |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
68 |
|
4.121 |
Gowd the day |
Ser-Ann, wilt carr thi daewn |
CLARE, Brian |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
40-41 |
|
4.096 |
Recollections |
Sittin up on't top ut moor |
CLARE, Brian |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
9-Oct |
|
4.122 |
T'gam |
Graewnd emptid fast |
CLARE, Brian |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
41-43 |
|
4.149 |
T'slip o' life |
A deeud gull wi eyl't wings |
CLARE, Brian |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
70 |
|
4.137 |
Uh beach full uh shells |
Wi ther buckets, spades un paaper flags |
CLARE, Brian |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
51-52 |
|
87.548 |
Our Romney |
Before I was born, my grandmother, who had lived most of her life in the |
CLARK, J. |
MARY'S miscellany: prose and verse by Lancashire writers, compiled by Mary Carter Clark |
|
M0040456LC |
151.580 |
1.966 |
4-May |
|
87.200 |
1939 - My first Air Raid |
On the Sunday the Second World War was declared, I, along |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
56 - 57 |
|
87.109 |
310th Infantry Training Camp - Hadrian's Camp, Carlisle |
I'd been in the Army for about three months when they asked |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
15 |
|
1.803 |
A cob o' coil - Sept 92 |
Outcropping for coal |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
48-49 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
1.853 |
Barber Bill |
Now Barber Bill's a sailor |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
35 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
87.193 |
Barber Bill |
Today the Army lost a man |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
49 |
|
1.861 |
Bill's tale of woe |
There's a sad tale to tell but tell it I must |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
47 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
1.879 |
Carlisle 20 October 1940 |
The Company's on draft |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
26 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
1.884 |
Childhood days in the Twenties |
Me, Cliff, Wilf |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
18-20 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
1.891 |
Cleveley's Men's Club |
It couldn't have been a nicer day |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
22 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
1.892 |
Cleveleys Working Men's Club snooker |
There's three lads and me |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
33-34 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
87.202 |
Daffodils |
Someone mentioned daffodils |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
58 |
|
87.182 |
Dunnt Shop farm fire |
Another fire I remember was about two years later. This was a |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
32 |
|
87.110 |
Fair of face |
Child of beauty |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
16 |
|
87.187 |
Food for thought |
If you could prove convincingly |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
38 |
|
87.195 |
From P & O ship Canberra |
I was having such a lovely time |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
51 |
|
87.203 |
Gunners magic carpet |
Serving out in Poona |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
59 |
|
1.947 |
Hadrian's Camp September 1940 |
On parade a soldier dare not blink |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
13 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
1.948 |
Hadrian's Camp, Carlisle 28 September 1940 |
With khaki everywhere |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
25 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
1.949 |
Hadrian's Camp, Carlisle, August 1940 |
I hear the bugle blowing |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
21 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
87.106 |
Hod carrying tales from 1935 in Haslingden |
In 1935 I started working for Thal Brown, Builder, who was |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
8 |
|
87.117 |
Horse drawn Fire Brigades |
Hoyle Bottom Mill was situated about one and a half miles |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
30 |
|
87.199 |
I stupid |
At thirteen I knew it all |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
54 |
|
1.980 |
In limbo - perhaps forever |
I never really knew what limbo meant |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
43 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
87.115 |
Jack Duckworth - The Wheelwright's Shop (Cont'd) |
I remember one special job done was to renovate and paint a |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
27 |
|
1.994 |
Just a thought |
And does a vole not cry out Mother! |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
27 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
87.198 |
Just a thought |
As I put foot |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
53 |
|
1.995 |
Just a thought on a rainy day |
Howling wind, slashing rain |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
32 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
87.108 |
Kids and youths of today |
Kids today, I often hear them say |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
12 |
|
2.001 |
Lancashire lad |
Some thoughts in rhyme |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
3 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
2.002 |
Lawrence of Arabia |
Today I humble homage pay |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
28 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
2.020 |
Lowercroft Mill |
Armistice Day again |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
31 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
2.034 |
Memories of mining days in the Thirties when sixteen years old |
You touched rock bottom in every way |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
14-15 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
87.183 |
Memories of Oswaldtwistle in the 1920's |
At noon each day and at five-thirty, finishing time, Union road |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
33 |
|
2.036 |
Memories of yesterday 1987-October 1990 |
Sometimes, when reminiscing of the days that used to be |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
Nov-13 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
87.112 |
My Eightieth birthday party |
If you can "make it" |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
18 |
|
2.052 |
My first date at age 15 |
T'was a summer day in twenty-nine |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
8-Sep |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
87.114 |
My memories of Jack Duckworth's Wheelwrights shop |
I'd be about seven years old when I first went to Jack |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
23 - 26 |
|
2.055 |
My pal Stan, Hadrian's Camp September 1940 |
This day my loneliness is at an end |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
14 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
2.056 |
My pal Stanley Cain |
I call him Stan for short |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
31 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
2.078 |
Oh! Haslingden 1940 |
Oh! Haslingden, Haslingden |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
26-27 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
87.184 |
Oswaldtwistle Illuminations |
One other vivid memory was, in Winter time, when, at about |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
34 |
|
87.194 |
P & O Ship Canberra |
To send a Valentine |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
50 |
|
2.094 |
P & O Ship Canberra's laundry blues |
7am! I've got to be up |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
43-44 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
87.197 |
R. E. M. E. Arborfield |
I was an Orderly Sergeant on this lovely moonlight Summer |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
52 |
|
87.190 |
Spring - (Gone in a flash 1993) |
Primroses have gone |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
43 |
|
2.147 |
Spring in Essex |
With a sigh and puzzled frown |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
29 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
2.151 |
Starky Barnes - builders labourer |
Starky Barnes doesn't care two hoots |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
37 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
87.191 |
Tales from the 1920's |
Bunny had deformed feet, it was called "club foot" (like a |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
44 |
|
87.185 |
Tales from the pit |
Just as the Army have Army language (all bad) so the coal pits |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
35 |
|
2.172 |
The air raid |
Out of a still quiet night |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
10 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
87.188 |
The blacksmith's striker |
A blacksmith in the 1920's contacted the local Labour |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
40 |
|
87.107 |
The Bubble factory, Oswaldtwistle |
What do you do |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
11 |
|
87.116 |
The Fire Horses |
Fire Horses? You have never heard of them? Well! They |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
28 |
|
87.186 |
The lad who lost his cap |
Sometimes when going to school |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
36 |
|
87.189 |
The only one now the lonely one |
Oh' I'm not complaining |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
42 |
|
87.113 |
The Royal Loo |
My cabin's got |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
20 - 21 |
|
2.256 |
The skylark |
We've cut down the hedges and levelled the ground |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
45 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
87.111 |
The spark of life at death |
Everything around me |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
17 |
|
2.285 |
Thoughts of Pendle Hill |
Bleak desolate, boulder-strewn |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
24-25 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
2.299 |
To Anchorsholme's lads and lasses |
Built by skilful labour and brilliant architects |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
35-36 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
2.300 |
To Audrey's birthday |
This little gift to you this day |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
16 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
2.303 |
To Finchingfield's lads and lasses |
Loveliest village in Essex? |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
32-33 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
87.196 |
To Julia |
I got pally again with those Koala's |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
52 |
|
2.306 |
To Lion Walk Chapel |
May I thank you all, for all the boys |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
34 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
2.308 |
To my own dearest Audrey |
With love from Jack |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
38 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
2.309 |
To my pal the robin |
I love your little robin |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
46 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
87.201 |
To my wife Audrey on our forty-ninth wedding anniversary |
I never thought we would make it |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
58 |
|
2.311 |
To our two pals |
Forty nine years |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
36 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
2.315 |
To the heroes of Dunkirk |
The attack is on |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
23 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
2.325 |
Unrequited love |
Of a man |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
27 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
2.329 |
Wadham's Commandos |
It's five fifteen |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad |
CLARK, Jack |
M0129170LC |
491.528 |
1.994 |
39-42 |
Autobiographical poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
87.192 |
Wyre Levee Stompers |
It's Thursday night |
CLARK, Jack |
Lancashire Lad. Book Two |
CLARK, Jack |
M0142080LC |
518.530 |
1.994 |
46 |
|
87.757 |
Thank You Lord |
Thank you Lord Jesus for all that You do |
CLARK, Laura K. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
42 |
|
86.712 |
Night lights |
Stars are bright |
CLARK, Laura K. (aged 11 years) |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
60 |
|
87.553 |
An Afternoon in Venice |
Venice! I went! I saw! It conquered me! |
CLARK, M. C. |
MARY'S miscellany: prose and verse by Lancashire writers, compiled by Mary Carter Clark |
|
M0040456LC |
151.580 |
1.966 |
12 |
|
87.547 |
Back O' Bowley |
Unspoiled hedgerows one finds there |
CLARK, M. C. |
MARY'S miscellany: prose and verse by Lancashire writers, compiled by Mary Carter Clark |
|
M0040456LC |
151.580 |
1.966 |
3 |
|
87.562 |
Joey |
I think Joey must have sensed my fear, and to remedy matters, I bravely |
CLARK, M. C. |
MARY'S miscellany: prose and verse by Lancashire writers, compiled by Mary Carter Clark |
|
M0040456LC |
151.580 |
1.966 |
28 |
|
87.556 |
Mi Fost Wros'lin' match |
One o'eaur customers is a wros'ler, an' wi'd kept ageeat o' promisin' to |
CLARK, M. C. |
MARY'S miscellany: prose and verse by Lancashire writers, compiled by Mary Carter Clark |
|
M0040456LC |
151.580 |
1.966 |
16-17 |
|
87.550 |
T'Arms - Printers An' Typists' |
Tha's heeart tell nay dowt 'beaut typists' an' printers' errors. Weel, Ah |
CLARK, M. C. |
MARY'S miscellany: prose and verse by Lancashire writers, compiled by Mary Carter Clark |
|
M0040456LC |
151.580 |
1.966 |
8-Sep |
|
87.561 |
Whalley Nab |
Ah've bin o'er t' Nab aw times o' t' year |
CLARK, M. C. |
MARY'S miscellany: prose and verse by Lancashire writers, compiled by Mary Carter Clark |
|
M0040456LC |
151.580 |
1.966 |
26-27 |
|
87.560 |
Where? |
Bewailed a poet of the lack |
CLARK, M. C. |
MARY'S miscellany: prose and verse by Lancashire writers, compiled by Mary Carter Clark |
|
M0040456LC |
151.580 |
1.966 |
24 |
|
16 |
Close Brow |
I remember heathered hill |
CLARK, Mary |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
114-115 |
|
82.155 |
Autumnal glories |
With eyes unfocused, deep in thought |
CLARK, Mary C. |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
65 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
4.443 |
Back o' Bowley |
Unspoiled hedgerows one finds there |
CLARK, Mary Carter |
Meander with Mary |
CLARK, Mary Carter |
M0066579LC |
280.321 |
1.971 |
11 |
Haslingden author |
4.442 |
Close Brow |
I remember heathered hill |
CLARK, Mary Carter |
Meander with Mary |
CLARK, Mary Carter |
M0066579LC |
280.321 |
1.971 |
8-Sep |
Haslingden author |
4.445 |
Loveliness |
Ah! Loveliness see I in gurgling streams |
CLARK, Mary Carter |
Meander with Mary |
CLARK, Mary Carter |
M0066579LC |
280.321 |
1.971 |
33 |
Haslingden author |
4.447 |
Moonlight delights |
Rejoice do I on moonlight night |
CLARK, Mary Carter |
Meander with Mary |
CLARK, Mary Carter |
M0066579LC |
280.321 |
1.971 |
37 |
Haslingden author |
4.446 |
On visiting Dacre Vicarage (August Bank Holiday, 1965) |
We called at Dacre Vic'rage |
CLARK, Mary Carter |
Meander with Mary |
CLARK, Mary Carter |
M0066579LC |
280.321 |
1.971 |
34-35 |
Haslingden author |
4.441 |
Stanhill sermons |
Sweet blend of voices, strings and brass |
CLARK, Mary Carter |
Meander with Mary |
CLARK, Mary Carter |
M0066579LC |
280.321 |
1.971 |
3-Jul |
Haslingden author |
4.448 |
The charm of Ashlands |
Twas dreamy-dusked Autumnal Eve |
CLARK, Mary Carter |
Meander with Mary |
CLARK, Mary Carter |
M0066579LC |
280.321 |
1.971 |
39 |
Haslingden author |
4.444 |
To Janet on her twenty-first birthday |
Twenty-one's a wonderful age |
CLARK, Mary Carter |
Meander with Mary |
CLARK, Mary Carter |
M0066579LC |
280.321 |
1.971 |
13 |
Haslingden author |
4.440 |
Woodland splendour |
Symphonic poems I'd love to scribe |
CLARK, Mary Carter |
Meander with Mary |
CLARK, Mary Carter |
M0066579LC |
280.321 |
1.971 |
1 |
Haslingden author |
81.549 |
Mars |
Mars is a place of war and death |
CLARK, Thomas |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
138 |
|
6.701 |
A gradely prayer |
Give us Lord |
CLARKE, Allen |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
109-110 |
Also writies as Teddy Ashton |
6.703 |
A lass fro' Chorlah |
Some say Chorlah's a sleepy tahn |
CLARKE, Allen |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
111-112 |
Also writes at Teddy Ashton |
547 |
A song of windmill land |
O, the Fylde's a bonny country, of flowery lane and lea |
CLARKE, Allen |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
122-123 |
Lancashire poetry |
6.702 |
A song of windmill land |
O, the Fylde's a bonny country, of flowery lane and lea |
CLARKE, Allen |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
110-111 |
Also known as Teddy Ashton |
4.462 |
A lass fro' Chorlah |
Some says Chorlah's a sleepy tahn |
CLARKE, C. A. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
37 |
C A Clarke also known as Teddy Ashton. A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.461 |
Getting wed |
It corn't be helped, it corn't be stopped |
CLARKE, C. A. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
36-37 |
C A Clarke is also known as Teddy Ashton. A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
136 |
A gradely prayer |
Give us, Lord, a bit o'sun |
CLARKE, C. Allen |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
42 |
|
892 |
A Kiss |
Rather peculiar is a kiss, you'll own |
CLARKE, C. Allen |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
76 |
|
4.288 |
Lancashire |
It's th' shire o' loom an' spindle, o' factory lad an' lass |
CLARKE, C. Allen |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
6 |
|
893 |
Windmill Land |
O Windmill Land, dear Windmill Land |
CLARKE, C. Allen |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
77 |
|
135 |
Windmill Land |
O, the Fylde's a bonny country, of flowery lane and lea |
CLARKE, C. Allen |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
41 |
|
1.014 |
A gradely prayer |
Give us, Lord |
CLARKE, Charles Allen |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
91 |
|
422 |
A gradely prayer |
Give us, Lord, a bit o'sun |
CLARKE, Charles Allen |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
118 |
Pseudonym was: Teddy Ashton |
1.012 |
A lass fro' Chorlah |
Some say Chorlah's a sleepy than |
CLARKE, Charles Allen |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
81-82 |
|
1.013 |
Eaur Lanky dialect |
There's fine folks twits eaur Lanky talk, an' says it's low an' foul |
CLARKE, Charles Allen |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
82 |
|
1.011 |
Lancashire |
It's th' shire o' loom an' spindle, o' factory lad an' lass |
CLARKE, Charles Allen |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
79-81 |
|
1.015 |
On th' hills |
Come onto th' windy moors wi' me |
CLARKE, Charles Allen |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
96-97 |
|
84.226 |
My Lady Beauty |
She stood beside me in the night |
CLARKE, Cyril E. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
126 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.225 |
Poem to Russian children: St. Nicholas |
Heigh Ho! Heigh Ho! |
CLARKE, Cyril E. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
125 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
87.816 |
Thinking Green |
Long I am walking in a wood |
CLARKE, Philip |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
104 |
|
82.902 |
My grandad |
My grandad smells of a smell I will never smell anywhere else |
CLARKSON, Emily |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
118 |
|
891 |
Spring cleaning |
Ho, ho! We're all spring cleaning today |
CLAYTON, Thomas |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
73-74 |
|
82.799 |
How strange |
How strange to think that someone else |
CLEGG, Ashleigh |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
58 |
|
87.557 |
Reflections on Pendle Hill |
Come 'ere, lad, an' sit on t' grass wi' me |
CLEGG, E. |
MARY'S miscellany: prose and verse by Lancashire writers, compiled by Mary Carter Clark |
|
M0040456LC |
151.580 |
1.966 |
18-19 |
|
4.463 |
In all seasons |
High upon the ragged moor |
CLEGG, Harry |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
38 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.465 |
Merry and breet |
It's nice to ger up in a mornin' |
CLEGG, Harry |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
40 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.464 |
The Moorland Inn |
When'er we meet in Moorland Inn |
CLEGG, Harry |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
39 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
1.017 |
A mower's song |
Aw clipped a meause i'th' mowin' fielt |
CLEGG, John Trafford |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
98-99 |
|
4.470 |
A weighver's song |
Deawn i' th' shed on a summer's day |
CLEGG, John Trafford |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
48-49 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.855 |
A weighver's song |
Deawn I' th' shed on a summer's day |
CLEGG, John Trafford |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
90-91 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
1.016 |
A weiver's song |
Deawn i' th' shed on a summer's day |
CLEGG, John Trafford |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
97-98 |
|
1.018 |
Cwortin |
Wilt walk wi' me o' Sunday, lass |
CLEGG, John Trafford |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
99-100 |
|
4.466 |
Cwortin |
Wilt walk wi' me o' Sunday, lass |
CLEGG, John Trafford |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
41 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.469 |
Forty year |
It's forty year, mi good owd dame |
CLEGG, John Trafford |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
46-48 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.468 |
Mi daughter |
God bless thi pratty face, mi chilt |
CLEGG, John Trafford |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
43-46 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
852 |
On th' hills |
Come onto th' windy moors wi' me |
CLEGG, John Trafford |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
140-141 |
|
4.471 |
On th' hills |
Come onto th' windy moors wi' me |
CLEGG, John Trafford |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
49-50 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
1.019 |
Rachda Wakes |
Come, Betty, lass, it's Rachda Wakes |
CLEGG, John Trafford |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
101 |
|
4.825 |
Rachda Wakes |
Come, Betty, lass, it's Rachda Wakes |
CLEGG, John Trafford |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
37-38 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
4.467 |
Rachda Wakes |
Come, Betty, lass, it's Rachda Wakes |
CLEGG, John Trafford |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
42 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.826 |
Th'Infirmary day, July 1890 |
Come, lively lads an' laughin maids, an' folk groon up an' set |
CLEGG, John Trafford |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
38-40 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
534 |
Lament |
The're bahn ter mak' me goa ter wark |
CLEMENCE, Will |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
105 |
Yorkshire poetry |
532 |
Nobbut a lad |
Soa; tha're feelin' like conquerin' t'world me lad? |
CLEMENCE, Will |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
103-104 |
Yorkshire poetry |
533 |
Owd Joa |
It's gerrin chilly sat i't' park |
CLEMENCE, Will |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
104 |
Yorkshire poetry |
531 |
Voice from upstairs |
Ow, Martha! Wheer's ter put me shirt |
CLEMENCE, Will |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
102-103 |
Yorkshire poetry |
5.757 |
Ask you where my true-love resides? |
Ask you where my true-love resides? |
CLEMESHA, Robert |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
67-68 |
First ten stanzas only |
5.759 |
Farewell to the harp |
Adieu! to thee, harp, I so oft-times have thrilled |
CLEMESHA, Robert |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
69-70 |
Eight stanzas only |
5.748 |
From 'A dunning letter to a brother bard' |
Dear ----, you must not now consider me rash |
CLEMESHA, Robert |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
59-60 |
Begging letters; incomplete poem |
5.749 |
From 'The Gazette' |
I once was a Merchant of Fortune |
CLEMESHA, Robert |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
60-61 |
Eight stanzas from a 38 stanza poem; bankruptcy |
5.755 |
On a wealthy cotton-lord: who lived to be an octogenarian |
Reposed from earthly Turmoil, rattling looms |
CLEMESHA, Robert |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
64-65 |
|
5.753 |
On Dr Grime |
Here sleeps the Man, who erst denied mean self |
CLEMESHA, Robert |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
64 |
Local epitaph 2 |
5.752 |
On Dr Whitaker |
Here sleep the mortal relics of a sage |
CLEMESHA, Robert |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
63 |
Local epitaphs 1 |
5.754 |
On George Dewhurst: the patriarchal reformer, of Blackburn |
Beneath this plain, smooth monument of grit |
CLEMESHA, Robert |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
64 |
Local epitaph 3 |
5.751 |
Sonnet: on being asked why I did not publish my poems |
You ask me why my multifarious flowers |
CLEMESHA, Robert |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
62-63 |
|
5.750 |
The bard of Ribblesdale |
While mightier minstrels laud the brave |
CLEMESHA, Robert |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
61-62 |
Opening nine stanzas only |
5.756 |
The skylark |
Child of the russet crest |
CLEMESHA, Robert |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
65-66 |
First twelve stanzas only |
5.758 |
To the atheist |
Gaze round, thou Infidel, o'er yonder sky |
CLEMESHA, Robert |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
68-69 |
Eleven stanzas only |
1.790 |
Annette |
Annette with her sister Tib |
CLEPHAN, James |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
78-79 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.792 |
Good night! |
Downward sinks the setting sun |
CLEPHAN, James |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
81 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.791 |
The memorial flower |
Cocken Woods are green and fair |
CLEPHAN, James |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
79-80 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
82.157 |
My father |
There he sits in his ultra-bright room |
CLEWORTH, Gwyneth |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
66 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
82.922 |
Springtime |
In the springtime ducklings hatch |
CLONEY, Nicola |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
130 |
|
1.799 |
A bit of both |
In all the time I've been at school |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
33 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
1.800 |
A boyhood dream |
How could he know? when very young |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
36 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.806 |
A garden scene |
In all my dreams, I have not seen |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
2 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.809 |
A long wait |
Time to go, our mother said |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
43 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.814 |
A morning strol |
The morning started calm and quiet |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
13 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
1.815 |
A near thing |
Starting on his round one day |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
44 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.818 |
A schoolboy's day out |
With all the day in front of me |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
50 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
1.821 |
A trip to Mars |
There may be dreams and fantasies |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
23 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.822 |
A trip to the moon |
The day will come, and may be soon! |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
20 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.839 |
An eye opener |
Small seeds I set in plastic pots |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
42 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.840 |
An old stone bridge |
A bridge I am, a bridge I stay |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
14 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.841 |
An old tin box |
An old tin box I found one day |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
1 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.842 |
An unwelcome visitor |
Out from the cold and dreary night |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
20 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
1.844 |
Ashes in the grate |
I sat beside the fire one night |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
31 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.858 |
Ben's lucky charm |
Less than average at his school |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
3 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
1.868 |
Body and soul |
Spare me a moment of your time |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
38 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.870 |
Bubbles |
A bowl of lukewarm water |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
26 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.876 |
Candle light |
A candle lit, and shining bright |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
25 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
1.893 |
Come along with me |
I woke up with the rising sun |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
21 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
1.895 |
Companions |
He was not just an ordinary dog |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
17 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
1.905 |
David's delight |
A little boy, of eight years old |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
8 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
1.909 |
Disturbing thoughts |
There are sometimes, when all things seem |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
25 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.911 |
Doctor John's patient |
Said Doctor John, I must agree |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
19 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.916 |
Easter bonnets |
Miss Peabody took a look outside |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
35 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.926 |
Fact and fantasy |
To write a Poem, I must relate |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
50 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.927 |
Faith and trust |
I thank thee Lord for every day |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
48 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.930 |
Farewell |
Oh come! thou lonely heart of mine |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
28 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.941 |
Gillian's letter |
I know not what my mind intends |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
39 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.958 |
Heart beats |
There'll always be a place for you |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
30 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
1.971 |
Horses and dogs |
The last time Amos went to work |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
34 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
1.989 |
Janet's magic box |
With other toys put on display |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
9 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
1.992 |
Jonathan's dilemma |
Jonathan Baines, that's his name |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
41 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
1.996 |
Just in time |
It lay prone on the frozen snow |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
49 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.014 |
Lost and found |
A tear came rolling down his cheek |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
32 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.025 |
Lyn and Rod |
I'll shake my box of memories up |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
38 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.033 |
Memories |
We'll take a stroll down lovers lane |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
12 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.057 |
My shadow |
Content when walking on my own |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
29 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.058 |
My Valentine |
With eyes of blue, I come to you |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
12 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.059 |
My world |
The world that I would like to see |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
39 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.062 |
Nicky mouse |
Two little eyes, to see in the dark |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
37 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.074 |
Odds and ends |
Chris turned his pockets inside out |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
37 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.082 |
One day in June |
Can you remember when we met |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
15 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.083 |
Our big balloon |
There's lots of things I'd like to do |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
22 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.099 |
Pots for rags |
Good luck to all at number four |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
8 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.100 |
Practice makes perfect |
One thing that Beryl could not do |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
17 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.104 |
Quiet moments |
The world seems such an empty place |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
14 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.105 |
Rachel's magic book |
I found a book to read one night |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
30 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.106 |
Rags and bones |
Rags and bones and donkey stones |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
34 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.107 |
Rainbow's end |
Whenever in my thoughts alone |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
35 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.108 |
Raindrops |
I watched the raindrops as they fell |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
31 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.112 |
Reflections |
Standing by a pool one day |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
41 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.126 |
Sam |
Come hail, come snow, come wet or fine |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
6 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.127 |
Santa's night out |
Once again it's Christmas Eve |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
4 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.139 |
Smiling through |
Try once to give a little smile |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
21 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.141 |
Snowflakes |
So soft and gently devoid of sound |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
3 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.148 |
Spring's awakening |
Goodbye to winter time at last |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
13 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.152 |
Stop and think |
No one is perfect, that we know |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
43 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.155 |
Summer flowers |
Where have the summer flowers gone |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
22 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.157 |
Sunrise Hill |
On Sunrise Hill, I looked to west |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
19 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.181 |
The broken dream |
Jake looked again into the glass |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
24 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.183 |
The cavern door |
Cheer up my friend and look around |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
23 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.184 |
The ceiling view |
Lying quietly on my bed |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
40 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.186 |
The choristers |
High on the hills where soft winds blow |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
32 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.188 |
The Christmas tree |
With snowflakes falling on the ground |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
5 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.189 |
The clockwork train |
Two little boys both dressed in blue |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
27 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.190 |
The crimson ball |
Among my many souvenirs |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
18 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.193 |
The devil's witch |
Picking blackberries from the bush |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
45 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.198 |
The farmer's boy |
Perhaps I should explain to you |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
15 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.201 |
The five kisses |
Five kisses you gave me |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
7 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.205 |
The fortune teller |
Take all the time you want My Dear |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
24 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.207 |
The gale force wind |
Over the hills and down the dale |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
2 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.209 |
The grandfather clock |
I'm just an old Grandfather Clock |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
26 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.217 |
The house by the stream |
There's a quaint little house |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
33 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.221 |
The little things |
Little things we often find |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
27 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.223 |
The lucky charm |
A voice, it whispered in my ear |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
46 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.224 |
The magic carpet |
A carpet square of emerald green |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
40 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.230 |
The maypole queen |
Louise, made her way home fast |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
10 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.237 |
The phantom butler |
Across the room, I went to see |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
16 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.240 |
The Pixies waltz |
Looking in my crystal ball |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
44 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.243 |
The prince and I |
So tired I was, I closed my eyes |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
9 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.244 |
The princess and the crown |
A Royal Princess, so fair and sweet |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
5 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.249 |
The roaming tramp |
From the day he came into the world |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
7 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.250 |
The rolling penny |
A penny rolling down the street |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
1 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.251 |
The running stream |
Far below the earth I've been |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
42 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.253 |
The shoe dance |
These shoes are far too big for me |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
11 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.260 |
The spider's web |
I sat down quietly on my own |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
18 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.263 |
The steeplejacks |
A Steeplejack, with nerves like steel |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
29 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.270 |
The village postman |
In uniform blue with piping red |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
47 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.272 |
The Whitworth valley |
Down Eagley Bank and through the stile |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
10 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.275 |
The world at my feet |
The path I took was long and steep |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
47 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.277 |
The yellow buttercups |
Through fields of green, I walk alone |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
4 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.281 |
There! Shall we dwell |
Cry not! My darling when I've gone |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
11 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.283 |
Those early days |
Reclining in my chair one day |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
16 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.284 |
Those many things |
Each day that comes can also bring |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
28 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.288 |
Time |
If we but try our best each day |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
45 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.292 |
Tiny tots |
Why do little boys and girls |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
48 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.323 |
Uncle Steve |
Upon my word, I've never seen |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
46 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.341 |
Where fairies dwell |
From Gawmless End to Healey Band |
CLOUGH, Albert |
Pensioner's poems with illustrations |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0107669LC |
412.422 |
199 |
49 |
The second part of an anthology of 100 poems. The first collection A pensioner's poems was published in 1990 |
2.349 |
Winter warning |
Winter time will soon be here |
CLOUGH, Albert |
A pensioner's poems |
CLOUGH, Albert |
M0099933LC |
378.795 |
1.990 |
36 |
The first part of an anthology of 100 poems |
2.433 |
Qua cursum ventus |
As ships, becalmed at eve, that lay |
CLOUGH, Arthur Hugh |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
125 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.434 |
Qui laborat orat |
O only Source of all our life and light |
CLOUGH, Arthur Hugh |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
126 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.435 |
Say not the struggle nought availeth |
Say not, the struggle nought availeth |
CLOUGH, Arthur Hugh |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
127 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.432 |
Through a glass darkly |
What we, when face to face we see |
CLOUGH, Arthur Hugh |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
124 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
6.622 |
Better than gold |
Better than gold, or what gold can buy |
CLOUNIE, Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
444-445 |
Love |
6.620 |
Patriotism |
Men of Britain, wake from slumber |
CLOUNIE, Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
442-443 |
|
6.619 |
Saved |
An outcast creature stood alone |
CLOUNIE, Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
441-442 |
Repentance |
6.621 |
South Africa 1900-1901: in memory of the fallen |
Weep now no more |
CLOUNIE, Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
443-444 |
|
6.623 |
The dying year |
See! the old year now is dying, and the trees, with branches bare |
CLOUNIE, Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
445 |
|
6.618 |
The rescue |
Man the lifeboat! man the lifeboat! o'er the wild waves' foam and spray |
CLOUNIE, Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
440-441 |
|
83.573 |
Weyvin' partners |
Oh, once aw were as happy |
CLOUT, Colin |
SKETCHES and poems by local writers, edited by John U. Smith |
|
M0129272LC |
491.715 |
18 |
14-15 |
Editor was member of the Burnley Literary and Philosophical Society. The poet's name is probably pseudonymous |
84.047 |
The club |
The niggard throats of Manchester may bawl |
CLYNE, H. Ross |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
1 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.148 |
The Duke of Lancaster |
Back in the grey old Saxon day |
CLYNE, H. Ross |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
70 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
81.402 |
Travelling through space |
Far into orbit the spaceship shot |
COCCO, Natasha |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
62 |
|
81.436 |
Parents |
This is what my parents say |
COCHRANE, Edward |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
78 |
|
82.774 |
Hallowe'en |
An old haunted house |
COKER, Ben |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
45 |
|
392 |
Taste the sweetness |
Keen sensed and open-hearted taste the sweetness of your years |
COLEMAN, Janet |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
38 |
|
81.249 |
(no title) |
City of my dreaming soul |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
|
Untitled, inside title page, no page number |
81.260 |
(no title) |
Going back the streets are hard to find |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
32 |
Untitled |
81.279 |
(no title) |
On a cobbler's shelf sit signs |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
71 |
Untitled |
81.268 |
(no title) |
Shop window models - stiff, elegant limbs |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
50 |
Untitled |
81.263 |
A city's troubles |
Those acid sounds |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
38 |
|
81.253 |
A grandfather's tale:the Ellen Vannin |
In gale force winds, a grey December day |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
14 |
|
81.254 |
A Liverpool dock, 1982 |
An empty sink |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
17 |
|
81.283 |
Across the Mersey |
Mid-winter city glitter |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
77 |
|
81.255 |
Albert Dock: regeneration, 1984 |
First, the Victorian grand design |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
18 |
|
81.269 |
At Gateacre |
Umber is the night |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
51 |
|
81.277 |
At the poultry stall (old St John's Market) |
Christmas fever. Breath in the air |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
69 |
|
81.272 |
Ballad of the white slave and the brown |
Two slaves in ships from Liverpool |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
56 |
|
81.274 |
By Victorian moonlight |
All those scenes by moonlight, with docks |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
60 |
|
81.265 |
City parks |
Sefton, Princes, Wavertree |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
43 |
|
81.257 |
Dredging (cast-iron shore) |
A dredger creeps in the noondark day |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
22 |
|
81.262 |
Fall of a pleasure dome (1876-1980) |
The Hippodrome's coming down |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
37 |
|
81.266 |
Football city |
The air seeps in damp clods |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
44 |
|
81.281 |
From Hilbre Island |
Dissolution of day |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
75 |
|
81.271 |
Ithaca-Liverpool |
My father came today: an awaited visit |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
54 |
|
81.270 |
Last long |
Last long |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
52 |
|
81.256 |
Liners |
Clinging like barnacles |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
21 |
|
81.259 |
Liverpool child |
The house stood tall, three storeys to the sky |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
27-30 |
|
81.250 |
Mersey nights |
O - for the night of those Mersey nights |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
9 |
|
81.264 |
Metropolitan cathedral |
Long poniards form a crown of thorns |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
40 |
|
81.282 |
New Year's Eve |
Shake of stars and frost shine |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
77 |
|
81.251 |
Old man |
Like Nelson |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
11 |
|
81.252 |
Presence (Formby Beach) |
There's a voice in the pines |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
13 |
|
81.273 |
Song of an LP (to Bryan Blundell, founder of the Blue Coat School) |
I have LP branded on my arm in red |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
58 |
|
81.276 |
The ballad of Everton Brow |
Grass has returned |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
65-66 |
|
81.275 |
The coming in of ancestors |
Here are the strangers with shabby holdalls |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
62 |
|
81.278 |
The cuttings |
On all my rail journeys out from Lime Street |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
70 |
|
81.284 |
The International Garden Festival |
This is a city surviving modern blitz and fire-bombs |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
79 |
|
81.261 |
The plaster madonna |
Spring in the streets brought conjecture |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
35 |
|
81.280 |
The pond, West Kirby cliffs |
The pond on the cliff has returned |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
73 |
|
81.258 |
Timepiece (Merseyside County Museum) |
Those ebony clocks ticking velvet death |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
25 |
|
81.267 |
To John Lennon |
Blackly the Mersey surges in the dark |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
Liverpool folio |
COLES, Gladys Mary |
715619659 |
193.878 |
1.984 |
47 |
|
166 |
A sage Cato |
When bright Apollo's flaming car had run |
COLLIER, John |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
42-47 |
|
1.020 |
Lancashire Hob and the quack doctor |
A thrifty carl was tir'd of lonely cot |
COLLIER, John |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
115-116 |
|
900 |
On Dr. Forster, Vicar of Rochdale |
Full three feet deep beneath this stone |
COLLIER, John |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
89 |
Pseudonym was Tim Bobbin |
6.704 |
The flying dragon and the man of Heaton |
What man alive tho' e'er so wise |
COLLIER, John |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
116-123 |
|
167 |
To Mr George Clegg, Conjurer-General |
From you, George Clegg, or Prickshaw Witch |
COLLIER, John |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
49-50 |
|
3.177 |
Dreams |
Tired of the dreary dark |
COLLINGE, Alice E. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
35 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.179 |
I would not be |
I would not be without your love. The earth |
COLLINGE, Alice E. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
37 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.178 |
My friend |
She hath an old-world grace |
COLLINGE, Alice E. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
36 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.180 |
Night |
Softly the shadows fall |
COLLINGE, Alice E. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
38 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
813 |
Good Friday at Pendle Gardens |
Oh, the long, long trek of a winding lane |
COLLINGE, E. |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
49 |
|
86.664 |
Baby in the chimney - Mitre Hotel |
Sleep on little baby |
COLLINGE, Elsie |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
12 |
|
2.471 |
Aims in life |
O if I might do some great deed, and die! |
COLLINGWOOD, W. Gershom |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
192 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.474 |
Fortune |
You may frown if you lie, and I'll borrow |
COLLINGWOOD, W. Gershom |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
194-195 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.470 |
Lent-lilies |
O if I were where my heart is |
COLLINGWOOD, W. Gershom |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
189-191 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.472 |
Old-fashioned love |
Love is a baron with counties seven |
COLLINGWOOD, W. Gershom |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
192-193 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.473 |
The aloe-blossom |
There's a tree that the fruit-trees scorn |
COLLINGWOOD, W. Gershom |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
193-194 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.469 |
The wooing of the Lancashire witches |
There came two fairies tripping along |
COLLINGWOOD, W. Gershom |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
188-189 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
6.404 |
Bessie Lisle |
Beneath a yew tree's solemn shade |
COLLINS, George Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
266 |
|
6.403 |
Memory and hope |
There stood upon the hoar-crowned height of three score years and ten |
COLLINS, George Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
265 |
|
6.407 |
The creation |
In chaos' dark and watery womb |
COLLINS, George Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
270-271 |
|
6.406 |
To the weary one |
Weary of life and friendless? |
COLLINS, George Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
268-269 |
|
6.405 |
Wayside thoughts |
One bright spring morn with gladsome heart |
COLLINS, George Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
267-268 |
|
1.744 |
May |
I love thee not, young May, with all thy flowers |
COLLINSON, Samuel |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
8-Sep |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.746 |
The life boat |
On a lone hillside 'neath the starless night |
COLLINSON, Samuel |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
10 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.745 |
Time: [From Mr J Potter Briscoe's Album, dated 1881] |
So fragmentary and so incomplete |
COLLINSON, Samuel |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
9 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.747 |
Whitby Abbey |
Time, sacrilegious hands of men, and storms |
COLLINSON, Samuel |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
10 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
416 |
Aw o'er agen |
Tha couldna know as Ah wur sad |
COLLISON, Edith |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
113 |
|
807 |
Horny Honds |
Ah bet yo've sin him deawn eawr way |
COLLISON, Edith |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
26-27 |
|
86.702 |
Metropolis |
A monster, its skin of concrete and steel |
COLQUHOUN, Thomas |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
50 |
|
175 |
Doctor Syntax on Change |
And now, with spirits fresh and gay |
COMBE, William |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
77-79 |
|
87.809 |
Remember |
Picture the sweet countenance of Jesus each day |
CONNELLY, Maureen |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
97 |
|
82.172 |
Reincarnation |
I have passed this way before |
CONSTABLE, Jill |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
92 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
333 |
Bi shoe or bi clog |
The wind in the dale is blowin' to fair |
COOKE, W. |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
113 |
|
242 |
Tak' the hoof |
Tak' the hoof wi' me my son |
COOKE, W. |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
126 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
124 |
First o' May |
Ah geet mi up on th' first o' May |
COOKE, William |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
223 |
|
80.863 |
Husbands |
Men make me so mad |
COONEY, Sandra |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
144 |
|
901 |
In the valley |
This is the place where beauty dwells |
COOPER, Alfred B. |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
90-91 |
|
4.475 |
Fond memory |
Kettle's boilin', on t' hob, owd gal |
COOPER, Doreen |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
54 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
81.355 |
Colour crazy |
Cream is the colour of a bird's egg |
COOPER, Emily |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
34 |
|
2.496 |
An owdham melludy |
Tother Setthurdy neet, aw thowt it wur reet |
COOPER, Joseph |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
220-221 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.498 |
Bodle the bouser: a Lancashire tale |
A goggle-eyed fuddler, as usual, bout brass |
COOPER, Joseph |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
222 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.500 |
Helping God to make the flowers grow |
One hot and sultry summer's eve |
COOPER, Joseph |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
223-225 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
81.560 |
Alphabet poem |
A is for ant sitting near a plant |
COOPER, Michelle |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
145 |
|
86.677 |
Free Speech |
Dont people say some funny things |
COOPER-HALTON, Anne |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
25 |
|
81.302 |
Bonfire night |
Bang, bang, bang went the noisy fireworks |
CORBISHLEY, Holly |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
9 |
|
84.170 |
Caldey by moonlight (after compline) |
There is a magic in the cool night air |
CORLESS, John F. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
93 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.171 |
From poems of Caldey - the Holy Mass |
Within the Abbey church the tapers glow |
CORLESS, John F. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
94 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.169 |
The exile's shamrock |
Alanna, there's the postman's knock |
CORLESS, John F. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
91-92 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
81.520 |
My puppet poem |
My puppet is a friendly thing |
CORLESS, Stephanie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
122 |
|
121 |
Th' market day ut Bacup |
Han yo' ever bin i' Bacup |
CORMACK, R. W. |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
219-221 |
Pseudonym Skylark |
199 |
A ramble on th' Rossendale hills |
Some foak us ne'er reight |
CORMACK, Robert |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
19 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
200 |
Ewer local twang un th' poets |
Therse foalk ut ses its rather rude |
CORMACK, Robert |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
20-22 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
80.851 |
The folk who live at number four |
There's something funny about the family next door |
CORNER, Lila |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
131-132 |
|
6.793 |
The Burnley haymakers |
Help goddess-muse to sing of revelation |
COTTAM, Mr. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
176-179 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.726 |
The Burnley haymakers |
Help goddess-muse to sing of revelation |
COTTAM, Mr. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
232-237 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
5.621 |
The Burnley haymakers |
Help goddess-muse to sing of revelation |
COTTAM, Mr. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
176-179 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
87.840 |
The Road to God |
The road that leads to God is long |
COUNSELL, Olwen |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
128 |
|
81.514 |
Space |
Space is all quiet |
COURT, Dean |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
119 |
|
5.143 |
Knockin' fifty |
Grey hairs o' mi head |
COWBURN, Jennifer |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
22 |
|
82.126 |
Red rose of Lancashire |
The chains of history rattle |
COWBURN, Jennifer |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
8 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
86.770 |
The sick bed |
Sit up, and I'll straighten your pillows |
COWBURN, Jennifer |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
114 |
|
5.193 |
Warkin' fer t'caenty |
Ah hevn't hed a proper job |
COWBURN, Jennifer |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
23 |
Unemployment |
5.142 |
Yon bukutt |
It's bin a friend fer mony a year |
COWBURN, Jennifer |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
22 |
|
828 |
Northerner |
I belong to the northlands |
COWLIN, Dorothy |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
19 |
|
82.651 |
A natterin' wife |
The parson, the squire an' the divil |
COWLING, George H. |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
96-97 |
2nd ed rev |
82.650 |
I's gotten t' bliss |
I's gotten t' bliss o' mooten-tops to-neet |
COWLING, George H. |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
96 |
2nd ed rev |
82.652 |
O! what do ye wesh i' the beck |
O! what do ye wesh i' the beck, awd wench |
COWLING, George H. |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
97 |
2nd ed rev |
81.489 |
The Titanic |
T is for Titanic, as large as a building |
COX, Adam |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
107 |
|
81.309 |
Animals |
Cobras slide |
COX, Sean |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
13 |
|
6.205 |
El ultimo sospiro del moro |
A rocky platform, and behind, a pass |
CRABB, Edward |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
28-33 |
|
1.811 |
A midnight dream |
Twas near the hour of midnight |
CRABTREE, Edgar |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
67-68 |
|
1.871 |
But whoso shall offend one of these little ones, etc |
It was Christmas Eve, and the mansion lights |
CRABTREE, Edgar |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
70-72 |
|
1.907 |
December 31st, 1914 |
Old Year, thou art swiftly waning |
CRABTREE, Edgar |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
69 |
|
2.337 |
What shall this child be? |
Many are the times I have taken a child |
CRABTREE, Edgar |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
65-67 |
|
87.721 |
To My Parents |
I thank God for my parents, they were not rich or clever |
CRAGG, Doreen |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
7 |
|
465 |
Daily bread |
At first he thought that married love |
CRAGG, J. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
14 |
|
484 |
Old friend, old friend |
New neighbours rang to thank me |
CRAGG, J. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
35 |
|
82.763 |
Bumbly Boo |
In the land of Bumbly Boo |
CRAIG, Ross |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
39 |
|
5.157 |
Children sleeping |
Flowers of my life! How sweetly are ye folded |
CRAVEN Green, E. S. |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
22-23 |
|
201 |
A draughty heawse |
Aw'm frozzen stiff, do wod aw will |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
25-27 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
325 |
A festival o' feastin' |
Neaw Tim Toggs an' Joe Juce wer' two contrary chaps |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
122-124 |
|
91 |
A lesson fer larners |
Ah went in t'garden one fine day |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
124-125 |
|
107 |
Ah did when ah could |
Th'owd felly coars o'er mi |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
148 |
|
110 |
Bravo, Springs! Bravo! |
Bravo! Well done Springs! England's champion band! |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
179 |
|
99 |
Callin' oal cats |
Neaw som' folk keep parrots, pet dogs, an oal that |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
135-136 |
|
330 |
Changin' times |
When Ah wer yung an' I' mi' prime |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
106 |
|
207 |
Dirty dog |
Ah boarded that last bus one dark wint'ry neet |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
34 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
108 |
Fair maid o'Rossendale |
When I wer young an' in mi prime |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
149-150 |
Originally written by D S Goodbrand |
202 |
Farewell Farm |
Ah chance't across a tumblin' shell |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
27-28 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
397 |
Farewell Farm |
Ah chance't across a tumblin' shell |
CRAVEN, Harry |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
97-98 |
|
90 |
Forest fantasy |
Black diamond hewn in the abysmal deep |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
123 |
|
205 |
Getting' owd |
Wi' constant thoughts o' youthful days |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
31-32 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
101 |
Heigh estate (Revised version) |
No moore fer me, yon draughty heawse |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
138-140 |
|
97 |
Laurel - crowned |
She cherished long-loved legacies |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
133 |
|
206 |
Luv affair |
Neaw John Tommy Tupper wer' fifteen yer owd |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
32-34 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
4.377 |
Luv affair |
Neaw John Tommy Tupper wer' fifteen yer owd |
CRAVEN, Harry |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
50 |
|
100 |
Open cast |
Nostalgia - fed, my loyal heart long yearned |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
137 |
|
331 |
Owd Benny |
Owd Benny stepped eawt of a battered pit cage |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
108-109 |
|
209 |
Owd Booth Fowd |
When Aw'r a lad an Aw lived up Booth |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
42-44 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
102 |
Owd Sammy's brass |
Owd sammy wer deein' twer plain to bisin |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
141-142 |
|
98 |
Owd weyver lass |
Fer eighty yer thoo's sowjered on |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
134 |
|
809 |
Owd weyver lass |
Fer eighty yer thoo's sowjered on |
CRAVEN, Harry |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
34-35 |
|
328 |
Red tape |
We're free to woak an' toak an' think |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
129 |
|
103 |
Rice puddin' |
Mi parents were two patriots unhonoured an' unsung |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
143-144 |
|
104 |
Simple psychology |
Ah'm owd and ah'm ailin' |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
144 |
|
93 |
Song at sunset (English version) |
I like to tramp my native hills |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
126 |
|
96 |
Song o' Bacup |
Ah've yerd folk say'at Bacup Teawn |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
132-133 |
|
109 |
Sunset Musin(g)s |
Ah like to thramp mi native hills |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
151 |
|
203 |
Sunset musins |
Ah like to thramp mi native hills |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
29 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
105 |
Th' owd folks |
Ah'd like to see th' owd folk weel treated |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
145-146 |
|
95 |
The blacksmith's lament |
Tha tells mi, young tinker, tha'rt just leavin' t' school |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
129-131 |
|
92 |
The people's peace |
Shall we again make light of victory? |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
125 |
|
106 |
To a Pennine spring |
If I should live for ten score years and ten |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
147 |
|
204 |
To a shepster |
Tha smooky lukkin llittle thing |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
30-31 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
4.378 |
Trick o' t' trade |
Tha tells mi, young tinker, tha'rt just leavin' t' school |
CRAVEN, Harry |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
51 |
|
94 |
Tricks o' t' trade |
Tha tells mi, young tinker, tha'rt just leavin' t' school |
CRAVEN, Harry |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
127-128 |
|
80.844 |
School days remembered |
As I wait, I sit and stare |
CRAWFORD, Anthony |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
113-114 |
|
9 |
Belthern Charity |
Owd Fiddlin' Bob un Clarnet Bill, un Sam wi' th' |
CRAWSHAW, Richard |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
77-82 |
Author Pseudonym Fent Dick |
1.697 |
Azzel nutting |
Towk o' t'weather, by the frost, nowt good taa towk about |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
48-50 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.689 |
Because each one I love |
Soft waves the curtain, calling me |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
26-27 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.694 |
Bull in t'field |
A' stood on t'top o' t'river bank, a' thowht a'd hev a smook |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
40-43 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.686 |
Does time heal |
Does time heal the aching heart, that languishes slowly there |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
20-21 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.681 |
Drying out |
T'weather wazz cowd, naa sign o' spring, an' o' wazz dull an' bleak |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
8-Oct |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.695 |
For me |
Comes the wakening of the morn, the power of night lies crushed |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
44-45 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.702 |
Friendship vale |
I stood 'neath the side of steepened fell |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
59-60 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.679 |
How often |
How often? have I bent my head, before assailing gale |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
5-Jun |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.680 |
Kindness |
It's good to hear a welcome, and to see a friendly smile |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
7 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.696 |
My friend with the kindly smile |
I love that pass of the mountain sheep |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
46-47 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.703 |
Old fashioned ways |
There's a wind in my heart, early morn sees me start |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
61-62 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.693 |
One so dear |
An old farm stood on the steepening rise, the twisting lane led on |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
38-39 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.684 |
Resting there |
There's a stream so sweet 'mid the heathered hills |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
16-17 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.677 |
Smiling there |
In sorrowed mood I closed my door, to stand 'neath the open sky |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
1-Feb |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.685 |
Son of the rocks |
Dark the rocks that are leaning there |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
18-19 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.682 |
The birds personality contest - - - (from a dream) |
The eagle, noble king of birds, gave orders out one day |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
Nov-13 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.691 |
The curlew |
I hear the hushed murmurs of clustered pines |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
31-32 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.690 |
The dandelion |
I wandered one day down a country lane |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
28-30 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.699 |
The hill gorse |
My eyes look on, at Ash, unclothed |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
53-54 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.692 |
The old mill-wheel |
I saw it first when but a boy, it's many long years ago |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
33-37 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.700 |
The rabbits are back |
By the old pasture gate, I sat down to wait |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
55-56 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.688 |
The redstart |
I sometimes tend to ask myself |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
24-25 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.683 |
The snowdrop |
I love to walk on leaf-sponged ground |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
14-15 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.678 |
The wanderer |
I watched the moorland grasses, as they bent before the breeze |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
3-Apr |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.687 |
The waysider |
A' met an owd feller on a moorland track |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
22-23 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.698 |
The white violet |
There's lane so fair, 'neath the hillside bare, there's the Spring sun's soothing rays |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
51-52 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
1.701 |
Where samphire grows |
Salt-licked by tide, where ocean wide |
CREEAR, Tom |
The changing hours: original poems |
CREEAR, Tom |
M0037152LC |
136.513 |
1.958 |
57-58 |
Author is a native of Furness, and some of the poems are written in the Furness dialect |
5.238 |
Gradely |
Mony things are gradely |
CRITCHLOW, Nellie |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
49 |
|
5.228 |
The 'L' of it all |
Eawr teycher's takin' 'er drivin' test |
CRITCHLOW, Nellie |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
48 |
Driving test |
86.733 |
September |
When the summer sun is fading |
CROMPTON, Rita |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
81 |
|
1.024 |
A strange dreeom |
The're a chap i' th' Chimney Corner |
CRONSHAW, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
124-127 |
|
138 |
Comin' whoam |
Aw'm gradely fain theau'rt comin' whoam |
CRONSHAW, Joseph |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
45-46 |
|
6.706 |
Comin' whoam |
Aw'm gradely fain theau'rt comin' whoam |
CRONSHAW, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
129-130 |
|
1.023 |
Eawr parson |
Aw like to yer eawr parson praitch |
CRONSHAW, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
121-122 |
|
548 |
My garden |
Aw've a bonny little garden |
CRONSHAW, Joseph |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
123-124 |
Lancashire poetry |
6.705 |
My garden |
Aw've a bonny little garden |
CRONSHAW, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
128 |
|
6.707 |
Owd Polyant' an' Chitty |
Owd Chitty wer a merry bird, his voice wer awlus ringin' |
CRONSHAW, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
131-132 |
|
895 |
The robin and the thrush |
A modest little robin perched |
CRONSHAW, Joseph |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
80-82 |
|
1.021 |
The sunny month o' June |
Aw like to roam at early morn |
CRONSHAW, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
119 |
|
137 |
To a throstle |
Nean, I lads just yer yon throstle sing |
CRONSHAW, Joseph |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
45 |
|
894 |
To a throstle |
Neaw, lads, just yer yon throstle sing |
CRONSHAW, Joseph |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
79-80 |
|
82.000 |
To th' cuckoo |
Hello, owd friend, aw'm fain theawr't come |
CRONSHAW, Joseph |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
14 |
|
1.022 |
When thee an' me wer yung |
Aw'm thinkin', lass, abeawt thoose days |
CRONSHAW, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
120-121 |
|
4.476 |
When thee and me wer' young |
Aw'm thinkin', lass, abeawt thoose days |
CRONSHAW, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
55-56 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
80.796 |
A free day |
A free day to do as I please |
CROOKHAM, R. |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
21 |
|
86.692 |
Inner city decay |
Old and new buildings all boarded up |
CROSSLEY, Mark |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
40 |
|
82.889 |
Underneath the sea |
Down, down beneath the sea |
CROSTON, Amy |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
110-111 |
|
467 |
Southward Ho! |
Looking in your mirror |
CROWTHER, J. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
16 |
|
86.693 |
Innocence |
Let me be a child again, just for a little while |
CROWTHER, Jean |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
41 |
|
4.392 |
Recession |
Ar't cummin' for a drink, Tom |
CRUTCHLOW, Nellie |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
59 |
|
87.332 |
A Legacy |
To you, children, I leave life's gladdest hours |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
193 |
Farnworth authors |
87.180 |
A Man's Part |
O, to act a man's part |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
150 |
Farnworth authors |
87.326 |
A Prayer |
Grant us, oh God, the light to see |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
186 |
Farnworth authors |
87.351 |
A Prayer. |
Father Divine, who rulest all |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
214-215 |
Farnworth authors |
87.156 |
Allons! |
Let us go on, calm and serene |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
124 |
Farnworth authors |
87.319 |
Appreciation |
I honour those who to the height |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
177 |
Farnworth authors |
87.334 |
Avalon |
You have gone to Avalon, through the sunset golden |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
196 |
Farnworth authors |
898 |
Baby's bedtime (on Blackstone Edge) |
Bless thi now, mi little lamb |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
85-86 |
|
384 |
Better to trust |
Better to trust and be deceived |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
33-34 |
|
82.025 |
Better to trust |
Better to trust and be deceived |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
80 |
|
896 |
Better to trust |
Better to trust and be deceived |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
82-83 |
|
87.166 |
Better to trust |
Better to trust and be deceived |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
134 |
Farnworth authors |
87.328 |
Bohemia |
Come to Bohemia, rich or importunate |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
188 |
Farnworth authors |
87.208 |
Books |
My dear and quiet friends, beloved books |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
156 |
Farnworth authors |
87.342 |
Buttercups and Daisies |
O Golden buttercups and daisies white |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
204 |
Farnworth authors |
87.316 |
Carry On! |
Carry on! and brave the worst |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
174 |
Farnworth authors |
87.317 |
Christian Reformers |
They shall tell when you are sleeping |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
175 |
Farnworth authors |
87.181 |
Content |
I do not ask from life a path of ease |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
151 |
Farnworth authors |
87.318 |
Contrast |
Life is dreary, and days are dark |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
176 |
Farnworth authors |
87.218 |
Dawn |
Let us arise and meet the dawn |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
170 |
Farnworth authors |
87.151 |
De Profundis |
Its path ordained for aeons past |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
117-118 |
Farnworth authors |
87.152 |
De Profundis II |
Fair flowers, innocent and gay |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
119 |
Farnworth authors |
87.153 |
De Profundis III |
The house of clay is silent now |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
120 |
Farnworth authors |
87.154 |
De Profundis IV |
How often have we roved at eve |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
121-122 |
Farnworth authors |
87.149 |
Dedicatory |
My fellow-bards, accept these lays |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
115 |
Farnworth authors |
87.340 |
Desire and Duty |
Should we wander, you and I |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
202 |
Farnworth authors |
87.213 |
Dirge For Yesterday |
Close the portal of the soul |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
163 |
Farnworth authors |
87.344 |
En Avant! |
We shall arrive, we shall win through |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
206 |
Farnworth authors |
87.217 |
Englands Glory |
For thee, fair land of england |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
168-169 |
Farnworth authors |
87.179 |
Evolution |
New problems are propounded every hour |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
149 |
Farnworth authors |
87.322 |
Failures |
I sing a song for those |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
181 |
Farnworth authors |
87.216 |
Flowers in the City |
He beareth neither sword nor spear |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
167 |
Farnworth authors |
87.345 |
Fore-runners |
Oft in my dreams I see them stand |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
207-208 |
Farnworth authors |
87.162 |
God speaketh yet |
God speaketh yet in divers ways |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
130 |
Farnworth authors |
87.327 |
God's Temple |
Come! let us linger here awhile |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
187 |
Farnworth authors |
87.214 |
Gods Work of man |
Too much the lettered page let me not scan |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
164 |
Farnworth authors |
87.346 |
Godspeed |
Be near me when the deepening shadows fall |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
209 |
Farnworth authors |
87.173 |
Good men |
Good men still walk the earth |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
143 |
Farnworth authors |
87.158 |
Greatness |
How great is he, who, in life finds |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
126 |
Farnworth authors |
87.324 |
Heart of Mine |
Heart of mine, be quiet |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
183 |
Farnworth authors |
87.221 |
How Could we Know? |
How could we know the light would fade |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
173 |
Farnworth authors |
87.355 |
How Few |
How few the kindly actions done |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
221 |
Farnworth authors |
87.150 |
In memoriam |
A silence falls! no more is heard |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
116 |
Farnworth authors |
87.349 |
In The Gloaming |
Lone bird, that in the gloaming |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
212 |
Farnworth authors |
87.170 |
Inarken |
Come! one solemn mass for the fair, young Inarken |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
139 |
Farnworth authors |
87.337 |
Kinship |
I am a child of the sun |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
199 |
Farnworth authors |
87.157 |
Land of Innocence |
With dancing feet, in glad sequence |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
125 |
Farnworth authors |
87.160 |
Let us go home |
Let us go home: for day is done |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
128 |
Farnworth authors |
87.165 |
Life. |
All life was as the ground I thought |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
133 |
Farnworth authors |
82.014 |
Little things |
These little things, what mystic power have they |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
43 |
|
82.018 |
Little things |
What blessings come unto us from little things! |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
61 |
|
87.172 |
Love and death |
When love first walked upon the earth |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
142 |
Farnworth authors |
87.321 |
Lust |
With wanton hand a blossom fair |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
180 |
Farnworth authors |
87.330 |
Magdalene |
My sad-eyed sister of the city |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
191 |
Farnworth authors |
87.167 |
Memory |
Come! fond memory, weave once more |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
135 |
Farnworth authors |
87.341 |
Morn |
Lo! now 'tis morn |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
203 |
Farnworth authors |
87.174 |
Mother's Hymns |
In the old-fashioned chair she sits |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
144 |
Farnworth authors |
87.209 |
Music everywhere |
There is music in the stream |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
157 |
Farnworth authors |
87.169 |
My garden |
In calm seclusion I would rest |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
137-138 |
Farnworth authors |
87.178 |
Nell |
It is not so very long ago |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
148 |
Farnworth authors |
87.177 |
Nil Desperandum! |
Come! sad one, lift thy head, forget thy pain |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
147 |
Farnworth authors |
87.323 |
Now |
Oh! keep not back the tender word |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
182 |
Farnworth authors |
82.002 |
O! Beautiful |
O! Beautiful, the fragrant rose |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
17 |
|
87.210 |
O! Beautiful |
O! Beautiful, the fragrant rose |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
158 |
Farnworth authors |
87.353 |
On The Mount |
Truly the night is beautiful |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
217-219 |
Farnworth authors |
87.176 |
Over the hill |
Over the hill lies a garden fair |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
146 |
Farnworth authors |
87.339 |
Peace |
In Death's soft arms thy form reposes |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
201 |
Farnworth authors |
87.212 |
Prospice |
We shall meet again beloved |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
161 |
Farnworth authors |
87.204 |
Recompense |
Home for the wanderer, home |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
152 |
Farnworth authors |
87.175 |
Redeem the time |
Redeem the time, the golden hours are fleeting |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
145 |
Farnworth authors |
3.181 |
Re-incarnation |
The cold rain walks the tiled roof |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
39 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
87.206 |
Remorse |
The massive walls rise grim and bare |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
154 |
Farnworth authors |
87.155 |
Requiescat in Pace |
Dawn to dusk the hours have run |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
123 |
Farnworth authors |
87.348 |
Resurgam |
The Spring-time's vernal tint returns |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
211 |
Farnworth authors |
87.338 |
Retrospect |
Life has its troubles, yet fair withal |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
200 |
Farnworth authors |
87.350 |
Sleep, Sleep, Sad Heart |
Sleep, sleep, sad heart |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
213 |
Farnworth authors |
897 |
Slum children |
When wilt thou take, O England |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
83-84 |
|
87.333 |
Slum children |
When wilt thou take, O England |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
194-195 |
Farnworth authors |
87.164 |
Sunset |
The day is slowly drawing to its close |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
132 |
Farnworth authors |
87.331 |
Take Heart |
Take heart, the cause moves onward |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
192 |
Farnworth authors |
87.207 |
That Night of June |
Hast thou forgotten that happy night |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
155 |
Farnworth authors |
87.220 |
The Antidote |
Get up! get up! don't sit and mope |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
172 |
Farnworth authors |
87.343 |
The Call Of The Road |
I am weary of the bawling |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
205 |
Farnworth authors |
87.161 |
The coming of spring |
She comes, she comes, the beauteous spring |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
129 |
Farnworth authors |
87.329 |
The days that are to be |
The ancient faiths must falter |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
189-190 |
Farnworth authors |
87.215 |
The Gateway of the West |
A little while to work and play |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
165 |
Farnworth authors |
87.211 |
The Greatest Deed |
A soul appeared at heaven's gate |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
159 |
Farnworth authors |
87.352 |
The Ideal |
Thy feet are on the road of the ideal |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
216 |
Farnworth authors |
87.347 |
The Past |
Thou land of other days, through shadows never lifting |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
210 |
Farnworth authors |
87.315 |
The Pioneer |
He beareth neither sword nor spear |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
167 |
Farnworth authors |
3.182 |
The pleasure house of gold |
I built a pleasure house of gold |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
40 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
87.171 |
The poet's home |
He has a home by coral seas |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
140-141 |
Farnworth authors |
87.205 |
The Song Of The Silent Reaper |
As death came along I heard his song |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
153 |
Farnworth authors |
87.163 |
The south wind |
I come from land of sunny clime |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
131 |
Farnworth authors |
87.336 |
The Spring of Life |
To live, to laugh, to love! |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
198 |
Farnworth authors |
87.354 |
Think Of Me At My Best |
Oh! friend, when I am far away |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
220 |
Farnworth authors |
899 |
Tis Sunday in the morning |
The prospect brightens as it nears |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
86-87 |
|
6.708 |
Tommy and the pig |
Once on a time, near Rochdale town |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
135-139 |
|
87.159 |
True Liberty |
Who doth his freedom prostitute |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
127 |
Farnworth authors |
87.320 |
Truth |
The day of knowledge comes apace |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
178 |
Farnworth authors |
87.356 |
When Death Shall Call |
When death shall call this soul of mine |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
221 |
Farnworth authors |
87.335 |
When? |
What will there be when the sweet song is ended |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
197 |
Farnworth authors |
87.325 |
Who Truly Lives |
Who truly lives must think aright |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
184-185 |
Farnworth authors |
87.168 |
Why do we wait? |
Why do we wait till tired hands are lying |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
136 |
Farnworth authors |
87.219 |
Worth |
The worth of any deed or word |
CRYER, James Wilfred |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
171 |
Farnworth authors |
87.044 |
Man and Dog |
Dear doggie, thou hast been the butt |
CRYER, Wiiliam |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
45-47 |
Farnworth authors |
86.865 |
A Botanist |
He was a man - the like Heaven multiply! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
247-248 |
Farnworth author |
87.011 |
A Household Jewel |
O, pleasant as the budding flowers that breathe |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
307-308 |
Farnworth author |
86.828 |
A Jubilee Salutation |
O, Sovereign! mark the loyal flame |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
131-133 |
Farnworth author |
87.043 |
A Lancashire Lady |
Yes, well I remember her figure |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
40-44 |
Farnworth authors |
86.817 |
A Lancashire Lady |
Yes, well I remember her figure |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
94-98 |
Farnworth author |
86.847 |
A Little Poise to the memory of Samuel Laycock |
The minor bard has work to do |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
192-200 |
Farnworth author |
86.793 |
A May Morning |
Who can describe thy beauty, bright May morn! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
35 |
Farnworth author |
87.130 |
A Mayors Daughter |
O' she was a Mayor's daughter |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
412-413 |
Farnworth author |
87.053 |
A minor bard |
He sang his song, a lowly strain |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
77-79 |
Farnworth authors |
86.861 |
A Minor Bard |
He sang his song, a lowly strain |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
236-238 |
Farnworth author |
86.813 |
A Mothers Love |
Stern poverty had entered in |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
82-86 |
Farnworth author |
87.047 |
A plea for generous judgement |
Oh, well for us we sometimes check |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
58-60 |
Farnworth authors |
86.833 |
A plea for generous judgement |
Oh, well for us we sometimes check |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
147-149 |
Farnworth author |
87.037 |
A Pot Of Musk |
Up the back streets of the city I passed |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
28-29 |
Farnworth authors |
86.802 |
A Pot of Musk |
Up the back streets of the city I passed |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
56-57 |
Farnworth author |
87.034 |
A Singing Prisoner |
In passing down the city street |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
18-19 |
Farnworth authors |
86.779 |
A Singing Prisoner |
In passing down the city street |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
23-24 |
Farnworth author |
87.033 |
A Snowdrop in a Moorland Glen |
Eh, bonny rare thing |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
17 |
Farnworth authors |
86.771 |
A Snowdrop in a Moorland Glen |
Eh, bonny rare thing |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
8 |
Farnworth author |
86.831 |
A Song of Friendship |
Still dear is the story |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
143-144 |
Farnworth author |
86.792 |
A Song of the Morning |
Hail, to the morning light! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
33-34 |
Farnworth author |
86.848 |
A song of the peace crusade |
Champions of Peace! let not your hands |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
201-203 |
Farnworth author |
86.832 |
A Song of Welcome |
Once again each other greet we |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
145-146 |
Farnworth author |
86.761 |
A Sunbeam |
Come in, come in, thou sunbeam bright! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
4-May |
Farnworth author |
87.040 |
A Welcome |
Much wearied with my daily toil |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
34-35 |
Farnworth authors |
86.810 |
A Welcome |
Much wearied with my daily toil |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
75-76 |
Farnworth author |
87.014 |
Alec Louden |
Dear Alec, sweet Alec, for thee |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
313-314 |
Farnworth author |
87.028 |
Alone |
She's been away a fortnight, but it seems almost a year |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
351-354 |
Farnworth author |
87.056 |
Alone |
She's been away a fortnight, but it seems almost a year |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
85-88 |
Farnworth authors |
86.824 |
Among the Heather |
Only a tuft of heather! true |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
122-123 |
Farnworth author |
87.135 |
An Election Hymn |
Lord of all nations! hear |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
429-430 |
Farnworth author |
87.049 |
An upland reverie |
The sun hath crimsoned all the west |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
64-68 |
Farnworth authors |
86.838 |
An Upland Reverie |
The sun hath crimsoned all the west |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
164-168 |
Farnworth author |
86.863 |
At Darley Hall |
Old Darley! Hast thou not beheld of yore |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
242-243 |
Farnworth author |
87.041 |
Babys Bedtime |
Bless thi now, mi little lamb |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
36-37 |
Farnworth authors |
86.815 |
Babys Bedtime |
Bless thi now, mi little lamb! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
90-91 |
Farnworth author |
87.066 |
Be Just and Fear Not |
This is a motto good to take |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
372-373 |
Farnworth author |
87.074 |
Be Men |
Hear the brave, heroic Paul |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
381-382 |
Farnworth author |
87.128 |
Beatrice |
There is a form to me most dear |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
409 |
Farnworth author |
86.892 |
Ben Brierley |
We laid our much-loved Edwin low |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
291-293 |
Farnworth author |
87.146 |
Blessed be God |
O, for a joy that sings |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
204-205 |
Farnworth authors |
87.076 |
Blessed Be God |
O, for a joy that sings |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
385-386 |
Farnworth author |
87.060 |
Britons Yet! |
Brothers, with ambition burning |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
363-364 |
Farnworth author |
86.823 |
By the Roach River |
Oft by the Roach River |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
118-121 |
Farnworth author |
86.852 |
Calling out the reserves |
They go to join the service of the Queen |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
214-215 |
Farnworth author |
86.894 |
Charles Haddon Spurgeon |
And now another prince is gone |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
295 |
Farnworth author |
87.064 |
Chrysanthemum |
Thrice welcome with thy fair attendant train |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
369 |
Farnworth author |
87.141 |
Confidence |
In the Almighty is our trust |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
94-95 |
Farnworth authors |
87.013 |
David |
Humbly, courageous, generous and kind |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
311-312 |
Farnworth author |
87.137 |
David Livingstone |
Devoted servant of the Lord Most High |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
433 |
Farnworth author |
87.029 |
Did You Ever Know Such Weather In Your Life? |
Es, one, nine nought, and three |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
355-357 |
Farnworth author |
86.845 |
Do the best that yo con |
Mi talents aw know are but few |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
185-188 |
Farnworth author |
86.798 |
Down in a Shady Lane |
The gloaming hour is here |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
48-49 |
Farnworth author |
86.893 |
Duke of Clarence |
On her two manly sons the mother gazed |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
294 |
Farnworth author |
86.858 |
Edward and Alexandra |
Welcome, Sovereign! this we say |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
227-229 |
Farnworth author |
86.891 |
Edwin Waugh |
Peace, Edwin! but we feel it hard |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
289-290 |
Farnworth author |
86.837 |
Epistle to Mr Robert Leake MP |
Me, honoured sir, you will not blame |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
161-163 |
Farnworth author |
86.836 |
Epistle to the Rev Henry Burton BA |
My much-loved friend, I've read your book |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
157-160 |
Farnworth author |
87.016 |
Florence Nightingale |
O, love-ennobled lady, wheresoe'er |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
316 |
Farnworth author |
87.020 |
Forbears |
Of my forbears I think with pride |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
323-325 |
Farnworth author |
86.870 |
Foundering of the SS Stella |
With bright and happy greetings |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
258-260 |
Farnworth author |
86.842 |
Fro T Brown Cow |
Eh! down into t' guther hoo's gone |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
179-180 |
Farnworth author |
87.036 |
Frolics with flowers |
O, joy of the early morn |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
22-27 |
Farnworth authors |
86.797 |
Frolics with flowers |
O, joy of the early morn |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
43-47 |
Farnworth author |
87.042 |
Getting Father to sleep |
Sweet Alice had just had her bath |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
38-39 |
Farnworth authors |
86.816 |
Getting Father to sleep |
Sweet Alice had just had her bath |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
92-93 |
Farnworth author |
87.138 |
God Save The King |
Ring far and wide the glad acclaim |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
434-435 |
Farnworth author |
87.012 |
Good-bye! |
Oh, word of strange emotions, and of import deep and vast! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
309-310 |
Farnworth author |
87.131 |
Greeting to Mr. George Milner, M.A. |
We wish-and our wish is a prayer |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
414-415 |
Farnworth author |
86.829 |
Hail to the Shamrock! |
Hail to the shamrock of Erin! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
134-135 |
Farnworth author |
86.859 |
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow |
Bard of soul-inspiring strains! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
230-232 |
Farnworth author |
87.025 |
Here Again! |
Christmas is come again |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
341-345 |
Farnworth author |
86.811 |
His First Battle |
When North and South each hurled the brand |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
77-81 |
Farnworth author |
87.147 |
Homely Joys |
Thrice happy man! his envied lot we sing |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
106 |
Farnworth authors |
87.061 |
Homely Joys |
Thrice happy man! his envied lot we sing |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
365-366 |
Farnworth author |
87.139 |
I Bide My Time |
Though common slander smirch my name |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
92 |
Farnworth authors |
87.078 |
I Bide My Time |
Though common slander smirch my name |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
388 |
Farnworth author |
87.019 |
Irelands Hope |
O Erin, of the generous heart |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
321-322 |
Farnworth author |
86.888 |
It is well to be you |
It is well to be you (with a slap on the back) |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
281-284 |
Farnworth author |
87.015 |
James Craig |
Dear Scotland! Was not this thy son? |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
315 |
Farnworth author |
86.857 |
John Bright |
He stood the embodiment of all that's best |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
224-226 |
Farnworth author |
87.069 |
Keep On |
Toiler, earning honest bread |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
376 |
Farnworth author |
87.057 |
Keep on! |
Toiler, earning honest bread |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
89 |
Farnworth authors |
87.054 |
Kind words |
O, give them voice, those feelings strong |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
80-82 |
Farnworth authors |
87.009 |
Kind words |
O, give them voice, those feelings strong |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
302-304 |
Farnworth author |
86.794 |
Lancashires Love of Flowers |
My own, my native shire, in thee |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
36-38 |
Farnworth author |
86.882 |
Launch of the "Bolton" Lifeboat at Kessinglanfd, August 19, 1893 |
Launch the Bolton, while the welkin |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
268-270 |
Farnworth author |
87.017 |
Leo Tolstoy |
Breathe we his name with warm and reverent thought |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
317 |
Farnworth author |
87.052 |
Life |
O, life, with thy trials and sorrow-filled days! |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
75-76 |
Farnworth authors |
86.856 |
Life |
O, life, with thy trials and sorrow-filled days! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
222-223 |
Farnworth author |
86.843 |
Life Still is a tough bit o wark |
Life still is a tough bit o' wark |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
181-182 |
Farnworth author |
86.782 |
Lily of the Valley |
Modest flower of lowly name |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
29-30 |
Farnworth author |
87.132 |
Lines On Leaving Guernsey |
Thee I am loth, fair isle to leave |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
416-417 |
Farnworth author |
87.121 |
Little Nell |
Dear tender hearted little Nell |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
395 |
Farnworth author |
87.144 |
Little Things |
What blessings come to us from little things |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
99-100 |
Farnworth authors |
87.119 |
Little Things |
What blessings come to us from little things |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
389-390 |
Farnworth author |
87.035 |
lLily Of The Valley |
Modest flower of lowly name |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
20-21 |
Farnworth authors |
87.143 |
Lord Byron |
Byron! A charm is in thy very name |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
97-98 |
Farnworth authors |
86.860 |
Lord Byron |
Byron! A charm is in thy very name |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
233-235 |
Farnworth author |
86.889 |
Lord keep my memory green! |
Life I have loved, nor scorned my lot |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
285-286 |
Farnworth author |
86.869 |
Loss of the Drummond Castle |
Oh, the pity of it, truly! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
256-257 |
Farnworth author |
87.038 |
Love and Beauty Everywhere |
Tread where we will this earth around |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
30-32 |
Farnworth authors |
86.803 |
Love and Beauty Everywhere |
Tread where we will this earth around |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
58-60 |
Farnworth author |
86.780 |
Lusty Life |
O, Happy man, with life so blest |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
25-26 |
Farnworth author |
86.821 |
Man and Dog |
Dear doggie, thou hast been the butt |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
109-111 |
Farnworth author |
86.764 |
March |
March! I can seldom kindly take to thee |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
6-Jul |
Farnworth author |
87.073 |
Mighty To Save |
Ills are not purposeless |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
380 |
Farnworth author |
86.825 |
Mignonette |
Delightful mignonette! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
124-126 |
Farnworth author |
87.065 |
Moral Athletics |
Held the preacher forth to wake |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
370-371 |
Farnworth author |
86.795 |
My Clematis La France |
Soon as stern winter's iron reign |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
39-40 |
Farnworth author |
87.050 |
My friend the shoemaker |
A friend he is loyal and true |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
69-71 |
Farnworth authors |
86.841 |
My friend the shoemaker |
A friend he is loyal and true |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
176-178 |
Farnworth author |
87.010 |
Now Annies Away |
When day is declining, and night comes apace |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
305-306 |
Farnworth author |
87.032 |
Of What Shall I Sing? |
I will sing of the glory and truth |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
14-16 |
Farnworth authors |
86.760 |
Of What Shall I Sing? |
I will sing of the glory and truth |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
1-Mar |
Farnworth author |
86.820 |
Old Smiler |
Poor Smiler, and thou art no more! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
105-108 |
Farnworth author |
87.142 |
On Rivingtons Heights |
When this fair world to being sprung |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
96 |
Farnworth authors |
87.062 |
On Rivingtons Heights |
When this fair world to being sprung |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
367 |
Farnworth author |
86.819 |
On the Bowling Green |
Let football youhtful ardour show |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
101-104 |
Farnworth author |
87.008 |
Our First-Born in Heaven |
Twelve months, and heaven fordids thy stay! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
301 |
Farnworth author |
86.853 |
Our Gallant Steeds |
When ye tell the tale, my brothers, as ye will with |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
216-217 |
Farnworth author |
86.809 |
Parepa Rosas Song |
Let me a worthy deed relate |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
70-74 |
Farnworth author |
86.862 |
Pilgrimages to old homes |
How pleasant with a Moss to roam! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
239-241 |
Farnworth author |
86.818 |
Queen Victorias Visit To Manchester |
Crowd answers gathering crowd |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
99-100 |
Farnworth author |
87.027 |
Questionings |
The spring and the summer have come and gone |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
348-350 |
Farnworth author |
87.068 |
Quit You Like Men |
Dear comrades, let us take |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
375 |
Farnworth author |
87.124 |
Robert Buchanan and David Gray |
We felt that charm the story yields, when first |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
401 |
Farnworth author |
86.844 |
Robin comes on the washing day |
Monday is eaur weshin' day |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
183-184 |
Farnworth author |
86.801 |
Rostherne |
For situation beautiful art thou |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
55 |
Farnworth author |
87.133 |
Supera Moras |
O list to my lay, for it will not be long |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
418-420 |
Farnworth author |
86.776 |
Sweet Blades of Grass |
Sweet blades of grass, sweet blades of grass |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
16-17 |
Farnworth author |
87.071 |
Take Up the Cross and Follow Me |
Lord, I have been by passion led |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
378 |
Farnworth author |
86.827 |
That mouth was made to be kissed |
Sweet baby on mother's knee |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
130 |
Farnworth author |
86.883 |
The "Bolton" Lifeboat |
Well done! well done, eight lives are won |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
271-272 |
Farnworth author |
86.884 |
The Abram Colliery Disaster |
Brave collier men! each honest heart |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
273-274 |
Farnworth author |
86.854 |
The Agony |
O, country mine, beloved, admired |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
218-219 |
Farnworth author |
86.850 |
The Armenian Atrocities |
Sad are the tales that stir old England's breast |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
208-211 |
Farnworth author |
86.783 |
The Awakening |
Welcome, welcome, joyous spring! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
31-32 |
Farnworth author |
86.806 |
The Bogey Man |
Within a car I sat beside |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
66-67 |
Farnworth author |
86.800 |
The Bonny Bowdon Downs |
Away! away! O, why delay? |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
53-54 |
Farnworth author |
87.023 |
The Bonny Gowd Bit |
Queen Vic! what a pleasure to trace |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
330-331 |
Farnworth author |
87.021 |
The Burial of Dr. Barnardo |
Come grateful Nellie, thankful Jim |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
326-327 |
Farnworth author |
87.140 |
The Bursting Bud |
Bright blithesome spring returns again! |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
93 |
Farnworth authors |
86.772 |
The Bursting Bud |
Bright, blithesome spring returns again! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
9 |
Farnworth author |
86.781 |
The Coming of the Flowers |
They come! they come! as fair to view |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
27-28 |
Farnworth author |
87.134 |
The Coronation of George V |
Dear Sovereign, a Lancashire Lad dares to pay |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
421-428 |
Farnworth author |
86.804 |
The Country Stile |
Be it at morn when Sol ascends |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
61-62 |
Farnworth author |
87.018 |
The Crimes of the Congo |
O' England mine, so famed of old! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
318-320 |
Farnworth author |
86.777 |
The Daisy |
Well might the Caledonian bard |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
18-19 |
Farnworth author |
87.075 |
The Day of Pentecost |
And this is Peter that upstands |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
383-384 |
Farnworth author |
87.024 |
The Death of Chanticleer |
Alas, for poor Chanticleer! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
335-340 |
Farnworth author |
87.045 |
The Face that Wears a Smile |
How I have loved to look upon |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
48-50 |
Farnworth authors |
86.826 |
The face that wears a smile |
How I have loved to look upon |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
127-129 |
Farnworth author |
86.890 |
The fall of a Glasgow mill, in 1889 |
Sweetest words on infant lips |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
287-288 |
Farnworth author |
86.796 |
The Fuchsia |
Hail, glorious flowers in bright array |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
41-42 |
Farnworth author |
86.778 |
The Glory of the Sun |
O, Mighty Sol, I sing thy praise |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
20-22 |
Farnworth author |
87.122 |
The Grecian Mother |
Fair fame the Grecian mother won |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
396-397 |
Farnworth author |
86.855 |
The Horrors of War |
In Thee, O God, our faith stands fast |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
220-221 |
Farnworth author |
86.886 |
The Hulton Colliery Explosion, December 21st, 1910 |
Hush, hush, ye Christmas bells! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
277-278 |
Farnworth author |
86.830 |
The Joys of Friendship and of Poesy |
Welcome, my friends, and comrades dear! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
136-142 |
Farnworth author |
87.046 |
The Joys of Friendship and Poesy |
Welcome, my friends, and comrades dear! |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
51-57 |
Farnworth authors |
87.030 |
The Lancashire Lad |
He is very much alive |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
358-360 |
Farnworth author |
87.031 |
The Lancashire Lass |
She's sightly, and sprightly |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
361-362 |
Farnworth author |
86.805 |
The Maiden and the Kiss |
O' joy it was to see my queen |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
63-65 |
Farnworth author |
87.070 |
The Man Born Blind |
Jesus it was who gave me sight |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
377 |
Farnworth author |
87.063 |
The Passion Flower |
Most mystical, most wonderful of flowers! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
368 |
Farnworth author |
87.058 |
The path of the shining light |
I have fought, I have lost, I have won |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
90 |
Farnworth authors |
87.072 |
The path of the shining light |
I have fought, I have lost, I have won |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
379 |
Farnworth author |
87.129 |
The Pride of Lancresse |
The day threatened storms, but we ventured the walk |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
410-411 |
Farnworth author |
86.864 |
The Quintas Fair Domain |
Sweet retrospective thoughts awake |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
244-246 |
Farnworth author |
86.840 |
The Rhymers Resolve |
Now what care I who heeds my plight |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
174-175 |
Farnworth author |
86.839 |
The Rhyming Throng |
The rhyming throng, the rhyming throng |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
169-173 |
Farnworth author |
86.835 |
The Sabbath |
Blest day! The Hebrew prophet's flame |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
153-156 |
Farnworth author |
87.126 |
The Smile On The Stairs |
The preacher was then in his young manhood's prime |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
405-406 |
Farnworth author |
86.851 |
The South African War Cloud |
From the mountain's fertile terrace, and the wide |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
212-213 |
Farnworth author |
87.026 |
The Star of Hope |
Again we greet with hallowed mirth |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
346-347 |
Farnworth author |
87.120 |
The Sweep Of A Scythe |
He whetted his blade with a practised hand |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
393-394 |
Farnworth author |
86.808 |
The Sweet Salopian Maid |
How sweet to wake fond memory's powers |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
69 |
Farnworth author |
86.867 |
The Toll of the Sea |
The heart of England beats with pride |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
252-253 |
Farnworth author |
87.039 |
The Two Blades |
Let the sword blade perish! |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
33 |
Farnworth authors |
86.807 |
The Two Blades |
Let the sword blade perish! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
68 |
Farnworth author |
86.814 |
The Typical Lancashire Lass |
Hark, to the rapid footstep chime! |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
87-89 |
Farnworth author |
86.885 |
The Whitehaven Disaster |
Brave men! for you, the wide world o'er |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
275-276 |
Farnworth author |
86.881 |
The wreck of the "Titanic" |
What now shall mitigate our torturing grief |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
265-267 |
Farnworth author |
86.871 |
The wreck of the Roumania |
We speak with bated breath |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
261-262 |
Farnworth author |
87.048 |
Time and opportunity |
Is there a word that i can speak |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
61-63 |
Farnworth authors |
86.834 |
Time and opportunity |
Is there a word that I can speak |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
150-152 |
Farnworth author |
87.127 |
Tis Sunday In The Morning |
The prospect brightens as it nears |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
407-408 |
Farnworth author |
87.022 |
To An Old Clock |
Dear Old Clock! thy pleasant tick |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
328-329 |
Farnworth author |
87.055 |
To an old clock |
Dear old clock! thy pleasant tick |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
83-84 |
Farnworth authors |
86.822 |
Tommy and the pig |
Once on a time, near Rochdale town |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
112-117 |
Farnworth author |
87.067 |
True To Thy Nation |
Lowly thy tent may be |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
374 |
Farnworth author |
86.799 |
Under a Lancashire Thorn Hedge |
Did tropic scene e'er bless the trveller's sight |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
50-52 |
Farnworth author |
86.774 |
Under Glass |
Brave hyacinth! Thou stately bloom |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
Dec-13 |
Farnworth author |
86.866 |
Victoria |
God of the mountains hoary |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
249-251 |
Farnworth author |
87.125 |
Victorias Great Resolve |
I will be good, she said, ere on her brow |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
402-404 |
Farnworth author |
86.775 |
Wallflowers, Sweet Wallflowers! |
O, sweet is the wallflower's scent |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
14-15 |
Farnworth author |
87.118 |
We All Do Fade As A Leaf |
Just was the picture of his pen |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
391 |
Farnworth author |
86.846 |
We re linked to one another |
Who is he that would stand alone |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
189-191 |
Farnworth author |
86.773 |
Welcome to Spring |
Hail, joyous Spring! for thou dost bring |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
10-Nov |
Farnworth author |
87.051 |
Were linked to one another |
Who is he that would stand alone |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
72-74 |
Farnworth authors |
87.059 |
When I look back |
How pleasant when to rest I turn |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
91 |
Farnworth authors |
87.077 |
When I look back |
How pleasant when to rest I turn |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
387 |
Farnworth author |
87.145 |
Where glory waits |
Go where duty leads thee |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
101-103 |
Farnworth authors |
87.123 |
Where Glory Waits |
Go where duty leads thee |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
398-400 |
Farnworth author |
86.887 |
Who are the brave? |
Who are the brave? They are those, who with scorning |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
279-280 |
Farnworth author |
87.007 |
William Ewart Gladstone |
Britain! a name beloved and feared |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
295-300 |
Farnworth author |
87.148 |
Witnesses |
O! think not these in nature's strength alone |
CRYER, William |
Poems By Father and Son |
CRYER, William |
M0001802LC |
4.635 |
0 |
107-110 |
Farnworth authors |
86.849 |
Witnesses |
O1 Think not these in nature's strength alone |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
204-207 |
Farnworth author |
87.136 |
World-Heroes |
How sorrow and joy keep in pace |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
431-432 |
Farnworth author |
86.880 |
Wreck of the "City of Dundee" |
We sing of the heroes of peace |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
263-264 |
Farnworth author |
86.868 |
Wreck of the Victoria |
Gone down! how the message strikes through |
CRYER, William |
Lays After Labour |
CRYER, William |
M0001804LC |
4.638 |
1.913 |
254-255 |
Farnworth author |
82.958 |
Barn owl |
The jet-black sky |
CULLEN, Bethany |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
150 |
|
80.809 |
To my loving husband |
I really don't know how our marriage has lasted |
CULLINGTON, Carol |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
40 |
|
82.149 |
New diabetic |
Stop thinking Blackberry Pies. Keep out of mind |
CULSHAW, Olive |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
54 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
82.180 |
Scorton in April |
Hillocks are bluebell-spiked and bracken-strewn |
CULSHAW, Olive |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
108 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
385 |
Tired |
It was after the child that would never be given a name |
CULSHAW, Olive |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
34 |
|
86.878 |
Worm |
As you munch every day |
CULSHAW, Olive |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
130 |
|
438 |
Song of Blackburn: an unplanted and uprooted tree |
Your grim stone walls are soft with damp |
CUNLIFFE, Dave |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
22-24 |
|
822 |
Ribblesdale |
O I was born in Lancashire in lovely Ribblesdale |
CUNNINGHAM, Beatrice |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
94-95 |
|
513 |
Today it rained |
Today it rained in Lancashire... a dreary, drizzling rain |
CUNNINGHAM, Beatrice |
Preston Writers '72 |
PRESTON WRITERS |
M0017962LC |
78.606 |
1.972 |
55 |
|
698 |
Holiday gown |
In holiday gown, and my new-fangled hat |
CUNNINGHAM, John |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
211-212 |
Tyneside |
81.373 |
Space |
The long, sparkling emptiness |
CURRAN, Joe |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
44 |
|
82.844 |
Rainy days |
Rainy days |
CURRAN, Nicola |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
86 |
|
81.529 |
Aeroplanes |
Aeroplanes go through the sky |
CURWEN, Daniel |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
127 |
|
5.295 |
War |
Ah, frantic Rage! thou first-born child of Hell! |
D. D. |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
3 |
An early fugitive poem written Blackburn |
86.703 |
Mother |
This poem written about my mother, who was only four feet, six and a half |
DAKIN, Hilda |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
51 |
|
6.016 |
Early memories |
Gazing on scenes of boyhood, I am dreaming |
DALY, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
202-203 |
|
6.017 |
The voice of Flora: in Blackburn Park |
Here in the dell as flowers of May were blowing |
DALY, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
204 |
|
82.917 |
Bombs crashing |
Bombs crashing |
DARBYSHIRE, Catherine |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
126 |
|
82.725 |
My monster |
My monster has |
DARBYSHIRE, Jack |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
17 |
|
450 |
And no-one cried |
Dark, stark, and sheer the concrete towers |
D'ARCY, B. G. |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
38 |
|
87.832 |
God's Gift to Me |
My gift was not wrapped in silken bows |
D'ARCY, Sarah |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
120 |
|
80.802 |
Fisherman's dreams |
Deep under the mountains of waves |
DARLINGTON, Chris |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
28 |
|
82.932 |
Victorian schoolroom |
A class full of disciplined children |
DARNELL, Jamie-Leigh |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
134 |
|
86.743 |
Take time to watch - find time to listen |
Sitting and staring, is she searching in vain? |
DARWIN, Pat |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
90 |
|
87.785 |
Under the shadow of the cross |
Lord, I want to thank you for the times I cannot pray |
DARWIN, Patricia |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
71 |
|
81.213 |
A canine gloss on music |
First, you bark the cutest code |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
32 |
Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.205 |
A large school in Leigh |
Skid lines on the back field |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
20 |
Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.204 |
Allotments |
Were Edens without the Eve |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
19 |
Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.196 |
Alterations |
She works where someone must have stitched her up |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
11 |
Lancashire workers No 3. Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.199 |
Artexing |
A kind of cult has inculcated |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
14 |
Lancashire workers No 6. Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.203 |
Breaking-in |
A burglar courses through these streets |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
18 |
Lancashire workers No 10. Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.197 |
Butcher and son |
For forty years, no sign. Come sun |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
12 |
Lancashire workers No 4. Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.211 |
Car dust |
Your neighbours buy a make they've sold before |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
29-30 |
Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.219 |
D8unt |
Take a 4-by-4, add 8 |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
38 |
Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.195 |
Delivery |
They are not doctors, do not slow |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
10 |
Lancashire workers No 2. Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.208 |
Dogseye-calendar |
Slush up cul-de-sacs |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
23-24 |
Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.194 |
Dropping off |
Kitchens empty, gullets drain |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
9 |
Lancashire workers No 1. Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.217 |
Drying up |
That splash of inspiration on a moor |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
36 |
Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.206 |
Homing in |
Some municipal home lies air-dropped at will |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
21 |
Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.215 |
How they sang |
Thanks |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
34 |
Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.220 |
Lancashire working (2003) |
A supple one hundred miles |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
39-40 |
Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.193 |
Living in Lancashire (1996) |
A couple of hundred meals |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
7-Aug |
Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.212 |
No showdown |
Each canine eyes another's end of alley |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
31 |
Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.201 |
Oil painter |
A broad brush in those overalls |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
16 |
Lancashire workers No 8. Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.214 |
Playground ablaze |
Dog at new brink of his breeding |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
33 |
Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.216 |
Separation letters |
Each letter came like light |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
35 |
Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.200 |
Surfacing |
A patch of days brings all they ordered here |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
15 |
Lancashire workers No 7. Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.210 |
The wonder club |
N.B. these rules for members, hereinafter |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
27-28 |
Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.207 |
Town overgrows |
Here's how it steals |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
22 |
Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.202 |
Unseen gardeners |
Too late, they come into our plots |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
17 |
Lancashire workers No 9. Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.209 |
Ward notes |
Bed 1: a travelogue badly spelt |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
25-26 |
Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.218 |
When to review |
Begin, and prove how learning knows |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
37 |
Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
81.198 |
Windows cleaned |
Coming to mind, and when it's fine, he drops in |
DAUNT, Will |
Lancashire working |
DAUNT, Will |
090775998x |
933.536 |
2.003 |
13 |
Lancashire workers No 5. Author lives in Ormskirk and is a headteacher in St. Helens |
652 |
The day I made a friend |
The forest was still and silent |
DAVENPORT, A. |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
56 |
|
5.243 |
Ah'm in t' dog'ouse |
Oh Eck, what a mess |
DAVENPORT, Albert |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
52 |
|
82.141 |
The tear |
A tear appears, crystal clear |
DAVENPORT, Albert |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
35 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
1.719 |
An old Rochdale masher |
Long ago he smelled of Brylcreem |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
Lancashire laugh lines |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
M0117137LC |
454.097 |
1.993 |
36-37 |
isbn - 1872895158. Humorous poems based on author's recollections of Preston, Oldham and Rochdale |
1.721 |
An Oldham girl |
Once her hair was blonde and crinkly |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
Lancashire laugh lines |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
M0117137LC |
454.097 |
1.993 |
40 |
isbn - 1872895158. Humorous poems based on author's recollections of Preston, Oldham and Rochdale |
1.704 |
Auntie May's corsets |
Aunt May scorned the netmeg cure |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
Lancashire laugh lines |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
M0117137LC |
454.097 |
1.993 |
5 |
isbn - 1872895158. Humorous poems based on author's recollections of Preston, Oldham and Rochdale |
1.714 |
Eeni-meeni-myni mo |
Eeni Meeni Myni Mo |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
Lancashire laugh lines |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
M0117137LC |
454.097 |
1.993 |
26-27 |
isbn - 1872895158. Humorous poems based on author's recollections of Preston, Oldham and Rochdale |
1.716 |
Five inches of bath-water |
George the Sixth, in wartime decreed |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
Lancashire laugh lines |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
M0117137LC |
454.097 |
1.993 |
30-31 |
isbn - 1872895158. Humorous poems based on author's recollections of Preston, Oldham and Rochdale |
1.706 |
Flaming Nora |
Flaming Nora - who is she? |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
Lancashire laugh lines |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
M0117137LC |
454.097 |
1.993 |
8-Sep |
isbn - 1872895158. Humorous poems based on author's recollections of Preston, Oldham and Rochdale |
1.709 |
Hot seat |
Uncle Teddy, rough and ready |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
Lancashire laugh lines |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
M0117137LC |
454.097 |
1.993 |
14-15 |
isbn - 1872895158. Humorous poems based on author's recollections of Preston, Oldham and Rochdale |
1.717 |
Make do and mend |
The Queen was in the sewing-room |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
Lancashire laugh lines |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
M0117137LC |
454.097 |
1.993 |
32-33 |
isbn - 1872895158. Humorous poems based on author's recollections of Preston, Oldham and Rochdale |
1.715 |
Manure-cure |
Old Bet from Bardsley had an uncle |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
Lancashire laugh lines |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
M0117137LC |
454.097 |
1.993 |
28-29 |
isbn - 1872895158. Humorous poems based on author's recollections of Preston, Oldham and Rochdale |
1.705 |
Nutmeg in her knickers |
My friend's Auntie Nora |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
Lancashire laugh lines |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
M0117137LC |
454.097 |
1.993 |
6-Jul |
isbn - 1872895158. Humorous poems based on author's recollections of Preston, Oldham and Rochdale |
1.718 |
Sunday best |
When we all dressed in Sunday Best |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
Lancashire laugh lines |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
M0117137LC |
454.097 |
1.993 |
34-35 |
isbn - 1872895158. Humorous poems based on author's recollections of Preston, Oldham and Rochdale |
1.712 |
The Brownies' revenge |
In Proud Preston Town, of Guild renown |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
Lancashire laugh lines |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
M0117137LC |
454.097 |
1.993 |
22-24 |
isbn - 1872895158. Humorous poems based on author's recollections of Preston, Oldham and Rochdale |
1.711 |
The Co-op - the back shop |
When Gracie Fields was Nobbut a lass |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
Lancashire laugh lines |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
M0117137LC |
454.097 |
1.993 |
20-21 |
isbn - 1872895158. Humorous poems based on author's recollections of Preston, Oldham and Rochdale |
1.710 |
The Co-op ... the front shop |
The Rochdale Pioneers of old |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
Lancashire laugh lines |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
M0117137LC |
454.097 |
1.993 |
16-19 |
isbn - 1872895158. Humorous poems based on author's recollections of Preston, Oldham and Rochdale |
1.707 |
The golden age of innocence |
When innocence was still alive |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
Lancashire laugh lines |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
M0117137LC |
454.097 |
1.993 |
10-Nov |
isbn - 1872895158. Humorous poems based on author's recollections of Preston, Oldham and Rochdale |
1.708 |
The nun's tale |
Sister Anne, in contemplation |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
Lancashire laugh lines |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
M0117137LC |
454.097 |
1.993 |
Dec-13 |
isbn - 1872895158. Humorous poems based on author's recollections of Preston, Oldham and Rochdale |
1.720 |
The Old Girl's dinner (at the 1992 Preston Guild) |
At The Park School Old Girl's Dinner |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
Lancashire laugh lines |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
M0117137LC |
454.097 |
1.993 |
38-39 |
isbn - 1872895158. Humorous poems based on author's recollections of Preston, Oldham and Rochdale |
1.713 |
This is not a dress rehearsal |
He's got to go afore I do |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
Lancashire laugh lines |
DAVENPORT, Kay |
M0117137LC |
454.097 |
1.993 |
25 |
isbn - 1872895158. Humorous poems based on author's recollections of Preston, Oldham and Rochdale |
81.368 |
In the dark |
When I look up to my ceiling |
DAVIDSON, Katie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
41 |
|
82.735 |
Merlin |
Hair and beard very long |
DAVIES, Carol |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
22 |
|
82.896 |
Splish, splash |
Splish, splash |
DAVIES, Jade |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
114-115 |
|
81.316 |
Cosmic |
I looked up one day |
DAVIES, Jennifer |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
16 |
|
81.401 |
My space dream |
Space is cold, dusty and dark |
DAVIES, Michele |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
62 |
|
81.386 |
Space |
The sun is shining bright against the blackness of space |
DAVIES, Simon |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
52 |
|
6.189 |
After the funeral(s) |
I want to be like him, be up there |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
43 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.177 |
All the Mondays |
Romance is the book she thumbs |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
30 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.198 |
Ancestral homes |
They took dark bricks fired in Lancashire ovens |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
52 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.190 |
Another look at the merry-go-line |
Out on the line, the cold |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
44 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.161 |
Canaries |
Because it is warm |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
13 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.156 |
Children, snow, and the dusk |
We are the men |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
8 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.179 |
Climb the wheel to top dead centre |
A sort of game the kids play |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
32 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.195 |
Down in the coal-yard: holding |
The tones hold, staining the yard |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
49 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.194 |
Down in the coal-yard: the wheel |
Silence is trapped in this place, air |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
48 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.157 |
Evening shadows |
Their shift completed |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
9 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.182 |
Flowers from the slag-hills |
A splash of red edges |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
35 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.186 |
Flowers from the slag-hills part 2 |
Screamed the black-suited man |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
39 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.197 |
Goodbye: for John (Jack) Davies |
Goodbye, grand ancestor, happy eh |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
51 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.164 |
Imagine: for my grandfather |
A child's eyes begin clear |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
16-17 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.176 |
Late shopping |
Tight-lipped she waits |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
29 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.160 |
Master coal-cutter |
Forever inbye. He is the jib |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
12 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.162 |
Miner's Lodge |
All pit-villages have these |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
14 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.158 |
My grandfather's brother |
The old crushed hewer |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
10 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.187 |
On a photograph of redundant colliers |
Only a small picture, and |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
40 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.174 |
Oracle |
Middling the row, this side of the road |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
27 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.159 |
Pitch and toss |
This is the place where the game |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
11 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.184 |
Pit-pond |
Black massifs ridge the sky above |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
37 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.170 |
Pit-pond swans |
These hills darkling our eyes |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
23 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.183 |
Ra |
This knot-of-lightning |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
36 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.185 |
Safety-lamp |
On the edge: a pitched tent, stark |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
38 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.175 |
Street char |
Perhaps an agreement |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
28 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.165 |
Summer days |
The brilliance of them |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
18 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.188 |
Talking steam with young David: for CJ and GT steam enthusiasts |
Young David, misanthropist, in his 50s |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
41-42 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.169 |
The Cat-Pit: not a cat in hell's chance |
Brick-lined and narrow, it was like |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
22 |
During the 19th century immigration from the countryside into the manufacturing towns of North West England caused a massive population problem. Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.192 |
The dismantling of the spoil-conveyer |
I watched it go |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
46 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.180 |
The lamp-room |
The lamp-room is lore |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
33 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.196 |
The last load |
The old engine-house |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
50 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.193 |
The levelling of the hills |
The hills come down |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
47 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.191 |
The loweringof the winding wheels |
Once more |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
45 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.181 |
The merry-go-line |
Under a defeated sky |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
34 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.171 |
The mountain |
Where the street ends |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
24 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.167 |
The new vicar: for J Whittaer - parish vicar 1935-76 |
This is a hard place for him |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
20 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.163 |
The shotfirer's issue: for those who died in the explosion 1896 |
My greatgrandfather was one |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
15 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.168 |
The sweep |
is without change; he damns all |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
21 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.199 |
There are no bends on Green Lane now |
Hauled from the outhouse |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
53 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.172 |
Tom's stone |
She worked in screening |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
25 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.178 |
Vera |
Our Vera bled last night |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
31 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.166 |
Wet-workings |
Inbye: watermen, they bathe |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
19 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
6.173 |
Whitestone |
Old woman of the street |
DAVIES, Steve |
Flowers from the slaghills |
DAVIES, Steve |
946407444 |
328.866 |
0 |
26 |
Poems about the decline of the Lancashire coalmining industry |
82.777 |
Factory |
Bang, bang, bang goes the hammer, hammer, hammer |
DAVIS, Nathan and BARON, Benjamin |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
46 |
|
81.530 |
Winter |
Cold and dark the people walk |
DAVIS, Siobhan |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
127 |
|
21 |
Vernon Dean |
The morning was gleaming in dear Ribble Valley |
DAVY, Fred |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
128-129 |
|
87.758 |
A Poem Of Thanksgiving |
Sing praises to our Heavenly Father, God, Creator all is He |
DAWSON, A Edwyn |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
43 |
|
82.848 |
Chinchilla |
I am a good creeper |
DAWSON, David |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
88 |
|
1.025 |
A welcome |
Eh, Jone, aw'm rare un' fain thae'rt come |
DAWSON, James |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
129-130 |
|
1.944 |
Good neet |
Good neet, owd friend! Aw wish thee well |
DAWSON, James |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
261-262 |
|
82.537 |
A welcome |
Eh, Jone, aw', rare un' fain thae 'rt come |
DAWSON, James Junior |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
441-442 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.442 |
A Welcome |
Eh, Jone, aw'ur rare un' fain thaert come |
DAWSON, James Junior |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
155-156 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
4.874 |
Good neet |
Good neet, owd friend! Aw wish thee well |
DAWSON, James Junior |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
120 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
82.592 |
Good neet |
Good neet, owd friend! aw wish thee well |
DAWSON, James Junior |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
469-470 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
4.478 |
Sowd up |
It's spinnin' weel today, said Joe |
DAWSON, Rev Harold |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
58-59 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.477 |
The vicar calls |
Ah'm glad to see yo' Vicar |
DAWSON, Rev Harold |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
57-58 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.479 |
What is man |
Neau let mi tell thi lad |
DAWSON, Rev Harold |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
59-60 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
86.736 |
Slowly |
The sands of Time are slipping |
DE GRAFF, Veronica |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
84 |
|
84.048 |
Awake |
Why hath the rose faded and fallen, yet these eyes have not seen |
DE LA MARE, Walter |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
2 |
Most of the poems in this book are by members of the Manchester Lyric Club |
82.719 |
Mum, will you help me? |
Mum, will you help me write a poem |
DE SILVA, Lauren |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
14 |
|
87.833 |
My Lord |
One time as I went walking in the middle of the night |
DEACON, Sara Jane |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
121 |
|
87.859 |
Praise |
Lift up your heart and rejoice in the Lord |
DEAN, Jean M. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
148 |
|
82.733 |
The volcano |
River of fire |
DEANS, Rebecca |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
21 |
|
80.266 |
The plight of the pussycat |
The Owl and the Pussycat went to sea |
DEEGAN, Ann |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
13 |
Poems about cats |
82.731 |
Merlin |
Long beard and very long hair |
DENNEY, Kyle |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
20 |
|
3.184 |
The visitation |
The town's clear distant miniature deceives |
DEREZINSKA, Helen |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
44 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.183 |
Written on a beautiful day |
On such a day, oh! how can people die |
DEREZINSKA, Helen |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
43 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
87.776 |
A Privileged Life |
Don't you find it a privelege |
DEVINE, G. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
61 |
|
87.821 |
Resurrection |
When I saw You on Your cross Lord |
DEVLIN, Christine |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
109 |
|
843 |
Chance-child |
Ah wonder who thi daddy wor? |
DEWHIRST, Ian |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
95 |
|
829 |
Johnny Lad's |
The track still goes, as in other days |
DEWHIRST, Ian |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
20 |
|
81.430 |
Night sky |
When I look into the sky at night |
DEWHURST, Andrew |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
75 |
|
82.977 |
My new year's resolutions |
I won't argue back to my parents |
DEY, Mrinalini |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
159 |
|
82.769 |
The haunted classroom |
We're in the haunted classroom |
DHABALI, Tanveer |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
42 |
|
87.845 |
Christ alone can satisfy |
Lord, if Thou canst fully, truly |
DICKENSON, Gillian |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
133 |
|
82.052 |
God is love |
Yea God is love, profound sufficiency! |
DICKINS, Clara Swain |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
199 |
|
86.689 |
In extremis |
Can't see |
DICKINSON, Hazel |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
37 |
|
344 |
Pendle |
Soft light and shade on Pendle side |
DIGBY, Austin G. |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
59 |
|
48 |
O' T' Green |
Reych up, reych up an dornd bi short |
DIGBY, R. Y. |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
197 |
|
49 |
Owd Billy |
Have yo' heeard o Owd Billy ut lived up at Bash |
DIGBY, R. Y. |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
198 |
|
863 |
Owd Pendle |
Aw've ollus lov'd owd Pendle Hill |
DIGBY, R. Y. |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
206 |
|
12 |
The Coppice |
Tha must bi cowd i' th' winter |
DIGBY, R. Y. |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
104 |
|
335 |
The Pennines |
I long to roam the moors again and hear the curlew cry |
DIGBY, R. Y. |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
61 |
|
825 |
T'moors o' Rozzendale |
Aw've thramped o't' moors o' Rozzendale |
DIGBY, R. Y. |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
108 |
|
208 |
Owd Rossendale |
A've yerd mi mother tell of heaw thi' used to ride the stang |
DIGBY, Ronald |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
37 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
123 |
Blackpoo' |
Thi con goo ut likes to t'Sleepy South an' frizzle an' fry i' t' sun |
DIGBY, Ronald Y. |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
222-223 |
|
311 |
Childhood memories |
Just an old cottage, down a green lane |
DIGBY, Ronald Y. |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
192 |
|
314 |
Lancashire |
The cloughs - the haunts of boggarts, shady dingles |
DIGBY, Ronald Y. |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
195 |
|
111 |
May day on Rowley Moor |
Before the war I always went |
DIGBY, Ronald Y. |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
185 |
|
120 |
Oise Eggs (an old Bacup tale) |
Fer helpin' wi' a flittin, Joe'd addled hawf a creawn |
DIGBY, Ronald Y. |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
218 |
|
86 |
On't moors o' Rozzendale |
Aw've tramped o't'moors o'Rozzendale |
DIGBY, Ronald Y. |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
109 |
|
341 |
The Irwell |
Most miners have great beauty |
DIGBY, Ronald Y. |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
56-57 |
|
358 |
The Pennines |
I long to roam the moors again and hear the curlew cry |
DIGBY, Ronald Y. |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
17 |
|
112 |
Ut schoo' afore t' first war |
Ring worms an' jacket sleeves shiny wi snot |
DIGBY, Ronald Y. |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
186 |
|
88 |
Ward Ogden |
Beneath the wide and open sky |
DIGBY, Ronald Y. |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
120 |
|
4.388 |
Owd Pendle |
Ah've ollus luv'd owd Pendle Hill |
DIGBY, Ronnie |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
57 |
|
4.387 |
Ut schoo' afooar t' fost waar |
Ring-worms, slimy jacket sleeves an' spots |
DIGBY, Ronnie |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
57 |
|
82.702 |
If |
If I could meet Michael Owen |
DILWORTH, Hannah |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
5 |
|
5.576 |
The bataile of Brampton or Flodden Field |
Sir Edward Stanley in the rearward was he |
DINGLEY, Francis |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
27-28 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Fragment of a longer poem. |
5.685 |
The bataile of Brampton or Flodden Field |
Sir Edward Stanley in the rearward was he |
DINGLEY, Francis |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
37-38 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland. |
2.976 |
The bataile of Brampton or Flodden Field |
Sir Edward Stanley in the rearward was he |
DINGLEY, Francis |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
27-28 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Fragment of a longer poem.Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
426 |
Message to Nelson |
Don't take away our happiness |
DINNADGE, Constance |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
7 |
|
1.027 |
Bosco Fowd |
Id were a dismal winter's neet |
DITCHFIELD, Ralph |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
133-134 |
|
84.791 |
Bosco' Fowd |
Id were a dismal winter's neet |
DITCHFIELD, Ralph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
189-190 |
|
6.006 |
Buried |
Aw diden'd expect him to dee |
DITCHFIELD, Ralph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
188 |
Death; first six stanzas only |
1.026 |
Folk knows their own 'know' t' best |
It's reet enough to give advice |
DITCHFIELD, Ralph |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
132 |
|
6.005 |
Folk knows their own 'know' t' best |
It's reet enough to give advice |
DITCHFIELD, Ralph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
187 |
|
84.788 |
May Day Song |
O bright is the day, all nature looks gay |
DITCHFIELD, Ralph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
186 |
|
6.009 |
Poor old Tom that is dead |
No muffled bell in mournful tone |
DITCHFIELD, Ralph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
192-193 |
|
6.008 |
Take it cool |
Wisdom whispers in all ages |
DITCHFIELD, Ralph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
191-192 |
|
82.564 |
The milkin'-time |
Meet me at the fowd at the milkin'-time |
DIXON, J. H. |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
36-37 |
2nd ed rev |
845 |
The milkin'-time |
Meet me at the fowd at the milkin'-time |
DIXON, J. H. |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
108 |
|
86.595 |
Eawr owd Westminster chime |
We'n getten a clock on th' mantlepiece |
DOBBS, Lionel |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
72-73 |
|
86.626 |
A bob a day |
Neaw Tum Brown was a little piecer lad |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
168-169 |
|
86.645 |
A family eawt |
Comn, Hilda lass, put thi chores aside |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
Oct-13 |
|
86.602 |
A gradely cook |
Aw've getten a farrantly wife co'd Sally |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
98-99 |
|
4.326 |
A gradely sope o' tay |
When life - it seems - is nobbut Hell |
DOBBS, Lowell |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
18 |
|
86.589 |
A gradely sope o' tay |
When life - it seems - is nobbut hell |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
65-66 |
|
5.074 |
Afore his cloth wer spun |
Owd Joss Grundy wer a dacent chap |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
18-19 |
|
86.615 |
Alberts warty caps |
Yung Albert Nutall is a quare soart o' chap |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
127-128 |
|
86.631 |
Aylo (shy) |
Mi hearts bin reet eawt -o-flunter |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
51-52 |
|
5.070 |
Bath-neet |
Aw wer allus feort on mi bath-neet |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
8-Sep |
|
86.610 |
Be o gradely cheer |
If yo're the soart ut travels sore |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
115-116 |
|
86.634 |
Bill Buckleys thievin cat |
Bill Buckley chunnered to his pal i' th' pub |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
46-47 |
|
86.621 |
Bits o slack |
Now mi dad said, like his pidgins |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
155-157 |
|
86.594 |
By gum, its the moors fer me! |
When aw'm trampin' o'er th' moors reawnd Owdham |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
70-71 |
|
5.200 |
Ceawer thi deawn |
Neaw when yo' come to eawr meetin's |
DOBBS, Lowell |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
28 |
|
86.630 |
Chappin ogen |
Mi sister Sally's a begger fer men |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
53-55 |
|
86.607 |
Cleawer thi deawn |
Neaw when yo' come to eawr meetin's |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
109-110 |
|
86.625 |
Dads owd moticar |
Neaw when mi dad bowt a moticar |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
164-167 |
|
86.586 |
Days o yore |
Heaw weel aw remember thoose days o' yore |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
62-63 |
|
86.576 |
Deawn eawr street (nobbut a glent) |
Aw've travelled owd Englund eend to eend |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
33-43 |
|
5.069 |
Eawr Hetty's mother |
Aw know aw Shudno' speak ill o'th deod |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
6-Jul |
|
86.609 |
Eawr Nell |
Eawr Nell is far the prattyest lass |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
113-114 |
|
4.327 |
Eawr owd Westminster chime |
We'n getten a clock on th' mantlepiece |
DOBBS, Lowell |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
19 |
|
86.598 |
Eawr Sallys keepin fit |
Ee, dear aw'm a reet throubled mon |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
88-89 |
|
86.606 |
Empty plates |
Young Charley Sykes wer a proper foo |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
107-108 |
|
86.623 |
Failsworth pier |
Neaw if yo' favvour grand company |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
160-161 |
|
86.584 |
Fetch |
When aw wer nobbut a lad ut whoam |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
56-57 |
|
86.612 |
Getting up fer wark |
Comn, Surah, lass, put kettle on |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
121-122 |
|
86.603 |
Greenmans farm (Greenfield) |
Bi a sweet moorlond spring tumblin' |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
100-101 |
|
86.611 |
Harvey Kershaws poetry book (A tribute to fellow Lancashire dialect writer) |
Neaw Harvey Kershaw's poetry book |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
117-120 |
|
86.614 |
I a Lankysheer park |
If theaw's never bin i' a Lankysheer park |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
125-126 |
|
86.635 |
If awd nobbut yeps o brass |
If 'ifs' wer hosses beggars ud ride |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
44-45 |
|
86.619 |
Jeremiahs cottage |
Up the lane to Hartshead Church |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
151-152 |
|
86.596 |
Lanky Lil an little Titch |
Neaw aw've getten a tale to tell thi |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
74-85 |
|
5.068 |
Lankysheer Moor |
When roamin' o'er th' Lankysheer Moor |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
4-May |
|
86.605 |
Lankysheer music |
Neaw Lankysheer music to Lankysheer folk |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
104-105 |
|
86.622 |
Little barrel |
In a poor miner's cottage one cold winter morn |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
158-159 |
|
86.644 |
Little miracle |
Aw've bin waitin' up o' neet fer thee |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
14-15 |
|
86.580 |
Memries |
Aw'm owd, wambly, an' leet on th' bone |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
48-49 |
|
86.597 |
Mi bike |
On mi ninth birthday aw remember weel |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
86-87 |
|
86.627 |
Oldham Fair (The little liars song) |
I've just been to the Oldham Fair, and what do you think I saw |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
170-171 |
|
86.600 |
Owd Ben |
Owd Ben ceawered snug i'th aleheawse nook |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
93-95 |
|
5.201 |
Owd Clinker's Gowd |
Owd Clinker wer a teet-neaved chap |
DOBBS, Lowell |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
29 |
|
86.637 |
Owd Clinker's Gowd |
Owd Clinker wer a teet-neaved chap |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
31-32 |
|
86.608 |
Owd Nap (A Lancashire wit) |
When bethinkin' owd characters i' th naybourhood |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
111-112 |
|
86.592 |
Shame on th lass! |
Shame on th' lass ut's fancy free |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
64 |
|
86.620 |
Song of the colliers |
Sam Seaurpoke wer a collier lad in eighteen fifty three |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
153-154 |
|
86.563 |
Sweet Nell fro Hathershaw |
When ut fust aw clapt mi een upon |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
1-Mar |
|
86.581 |
The autumns ere ogen |
Theer's noan mich blue i'th sky |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
50 |
|
86.618 |
The bluebell |
As o'er the moors my lass and I |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
150 |
|
86.628 |
The boggart o Chamber Ho |
Neaw gather reawnd ye Lanky folk |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
58-61 |
|
5.073 |
The cally-weighver's dowter |
There wer wonce a yung babby - a reet pratty lass |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
16-17 |
|
86.613 |
The dule i gronnys bonnet |
By gum, theer's bin some clemmin' |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
123-124 |
|
86.599 |
The haymakkers |
Bi th' winter feigher aw'm gradely glad |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
90-92 |
|
86.624 |
The leggers song |
Mi fayther is a legger on the Manchester canal |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
162-163 |
|
86.604 |
The poets song |
Aw dorn't know why aw'm a poet |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
102-103 |
|
82.131 |
The poet's song |
Aw dorn't know why aw'm a poet |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
Dec-13 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
86.590 |
Theres nowt as quare as folk |
This world is ram-jam full o' mysteries |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
67-69 |
|
5.075 |
Th'owd brass monkey |
Th'owd brass monkey wer th'pawn shop |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
20-22 |
|
86.640 |
Uncle Sam (Th owd cobbler) |
Owd Sam, it wer plain, wer a master o' his trade |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
23-25 |
|
5.077 |
Uncle sam (th'owd cobbler) |
Theer once lived I'George Street, Owdham teawn |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
23-25 |
|
86.638 |
Uncle Tum's advice |
When aw're nobbut a lad o'seventeen |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
28-30 |
|
86.617 |
Visit o the lord o Mushroom ho to Chester races |
Owd Lankysheer's had yeps o' characters |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
134-148 |
|
5.078 |
Wackery Bill |
When aw fust leet een on Wackery Bill |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
26-27 |
|
86.616 |
Whoam (Home) |
Whoam to me is an owd cottage fair |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
129-131 |
|
4.360 |
Yon briny breeze |
Come lads, Aw know yon facthry's dhree |
DOBBS, Lowell |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
41 |
|
86.601 |
Yon briny breeze |
Comn, lads, aw know yon facthry's dree |
DOBBS, Lowell |
Sneck-bants an' jannock hearts |
DOBBS, Lowell |
M0317484LC |
925.536 |
2.003 |
96-97 |
|
4.357 |
Th' owd spinner |
Thur pooin' th' owd mill deawn at last |
DOBSON, Alan |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
40 |
|
856 |
Miss Meredith |
She stands before us |
DOCKERAY, Malcolm |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
161-162 |
|
6.296 |
Pines |
Pines! Pines! Pines! That rest on the hillside springing |
DODGE, Eva |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
191-192 |
E - nom de plume |
581 |
Sacrifice |
I am constrained, restrained, cannot escape their beating |
DOE, Jane |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
6 |
|
593 |
The Host |
In the beginning, time passed by |
DOE, Jane |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
12 |
|
1.732 |
Auld Lang Syne |
The green is thronged - it is subscriber's day |
DOHERTY, Austin |
Nathan Barlow: sketches in the retired life of a Lancashire butcher |
DOHERTY, Austin |
M0129193LC |
491.555 |
18 |
62-69 |
2nd ed |
1.734 |
Charity |
One Saturday - for now he rarely rose |
DOHERTY, Austin |
Nathan Barlow: sketches in the retired life of a Lancashire butcher |
DOHERTY, Austin |
M0129193LC |
491.555 |
18 |
79-84 |
2nd ed |
1.728 |
Christmas Eve: unsettled |
Within, the hearth from blazing fire aglow |
DOHERTY, Austin |
Nathan Barlow: sketches in the retired life of a Lancashire butcher |
DOHERTY, Austin |
M0129193LC |
491.555 |
18 |
40-46 |
2nd ed |
1.731 |
Dame Barlow's tenants |
In earlier days, when Nathan and his wife |
DOHERTY, Austin |
Nathan Barlow: sketches in the retired life of a Lancashire butcher |
DOHERTY, Austin |
M0129193LC |
491.555 |
18 |
57-61 |
2nd ed |
1.727 |
Friends |
The Barlows, after walking to the station |
DOHERTY, Austin |
Nathan Barlow: sketches in the retired life of a Lancashire butcher |
DOHERTY, Austin |
M0129193LC |
491.555 |
18 |
35-39 |
2nd ed |
1.736 |
Life and death |
Seedtime to blossom, bloom to harvest led |
DOHERTY, Austin |
Nathan Barlow: sketches in the retired life of a Lancashire butcher |
DOHERTY, Austin |
M0129193LC |
491.555 |
18 |
90-95 |
2nd ed |
1.737 |
Nathan's shade |
When Nathan lay, beneath a grass-clad mound |
DOHERTY, Austin |
Nathan Barlow: sketches in the retired life of a Lancashire butcher |
DOHERTY, Austin |
M0129193LC |
491.555 |
18 |
96-101 |
2nd ed |
1.730 |
Rural variety |
One day when Nathan, somewhat touched with |
DOHERTY, Austin |
Nathan Barlow: sketches in the retired life of a Lancashire butcher |
DOHERTY, Austin |
M0129193LC |
491.555 |
18 |
52-56 |
2nd ed |
1.726 |
Settled |
Sometimes, my wench, a start 'at's bad 'll tend |
DOHERTY, Austin |
Nathan Barlow: sketches in the retired life of a Lancashire butcher |
DOHERTY, Austin |
M0129193LC |
491.555 |
18 |
30-34 |
2nd ed |
1.735 |
Sunday: at service |
The same birds sing that sing on working days |
DOHERTY, Austin |
Nathan Barlow: sketches in the retired life of a Lancashire butcher |
DOHERTY, Austin |
M0129193LC |
491.555 |
18 |
85-89 |
2nd ed |
1.724 |
The building |
When Nathan Barlow saw before his eyes |
DOHERTY, Austin |
Nathan Barlow: sketches in the retired life of a Lancashire butcher |
DOHERTY, Austin |
M0129193LC |
491.555 |
18 |
16-21 |
2nd ed |
1.725 |
The flit |
None that have long lived in one house alone |
DOHERTY, Austin |
Nathan Barlow: sketches in the retired life of a Lancashire butcher |
DOHERTY, Austin |
M0129193LC |
491.555 |
18 |
22-29 |
2nd ed |
1.733 |
The nosebag |
Next day, when Dobson woke with aching head |
DOHERTY, Austin |
Nathan Barlow: sketches in the retired life of a Lancashire butcher |
DOHERTY, Austin |
M0129193LC |
491.555 |
18 |
70-78 |
2nd ed |
1.722 |
The project |
The cuts wer sold, the rougher pieces put |
DOHERTY, Austin |
Nathan Barlow: sketches in the retired life of a Lancashire butcher |
DOHERTY, Austin |
M0129193LC |
491.555 |
18 |
5-Sep |
2nd ed |
1.729 |
The village inn |
As bees buzz round, in summer's genial hours |
DOHERTY, Austin |
Nathan Barlow: sketches in the retired life of a Lancashire butcher |
DOHERTY, Austin |
M0129193LC |
491.555 |
18 |
47-51 |
2nd ed |
1.723 |
Turning the first sod |
The site was chosen, the conveyance made |
DOHERTY, Austin |
Nathan Barlow: sketches in the retired life of a Lancashire butcher |
DOHERTY, Austin |
M0129193LC |
491.555 |
18 |
Oct-15 |
2hd ed |
82.937 |
Victorian schoolroom |
Peter is working at the window |
DON, Stephen |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
136 |
|
82.826 |
Rappin' trees |
Rap, rap, raoppin' trees |
DONLEY, Adam |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
73 |
|
3.187 |
End of April |
The spirit of a splendid girl |
DONNELLY, Norman |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
51-52 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.185 |
Fool moon and tempest |
Hurled of the gods - most silvern, miraculous shell |
DONNELLY, Norman |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
45 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.188 |
The gentle Jesus |
Not meekness; but the fire and vim |
DONNELLY, Norman |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
53 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.186 |
The modeller |
Softer and whiter than the snow that lies |
DONNELLY, Norman |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
46-50 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
82.825 |
What's that! |
What's that |
DORRIAN, Sam David |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
73 |
|
2.457 |
The message of the chimes |
While musing o'er the year gone by |
DOTCHSON, Thomas Parkinson |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
165-166 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.455 |
When I am dead |
The world will speed |
DOTCHSON, Thomas Parkinson |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
164-165 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
81.301 |
Fireworks sparkling and shining |
Fireworks, fireworks |
DOUGHTY, Hayley |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
9 |
|
6.272 |
The storm song of the sea-kings |
Furled is our bursting sail |
DOUSE, Thomas |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
164-165 |
|
81.348 |
Hamsters |
Hamsters are loveable creatures |
DOWDALL, Phoebe |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
30 |
|
87.846 |
God's gift of Spring |
Mother Nature sheds her cloak |
DOWER, KIM |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
134 |
|
86.790 |
To my mother |
Her hair a whisp of snow white fluff |
DOWNER-BOTTOMLEY, Margot |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
122 |
|
82.642 |
The file-cutter's lament to liberty |
Nay, I'm moithered, fairly maddled |
DOWNING, E. |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
82-84 |
2nd ed rev |
1.775 |
The loss of the Birkenhead: supposed to be told by a soldier who survived |
Right on our flank the sun was dropping down |
DOYLE, Sir Francis Hastings |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
57-59 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.776 |
The private of the Buffs |
Last night, among his follow roughs |
DOYLE, Sir Francis Hastings |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
59-60 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
383 |
Diminuendo |
I reach the winter of my years |
DOYLE, Winifrede |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
33 |
|
4.152 |
T' seawnd o' t' sea |
Ah wur born t' seawnd o' t' summer sea |
DOYLE, Winifrede |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
73-74 |
|
80.827 |
The ward round |
Frightened faces in clinical stillness |
DRAPER, Bernard |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
97-98 |
|
156 |
Hey for Lancashire! |
The circuit of this shire exprest |
DRAYTON, Michael |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
14-22 |
|
81.426 |
Spaceship |
Spaceships fly high in the sky |
DREVER, Callie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
73 |
|
3.189 |
Spring in town |
Spring has come a-visiting |
DREY, Agnes |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
54 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
84.063 |
A bust of Franz Josef |
Here in an Austrian market place |
DRINKWATER, John |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
16 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
256 |
A thoughless word |
How thoughtless the word that suggested an insult |
DRIVER, Lily |
Thoughtful words |
DRIVER, Lily |
M0101576LC |
386.618 |
1.991 |
46 |
|
1.007 |
A thoughtless word |
How thoughtless the word that suggested an insult |
DRIVER, Lily |
Thoughtful words |
DRIVER, Lily |
M0101576LC |
386.618 |
1.991 |
46 |
|
247 |
Apocalypse |
In the beginning there was darkness |
DRIVER, Lily |
Thoughtful words |
DRIVER, Lily |
M0101576LC |
386.618 |
1.991 |
8 |
|
244 |
Autumn gold |
Autumn like a proud phoenix, rises out from summer's ashes |
DRIVER, Lily |
Thoughtful words |
DRIVER, Lily |
M0101576LC |
386.618 |
1.991 |
4 |
|
1.004 |
Concern |
He watched her every move, his eyes warm, gentle in anticipation |
DRIVER, Lily |
Thoughtful words |
DRIVER, Lily |
M0101576LC |
386.618 |
1.991 |
6 |
|
245 |
Concord |
He watched her every move, his eyes warm, gentle in anticipation |
DRIVER, Lily |
Thoughtful words |
DRIVER, Lily |
M0101576LC |
386.618 |
1.991 |
6 |
|
248 |
Do this earth's destiny |
Devastated planet that was once so bright and blue |
DRIVER, Lily |
Thoughtful words |
DRIVER, Lily |
M0101576LC |
386.618 |
1.991 |
9 |
|
255 |
Everlasting Spring |
They say that nothing lasts forever |
DRIVER, Lily |
Thoughtful words |
DRIVER, Lily |
M0101576LC |
386.618 |
1.991 |
44 |
|
246 |
I just want peace |
I don't want my son in battledress |
DRIVER, Lily |
Thoughtful words |
DRIVER, Lily |
M0101576LC |
386.618 |
1.991 |
7 |
|
249 |
Life's autumn |
Sad eyed and melancholy |
DRIVER, Lily |
Thoughtful words |
DRIVER, Lily |
M0101576LC |
386.618 |
1.991 |
18 |
|
254 |
My temple |
I need us table covered by a spotless cloth |
DRIVER, Lily |
Thoughtful words |
DRIVER, Lily |
M0101576LC |
386.618 |
1.991 |
39 |
|
251 |
Storm clouds |
Love is a mountain that starts as a plain |
DRIVER, Lily |
Thoughtful words |
DRIVER, Lily |
M0101576LC |
386.618 |
1.991 |
24 |
|
250 |
The little man |
I am just a little man who no heroic deed has done |
DRIVER, Lily |
Thoughtful words |
DRIVER, Lily |
M0101576LC |
386.618 |
1.991 |
19 |
|
253 |
The season's children |
Scantily dressed nymph is spring, tantalising man with new delights |
DRIVER, Lily |
Thoughtful words |
DRIVER, Lily |
M0101576LC |
386.618 |
1.991 |
33 |
|
252 |
The sound of silence |
I listen to the sounds of silence while rocking in my chair |
DRIVER, Lily |
Thoughtful words |
DRIVER, Lily |
M0101576LC |
386.618 |
1.991 |
32 |
|
82.031 |
Cleopatra |
Curled serpintine, alone and unafraid |
DRONSFIELD, John |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
101 |
|
81.339 |
Life |
You have been born |
DUCKWORTH, George |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
26 |
|
82.890 |
Down in the sea |
Deep down in the sea I found one day |
DUCKWORTH, Hazel |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
111 |
|
4.382 |
Nobbut a lass |
Ello Jane Ann, eaw arta lass |
DUCKWORTH, Nan |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
54 |
|
82.173 |
True greatness |
Few people find true greatness |
DUCKWORTH, Nan |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
92 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
413 |
Wonce bitten |
Yon purly gates were opened wide |
DUCKWORTH, Nan |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
111 |
|
86.672 |
Creative thought |
The words emerging from my pen |
DUCKWORTH, Pen |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
20 |
|
6.238 |
The student's love |
Thro' the age of the Session's enslavement |
DUFFIN, Harry C. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
132-133 |
|
6.305 |
Wide waters |
Wide water of the Flatlands, on thy breast |
DUFFIN, Harry C. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
201 |
Reminiscences of yachting on the Norfolk Broads |
87.748 |
Christs Life After Death |
The cross, stood on the hill, so green |
DUFFY, Julie Colleen |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
33 |
|
5.541 |
A memorial for my sister |
I was the best toy my sister ever had |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
129 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.393 |
A narrow place |
I have pinched and scraped, sulked too long |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
29 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.395 |
A prospect of the west |
After the sudden spring, wonder of earth's waking |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
30-31 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.399 |
A question of identity |
I surface slowly, sink, rise, sink |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
34-35 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.411 |
A self-portrait Ugo Foscolo |
Face, brow, deep-scored: sunken eyes that burn |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
46 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.450 |
A statement is expected shortly |
Thrace devastated now, the barbarians |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
76 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.430 |
A study in sepia |
Slender as swans they drift back into view |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
57 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.540 |
A toast |
Here's to George, who as a lad |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
128 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.445 |
A winter journey |
Twenty-five years ago I hiccuped sobs |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
67-69 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.543 |
A woman of Nazareth |
Is not this the carpenter, the son of Mary? |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
130-131 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.572 |
Absentee |
A sudden clamour splits my skull. I reach |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
146 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.469 |
After the bombing |
Between the fire-tongued shells of warehouses |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
86 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.570 |
Afternoon in early March: East Belfast |
Pale sunlight gilds a windy sky |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
145 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.391 |
Against abstraction |
Miles don't matter |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
27-28 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.505 |
Age |
Is crossing the Mall or Aldersgate |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
109 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.478 |
Age |
Is the dead patch of skin that pricked |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
91 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.515 |
Age of heroes |
O the afternoons of those wet Sundays |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
112-113 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.425 |
All for Hecuba |
My forte was the small supporting role |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
55 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.392 |
An enemy |
Converting your base metal into gold |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
28 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.397 |
An exorcism |
The thick blood smokes. Fend off those shades |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
33 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.403 |
Anarchist |
Sapper, snorting under sleep, furiously |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
42 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.546 |
Ancestry |
A minor setback here and there, a few |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
132 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.362 |
Anglican church: West Cork |
A surprise, after the slap and suck of tide |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
4-May |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.438 |
Apocalypse |
Legend says they were let down |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
62-63 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.526 |
Apparition |
Fuckin' foreigner, he said, his pale, mad face |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
118-119 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.471 |
At Saul |
Rouse me, March, from this long torpor |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
87 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.416 |
Aubade |
The stab-wound on the skyline bleeds |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
49 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.567 |
Aunt Sissie |
They can say what they like about your Sissie |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
142-144 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.407 |
Autopsy on the fourth decade |
No call, you think, for panic yet |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
44 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.455 |
Back to the basics |
Here we go again: pulse, temperature |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
79 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.424 |
Backwater |
Tranquil in the sun, the suburbs drowse |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
54 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.545 |
Ballymacarrett blues: summer 1994 |
They'll soon be dancing on our graves you'll see |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
132 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.569 |
Beginnings and ends |
It's the women mostly who get the worst of things |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
145 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.365 |
Belfast |
City of gull-flecked gantries, cloudy city |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
7 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.402 |
Bog |
Black contusions bruise the frame |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
41 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.468 |
But for your gifts |
But for your gifts, Lord, of poetry |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
85-86 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.544 |
Camouflage |
Most strip now well in youth |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
131-132 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.459 |
Candles |
I have lit candles for you all through Greece |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
81 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.529 |
Celtic bard, burgher's wife |
Grizzled, broke, with a small child's grasping hands |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
120 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.562 |
Christmas Eve |
Glancing up as we climbed into the car |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
141 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.413 |
Clerk's tale |
Suddenly this morning Autumn's slow |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
47 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.542 |
Closed shop |
Senior retired civil servants |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
130 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.448 |
Columbkille |
The mountains sprang to guard his birth |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
74-75 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.433 |
Corncrake in October |
All summer long through my lank youth |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
58-59 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.504 |
Cretan mantinada |
Rank, riches, fame I never envied |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
109 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.521 |
Crossings |
It always started after dark, that journey |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
116-117 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.434 |
Dalesmen in Craven |
Like lovers they run |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
59-60 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.482 |
Daybreak |
As, in a silent town, life stirs |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
93-94 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.410 |
Definitions |
Lust first - the common itch |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
46 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.479 |
Diplomatic reception |
Drinks in hand they bellow |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
92 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.409 |
Disciplinary case |
Reading the file from front to back (the wrong |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
45 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.439 |
Dolphins |
According to Aesop they were witty |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
63 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.532 |
Domestic interior |
Winter kills them off, old dog, old people |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
121 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.490 |
Donegal |
Look, this land, mist-shawled |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
101 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.376 |
Downham revisited |
Cold, witchered country this I walk today |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
16-17 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.364 |
Dublin |
Autumn blusters in the square. Squalls of rain |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
6 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.372 |
Easter in Craven |
East wind gnaws the fells, rubs |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
12 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.491 |
Elder statesman |
He was shopping, he said, leaning on his stick |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
101-102 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.476 |
Encounters |
Some are by fate, not accident |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
89 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.453 |
End of season |
Like a playful smack on a barmaid's bottom |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
77-78 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.556 |
End of the affair |
After much painful cogitation |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
138 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.561 |
Epiphany |
The first faint stir of life in field and byre |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
140 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.396 |
Evensong |
Mist-fall, leaf-fall, the plane trees flare |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
31-33 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.568 |
Family tree |
Good mixer, matey, never doubting himself |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
144 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.500 |
Final act |
The game is up, the handcuffs on, stalls and pit |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
107 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.406 |
Fire risk |
Behind the squared-off, plate-glass thoroughfares |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
43-44 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.557 |
Five Cretan mantinades and an epigram by Plato |
They are much alike, Love and Time |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
138-139 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.384 |
Fontier incident |
That day the first rumours reached the City |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
23 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.381 |
For better or worse |
Assured of my inheritance |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
20 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.388 |
Galatea to Pygmalion |
Now my blocked mouth is loosed. My eyes |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
26 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.531 |
Gerousia |
The first bright day of spring draws them out again |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
120-121 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.483 |
Glenarm |
Ageing man, I walk the lanes alone |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
94 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.464 |
Grief |
Slow as slugs the lines |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
83 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.379 |
Gt Portland Street |
Caught in the undertow of memory |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
19 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.538 |
Half-remembered things |
My brother dead, they hold no interest now |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
127 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.501 |
Hallowe'en |
Beautiful pale girls whose copper hair |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
107 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.560 |
Harvest |
Age winnows, threshes, blows away the chaff |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
140 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.374 |
Haven Street |
Uncle Henry always wore his cap indoors |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
13-15 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.373 |
Haworth |
First through the comfortable cotton towns |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
Dec-13 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.467 |
Higher Hodder |
On Hodder Bridge I pause to map |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
84-85 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.503 |
Homage to the bard |
Whose poems run straight |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
108-109 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.463 |
Home for Christmas |
The people I encounter in the street |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
82-83 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.466 |
How to become an Alexandrian |
You lecture in English. This confers prestige |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
84 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.435 |
Hurstwood |
Edmund Spenser lived here once in youth, head full |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
60-61 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.498 |
In a large Greek colony: 200BC |
That things aren't what they should be in the colony |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
105-106 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.477 |
In memoriam G B Newe |
A staff nurse through the sleeping ward |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
89-91 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.499 |
Inner city |
How it blows, skimming salt-marsh, slobland |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
106 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.527 |
Insomnia |
Last night I laid an ambush |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
119 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.444 |
Ithaca |
Beyond the black, rumbustious straits |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
66 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.460 |
Journey's end |
Expresses glide now into termini; screws |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
81 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.361 |
Kerry |
Here Ireland thrusts a great arthritic fist |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
4 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.370 |
Landfall |
Stiff-gaited, cumbersome, the great still bird |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
10-Nov |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.564 |
Landscape in winter |
How fleeting now, how rare these visitations |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
142 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.415 |
Lares |
What need have you to ring the bell |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
48 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.519 |
Last night |
Last night I saw you in my dreams again |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
115 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.508 |
Leader of men |
Strange how they foundered under him, each ship |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
109 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.449 |
Lent |
East by north all winter through |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
75-76 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.537 |
Limbo |
The track ends here in reeds, and fog |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
123 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.369 |
Lines for an old lady |
So they are all to go, then - church |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
9-Oct |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.418 |
Littoral |
On a rock or reef, this spit of land |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
49-52 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.497 |
Long-distance coach station |
They fetch us back, familial errands |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
104-105 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.368 |
Louis MacNeice |
Alone in the keen air a hawk swings wide |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
9 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.502 |
Lovers |
Deciphering the manuscripts exhumed |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
107-108 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.558 |
Lower orders |
I once saw Compton make seventy at Lord's |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
139 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.552 |
Maker |
They float into the mind |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
135 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.554 |
Man of property |
I had hoped for something more commodius |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
136-137 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.408 |
Marches |
After dark, it is best to keep moving |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
45 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.465 |
Mason |
That I read your verses always on some train |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
83 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.550 |
Medical ward |
You lie down here with strangers likewise |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
134 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.520 |
Medizers |
They were rational men, the Medizers |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
115-116 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.528 |
Metamorphosis |
Tall, grey-eyed, she moved through summer with the lithe |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
119 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.462 |
Michaelmas |
Above a shining sea honeysuckle |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
82 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.487 |
Moralities |
Given that human nature gravitates |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
96-98 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.518 |
Mr Cavafy's Byzantine Archon versifying in his exile |
Conventional stuff, you say |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
114-115 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.510 |
Natural history |
The spiders hidden in high places here |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
110 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.426 |
Nekuia |
Those landfalls on the coasts of death. Twice |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
55 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.493 |
New management |
The rooms were empty but the lights still on |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
102-103 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.427 |
Night-ferry |
Winking headlands dowsed by dawn |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
55-56 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.437 |
No second Troy? |
Well past (for the most part) military age |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
61-62 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.389 |
Nocturne |
Tangled in gantries still, a struggling moon |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
26-27 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.412 |
Northern spring |
Whins blaze along the coast |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
47 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.436 |
Not in the brochure |
By plane this time, by coach they come |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
61 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.417 |
November afternoon |
Rock ribs the foreshore at low tide. Gulls |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
49 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.509 |
Old man sitting in the park |
To renounce the world is one thing |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
110 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.525 |
Olympic games |
Afterwards, did he boast, say he was sorry |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
118 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.394 |
On a recent happy event |
That clammy toad with popped |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
29-30 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.359 |
One and many |
Lord, let me now and then forget |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
3 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.563 |
One of the boys |
I am a freedom-fighter. I kill and maim |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
141 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.533 |
Overture and beginners |
Beware the curse of general praise |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
121 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.452 |
Pantechnicon |
This thing goes faster and faster. Brakes worn |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
77 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.380 |
Pavane for the Forty-five |
They are shadows all, cloudy presences |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
19-20 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.371 |
Pennines |
Mere bacilli the diesels crawl below |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
11 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.432 |
Peripeteia |
In the age before school-milk and meals |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
58 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.366 |
Persephone |
Although it cannot last |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
8 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.387 |
Perseus |
Somehow it must be done. Cleched will |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
25-26 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.360 |
Personal appearance |
He strides in from another world, this man |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
3-Apr |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.458 |
Pillar of society |
Yes, he hankered for respectability |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
80 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.423 |
Place and time |
Climbing the stair this scowling night |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
54 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.559 |
Planter |
In a quarter of the garden where other trees |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
139-140 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.522 |
Polonius complains |
It's not the spells of dullness or mere vacancy |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
117 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.461 |
Polycrates' ring |
My brother of Egypt counsels me |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
82 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.382 |
Poor Fitz |
Died as he lived, an apostate; was buried |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
20-21 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.547 |
Prelude |
After night's turbulence a silent dawn |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
133 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.513 |
Pre-retirement course |
Solon, the Athenian |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
111 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.421 |
Problem family |
Squalling brats |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
53 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.506 |
Progeny |
His dreaming head, beached high and dry at dawn |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
109 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.401 |
Prolegomena for John Smith |
Evanescent, thin as smoke, the cries |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
39-41 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.420 |
Proper names |
Ballydehob, for instance |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
52-53 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.454 |
Provincia deserta |
Well, here it is: not Botany Bay |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
78-79 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.386 |
Queene and huntresse |
You define my world; bring |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
25 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.456 |
Quis multa gracilis |
Short back-and-sides, I slump into a chair |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
79 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.375 |
Reasons of state |
Mostly the butchery occurred elsewhere |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
15-16 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.422 |
Recluse |
Years ago you slammed the door |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
53 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.555 |
Rector |
We sat in the kitchen, four of us |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
137-138 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.429 |
Remembrance of things past |
The rural gods? Those rough bucolics rich |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
57 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.530 |
Remorse |
Oh no: that it should come to this |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
120 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.390 |
Retrospect |
Ares and Aphrodite snared |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
27 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.516 |
Ribblesdale |
Like the flash of a kingfisher's wing |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
113 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.492 |
Robin among summer visitors |
Connoisseur of bread crumbs and grilled bacon rind |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
102 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.553 |
Rue Lepsius |
Shall I install electric light, he said |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
136 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.486 |
Running repairs |
It won't be much of a job, you understand |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
96 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.405 |
Salmon-leap: Co. Mayo |
This sliding world - the lick |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
43 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.523 |
Satan's advice |
Let it cohabit, this animal |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
117 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.441 |
Scheria |
What visions in that leaping light |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
64 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.442 |
Scholar emeritus |
As Lesbos rose on the port bow |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
65 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.472 |
Scholar in the library |
A flash of legs and high heels past his desk |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
87 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.494 |
School photograph |
Head prefect, Captain of the First XI |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
103 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.548 |
Scrapheap |
Never start something that you cannot finish |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
133 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.571 |
Sea and stars |
I walk along the dunes. A westering sun |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
145-146 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.398 |
Sea-change |
What laughter stirs him, couched |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
34 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.414 |
Seated king and queen |
The wind intones its rumours through their heads |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
48 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.474 |
Second-hand bookstall |
In the photograph that forms the frontpiece |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
88-89 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.480 |
Shipwrecked mariner |
The sea-cleft, shadowed coast drew him unaware |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
92-93 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.549 |
Shoreditch |
Fat she may be and old and gray, no longer a pretty sight |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
134 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.489 |
Shrouded coast |
Fend off those shades. They throng my dreams |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
101 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.488 |
Silence |
We have quarrelled before, and parted. But |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
98 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.400 |
Single ticket |
To a flutter of flags and handkerchiefs |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
35-36 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.484 |
Small hours |
Coming back from that long journey |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
94-95 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.404 |
Some notes for impartial observers |
Flown over, it is a conurbation |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
42 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.457 |
Souterrain |
I wonder about this Macedonian |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
80 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.431 |
South Manchester revisited |
These strokes come thick an' heavy, mon |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
58 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.481 |
Specimen |
Where has it gone, that gift |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
93 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.447 |
Spirit of place |
These days I know you only |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
73 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.517 |
St James, Piccadilly |
Wealth and fashion once adorned this chuch |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
113-114 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.524 |
Staff party |
She looked experienced as well as pretty |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
118 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.551 |
Sunday service |
Through the midlands now on a warm summer's evening |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
134-135 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.367 |
Swift |
Dread like a storm-cloud from the start |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
8-Sep |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.507 |
Talking head |
It isn't just what fills the frame or box |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
109 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.428 |
Terminus |
This bedlam in my head, like Waterloo |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
56 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.443 |
Thasos |
Morning sparkles in the bay |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
65-66 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.514 |
The commissars confirm their short list |
Yes, these are the big names. In their cots |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
111-112 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.383 |
The disposition of the weather |
My landscape turns to winter everywhere |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
22 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.377 |
The farther shore |
Heysham slides past the window, once again |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
17-18 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.440 |
The last Alexandrian |
I rummage through his multiple disguises |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
64 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.534 |
The other kingdom |
Winter would be worst, I thought, its wild storms |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
121 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.566 |
The roundabout |
I have grown more reclusive still with age |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
142 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.485 |
Theodotus |
Consider carefully, you who belong |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
95 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.446 |
Theologian |
Stooped, blinking at the light, he shambled in |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
73 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.565 |
There are more things |
Civilizations have collapsed before |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
142 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.475 |
To an English liberal, ten years on |
They bomb and burn and slaughter still. 'Why yet?' you cry |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
89 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.385 |
To Venus |
Not again, O surely not again, dear lady |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
24-25 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.378 |
Tourist season |
Buttocks like balloons squeezed in their chairs |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
18 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.511 |
Trading station |
Blown off course, storm-battered and leak-sprung |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
110 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.470 |
Travelling westward |
Travelling westward this day through the shires |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
86-87 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.473 |
Trivia |
Crowning these hills, a knot of roads |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
88 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.495 |
Tryst |
Wind frets the low peninsula |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
103-104 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.363 |
Two in Connemara |
This business man whose affable 'Good mornings' |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
5 |
Published in a volume entitled 'A prospect of the West' (1970). Burnley born author |
5.496 |
Tynan |
However slow its onset, catastrophe |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
104 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.451 |
Visitation |
I recognised first the gesture |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
77 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Running Repairs' (1983). Burnley born author |
5.419 |
Waste |
Is what goes down the plug-hole of our lives |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
52 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Corncrake in October' (1978). Burnley born author |
5.512 |
What's wrong with Aberystwyth |
When she was twenty-one, Aunt Bertha |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
110-111 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.536 |
White church at Ballintoy |
The village lines the coastal road, a thin |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
122-123 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.539 |
Young man and old |
Don't grind your teeth, cantankerous old fool |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
127 |
New and unpublished poems (1991-1995). Burnley born author |
5.535 |
Zoo |
They screech and gibber, scutter, scratch and stink |
DUGDALE, Norman |
Collected poems 1970-1995 |
DUGDALE, Norman |
1873687451 |
655.982 |
1.997 |
122 |
Published in a volume entitled 'Limbo' (1991). Burnley born author |
5.320 |
Dugdale's answer |
Uneducated orphan, I |
DUGDALE, Richard |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
36 |
|
5.321 |
Lines |
It never was decreed by God |
DUGDALE, Richard |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
36-37 |
Tyranny; Justice; Corporal punishment |
5.323 |
Lines on a spring near the poet's birthplace |
On a cottager's fare, in my home near yon spring |
DUGDALE, Richard |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
37 |
|
5.315 |
Lines on an orphan |
An Orphan, I was lonely left |
DUGDALE, Richard |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
31 |
Written Branch Road, Blackburn May 1838 |
5.316 |
Lodge song: a parody on Burns's 'Highland Mary' |
Ye brothers bright in friendship bound |
DUGDALE, Richard |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
32 |
|
5.318 |
On the death of a little grand-daughter |
Sweet child! Departed day-star of my soul |
DUGDALE, Richard |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
34-35 |
|
5.319 |
Lines on a spray of hawthorns |
Hail, infant of a happy year |
DUGDALE, Robert |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
35 |
|
5.317 |
Stanzas to the memory of the immortal Robert Burns |
One hundred years and one have passed away |
DUGDALE, Robert |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
33-34 |
|
81.400 |
Night |
The owl flies down to catch its prey |
DUGGAN, Jodie Lee |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
61 |
|
81.367 |
The colours of my paintbox |
Black in the middle of a sunflower growing in the sun |
DUIGAN, Gemma |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
40-41 |
|
81.403 |
Into space |
As I go up into space |
DUNHAM, Amy |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
63 |
|
82.700 |
Anger |
Anger is like rage that twists your body inside out |
DUNN, Shinade |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
4 |
|
4.141 |
Eawr picnic club eawtin' ter Blackpoo' |
It's hawf ten of a Setday, and't lads are rarin't goo |
DUTTON, Dave |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
59-61 |
|
5.262 |
Fer a doomed factory chimney |
Creawds o' fooak av come fert watch thi dee |
DUTTON, Dave |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
11 |
|
4.365 |
I' memory o' Gran: a young man-married now and with a family - remembers his grandmother |
Ah see thi still. Sittin' theer |
DUTTON, Dave |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
45 |
|
5.261 |
In eawr teawn |
In eawr teawn, we live on t' dole |
DUTTON, Dave |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
10 |
|
4.097 |
Owd Thrumble's owd thrombone |
There's an owd mon lives at th'eend o't street, wi know as just 'Owd Thrumble' |
DUTTON, Dave |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
10-Dec |
|
4.100 |
Seawnd o't sea |
Row on row they come in hard |
DUTTON, Dave |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
15-16 |
|
4.363 |
Surreawnded bi flowers |
Me mam were an ordin'ry Lancashire lass - she'd worked in the mill most her life |
DUTTON, Dave |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
44 |
|
6.515 |
A summer day |
At the break of the morn, when the crest of the hill |
DUXBURY, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
354-355 |
|
6.514 |
Hooam an' clubland |
Id wer a winter's evenin' |
DUXBURY, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
351-353 |
|
6.513 |
Only a word |
Only a word, a little word |
DUXBURY, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
350-351 |
|
6.473 |
The song of the wind |
Yo ho! Yo ho! I gently blow |
DUXBURY, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
349-350 |
|
6.472 |
Those dear old songs |
O sing to me those dear old songs, sung in the long ago |
DUXBURY, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
348-349 |
|
80.828 |
I am the miner |
I am the miner |
DYER, Steve |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
98 |
|
81.285 |
Fireworks |
Sparkling, shining in the sky |
DYKES, Lucas |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
1 |
|
82.854 |
I wish |
I wish I had a big posh house |
EADSON, Anthony |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
92-93 |
|
81.385 |
The shooting star |
I saw a shooting star one night |
EARLE, Leanne |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
52 |
|
82.821 |
Green |
Green is a gremlin crawling in the caves |
EARLE, Sam |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
71 |
|
80.829 |
Time concerned |
I've never been time concerned |
EASSON, John |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
99 |
|
500 |
Guilty |
Guilty! he boomed from his prominent seat |
EASTHAM, B. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
51 |
|
501 |
Show me |
Show me the stones which absorbed His Blood |
EASTHAM, B. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
52 |
|
82.019 |
Nature's music |
There is music by the river |
EASTHAM, David |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
63 |
|
80.852 |
Edible Island |
There once was an island, far away |
EASTUP, Alison |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
132 |
|
1.837 |
An apology |
I wish to meet you, one and all |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
167-168 |
|
1.838 |
An appreciation |
When in my sickness laid aside |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
172-173 |
|
1.856 |
Before thine altar, God of grace |
Before Thine altar, God of grace |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
174-175 |
|
1.866 |
Blue bell |
A bonny little bluebell, all alone an-bi-thi-sel |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
176-177 |
|
1.874 |
Call the Sabbath a delight |
The angel breath of Sabbath morn |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
174 |
|
1.902 |
Dan Taylor |
Can we find a place on the nation's scroll |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
25 |
|
1.946 |
Grandchild - reflections |
The innocent look of a little child |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
28 |
|
1.952 |
Hallowed memories |
What hallowed memories cluster round |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
170-171 |
|
1.977 |
If I were you |
If I were you and you were I |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
31 |
|
1.985 |
In this our time of need |
In this our time of need |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
21-22 |
|
1.987 |
It's brown |
Our cousins, you see, from over the sea |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
168-169 |
|
2.005 |
Light of Life |
Give us the light that ne'er was cast |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
181 |
|
2.010 |
Lines written on the coming of age of my first nephew |
In years that are gone I saw thee |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
169-170 |
|
2.042 |
Missionary Hymn |
Send out Thy servants far away |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
171-172 |
|
2.046 |
Moorland ramble |
More than a hundred strong today |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
27-28 |
|
2.073 |
O what a joy |
O what a joy it is to sing |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
173 |
|
2.084 |
Our five |
Five of them-good stalwart men |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
26-27 |
|
2.113 |
Regret |
Ah! Bobby, mi lad, it mak's mi sad |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
179 |
|
2.153 |
Storm music |
Hearken to the music sweet |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
177-178 |
|
2.180 |
The bridge of life |
The bridge of fate, the bridge of tears |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
178 |
|
2.200 |
The first treat |
Off to Burnsall with the children |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
23-24 |
|
2.208 |
The good old days |
We've seen some wonderful things in our time |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
29-30 |
|
2.293 |
Tis not on earth that I shall see |
Tis not on earth that I shall see |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
181-182 |
|
2.310 |
To my sweetheart |
O! those eyes, those charming eyes! |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
28-29 |
|
2.334 |
What glorious hours |
What glorious hours our souls have seen |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
175-176 |
|
2.353 |
Words of cheer |
If the mountains we must climb |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
22-23 |
|
2.354 |
Would Nots |
I would not miss the glorious sight |
EASTWOOD, Daniel |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
179-181 |
|
381 |
The listener |
He stands, hands in pockets |
EASTWOOD, Elizabeth B. |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
32 |
|
81.308 |
Foxes |
Foxes sneak int he night |
EAVES, Lawrence |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
12 |
|
4.481 |
Pennine ramble |
Let's away, to the hills today |
EBRON |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
61-62 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.480 |
To a wife returned from hospital |
Aw'm glad tha's come whoam, lass |
EBRON |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
61 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
835 |
Aunt Nancy |
Aunt Nancy's one o' t' savin' sort |
ECCLES, J. H. |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
52-53 |
|
82.571 |
Aunt Nancy |
Aunt Nancy's one o' t' savin' sort |
ECCLES, J. H. |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
49-51 |
2nd ed rev |
82.570 |
Ode to t' mooin |
I like to see thy quaint owd face |
ECCLES, J. H. |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
47-49 |
2nd ed rev |
2.460 |
Deein be inches |
A'm deein be inches tha knaws weel enuf |
ECCLES, Joseph H. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
172-173 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.461 |
Keep aght ov debt |
Keep aght ov debt - it's gud advice |
ECCLES, Joseph H. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
173-175 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.462 |
The lock of flaxen hair |
I have aloc of flaxen hair |
ECCLES, Joseph H. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
175-176 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
87.669 |
A bit of a do |
We'd had this invitation |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
18 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.670 |
A major affair |
I've a cautionary tale to tell you |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
19 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.676 |
A penny for Doris |
Well I'll tell you, me and Doris |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
27 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.671 |
After the flood |
You'd never believe last Friday |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
21 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.674 |
All creatures great and small |
We enjoy a good wedding, Doris and me |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
25 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.863 |
Bert and Leonard's War |
When our country called us |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
7 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.878 |
Big Organs and Mussels |
We wish you could see our photo |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
23 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.679 |
Big turkeys and small parcels |
What sort of Christmas have you had? |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
31 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.870 |
Bowling with jack |
We thought we might try this bowling thing |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
16 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.882 |
Brief Encounter |
We're sat in the station buffet |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
27 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.876 |
Bunions and Beckham |
Doris has been limping lately |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
21 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.714 |
Childhood Memories |
We've been looking back over the past fifty years |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
33 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.867 |
Driven round the u bend |
We've had some trouble this weekend |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
11 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.866 |
Dumplings on t'Menu |
Do you know what we did last weekend |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
10 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.874 |
Eureka and Len |
Our Len's been busy at weekends |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
19 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.665 |
Executives and dodgy dealers |
Talk about right shady characters |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
11 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.678 |
Flash bang wallop |
We fancied following trend this Christmas |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
30 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.660 |
Foreword |
Of Doris and Elsie... what can be said |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
1 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.871 |
Golf Balls and Sugar |
We fancied British Open |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
17 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.672 |
Good vibrations |
This morning Bert woke with a smile on his face |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
22 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.864 |
Her at No.4 |
We've decided to go on a diet |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
8 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.879 |
Jungle Drums and Net Curtains |
Since watching David Attenborough |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
24 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.862 |
Land Army Girls |
They sent us to dig for victory |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
6 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.675 |
Legacys and toupes |
Well we've had a bit of an upset |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
26 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.865 |
Loose Teeth and Women |
Doris is having a bit of trouble |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
9 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.666 |
Morecambe Bay shrimps |
We were up early Sunday morning |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
13 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.680 |
Old |
How do you know when you're getting old |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
32 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.668 |
Publish and be damned |
Doris I said Now we're out in print |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
15 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.868 |
Purple Curls and Leather Pants |
I said to Doris last weekend |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
14 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.673 |
Shiny red plums and powder |
Have you ever fancied a makeover? |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
23 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.667 |
Smelly feet and caravans |
Doris has gone on a holiday |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
14 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.664 |
Spreading the Sheets |
It was a week last Sunday morning |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
10 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.677 |
The Christmas fairy |
They've been auditioning for Christmas Santas |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
29 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.883 |
The Gin Palace |
I called for Doris at eight o'clock |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
28 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.875 |
The Shortsight Saga |
Forget the Sunday night saga |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
20 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.662 |
Union flag bikinis and jelly |
Me and Doris were up at crack of dawn |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
7 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.661 |
Valentines and dirty washing |
Eh Doris, I said These seats are hard |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
5 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.861 |
Vera |
We were around during the war years |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
5 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.873 |
Vicars and Cricket Balls |
Here we all are sat in t'hospital |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
18 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.663 |
Walking the plank |
You wouldn't believe the weekend we've had |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
Beyond infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432939 |
999.170 |
2.002 |
9 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.881 |
Warts and All |
If you watch the sky on Halloween |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
26 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.877 |
Wee Hairy Highlanders |
We were at stand P on the Boulevard |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
22 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.869 |
White Lycra and Chippy Teas |
We went away last weekend |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
15 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
87.880 |
Y Fronts and Magazines |
We decided to have a good clear out |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
To infirmity and beyond...Doris and Elsie |
ECCLESTON, Kath |
953432920 |
881.393 |
2.002 |
25 |
Humorous poems broadcast on Radio Lancashire. Anne Wareing lives in Clayton-le-Moors |
81.289 |
A spell to keep children quiet |
Croak of frogs |
ECKERSLEY, Kate |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
3 |
|
81.699 |
All God's children |
Till all God's children |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
42 |
|
81.693 |
Beer is best |
Dad staggers in |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
30-31 |
|
81.691 |
Jasper the plant |
There's a dear |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
26-28 |
|
81.680 |
Jubilee, Jubilee! |
Jubilee, Jubilee |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
1 |
|
81.696 |
My wild, wild beauty |
Two kindred souls |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
35-36 |
|
81.685 |
Oh I wish I'd passed me test |
Oh I wish I'd passed me test |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
9-Nov |
|
81.700 |
Old fashioned Christmas |
Give me |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
43 |
|
81.690 |
The addict |
The carousel revolves |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
24-25 |
|
81.692 |
The bargain-hunters |
Winter had not surrendered |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
29-30 |
|
81.682 |
The giant killer shark |
A clear blue a sky |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
4 |
|
81.695 |
The mystery |
Can't think why |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
33-34 |
|
81.687 |
The nudist camp escapade |
Larry stretches his arms |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
15-18 |
|
81.698 |
The painted caravan |
Down a lonely country lane |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
40-41 |
|
81.686 |
The penalty |
As the bite of winter |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
Dec-14 |
|
81.688 |
The rodeo |
A rodeo |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
19-20 |
|
81.681 |
The sauna |
Me, and the wife |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
2-Mar |
|
81.697 |
The window hat story |
What's a window hat |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
37-39 |
|
81.689 |
The wrestling match |
The referee arrives |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
21-23 |
|
81.683 |
The zoo |
I'll never forget the day |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
5-Jul |
|
81.684 |
Vietnam |
I arrived a boy in Vietnam |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
8 |
|
81.694 |
Voodoo |
Voodoo...............Voodoo |
ECKLES, Noreen |
Poetry cocktail |
ECKLES, Noreen |
M0061027LC |
267.872 |
1.977 |
32 |
|
4.071 |
Albert and the 'eadsman |
On young Albert Ramsbottom's birthday |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert, 'Arold and others |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0038136LC |
141.205 |
0 |
14-16 |
|
6.808 |
Albert and the 'eadsman |
On young Albert Ramsbottom's birthday |
EDGAR, Marriott |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: Albert, 'Arold and others |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
14-16 |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
4.434 |
Asparagus |
Mr Ramsbottom went to the races |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert and Balbus and Samuel Small |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0039591LC |
149.230 |
0 |
18-19 |
Includes "Sam's medal", by Mabel Constanduros and Michael Hogan |
4.438 |
Balbus (the Great Wall of China) |
I'll tell you the story of Balbus |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert and Balbus and Samuel Small |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0039591LC |
149.230 |
0 |
27-29 |
Includes "Sam's medal", by Mabel Constanduros and Michael Hogan |
4.437 |
Burghers of Calais |
It were after the Battle of Crecy |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert and Balbus and Samuel Small |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0039591LC |
149.230 |
0 |
24-26 |
Includes "Sam's medal", by Mabel Constanduros and Michael Hogan |
5.109 |
Canute the Great |
I'll tell of Canute, King of England |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Normans and Saxons and such: some ancient history |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0001382LC |
3.457 |
1.949 |
2-May |
Stanley Holloway monologues: see also G H Goodwin |
80.785 |
Canute the Great 1017 - 1035 |
I'll tell of Canute, King of England |
EDGAR, Marriott |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: Normans and Saxons and such - some ancient history |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
2-May |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
4.397 |
George and the dragon |
I'll tell you the tale of an old country pub |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert and Balbus and Samuel Small |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0039591LC |
149.230 |
0 |
10-Dec |
Includes "Sam's medal", by Mabel Constanduros and Michael Hogan |
4.073 |
Goalkeeper Joe |
Joe Dunn were a bobby for football |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert, 'Arold and others |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0038136LC |
141.205 |
0 |
20-21 |
|
6.810 |
Goalkeeper Joe |
Joe Dunn were a bobby for football |
EDGAR, Marriott |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: Albert, 'Arold and others |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
20-22 |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
4.074 |
Gunner Joe |
I'll tell you a seafaring story |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert, 'Arold and others |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0038136LC |
141.205 |
0 |
22-23 |
|
6.811 |
Gunner Joe |
I'll tell you a seafaring story |
EDGAR, Marriott |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: Albert, 'Arold and others |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
|
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
5.114 |
Henry the Seventh 1485 - 1509 |
Henry the Seventh of England |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Normans and Saxons and such: some ancient history |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0001382LC |
3.457 |
1.949 |
27-31 |
Stanley Holloway monologues: see also G H Goodwin |
80.790 |
Henry the Seventh 1485 - 1509 |
Henry the Seventh of England |
EDGAR, Marriott |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: Normans and Saxons and such - some ancient history |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
28-32 |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
4.436 |
Joe Ramsbottom |
Joe Ramsbottom rented a bit of a farm |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert and Balbus and Samuel Small |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0039591LC |
149.230 |
0 |
22-23 |
Includes "Sam's medal", by Mabel Constanduros and Michael Hogan |
4.439 |
Jonah and the grampus |
I'll tell you the story of Jonah |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert and Balbus and Samuel Small |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0039591LC |
149.230 |
0 |
30-32 |
Includes "Sam's medal", by Mabel Constanduros and Michael Hogan |
4.077 |
Little Aggie |
When Joe Dove took his elephants out on the road |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert, 'Arold and others |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0038136LC |
141.205 |
0 |
30-32 |
|
6.814 |
Little Aggie |
When Joe Dove took his elephants out on the road |
EDGAR, Marriott |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: Albert, 'Arold and others |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
30-31 |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
4.070 |
Marksman Sam |
When Sam Small joined the regiment |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert, 'Arold and others |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0038136LC |
141.205 |
0 |
Nov-13 |
|
6.807 |
Marksman Sam |
When Sam Small joined the regiment |
EDGAR, Marriott |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: Albert, 'Arold and others |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
Nov-13 |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
5.112 |
O lady, lady, stop awhile |
I'll tell of King 'Enery the Second |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Normans and Saxons and such: some ancient history |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0001382LC |
3.457 |
1.949 |
17-20 |
Stanley Holloway monologues: see also G H Goodwin |
5.111 |
Queen Matilda 1100 - 1135 |
Henry the first, surnamed 'Beauclare' |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Normans and Saxons and such: some ancient history |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0001382LC |
3.457 |
1.949 |
13-16 |
Stanley Holloway monologues: see also G H Goodwin |
80.787 |
Queen Matilda 1100 - 1135 |
Henry the first, surnamed 'Beauclare' |
EDGAR, Marriott |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: Normans and Saxons and such - some ancient history |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
14-16 |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
5.113 |
Richard Coeur-de-Lion 1189 - 1199 |
Richard the first, Coeur-de-Lion |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Normans and Saxons and such: some ancient history |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0001382LC |
3.457 |
1.949 |
21-25 |
Stanley Holloway monologues: see also G H Goodwin |
80.789 |
Richard Coeur-de-Lion 1811 - 1199 |
Richard the first, Coeur-de-Lion |
EDGAR, Marriott |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: Normans and Saxons and such - some ancient history |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
22-25 |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
4.067 |
Runcorn Ferry: tuppence per person per trip |
On the banks of the Mersey, over on Cheshire side |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert, 'Arold and others |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0038136LC |
141.205 |
0 |
4-May |
|
6.804 |
Runcorn Ferry: tuppence per person per trip |
On the banks of the Mersey, over on Cheshire side |
EDGAR, Marriott |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: Albert, 'Arold and others |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
4-May |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
4.394 |
Sam's medal |
You've 'eard of Samuel Small, per'aps |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert and Balbus and Samuel Small |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0039591LC |
149.230 |
0 |
1-Apr |
Includes "Sam's medal", by Mabel Constanduros and Michael Hogan |
4.396 |
Sam's racehorse |
When Sam Small retired from the Army |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert and Balbus and Samuel Small |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0039591LC |
149.230 |
0 |
7-Sep |
Includes "Sam's medal", by Mabel Constanduros and Michael Hogan |
4.069 |
The battle of Hastings |
I'll tell of the Battle of Hastings |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert, 'Arold and others |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0038136LC |
141.205 |
0 |
8-Oct |
|
6.806 |
The Battle of Hastings |
I'll tell of the Battle of Hastings |
EDGAR, Marriott |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: Albert, 'Arold and others |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
8-Oct |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
4.433 |
The Channel swimmer |
Would you hear a wild tale of adventure |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert and Balbus and Samuel Small |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0039591LC |
149.230 |
0 |
16-17 |
Includes "Sam's medal", by Mabel Constanduros and Michael Hogan |
80.788 |
The Fair Rosamund 1154 - 1189 |
I'll tell of King 'Enry the Second |
EDGAR, Marriott |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: Normans and Saxons and such - some ancient history |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
18-20 |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
4.075 |
The Jubilee sov'rin |
On Jubilee Day the Ramsbottoms |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert, 'Arold and others |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0038136LC |
141.205 |
0 |
24-26 |
|
6.812 |
The Jubilee sov'rin |
On Jubilee Day the Ramsbottoms |
EDGAR, Marriott |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: Albert, 'Arold and others |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
24-26 |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
4.066 |
The lion and Albert |
There's a famous seaside place called Blackpool |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert, 'Arold and others |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0038136LC |
141.205 |
0 |
1-Mar |
|
6.686 |
The lion and Albert |
There's a famous seaside place called Blackpool |
EDGAR, Marriott |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: Albert, 'Arold and others |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
1-Mar |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
6.684 |
The lion and Albert |
There's a famous seaside place called Blackpool |
EDGAR, Marriott |
The lion and Albert |
EDGAR, Marriott |
416584500 |
38.770 |
1.978 |
Jan-28 |
Stanley Holloway Monologues; pictures by Caroline Holden |
4.076 |
The Magna Charter |
I'll tell of the Magna Charter |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert, 'Arold and others |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0038136LC |
141.205 |
0 |
27-29 |
|
6.813 |
The Magna Charter |
I'll tell of the Magna Charter |
EDGAR, Marriott |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: Albert, 'Arold and others |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
27-29 |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
4.395 |
The 'ole in the ark |
One evening at dusk as Noah stood on his Ark |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert and Balbus and Samuel Small |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0039591LC |
149.230 |
0 |
4-Jun |
Includes "Sam's medal", by Mabel Constanduros and Michael Hogan |
4.398 |
The recumbent posture |
The day after Christmas, Young Albert |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert and Balbus and Samuel Small |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0039591LC |
149.230 |
0 |
13-15 |
Includes "Sam's medal", by Mabel Constanduros and Michael Hogan |
4.072 |
The return of Albert (Albert comes back) |
You've 'eard 'ow young Albert Ramsbottom |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert, 'Arold and others |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0038136LC |
141.205 |
0 |
17-19 |
|
6.809 |
The return of Albert: Albert comes back |
You've 'eard 'ow young Albert Ramsbottom |
EDGAR, Marriott |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: Albert, 'Arold and others |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
17-19 |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
4.068 |
Three ha'pence a foot |
I'll tell you an old-fashioned story |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert, 'Arold and others |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0038136LC |
141.205 |
0 |
6-Jul |
|
6.805 |
Three ha'pence a foot |
I'll tell you an old-fashioned story |
EDGAR, Marriott |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: Albert, 'Arold and others |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
6-Jul |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
4.435 |
Uppards: a Lancashire version of Longfellow's famous poem Excelsior |
Twere getting dusk |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Albert and Balbus and Samuel Small |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0039591LC |
149.230 |
0 |
20-21 |
Includes "Sam's medal", by Mabel Constanduros and Michael Hogan |
5.110 |
William Rufus 1087 - 1100 |
The reign of King William the Second |
EDGAR, Marriott |
Normans and Saxons and such: some ancient history |
EDGAR, Marriott |
M0001382LC |
3.457 |
1.949 |
7-Nov |
Stanley Holloway monologues: see also G H Goodwin |
80.786 |
William Rufus 1087 - 1100 |
The reign of King William the Second |
EDGAR, Marriott |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: Normans and Saxons and such - some ancient history |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
8-Nov |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
1.196 |
Lowly worth |
Is the lily less pure, that it springs from the earth |
EDITOR |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
256-257 |
|
1.170 |
Lucy Neale |
Avoca's Vale, thy charms no more |
EDITOR |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
102-103 |
|
2.098 |
Poet's fictions |
I pity the poets that deck the loved fair |
EDITOR |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
127-128 |
|
2.187 |
The Christmas tree |
The lofty cedar of Lebanon |
EDITOR |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
192-193 |
|
82.878 |
I thought I was |
I thought I was young |
EDWARDS, Amy |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
104 |
|
82.880 |
I'm flying |
I can fly, I can fly |
EDWARDS, Kelly |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
105 |
|
82.692 |
Happiness |
Happiness is being loved by your family |
EDWARDS, Zoe |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
1 |
|
82.703 |
Death |
Death is the pit of oblivion |
EGAN, Christopher |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
5 |
|
81.326 |
Cosmic poems |
I would like to visit planet Mars |
EGAN, Nicola |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
21 |
|
902 |
A beaut cards |
One afthernoon aw went eaut to my tay |
EKERSALL, Elizabeth |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
91-93 |
|
903 |
Edwin Waugh |
Neaw, Ned, we're meetin' here to-neet |
EKERSALL, William |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
94-96 |
|
82.841 |
My pet |
I've got a pet, it's called Treacle |
ELLIOT, Laura |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
84 |
|
2.527 |
A dark day |
Downy seeds of thistles drifting lay like snow flakes on the moor |
ELLIOT, Rev. Robert W. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
261-262 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.525 |
The opening of the bells of Holy Trinity Church, Hull, A D 1727 |
The roses were red in the gardens of summer |
ELLIOT, Rev. Robert W. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
259-260 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.526 |
The Royal Academy, 1885 |
Two lovely babes lie wrapt in sleep's repose |
ELLIOT, Rev. Robert W. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
261 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
342 |
The Rossendale Hills |
Away to the Rossendale hills, my boys |
ELLIOT, W. Hume |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
57-58 |
|
82.849 |
My dog |
Tail whipper |
ELLIOT, William |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
89 |
|
176 |
Preston Mills |
The day was fair, the cannon roar'd |
ELLIOTT, Ebenezer |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
79-81 |
|
6.215 |
(no title) |
There is a spark of God-head in my breast |
ELLIS, Oliver |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
71-74 |
|
6.323 |
A poem |
Somewhere about the zenith of Desire |
ELLIS, Oliver |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
222 |
|
6.324 |
Bucolic |
The green blade shrivels in the pitiless glare |
ELLIS, Oliver |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
222-223 |
|
6.242 |
Epilogue |
When near the dawn the clouds come through |
ELLIS, Oliver |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
137-138 |
|
6.326 |
God's anarchist |
I have a greater heritage |
ELLIS, Oliver |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
225-226 |
|
6.328 |
Orpheus in the Underworld |
Here bends the willow weeping on the marge and here the reeds are singing murmurously |
ELLIS, Oliver |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
227-229 |
|
6.217 |
Samson Adami |
My great, big giant, I love thee |
ELLIS, Oliver |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
88-93 |
|
6.327 |
To Medusa |
Sometimes in slumber lying |
ELLIS, Oliver |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
226-227 |
|
6.325 |
Two New Year's eves |
The ld year turned from the cliffs of Time |
ELLIS, Oliver |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
223-225 |
|
6.225 |
Venit: vidit: vicit |
Cheer!- with a will! - and a heart! - and a strength! - and a lung |
ELLIS, Oliver |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
113-114 |
|
82.726 |
The old man |
It was a cold, wet winter's day |
ELLISON, Conor |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
17 |
|
81.300 |
The wind |
The wind is like a bear |
ELLWOOD, Sophi |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
8 |
|
6.283 |
Ballade des enfants sans souci |
These children, oftener barefoot wayfaring |
ELTON, O. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
180 |
|
6.223 |
Prologue |
We ask no grace; we do not mount our play |
ELTON, O. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
104-105 |
|
466 |
Girl and brown stallion |
Beyond her |
EMBERSON, J. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
15 |
|
80.830 |
Widowed for the second time |
Lingering dreams |
EMBLEM, Bet |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
99-100 |
|
368 |
Hypnotised by bees |
The vivid colours and soothing grace |
EMMOTT, Stewart Earl |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
23 |
|
4.391 |
Th' coaler |
When winter coomes reaund, an' ther's frost, fog, an' snow |
EMSLEY, Walter |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
59 |
|
840 |
Fylingdales Early Warning Station (so called) |
The Ballistic Missile Early Warning Station |
ENGLISH, Brenda H. |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
78 |
|
4.156 |
T' seawnd o' t' sea |
Dost want larn geetar playin' |
ENTWISTLE, Margaret |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
78-79 |
|
82.942 |
Hidden treasures |
There is treasure at the bottom of the sea |
EVANS, Elliott James |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
140 |
|
87.770 |
Lifes Treasure |
May the Sacred Heart of Jesus give you much pleasure |
EVANS, M. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
55 |
|
81.286 |
The wind |
The wind |
EVANS, Melissa |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
1 |
|
4.140 |
A day at the seaside |
Lancelot 'Argreaves wor built like three tanks |
EYRE, Kathleen |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
58-59 |
|
4.139 |
Eighee! dearie-me! |
Eawr Sandra's browt us aw' ta shame, sin' hoo fell fer t'chip-hoil fella |
EYRE, Kathleen |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
56-57 |
|
82.989 |
An unexpected friend |
He comes home lonely |
FAIRBROTHER, Emily |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
166 |
|
51 |
Mi owd Clock |
Tick Tock, Tick Tock, goes mi owd clock |
FAIRLEY, Elizabeth |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
201-202 |
|
4 |
Priestley Clough |
I have known this place since childhood |
FAIRLEY, Elizabeth |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
100 |
|
11 |
To the Moon |
Oh! Lovely orb set like a pearl amidst the diamond stars |
FAIRLEY, Elizabeth |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
177 |
|
86.767 |
The red-backed shrike |
Gaily you adorned those summer skies |
FARQUARSON, Nubia |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
111 |
|
3.190 |
Mountain fever |
With tattered maps I sat at rest |
FARRELL, W. G. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
55-56 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.192 |
Nocturne |
Night as black as the fabled pit |
FARRELL, W. G. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
58-59 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.191 |
Spring |
The weary sun his day's course run |
FARRELL, W. G. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
57 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
455 |
Motherly love |
When you have kids |
FAYE |
Young, single and pregnant |
M.O.T.O. |
M0129248LC |
491.674 |
1.992 |
33-34 |
Prose and poetry from members of the Burnley group "Mothers On Their Own" |
4.290 |
Cleggy's cough |
Cleggy ud geet a reyt rackin' cough |
FEARN, John |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
7 |
|
87.745 |
24-Hour Gardening |
Christian, Christian tired and weary; how does your garden grow? |
FEARON, Janette |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
30 |
|
4.123 |
A reet good do |
A reet good do! A reet good do! Us lads hev hed toneet |
FELL, Jimmy |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
43 |
|
4.117 |
A reet good do |
When t'Good Lord fost started to mek a new world |
FELL, Jimmy |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
33-34 |
|
4.098 |
Nowheer to park |
The wife sed,' Let's set off to t'seaside |
FELL, Jimmy |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
Dec-14 |
|
86.655 |
A friend |
Who can describe a friend? |
FENTON, Pat |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
3 |
|
81.546 |
Mars |
Red rusty flakes of flame |
FENWICK, Adam |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
135 |
|
87.810 |
Untitled by Ferrario |
I watch the clouds racing by |
FERRARIO, L. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
98 |
|
6.744 |
Bewsey |
But yet th' historic page records a tale |
FICHETT, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
15-16 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.676 |
Bewsey |
But yet th' historic page records a tale |
FICHETT, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
15-16 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.681 |
Bewsey |
But yet th' historic page records a tale |
FICHETT, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
19-21 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
1.801 |
A Christmas Carol |
Set the bells a-ringing |
FIELDING, Anne |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
129-130 |
|
1.859 |
Bethany |
Often our fancy hath painted the home |
FIELDING, Anne |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
125-126 |
|
1.962 |
Hebden Bridge and its surroundings |
It may be that a stranger mind |
FIELDING, Anne |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
127-129 |
|
2.102 |
Psalm XXIII |
The Lord is my Shepherd and therefore for me |
FIELDING, Anne |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
130-131 |
|
2.359 |
Yorkshire |
My county! Large and fair to see |
FIELDING, Anne |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
126-127 |
|
84.157 |
A busy day |
The dishes and pans are awaiting their turn |
FIELDING, Mildred |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
79 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.164 |
A woman's way |
Command me not, but ask me to obey |
FIELDING, Mildred |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
86 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.161 |
Always beginning |
The joying and the grieving, the folks that come and go |
FIELDING, Mildred |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
83 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.160 |
At midnight |
The crags, the forest, and the dark |
FIELDING, Mildred |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
82 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.163 |
Chrysanthemums |
They bloom, a colourful host |
FIELDING, Mildred |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
85 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.159 |
Night thought |
A passing thought, a dream as well |
FIELDING, Mildred |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
81 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.165 |
Poppies |
Poppy land, fairy land |
FIELDING, Mildred |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
87 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.158 |
The patient flower |
Awake from dreaming, drooping flower |
FIELDING, Mildred |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
80 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.162 |
The wind's changes |
Suspend your violence, mighty wind |
FIELDING, Mildred |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
84 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
1.825 |
A welcome to the Calder Valley poets |
Poets of the Calder Valley |
FIELDING, S. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
161-162 |
|
1.857 |
Bell-Hole Woods in March |
Let me haste where buds are bursting |
FIELDING, S. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
164 |
|
1.912 |
Downham |
A sweet little spot is Downham |
FIELDING, S. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
160 |
|
1.954 |
Hardcastle Craggs |
Oh! a jolly fine wood is this |
FIELDING, S. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
156 |
|
2.047 |
Morning in the mountains |
O, the quiet of the mountains in the early morning air |
FIELDING, S. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
155-156 |
|
2.048 |
Moses, the Seer |
Seeing Him who is invisible |
FIELDING, S. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
157-159 |
|
2.086 |
Our moorlands in April |
Healthy are our moorlands |
FIELDING, S. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
159-160 |
|
2.117 |
Rev. William Jones |
The news that breaks upon us |
FIELDING, S. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
165-166 |
|
2.214 |
The health and wealth of the moors |
Healthy are our moorlands |
FIELDING, S. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
157 |
|
2.216 |
The hills and valleys of the Calder |
These are the hills among which to wander |
FIELDING, S. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
161 |
|
2.245 |
The prodigal son |
Everyone has heard the story |
FIELDING, S. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
162-164 |
|
82.866 |
My dog |
He cuddles day and night |
FINN, Leighann |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
99 |
|
86.765 |
Awakening |
I hear a voice that calls to me |
FINNEGEN, John |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
94 |
|
82.732 |
My monster |
My monster has |
FINNEY, Declan |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
20-21 |
|
81.531 |
Springtime |
The bluebells are surrounding the wishing well |
FINNIGAN, Rachael |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
128 |
|
81.305 |
Home time |
Cats miaowing |
FIRTH, Jodie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
11 |
|
86.734 |
Shearer, shearer |
For Blackburn and for England |
FISH, Jim |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
82 |
|
86.735 |
Silence |
There is no silence |
FISH, Madeleine |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
83 |
|
408 |
Clogs |
Clogs, clogs, how they clattered on the cobbled street! |
FISHWICK, Rosamund A. |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
107-108 |
|
1.032 |
A gradely mon |
I like a mon 'at's gradely. What |
FITTON, Sam |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
147-149 |
|
4.489 |
Cheer up, mother |
Come, mother, dunno' look so glum |
FITTON, Sam |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
77-78 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.818 |
Cotton Fowd |
We han some funny folk i' Cotton Fowd |
FITTON, Sam |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
23-25 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
4.482 |
Cotton Fowd |
We han some funny folk i' Cotton Fowd |
FITTON, Sam |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
63-65 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
1.028 |
Eawr Lancashire dialect |
Neaw if yo'r wantin' what they co'n a literary treat |
FITTON, Sam |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
139-141 |
|
571 |
Eawr Lancashire dialect |
Neaw if yo'r wantin' what they co'n a literary treat |
FITTON, Sam |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
154-156 |
Lancashire poetry |
4.827 |
Eawr market neet |
To yo' who read as weel as run |
FITTON, Sam |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
40-42 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
1.029 |
Eawr market neet |
To yo' who read as weel as run |
FITTON, Sam |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
141-144 |
|
4.483 |
Eawr market neet |
To yo' who read as weel as run |
FITTON, Sam |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
65-68 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.838 |
Eawr Sarah's getten a chap |
Eh, dear; there's bin some change in |
FITTON, Sam |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
57-59 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
570 |
Eawr Sarah's getten a chap |
Eh, dear; there's bin some change in |
FITTON, Sam |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
152-154 |
Lancashire poetry |
4.317 |
Eawr Sarah's getten a chap |
Eh, dear; there's bin some change in |
FITTON, Sam |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
12 |
|
4.491 |
Eawr Sarah's getten a chap |
Eh, dear; there's bin some change in |
FITTON, Sam |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
79-81 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.486 |
Love-sick |
Eh, mother, I'm bothered! I'm gloomy! I'm glad! |
FITTON, Sam |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
72 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.319 |
Love-sick |
Eh, mother, I'm bothered! I'm gloomy! I'm glad! |
FITTON, Sam |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
14 |
|
904 |
Love-sick |
Eh, mother, I'm bothered! I'm gloomy! I'm glad! |
FITTON, Sam |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
101-102 |
|
6.710 |
Love-sick |
Eh, mother, I'm bothered! I'm gloomy! I'm glad! |
FITTON, Sam |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
146-147 |
|
6.709 |
My owd case clock |
We o' han' cherished things do deawt |
FITTON, Sam |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
143-146 |
|
4.484 |
My owd case clock |
We o' han' cherished things no doubt |
FITTON, Sam |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
68-70 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
82.028 |
My owd case clock |
We o' han' cherished things, ne deawt |
FITTON, Sam |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
90-91 |
|
572 |
My owd case clock |
We o'han cherished things no doubt |
FITTON, Sam |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
156-159 |
Lancashire poetry |
1.033 |
My owd case clock |
We o'han cherished things no doubt |
FITTON, Sam |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
149-151 |
|
4.485 |
My owd pipe |
When winter time comes creepin' on |
FITTON, Sam |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
70-71 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
1.031 |
Owd an' poor |
This world's a hardened piece o' dirt to some yo' may be sure |
FITTON, Sam |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
145-147 |
|
4.488 |
Poor feyther |
It's nice to be a feyther when |
FITTON, Sam |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
75-76 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.487 |
Th' childer's holiday |
Eh dear, I'm welly off my chump |
FITTON, Sam |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
73-74 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.849 |
Th' childer's holiday |
Eh, dear, I'm welly off my chump |
FITTON, Sam |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
78-80 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
1.030 |
That good old 'tato-pie |
Ther's nowt con beat that steamy seet |
FITTON, Sam |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
144-145 |
|
905 |
The Ocean |
See the mighty ocean splashing |
FITTON, Sam |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
102-103 |
|
4.490 |
Yonder moor |
Eh, dear, I am a crazy foo' |
FITTON, Sam |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
78-79 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
81.527 |
Winter |
The rain is falling |
FLAHERTY, Leanne |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
126 |
|
461 |
One tree |
I watched you taken |
FLANAGAN, B. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
7 |
|
477 |
The potato bowl |
She makes little of it |
FLANAGAN, B. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
27 |
|
80.853 |
Starting school |
What did you do in school today |
FLANAGAN, Shirley |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
133 |
|
87.819 |
Peace Be With You! |
When Jesus rose from the dead |
FLANAGAN, Wendy A. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
107 |
|
81.558 |
Alphabet poem |
A is for alphabet from A to Z |
FLANDERS, Emma |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
143 |
|
6.319 |
Autumn reverie |
O'er a world drab-color'd, dreary, shivering trees their trophies fling |
FLEMING, Margaret R. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
216-217 |
|
6.321 |
Winnower's song |
O breezes light that in your airy troops come flocking |
FLEMING, Margaret R. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
218 |
From the French of J du Bellay |
81.476 |
The Greek gods |
Zeus and Hera |
FLOUVAT, Arren L |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
100 |
|
406 |
Brokken resolutions |
Ah sed as ah wern'd banna bother this yer |
FLYNN, A. |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
106 |
|
4.342 |
A question o' spooart |
I' ev'ry spooart ther's sartin sayin's |
FLYNN, Amy |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
29 |
|
82.140 |
August |
Holidays and happiness |
FLYNN, Amy |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
34 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
4.341 |
Lancashire hot-pot |
Ther's nowt like a Lancashire Hot-pot |
FLYNN, Amy |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
28 |
|
87 |
Our town |
There's folks as say that Bacup's |
FLYNN, Amy |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
114-117 |
|
326 |
Th' A B and D threet |
I' Bacup we an wad we think is unique |
FLYNN, Amy |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
125-126 |
|
81.438 |
Mothers |
Mothers say |
FLYNN, Rebecca |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
80 |
|
87.261 |
Alouette |
They follow you, little Pied Piper |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
42 |
|
87.241 |
Apollo at Delphi |
From Delos, where man swims into the sky |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
19 |
|
87.232 |
Beached |
With oak and birch high on an ancient beach |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
10 |
|
87.242 |
Brief Parting |
In the dark shadows of wintry December |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
20 |
|
87.234 |
Candlelight |
When power fails and candles burn again |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
12 |
|
87.248 |
Evening Prayer |
I spend my life like an angel in a barber's chair |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
26 |
|
87.264 |
Fatima |
Under the black acacia |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
46 |
|
87.260 |
Game All |
This man breaks rackets on tennis-balls |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
41 |
|
87.262 |
Geordie Girl |
Geordie girl, Geordie girl |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
43 |
|
87.237 |
Mater Dolorosa |
I blame you for the ills you do not know |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
15 |
|
87.263 |
Peeping Queen |
When there is laughter in another room |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
45 |
|
87.259 |
Peterhouse (Cantab) Freshman, 1939 |
One would measure this antique spire |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
40 |
|
87.266 |
Polska |
She measures out her days behind shut doors |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
49 |
|
87.243 |
Punta Sottile |
Who would believe, seeing them on the beach |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
21 |
|
87.238 |
Requiescat in Pace |
In that long Spring from March to summer May |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
16 |
|
87.247 |
Saucy Girl |
At ease in the brown dining-room |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
25 |
|
87.240 |
The Bosphorus |
Ahmet and Mehmet, Valens and Constantine |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
18 |
|
87.244 |
The Comedians |
In the muted life of the English shires |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
22 |
|
87.265 |
The King of Bali |
When the great mountain burst and burned to ashes |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
47 |
|
87.233 |
The Mindbenders |
When clever men discuss the daily news |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
11 |
|
87.235 |
The Tantric Gods |
I hear the shouting, yet I do not hear |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
13 |
|
87.267 |
Time Alone |
There's wife-swapping in Mersham now |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
50 - 51 |
|
87.239 |
Tourist Love |
If I forget, you gone, what once you were |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
17 |
|
87.236 |
Undergraduette |
When the bare bones of branches scar the sky |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
14 |
|
87.246 |
Wanderer |
I used to go off fists deep in torn pockets |
FORBES, D. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
24 |
|
5.251 |
Howfen legend |
A Farmer from Howfen rose early one morn |
FORD, Ernest |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
59 |
|
5.253 |
Sortin em eawt |
Its not awe'l beer un skittles uz I'll hev yo know |
FORD, Ernest |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
61 |
Postal workers; Post Office Sorting Office; Letters to Santa |
5.254 |
T' brunin o' Westhowfen Mill |
In 1812 the neets were cowd |
FORD, Ernest |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
62 |
Luddites |
5.252 |
The Lord's Prayer |
Our fayther who art up theer |
FORD, Ernest |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
60 |
|
82.840 |
My life |
In my life I like to swim |
FORD, Gemma |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
84 |
|
6.714 |
A bird in t' people's park |
Aw yerd a bird in t' people's perk |
FORD, Gertrude |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
153-154 |
|
6.715 |
Billy Suet's song |
Bodle un Mischief un Poncake un me |
FORD, Gertrude |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
157-158 |
|
6.713 |
The end of an owd weyver |
Aw've wooven mi last, then, on t' loom o' this life! |
FORD, Gertrude |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
152-153 |
|
6.711 |
Unemployed |
Aw'm tired - reight tired! O' day aw've bin trampin' |
FORD, Gertrude |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
151-154 |
|
81.490 |
Winter |
Winter is cold |
FORD, Jak |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
108 |
|
487 |
After the wake |
She set the table for two and dined alone |
FORD, R. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
38 |
|
2.442 |
A village scene |
A ruined wall, 'neath sweetly blooming trees |
FORSHAW, Charles Frederick |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
137-138 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.440 |
Childhood |
Of all the happy, joyous days, oh, childhood's days are best |
FORSHAW, Charles Frederick |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
137 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.439 |
Church bells |
How sweetly sound the joyous bells |
FORSHAW, Charles Frederick |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
136 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
26 |
Buttercups |
You looked more fair in yonder grass |
FORSHAW, David Arnold |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
179 |
|
25 |
Friend |
Will we meet again my friend? |
FORSHAW, David Arnold |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
178 |
|
24 |
Stephen |
Summer has given you gold lad |
FORSHAW, David Arnold |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
178 |
|
82.764 |
Me |
Heidi always hiding things |
FORSTER, Heidi |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
40 |
|
81.341 |
Leon the fat dog |
Leon the fat dog |
FOSTER, Beth |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
27 |
|
5.220 |
Ah've bote mysel' an oargan |
Ah've bot mysel' an oargan, Ah'm tryin' hard t' play |
FOSTER, Brian |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
42 |
|
5.219 |
Speykin' to t' dog |
Thy art a mardy dog owd lass, tha likes a bit o' fuss |
FOSTER, Brian |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
41 |
|
5.241 |
War baby |
Ah've no clue what Ah looked like before Ah were four |
FOSTER, Cecilia |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
51 |
|
81.458 |
Footy down the park |
The pitch is like a polluted lake |
FOSTER, Dominic |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
91 |
|
52 |
Mi Concertina |
Ah'm eighty-four today |
FOULDS, Bessie |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
202-203 |
|
28 |
Day of Gladness |
On this day of gladness joyfully we sing |
FOULDS, Betty |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
180 |
|
84.126 |
To a faded lily |
Low on thy slender stem |
FOX, Arthur W. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
43 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.129 |
To Helen's eyes |
Azure lakes of liquid light |
FOX, Arthur W. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
45 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.127 |
What is love |
What is love? Wan lover says |
FOX, Arthur W. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
44 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.075 |
Jim |
Jim's done |
FOX-SMITH, C. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
33 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.073 |
Missing |
She will not come... oh, never, never more |
FOX-SMITH, C. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
29-30 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.076 |
Outward bound |
We've painted the Ratcliff Highway red |
FOX-SMITH, C. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
34 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.074 |
The old breed |
They cheered her from the waterside |
FOX-SMITH, C. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
31-32 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.077 |
The Orkney man |
I sailed onst with an Orkney man |
FOX-SMITH, C. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
35 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
80.831 |
The severing |
You left me in the Springtime |
FRAN |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
100-101 |
no surname |
86.686 |
Help me to be |
Help me to be thankful |
FRANCE, Hilda |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
34 |
|
80.797 |
Freeing of the spirits |
It's been quiet a long time.' A voice whispers in the gloom |
FRANCIS, James A. |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
22 |
|
493 |
Of things gone |
Gone the castles, turrets in mist |
FRANKLAND, J. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
42 |
|
87.800 |
Our Chapel |
In humble pride our Chapel was built |
FREDORO |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
73 |
|
46 |
Late Autumn |
The trees that now are almost bare |
FREESTON, Carole |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
194 |
|
563 |
A bird song away |
That he sung to his mate |
FREESTON, Nicholas |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
142-143 |
Lancashire poetry |
4.298 |
Paddy |
Fer nigh on three score years he toiled |
FREESTON, Nicholas |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
9 |
|
827 |
Sweet Fancy |
Sweet Fancy, tha's bin actin' t' foo |
FREESTON, Nicholas |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
119 |
|
567 |
Th'art lookin' sackless |
Th'art lookin' sackless, speckled breast |
FREESTON, Nicholas |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
148-149 |
Lancashire poetry |
53 |
Th'art lookin' sackless |
Th'art lookin' sackless, speckled breast |
FREESTON, Nicholas |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
204 |
|
4.300 |
Th'art lookin' sackless |
Th'art lookin' sackless, speckled breast |
FREESTON, Nicholas |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
9 |
|
812 |
The blackbird in Delph Road |
I wonder if that blackbird knows |
FREESTON, Nicholas |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
46 |
|
27 |
The robin |
He perched upon a garbage can |
FREESTON, Nicholas |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
179 |
|
54 |
Th'owd Blackbird |
Coom, coom, neaw, Johnny Yella-Bill |
FREESTON, Nicholas |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
205 |
|
81.521 |
My mum |
My mum is a very good mum |
FREITAS, Craig |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
122 |
|
81.362 |
In the dark |
My curtains wave at night like a ghost |
FRENCH, Adam |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
38 |
|
80.810 |
Election manifesto '87 |
Blue banners fly as the voices shrill |
FRIDAY, Julie |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
40-41 |
|
82.957 |
What? |
What should I write a poem about |
FRODSHAM, Emily |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
150 |
|
80.817 |
Nuclear aftermath |
Pearl grey mist, cobweb knit, by the sun is pulled aside |
FROOM, Winifred |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
51 |
|
82.739 |
Alien lampshade |
Alien lampshade has a squiggly body like a worm |
GAFFEY, Antony |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
24 |
|
82.707 |
The sun and the moon |
The sun is bright at night |
GAHFOOR, Almas |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
7 |
|
84.057 |
Resemblance |
Romeo, black of body |
GALE, Norman |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
13 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.056 |
Warning |
Still I believe in Song |
GALE, Norman |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
12 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
82.722 |
Merlin |
His beard is long |
GALLOWAY, Faith |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
15 |
|
84.066 |
Autumn by the sea |
We'll hear the murmer of the swell |
GALSWORTHY, John |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
20 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.065 |
Errantry |
Come! Let us lay a crazy lance in rest |
GALSWORTHY, John |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
18-19 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
86.680 |
From my watch to Cairo |
Oh! people |
GAMBLE, Richard Melvin |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
28 |
|
84.223 |
Snowflakes |
Lo! the gentle snowflakes falling |
GANLEY, Joseph |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
123 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.224 |
To the evening star |
Knowest thou, immortal star |
GANLEY, Joseph |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
124 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
80.854 |
Fairytales |
Handsome Prince riding through |
GANNON, Jackie |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
134 |
|
81.318 |
Cosmic poem |
Saturn, Earth, Neptune, and Mars |
GARRAHAN, Claire |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
17 |
|
1.855 |
Beautiful moorland |
Beautiful moorland, pleasant to see |
GARSIDE, James W. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
148-149 |
|
2.053 |
My friends |
When I get weary and oppressed |
GARSIDE, James W. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
151-153 |
|
2.192 |
The deaf old man at Heptonstall |
My friends, you argued well today |
GARSIDE, James W. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
153 |
|
2.232 |
The old oak tree |
I love that gnarled old oak tree |
GARSIDE, James W. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
149-150 |
|
2.294 |
Tis thirty years ago today |
Tis thirty years ago today |
GARSIDE, James W. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
150-151 |
|
81.461 |
Freddy and the diamonds |
Hello my name is Freddy |
GASKELL, Andrew |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
93 |
|
82.929 |
Cobra and the snake charmer |
Playing soft music |
GASKELL, Daniel |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
133 |
|
81.528 |
Winter |
Winter is a time |
GASKELL, Grant |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
126 |
|
5.740 |
Despondency |
Oh! what are earth's green valleys |
GASPEY, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
47 |
|
5.330 |
The ancient pair |
Tis more than forty years ago |
GASPEY, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
45-47 |
Workhouses; marriage |
5.164 |
The flight of a century |
One hundred years! How awful is the thought |
GASPEY, William |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
33-37 |
|
5.329 |
The victim |
How pale she is - ay, paler than the snow |
GASPEY, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
44-45 |
|
5.741 |
Valedictory stanzas |
Go little book as Southey's genius sings |
GASPEY, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
48 |
Mourning |
502 |
Blessed are the gentle |
Blessed are the gentle |
GAVAGHAN, D. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
53 |
|
87.764 |
Love |
Everybody has a circle |
GEDDES, Jasmine G. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
50 |
|
80.257 |
Feline |
I walked into the house |
GEORGE, Dorothy |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
3 |
Poems about cats |
4.345 |
Dad's medals |
It were smashin' when our dad come whoam |
GERRARD, Cliff |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
32 |
|
4.346 |
Eawr Joe's lad |
Each time eawr Joe become a dad |
GERRARD, Cliff |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
33 |
|
4.347 |
Jemmy's garden |
When Jemmy Warburton retired |
GERRARD, Cliff |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
33 |
|
82.956 |
Spider! |
Emily was in her bedroom |
GIBBONS, Laura |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
149 |
|
706 |
Lal Dinah Grayson |
Lal Dinah Grayson's fresh, fewsome, an'free |
GIBSON, A. C. |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
267-268 |
Cumberland |
86.742 |
Sunshine |
People go about their lives |
GIBSON, Ada |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
89 |
|
4.107 |
Silver and brass |
There wer never a sound, that could touch a brass band |
GIBSON, George |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
25-26 |
|
81.519 |
Stars |
I saw a bright star up above in the |
GIBSON, Rebecca |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
121 |
|
81.293 |
Happiness |
Happiness is when me, Adam and Mum have a group hug |
GIBSON, Siobhan |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
5 |
|
86.724 |
Preference to verse |
Poems penned in Wintertime |
GIBSON, Thomas Peter |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
72 |
|
87.824 |
I Thank You Lord |
My Lord You watch me from above |
GIFFORD, Karianne |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
112 |
|
82.171 |
The limit |
Ah wants the ter mek me a promise said Lou |
GILLART, Chris |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
90-91 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
82.165 |
Metrication |
When we geet decimalization |
GILLEARD, Olga |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
80 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
81.407 |
The aliens' trip |
There were three aliens in space |
GILLIGAN, Charlotte |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
65 |
|
82.813 |
My life |
My life is cool |
GILLIGAN, Dylan |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
67 |
|
82.926 |
Weekdays |
Monday |
GILLIGAN, Fiona |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
132 |
|
267 |
A morning in the Manchester Subscription Library |
To the still village and the noisiest town |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
78-86 |
Pseudonym. Real name John Stanley Gregson |
268 |
A suburban sortie |
Tir'd of the noise of waggons, coaches, carts |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
88-96 |
Pseudonym. Real name John Stanley Gregson |
274 |
An eye to the future |
A man had a horse, as of old it is said |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
131-132 |
Parody on a poem Abraham Newland by Carles Dibdin |
258 |
Cannon-Street - The New |
Some men to business, some to pleasure take |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
21-25 |
Pseudonym. Real name John Stanley Gregson. First line is a quotation from Alexander POPE |
257 |
Cannon-Street - The Old |
Hail, Cannon-Street! The tradesman's greatest pride |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
Sep-16 |
Pseudonym. Real name John Stanley Gregson |
265 |
Fountain - Street refectory |
Since Hudwell first in Manchester began |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
63-70 |
Pseudonym. Real name John Stanley Gregson |
272 |
Henry Hase |
Arise, oh muse! Attune thy lays |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
121-125 |
Parody on a poem Abraham Newland by Carles Dibdin |
278 |
Matrimonial consolations |
Dear Van! You'll excuse me I know it |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
185-193 |
Pseudonym. Real name John Stanley Gregson |
266 |
My corner cupboard |
Some sing their splendid shillings - look into |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
72-77 |
Pseudonym. Real name John Stanley Gregson |
260 |
One o'clock |
I fell asleep, and in my sleep I dreamt |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
35-40 |
|
259 |
Parody on Gray's Elegy |
The curfew tolls the knell of parting day |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
26-33 |
Pseudonym. Real name John Stanley Gregson. First line is taken from Elegy wrote in a country churchyard by Thomas GRAY |
271 |
Southport alias North Meols |
As part and parcel of our native land |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
110-118 |
Pseudonym. Real name John Stanley Gregson |
276 |
The author's epitaph |
His qualities were as various as his callings |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
136-140 |
Pseudonym. Real name John Stanley Gregson |
263 |
The gentlemen's concert |
Music hath charms, - but, ah, how 'tis debas'd |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
52-57 |
Pseudonym. Real name John Stanley Gregson |
270 |
The lament and petition of Bijou, my little lap dog |
Returning late last night from toil and care |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
105-109 |
Pseudonym. Real name John Stanley Gregson |
275 |
The loves of the colours |
Mr Green look'd quite blue after courting Miss Brown |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
133-134 |
Parody on a poem Abraham Newland by Carles Dibdin |
277 |
The Manchester Mulberry market |
Fellow silkworm! It is with the most sincere hope |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
173-181 |
Pseudonym. Real name John Stanley Gregson |
261 |
The races |
Oh! For a pen from which the words would flow |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
41-46 |
Pseudonym. Real name John Stanley Gregson |
264 |
Theatrical prospect for 1824 |
Huzza, fellow-townsmen, huzza! |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
58-64 |
Pseudonym. Real name John Stanley Gregson |
262 |
Tuesday and the last Friday in the month |
Tuesday - with goods what loaded waggons groan |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
47 - 51 |
Pseudonym. Real name John Stanley Gregson |
269 |
Valentine's day, 1824 or An advertisement for a wife |
Tis known to all, that in sly cupid's school |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
97-104 |
Pseudonym. Real name John Stanley Gregson |
273 |
Virginia tobacco |
Two maiden dames of sixty two |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
Gimcrackiana, or, Fugitive pieces on Manchester men and manners ten years ago |
GIMCRACK, Geoffrey |
M0108173LC |
414.944 |
1.833 |
129-130 |
Parody on a poem Abraham Newland by Carles Dibdin |
6.204 |
Ravenna |
One evening, as beneath an oak-tree old |
GISSING, George |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
22-28 |
|
6.279 |
To truth |
First-born of Wisdom, Truth |
GISSING, George |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
175-176 |
|
81.421 |
Alien sighting |
Aliens are funny little things especially if you see one |
GLAISTER, Johnathan |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
71 |
|
86.670 |
Circle of love |
A baby will cry, if it's too wet or dry |
GLOVER, Joseph Stanley |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
18 |
|
82.994 |
My new year's resolutions |
I will not pour gravy in my brother's socks |
GODFREY, Abigail |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
169 |
|
1.924 |
Eternal rest |
An old man sat at his cottage door |
GODFREY, J. R. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
14-15 |
|
1.969 |
Hill Top musings |
In meditative mood I stood |
GODFREY, J. R. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
10-Nov |
|
1.981 |
In memoriam |
And is she gone, the dear sweet maid |
GODFREY, J. R. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
16-17 |
|
2.085 |
Our Joe's wife |
Our Joe's wife was ill, ah, as ill as could be |
GODFREY, J. R. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
Nov-13 |
|
2.178 |
The brave soldier |
He left his fair home 'mid the woodbines so sweet |
GODFREY, J. R. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
13 |
|
2.185 |
The changed chorister |
In a grand old church on a pleasant hill |
GODFREY, J. R. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
15 |
|
2.274 |
The workman's song |
In the early morn I go away |
GODFREY, J. R. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
14 |
|
82.762 |
A tree, the sun |
A tree can be old |
GOHIL, Jasmine |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
38 |
|
86.675 |
Fairies |
Fairies are such pretty things |
GOLDEN, Janet |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
23 |
|
84.064 |
Christ or Ganymede |
I on the hillside no longer solitary |
GOLDING, Louis |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
17 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
80.781 |
Charles the First |
When Charles the First came on the scene |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: 'Istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
Dec-13 |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
80.782 |
Charles the Second |
This 'ere's about Charles the Second |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: 'Istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
14-17 |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
6.815 |
Ereward the Wake |
William the Conqueror 'ad just warmed up throne |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: More 'istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
2-Mar |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
6.670 |
Ereward the Wake |
William the Conqueror 'ad just warmed up throne |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
More 'istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
M0000946LC |
2.395 |
1.969 |
2-Mar |
Stanley Holloway monologues: see also Marriott Edgar |
6.817 |
Field of the cloth of gold |
King's Chancellor, Thomas Wolsey |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: More 'istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
10-Dec |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
6.672 |
Field of the cloth of gold |
King's Chancellor, Thomas Wolsey |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
More 'istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
M0000946LC |
2.395 |
1.969 |
10-Dec |
Stanley Holloway monologues: see also Marriott Edgar; King Henry VIII |
6.819 |
George the Second |
Wot's this 'ere place called Canada? |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: More 'istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
17-19 |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
6.674 |
George the Second |
Wot's this 'ere place called Canada? |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
More 'istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
M0000946LC |
2.395 |
1.969 |
17-19 |
Stanley Holloway monologues: see also Marriott Edgar |
80.777 |
George the Third |
When George the Third was King |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: More 'istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
20-23 |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
6.675 |
George the Third |
When George the Third was King |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
More 'istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
M0000946LC |
2.395 |
1.969 |
20-23 |
Stanley Holloway monologues: see also Marriott Edgar |
6.673 |
Great Fire of London |
Samuel Pepys said to 'is missus one day |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
More 'istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
M0000946LC |
2.395 |
1.969 |
13-16 |
Stanley Holloway monologues: see also Marriott Edgar |
6.818 |
Great Fire of London |
Samuel Pepys said to 'is missus one day |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: More 'istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
13-16 |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
80.778 |
Henry the Eigth |
Henry the eigth was a fun lovin' lad |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: 'Istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
2-Apr |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
80.780 |
James the First |
James the First came down to rule |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: 'Istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
8-Nov |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
6.816 |
Prince John |
Some years ago there lived a lad |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: More 'istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
4-Aug |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
6.671 |
Prince John |
Some years ago there lived a lad |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
More 'istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
M0000946LC |
2.395 |
1.969 |
5-Aug |
Stanley Holloway monologues: see also Marriott Edgar |
80.783 |
Prince Regent |
Prince Regent, or Prinny as 'e was called |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: 'Istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
18-20 |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
80.779 |
Queen Elizabeth the First |
When Queen Bess arrived on the throne |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: 'Istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
5-Jul |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
80.784 |
Queen Victoria |
Victoria came on the throne |
GOODWIN, G. H. |
LANCASHIRE comic songs: 'Istory according to Albert 'Igginbottom |
|
M0171210LC |
623.206 |
197 |
21-23 |
Stanley Holloway monologues; at Rawtenstall bound together with other selections by Marriott Edgar and G H Goodwin |
87.719 |
Untitled |
Tonight, I opened the door of my life |
GORDON, Stuart |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
5 |
|
80.832 |
Caught in the act |
I watched in amazement as they marched her away |
GOSNEY, Betty |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
101 |
|
80.833 |
Meat sandwich |
I am jobless, I am worthless, I am homeless |
GOSNEY, Maurice |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
101-102 |
|
80.798 |
Confession |
I have done the right thing |
GRACE, Sue |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
22-23 |
|
82.941 |
Hidden treasure |
There is a buried treasure chest |
GRADY, Sophie |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
139 |
|
87.843 |
Symbol of love |
God's day was drawing to a close |
GRAHAM, Adela |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
131 |
|
82.924 |
The fairy |
The fairy is |
GRAHAM, Bethany |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
131 |
|
5.880 |
A dream of war |
I dreamt of war, and cities wrapt in flame |
GRAHAM, Hugh Gardiner |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
143-144 |
|
5.879 |
A summer holiday |
When the earth pours forth her treasure to the Summer's gentle care |
GRAHAM, Hugh Gardiner |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
142-143 |
|
5.877 |
Dryfe |
Tis not for thy hills, lovely Dryfe, nor thy valleys |
GRAHAM, Hugh Gardiner |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
141 |
|
5.876 |
Graeme's Tower |
A structure arose in a dream of my fancy |
GRAHAM, Hugh Gardiner |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
139-140 |
Thirteen stanzas only |
5.885 |
Monarchs and statesmen, or the claims of freedom |
Heaven's voice, immortal Freedom, Men have heard with thrilling wonder |
GRAHAM, Hugh Gardiner |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
150-153 |
Opening stanzas and short extracts only of a 32 page pamphlet printed at Blackburn in 1879 by Mr James Bennett of Barton Street |
5.881 |
Morning |
I love thee, Morning, flooding field and fold |
GRAHAM, Hugh Gardiner |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
144-145 |
|
5.878 |
Ribble |
O! Ribbles's sylvan vales are sweet |
GRAHAM, Hugh Gardiner |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
141-142 |
|
5.882 |
Shakespeare |
Oh! sweetest child of that day's birth |
GRAHAM, Hugh Gardiner |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
145-146 |
|
5.883 |
The honest poor |
There's honour in the poor man's breast more dear to him than gold |
GRAHAM, Hugh Gardiner |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
146-147 |
|
5.884 |
Verses suggested by a visit to the tomb of Burns |
Fain would I bring an unassuming lay |
GRAHAM, Hugh Gardiner |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
147-149 |
|
485 |
Me rich Uncle Fred |
Me rich Uncle Fred had plenty of dough |
GRAHAM, J. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
36 |
|
87.728 |
Dunblane Massacre |
Your children are safely in heaven |
GRAHAM, L. M. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
13 |
|
391 |
The hawthorn |
By the corner of the road she grows |
GRAHAM, Margaret |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
37 |
|
82.154 |
Imagination |
When I see swans in languid pleasure glide |
GRAHAM, Rose |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
64 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
87.801 |
Im Only Me |
I believe that there's Somebody up there |
GRAHAM, Thomas |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
85 |
|
87.798 |
I'm only me |
I believe that there's Somebody up there |
GRAHAM, Thomas |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
85 |
|
1.804 |
A Coronation hymn to King George V |
Hail, noble sire! Thy sons and daughters greet thee |
GRAHAM, W. W. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
117 |
|
1.807 |
A hymn |
As to a mother's tender breast |
GRAHAM, W. W. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
113-114 |
|
1.808 |
A hymn |
To thee my God enthroned above |
GRAHAM, W. W. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
116-117 |
|
2.008 |
Lines to my mother |
Mother! What hallowed scenes that name can make |
GRAHAM, W. W. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
110-111 |
|
2.009 |
Lines written at High Green Wood, when crossing Old Royd Meadow |
Father, the rising sun tell of Thy glory |
GRAHAM, W. W. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
112 |
|
2.071 |
Nuptial greetings to Emily V |
And now that you enter the new married state |
GRAHAM, W. W. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
114-115 |
|
2.158 |
Sunset |
What said the setting sun to me |
GRAHAM, W. W. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
113 |
|
2.295 |
To a friend in adversity |
Let not the memory of the past |
GRAHAM, W. W. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
112 |
|
2.298 |
To a woman's tongue |
My dear Mrs. Grundy the theme of my song |
GRAHAM, W. W. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
115-116 |
|
2.301 |
To Doctor Jim |
Rejoice, Oh happy England! |
GRAHAM, W. W. |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
201-203 |
|
29 |
A Drift of Snow |
I was not here when the lonely wind went by |
GRAINGER, Burton |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
180 |
|
30 |
Happy as Pigs |
She was so huge, a monumental mother |
GRAINGER, Burton |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
181 |
|
708 |
D'ye ken John Peel? |
D'ye Ken John Peel with his coat so gray? |
GRAVES, John Woodcock |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
269-270 |
Cumberland |
87.739 |
The Resurrection |
The golden sun is rising a new day is born |
GRAVES, Sarah Ann |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
24 |
|
84.220 |
A philosophy |
Wiser is it to bear with life on earth |
GRAY, Freda M. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
118 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.219 |
Thou art the man |
I am a jealous God!, so runs the words |
GRAY, Freda M. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
117 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
81.453 |
The dragon |
One night I heard a dragon |
GRAY, Oliver |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
89 |
|
87.790 |
The Blessing |
The child looked up to Heaven |
GREEN, Beverley Yvonne |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
77 |
|
87.853 |
Gambling |
Fruit machine addiction, break the spell |
GREEN, David |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
142 |
|
86.662 |
Armchair travel |
When I do my embroidery I go to foreign lands |
GREENALL, Irene |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
10 |
|
514 |
Little gypsy child |
Your father is a wand'rin' man, my little gypsy child |
GREENHALGH, Margaret |
Preston Writers '72 |
PRESTON WRITERS |
M0017962LC |
78.606 |
1.972 |
60 |
|
4.301 |
Ready fer gooin |
When Liza Binks tuk to 'er bed |
GREENHALGH, Margaret |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
10 |
|
4.105 |
Silver an' brass an' Albert |
Ere's a tale abaht Albert Ramsbottom |
GREENHALGH, Margaret |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
21-23 |
|
853 |
Sunderland Point |
If you should wish for peace and rest |
GREENHALGH, Margaret |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
147 |
|
819 |
Witches of Pendle |
The rolling moors of Lancashire are wide and bracken-gold |
GREENHALGH, Margaret |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
76 |
|
80.864 |
An ambitious man |
An ambitious man is a woman's woe |
GREENLAND, Loretta |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
145 |
|
2.447 |
Desdichado |
Weep not for them who weep |
GREENWELL, Dora |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
147 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.449 |
Home |
Two birds with one nest |
GREENWELL, Dora |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
151 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.446 |
The blade of grass |
Oh! little blade of grass |
GREENWELL, Dora |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
147 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.448 |
The red-breast |
The souls in bliss to souls in woe |
GREENWELL, Dora |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
148-151 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
6.208 |
St Silvester's Day, 1384 |
I, John the priest, the last who knew the face |
GREENWOOD, Alice D. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
44-47 |
|
82.808 |
My nan |
My nan is honest and kind |
GREENWOOD, Paige |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
64 |
|
82.741 |
Sunshine |
Sun blazing bright |
GREGORY, Charlotte |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
25 |
|
81.315 |
Snakes |
Slimy snakes crawl in your bed |
GREGORY, Hannah |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
16 |
|
86.754 |
The growing town |
Big steel teeth |
GRIEVE, Ricky |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
102 |
|
86.753 |
The future |
What is the future for us all? |
GRIFFIN, Anne |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
101 |
|
83.001 |
The boy and the swan |
What a forlorn life he has |
GRIFFITHS, Gillian |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
173 |
|
81.470 |
Wanted - caretaker at St Mark's CE Primary School |
St Mark's CE Primary School needs |
GRIFFITHS, Paul |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
97 |
|
5.203 |
Progress palace |
When Emma Jones lived in eaur street |
GRIMSHAW, Mary |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
30 |
Mary Grimshaw also known as 'Tommy's Lass' |
5.202 |
When he's awreet |
His brains wern't allus in his feet |
GRIMSHAW, Mary |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
30 |
Mary Grimshaw is also known as 'Tommy's Lass'; Glue sniffing; Drugs |
80.811 |
Paveway |
Hung beneath your eagle, thrusting for the sky |
GRINTER, Martin |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
41-42 |
|
5.998 |
An allegory of the god-protected child of god |
Once on a time in an ancient close |
GROSART, Alexander Balloch |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
178-179 |
|
6.000 |
Sunset longings |
When I gaze on the setting sun |
GROSART, Alexander Balloch |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
181-182 |
Three stanzas from a hymn |
6.001 |
The everlasting arms underneath |
The child, that to its mother clings |
GROSART, Alexander Balloch |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
182 |
Opening stanza of a hymn |
6.002 |
The first cradle of the first-born |
Safe defended from all harms |
GROSART, Alexander Balloch |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
182-183 |
|
5.999 |
The glory of god in creation |
Morn unfolding gates of gold |
GROSART, Alexander Balloch |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
180-181 |
A hymn |
84.787 |
The Tear-Dimmed Lamp |
I had a dream that wafted me far up to the City of Gold |
GROSART, Alexander Balloch |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
183-184 |
|
82.463 |
I gazed o'er the blue, still waters wide |
I gazed o'er the blue, still waters wide |
GROVES, James Horton |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
330 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.392 |
I gazed o'er the blue, still waters wide |
I gazed o'er the blue, still waters wide |
GROVES, James Horton |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
87 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.393 |
Oh, mirk and stormy |
Oh, mirk and stormy is the nicht |
GROVES, James Horton |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
88-89 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.467 |
Oh, mirk and storny |
Oh, mirk and stormy is the nicht |
GROVES, James Horton |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
336-338 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
87.777 |
Flat on my face |
I'm engulfed by the darkness, Is anyone there? |
GROVES, M. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
62 |
|
6.227 |
To a beau |
Kind nature, Charles, no doubt has made you fine |
GUESHOFF, J. E. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
121 |
|
82.904 |
Cliff-hanger |
Heartache |
GUNN, Nicholas James |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
119 |
|
81.167 |
A passing flight of fancy |
I saw this fly |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
12 |
Ormskirk author |
81.183 |
A prayer |
Help me truly to know myself for what I am |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
27 |
Ormskirk author |
81.168 |
Ambition |
Ambition is like an angry animal |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
13 |
Ormskirk author |
81.192 |
Amen |
Amen. Let it be so |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
36 |
Ormskirk author |
81.175 |
Black plastic bags |
Black plastic bags seen swirling waywardly in life's great winds |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
19 |
Ormskirk author |
81.172 |
Bracken |
It once, like me, had known more pleasant time |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
17 |
Ormskirk author |
81.190 |
Bread and wine |
We say a simple 'thank you' for a little piece of bread |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
34 |
Ormskirk author |
81.156 |
Brickmakers' Arms Yard |
I wandered back again today to humble place where I was born |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
2-Mar |
Ormskirk author |
81.173 |
Confucious |
The sun rose early in the west tonight |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
17 |
Ormskirk author |
81.180 |
Destiny |
Before ever was the snow and ice |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
24 |
Ormskirk author |
81.164 |
Dunblane |
My heart feels pain |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
9 |
Ormskirk author |
81.176 |
Elmers Green |
This place looks out towards the sea through occidental windows of the sky |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
20 |
Ormskirk author |
81.159 |
Gethsemane |
Not such a place was this for thoughts of laughter nor of mirth |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
5 |
Ormskirk author |
81.161 |
Grave thoughts in Ormskirk churchyard |
Here in the midst of time and in the mist of our antiquity |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
8 |
Ormskirk author |
81.169 |
He that cometh to God |
Deep within my mind I found strange thoughts one day |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
14 |
Ormskirk author |
81.160 |
I too have hope in my home town (Ormskirk) |
I'd just been listening to the news |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
6-Jul |
Ormskirk author |
81.166 |
Money talks |
Money talks |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
11 |
Ormskirk author |
81.179 |
Obituary columns |
Regiments of vanquished fighters |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
23 |
Ormskirk author |
81.182 |
Our long home |
That sense of abject loss |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
26 |
Ormskirk author |
81.170 |
Reflections on the ebb tide |
It was cold and wet, a greyish night |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
15 |
Ormskirk author |
81.165 |
Rubbish |
The twisted box, tin-opened can, all such consigned within |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
10 |
Ormskirk author |
81.163 |
Sheep can only graze |
The sun sank down to that horizon called the west |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
9 |
Ormskirk author |
81.184 |
Snowing at dusk |
An eerie hush descended on almost everything |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
28 |
Ormskirk author |
81.188 |
Strife |
That speaks which sparks such spoken spite |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
32 |
Ormskirk author |
81.174 |
The 9.29am train |
The 9.29am train was my favourite train |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
18-19 |
Ormskirk author |
81.185 |
The hedgehog |
It was like a softly rustling sound |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
29 |
Ormskirk author |
81.187 |
The scarecrow |
There he stood |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
31 |
Ormskirk author |
81.171 |
The sower |
No sower ever sowed a better seed |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
16 |
Ormskirk author |
81.158 |
The squirrel |
Suddenly it appeared! Where nothing before was there |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
4 |
Ormskirk author |
81.177 |
The stream |
Down where the ever-moving river drags his weary legs |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
21 |
Ormskirk author |
81.157 |
The three graces |
Since neither faith,nor hope, nor even wondrous love |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
3 |
Ormskirk author |
81.178 |
To a dead mouse |
There it was, this baby fieldmouse which so clearly lay |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
22 |
Ormskirk author |
81.186 |
To my former lover |
It all took place in earlier years when we loved each other so |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
30 |
Ormskirk author |
81.162 |
True or false? |
I heard some muffled voices; to me seemed far away |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
8 |
Ormskirk author |
81.181 |
Where your heart is |
What you have set your heart on there is your treasure too |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
25 |
Ormskirk author |
81.189 |
Which of you two? |
Life is full of folk |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
33 |
Ormskirk author |
81.191 |
Windows |
Windows strike me |
GUY, Bill |
September song |
GUY, Bill |
M0166505LC |
600.472 |
0 |
35 |
Ormskirk author |
6.202 |
Lysander |
And this is Athens! He was wise who saith |
H. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
13-17 |
|
4.492 |
Owdham |
To some folk things are never reet |
H. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
82-83 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
3.312 |
To Samuel Bamford |
Bamford, an unknown friend would bring |
H. |
Miscellaneous poems |
BAMFORD, Samuel |
M0067263LC |
281.770 |
1.821 |
84-86 |
Now prisoner in Lincoln Castle, for having led a number of his fellow townsmen, bearing a banner inscribed 'Unity and Strength' to the peaceable meeting of Englishmen at Manchester, on the 16th August, 1819 |
5.303 |
To the redbreast: written during a heavy fall of snow |
Lonely little chirping robin |
H. W. |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
10-Nov |
An early fugitive poem written Blackburn December 1823 |
162 |
Love's evil choice |
I sow'd the seeds of love it was all in the spring |
HABERGHAM, Mrs. |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
34-35 |
|
1.364 |
Love's evil choice |
I sow'd the seeds of love it was all in the spring |
HABERGHAM, Mrs. |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
53-54 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
86.695 |
Just as hard - only different |
These days kids just don't know they're born |
HADFIELD, Michael |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
43 |
|
2.144 |
Sowerby's retiring schoolmaster |
As I think of this old village |
HAIGH, Levi |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
61-64 |
|
82.836 |
The forest's story |
I remember when life was good |
HAILWOOD, Megan |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
80-81 |
|
82.128 |
Airport |
Voices subdued |
HAINES, Catherine M. C. |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
10 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
55 |
Home |
Yon town whear lately I did roam |
HALL, Carole |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
205 |
|
56 |
Th'owd Town |
Tha knows id's bin a reet long time |
HALL, Carole |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
206-207 |
|
87.715 |
Renewal |
With the hand of God on my shoulder |
HALL, Dawn |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
1 |
|
81.500 |
The black horse |
Hear the black horse walking down the road |
HALL, Dean |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
112 |
|
82.137 |
A summer day (a sequence of Hiakus) |
Slowly rising sun |
HALL, Geoffrey |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
27 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
81.324 |
Cosmic |
Saturn, Earth, Neptune, Mars |
HALL, Peter |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
20 |
|
81.559 |
Alphabet animals |
A is for an armadillo that has a very hard shell |
HALL, Sarah |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
144 |
|
4.781 |
A day-dream on fox-cloud or the history of a landscape |
Warm was the day on high Fox-Cloud |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
24-30 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
290 |
A day-dream on Fox-Cloud: or the history of a landscape |
Warm was the day on high Fox-Cloud |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
406-412 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
4.776 |
A lay in spring |
The skies assume their softest hue |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
18-19 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
4.790 |
A time to laugh |
Twas said with saddest truth by one |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
51-52 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
299 |
A time to laugh |
Twas said with saddest truth by one |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
433-435 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
4.787 |
Be kind |
Be kind to the old man, while strong in thy youth |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
47 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
346 |
Burns and his fame |
Men of the land of flood and fell |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
439-440 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
6.124 |
Burns and his fame |
Men of the land of flood and fell |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
10-Dec |
Recited to a meeting of Scotsmen, in Sheffield, on the anniversary of their poet's birth, 1841 |
4.796 |
Burns and his fame |
Men of the land of flood and fell |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
57-58 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
6.151 |
Changes at home: to John Whitehead, Esq, British Consul at Archangel |
Allwood's Croft-stile is gone, my Friend |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
62-63 |
Burnley author |
6.138 |
Derby Arboretum: written in the album there, 1846 |
Blest be the man who here hath shrined |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
42-43 |
Burnley author |
351 |
Do thy best |
I love all plans to help the poor |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
445-446 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
4.801 |
Do thy best |
I love all plans to help the poor |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
63-64 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
350 |
Easter |
How brightly breaks this Easter morn |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
444-445 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
4.800 |
Easter |
How brightly breaks this Easter morn |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
62-63 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
6.142 |
Epitaph for Sidney Giles |
Come, Nature's lover! Let thy tear |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
48 |
Burnley author |
4.773 |
Evening light |
Though Furness Fells extend a longer line |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
13-15 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
355 |
Evening thought |
O'er Annesley Hills the sun retires |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
449-450 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
6.155 |
Evening thought while walking in the forest, near Newstead |
O'er Annesley Hills the sun retires |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
68-69 |
Burnley author |
4.806 |
Evening thought while walking in the forest, near Newstead |
O'er Annesley Hills the sun retires |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
69-70 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
6.123 |
Friendship's pilgrimage |
Glow! Deep thanks glow! That I am here at last |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
5-Sep |
Burnley author |
4.778 |
In affectionate remembrance of Little Sissy |
O, Righteous God! We bow to Thee |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
20 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
285 |
Lays from the Lakes: A lay in spring |
The skies assume their softest hue |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
400-401 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
282 |
Lays from the Lakes: Evening Light |
Though Furness Fells extend a longer line |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
395-397 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
287 |
Lays from the Lakes: Little Sissy |
O, Righteous God! We bow to Thee |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
402 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
284 |
Lays from the Lakes: Lizzie Warriner |
She bloom'd, a tender autumn flower |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
399-400 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
279 |
Lays from the Lakes: Near Windermere |
Didst thou e'er lend thine ear to Nature's tune |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
387-390 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
286 |
Lays from the Lakes: Response |
I shall not climb yon hills today |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
401-402 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
283 |
Lays from the Lakes: Rich though poor |
An old man in a little room |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
397-399 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
288 |
Lays from the Lakes: Richard Rigg, of Windermere |
And who was Richard Rigg? A man whose name |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
403 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
280 |
Lays from the Lakes: The Lakes in spring |
The snow has vanish'd from the mountains |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
390-393 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
289 |
Lays from the Lakes: the upland hamlet |
Little old Hamlet! Thou'rt a favour'd place |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
404-405 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
281 |
Lays from the Lakes: Thoughts on existence |
Say, what can this existence mean |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
393-395 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
4.775 |
Lizzie Warriner |
She bloom'd, a tender autumn flower |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
17-18 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. Child of Edward and Margaret Warriner, Browhead, near Ambleside, born Oct 4 1864 died Oct 7 1865 |
4.788 |
Mary's dream |
The days are shortening fast, Mary |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
48-50 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
297 |
Mary's dream |
The days are shortening fast, Mary |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
430-432 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
352 |
Midnight |
How solemn the surrounding city's sleep |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
447 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
4.802 |
Midnight: composed on Ouse Bridge, York, 1839 |
How solemn the surrounding city's sleep |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
65 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
356 |
My birthplace |
How beauteously the sunlit foliage waves |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
226-228 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
4.770 |
Near Windermere |
Didst thou e'er lend thine ear to Nature's tune |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
5-Aug |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
6.126 |
Not words but flowers |
Thou tellest me thou canst not write |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
16-19 |
Burnley author |
4.777 |
Response to the funeral-card of a friend's child, May 1st 1866 |
I shall not climb yon hills today |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
19-20 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
296 |
Rhymes for my children: Be kind |
Be kind to the old man, while strong in thy youth |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
429 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
293 |
Rhymes for my children: the botanist |
John Bloomer was a botanist |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
425-426 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
295 |
Rhymes for my children: the negro's breakfast |
Twas on a cold december morn |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
427-429 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
294 |
Rhymes for my children: the soldier's return |
Down in a lane, a low white cot |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
426-427 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
4.783 |
Rhymes for my children: the Universal teacher |
In days gone by I knew a child |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
41-42 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
292 |
Rhymes for my children: the universal teacher |
In days gone by I knew a child |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
421-422 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
6.127 |
Rhymes on Hardwick: as seen from Cocksmoor - one of Robin Hood's hills |
Lo! Where upon the plain appears |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
20-25 |
Burnley author |
4.774 |
Rich though poor |
An old man in a little room |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
15-17 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
4.779 |
Richard Rigg, of Windermere |
And who was Richard Rigg? A man whose name |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
21 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
6.130 |
Rural influences: in February |
Most mild, though dim, comes February in |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
28 |
Burnley author |
349 |
Sarah in Heaven |
The autumn days come round again |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
443-444 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
4.799 |
Sarah in heaven |
The Autumn days come round again |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
61-62 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
6.141 |
Sherwood Forest |
O! the fern-clad hills of Sherwood |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
46-47 |
Burnley author |
4.807 |
Song |
They fondly join'd at life's hill-foot |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
70 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
6.133 |
Song: showing how Robin Hood first met with Maid Marianne |
I'll sing the song of Robin Hood, the Forest King of yore |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
31-34 |
Burnley author |
6.125 |
Stanzas |
They tell me o'er yon Forest wide |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
13-15 |
Written on first hearing of the young author of 'Mornings in June', 'A hymn to sunset' and other beautiful poems |
347 |
Sunderland |
Throng Sunderland! Full many a scene hast thou |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
440-441 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
4.797 |
Sunderland (1850) |
Throng Sunderland! Full many a scene hast thou |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
58-59 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
353 |
Sunset at Southport |
The sun just setting o'er the distant sea |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
447-448 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
4.803 |
Sunset at Southport |
The sun just setting o'er the distant sea |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
65-66 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
6.147 |
Thanks for flowers: to Mr and Mrs William Fisher, of Sheffield |
Dear Friends! I thank you for the flowers |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
57-58 |
Burnley author |
4.784 |
The Botanist |
John Bloomer was a botanist |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
43-44 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
348 |
The dwellings of the poor |
Whene'er we seek the lane, the street |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
441-443 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
4.798 |
The dwellings of the poor |
Whene'er we seek the lane, the street |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
59-61 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. Respectfully inscribed to the Friends of Sanitary Reform |
6.136 |
The dying maniac |
I'll not believe it! Though with madness |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
38-39 |
Burnley author |
4.789 |
The electric light |
True science is a prophet of the Lord |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
50-51 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
298 |
The electric light |
True science is a prophet of the Lord |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
432-433 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
6.152 |
The end of grief |
Oh! What a meekener of man is grief |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
64 |
Burnley author |
6.137 |
The Goldthorpe Miller; a sketch from life |
To Goldthorpe Mill, if you've a mind |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
40-42 |
Burnley author |
4.771 |
The Lakes in spring |
The snow has vanish'd from the mountains |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
8-Nov |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
4.786 |
The negro's breakfast |
Twas on a cold December morn |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
45-47 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
4.782 |
The Outlaw's Excursion to Clipston: a tale of Sherwood Forest |
O with what joyfulness we hail |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
31-40 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
291 |
The outlaw's excursion to Clipston: a tale of Sherwood Forest |
O with what joyfulness we hail |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
413-422 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
6.153 |
the Rectory: written on returning from a visit, in Lincolnshire |
How pleasant here in those calm days |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
65-66 |
Burnley author |
6.131 |
The same: at the end of March |
O look and listen! 'tis the awaken'd Spring |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
29 |
Burnley author |
6.132 |
The same: in summer |
To stroll at stintless ease through some wild dell |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
30 |
Burnley author |
6.154 |
The sightless one |
Forlorn and thoughtful, there she sits all day |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
67 |
Burnley author |
4.785 |
The soldier's return |
Down in a lane, a low white cot |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
44-45 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
4.805 |
The stream of life |
My life a mountain stream has been |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
67-69 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
4.780 |
The upland hamlet |
Little old Hamlet! Thou'rt a favour'd place |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
22-23 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
6.122 |
The upland hamlet |
Little old hamlet! Thou'rt a favour'd place |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
1-Apr |
Burnley author |
6.129 |
The voice of truth |
Oft in the storm's inconstant sweep |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
26-27 |
Burnley author |
6.139 |
Thoughts on being called to magnetise an invalid |
There is something about her not moulded of clay |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
44 |
Burnley author |
4.772 |
Thoughts on existence |
Say, what can this existence mean |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
Nov-13 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
301 |
Times teachings |
We cannot grow younger by waiting |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
435-436 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
4.792 |
Time's teachings |
We cannot grow younger by waiting |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
53-54 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
6.134 |
To - on a visit to her native scenes |
Hail to thee, darling of my heart |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
35-36 |
Burnley author |
6.135 |
To a wife: on the anniversary of her wedding day 1836 |
When first you met, the fading year |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
37-38 |
Burnley author |
6.149 |
To Bernard Barton |
Bard of the Gentle! Mine is not |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
59-60 |
Burnley author |
6.146 |
To George Woolley, Esq, Isle of France |
Whilst lately wandering in the Old Bath Wood |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
56 |
Burnley author |
4.793 |
To Henry Houlding |
One day I took the paper up |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
54-55 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
302 |
To Henry Houlding |
One day I took the paper up |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
436-437 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
4.791 |
To John Sutherland |
Might we but stroll at will through yon wild dell |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
53 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
300 |
To John Sutherland |
Might we but stroll at will through yon wild dell |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
435 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
345 |
To Lady Brewster |
What memories will cluster round a name |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
438 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
4.795 |
To Lady Brewster |
What memories will cluster round a name |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
56-57 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
6.145 |
To Mrs Sarah Oldham |
More love I and revere thee every day |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
55 |
Burnley author |
6.144 |
To my father |
Dear Father! A volume I'm going to print |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
53-54 |
Burnley author |
6.150 |
To my first grey hairs |
Blossoms of death! Why here so soon |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
60-61 |
Burnley author |
354 |
To my first grey hairs |
Blossoms of Death! Why here so soon |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
448-449 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
4.804 |
To my first grey hairs |
Blossoms of death! Why here so soon |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
66-67 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
6.140 |
To the same patient after her recovery |
I would not call thy thought away |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
45 |
Burnley author |
303 |
Trees and men |
I saw two trees. The one was fair and high |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Biographical sketches of remarkable people, chiefly from personal recollection; with miscellaeous papers and poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129210LC |
491.584 |
1.873 |
437-438 |
Pseudonym was: the Sherwood Forester. Burnley author |
4.794 |
Trees and men |
I saw two trees. The one was fair and high |
HALL, Spencer T. |
Lays from the lakes and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0015409LC |
491.525 |
1.878 |
55-56 |
isbn is for SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor. |
6.128 |
Wiith flowers from Kyle: to a friend in Sherwood Forest |
Here, Friend! I send thee flowers, sweet flowers |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
25 |
Burnley author |
6.143 |
Wilford |
Wilford! When first I gazed on thee |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
49-53 |
Burnley author |
6.148 |
Wordless sorrow: on hearing of the sudden death of a Friend, the Victim of Slander |
Poor Sufferer! Slander's hateful tongue |
HALL, Spencer T. |
The upland hamlet and other poems |
HALL, Spencer T. |
M0129159LC |
491.512 |
1.847 |
58 |
Burnley author |
84.130 |
Night comes to town |
When Day goes westward with his pack |
HALL, William C. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
46 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.132 |
Sweet April |
Leave your books behind |
HALL, William C. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
48-49 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.131 |
Their years |
Who would capture youth again |
HALL, William C. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
47 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
81.508 |
Things at night |
Look outside |
HALLAM, Lauren |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
116 |
|
80.865 |
Different |
The days of love, romance and law |
HALLIDAY, Cheryl |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
146 |
|
540 |
Up i' t' Dales (Dalesickness) |
Wheniver Ah think o'T' Bonny Wharfe |
HALLIDAY, Donald |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
110-111 |
Yorkshire poetry |
517 |
Yorkshire tyke |
It's Ripon for rowels, an' Sheffield for steel |
HALLIDAY, Wilfred J. |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
89 |
Yorkshire poetry |
77 |
The real delinquents |
We read in the papers |
HALLISSEY, Christopher |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
85 |
|
5.673 |
The old man and his wife |
There was an old man who liv'd in a wood |
HALLIWELL, J. O. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
7-Aug |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.741 |
The old man and his wife |
There was an old man who liv'd in a wood |
HALLIWELL, J. O. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
7-Aug |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.678 |
The old man and his wife |
There was an old man who liv'd in a wood |
HALLIWELL, J. O. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
9-Oct |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
1.150 |
An old fashioned welcome |
Twer an owd fashioned cot |
HALSTEAD, David |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
156-157 |
|
906 |
Billy Suet's song |
Bodle un Mischief un Poncake un me |
HALSTEAD, David |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
108-109 |
|
1.034 |
Billy Suet's song |
Bodle un mischief un Poncake un me |
HALSTEAD, David |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
155 |
|
210 |
Billy Suet's song |
Bodle un Mischief un Poncake un me |
HALSTEAD, David |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
54 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
139 |
Billy Suet's song |
Bodle un Mischief un Poncake un me |
HALSTEAD, David |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
75 |
|
403 |
Billy Suet's song (extract) |
Bodle un Mischief un Poncake un me |
HALSTEAD, David |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
105 |
|
211 |
Whod could aw say? |
Aw'd bin deawn to Blackpool, just for the day |
HALSTEAD, David |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
55 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
396 |
Silence |
Mist creeps over the moor |
HALSTEAD, Nora |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
40 |
|
1.982 |
In memoriam |
Thou heard'st thy country's call of need |
HALSTEAD, Robert |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
109 |
|
395 |
Sunrise and sunset |
The sun is up |
HAMER, Hilda |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
40 |
|
393 |
Winter |
The garden seat stands weathering |
HAMER, Hilda |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
38 |
|
4.701 |
A dream of nature |
I knew a learned boy who used to sit |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
143-149 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.739 |
A house of prayer |
The morning came, the day of holy rest |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
253-255 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.745 |
A London studio |
They who love nature best surround themselves |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
269-270 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.687 |
A ruined church, whose broken walls |
A ruined church, whose broken walls |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
71 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.752 |
After a battle |
When England feared invasion, and the man |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
300-302 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.718 |
Al Jannat |
We die - I know no more - I cannot tell |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
185-189 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.730 |
Aphorisms |
Size is not value; knowledge loves to bind |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
217-219 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.686 |
Ardhonnel |
These mountains grow oppressive. I will row |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
57-70 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.757 |
At Dover April 1855 |
It is the midnight murmur of the sea |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
324 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.703 |
Ave Maria |
There is a maiden at my side |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
154-155 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.767 |
Casts |
When the great Napoleon lay |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
366-367 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.690 |
Conclusion |
Last night I saw the gloom upon the loch |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
82-87 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.763 |
Coral Islands |
Down in the Tropic sea |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
345-351 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.758 |
Corruption 1855 |
Corruption filled old nations ere they fell |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
325 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.728 |
De Argentine |
Come home, come home, De Argentine |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
209-210 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.729 |
Dear-bought field |
There is a field three acres in extent |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
211-215 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.719 |
Eden |
One evening at a noble's house I left |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
190-192 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.768 |
Engine driving |
Stand steady, sir! Close up, close up |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
368-371 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.761 |
Falling stars |
With old traditions all around us dying |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
336-341 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.750 |
Florence Nightingale |
Learning could not crush thy heart |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
295-297 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.766 |
Footprints in sandstone |
Listen while I tell a story of old Time the sure and slow |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
358-365 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.747 |
For - |
I have a thousand messengers to bear |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
284 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.680 |
Fraoch Elan |
You cannot see the castle on the isle |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
13-27 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.683 |
From a beach of yellow sand |
From a beach of yellow sand |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
38 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.723 |
Gabriel Ratchets |
Wild huntsmen? 'Twas a flight of swans |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
201-202 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.746 |
Haddon Hall |
There is an air about these terraces |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
271-284 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.689 |
I left the islands in the night |
I left the islands in the night |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
81 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.759 |
Imperial guests: a sketch in Piccadilly, April 16, 1855 |
I stood upon a balcony, and watched |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
326-329 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.696 |
Indolence |
My heart is wasting like a loosened vine |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
126 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.697 |
Industry |
My days are never weary, yet I toil |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
127 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.688 |
Inish Erreth |
Near to Ardhonnel Inish Erreth lies |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
72-80 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.682 |
Inishail |
There is a fair green island on Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
29-37 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.678 |
Introductory |
These isles were once the crests of pastoral hills |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
4-Nov |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.762 |
Iodine |
There was a time when we were taught |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
342-343 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.684 |
Kilchurn |
Now, as I write, it is a time of war |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
39-55 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.711 |
Lancashire bell-ringers |
From the dark old belfry tower |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
173-175 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.706 |
Love and light |
I know a lady very bright |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
160-161 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.691 |
Maclean of Duart |
Upon the leaded roof of a square keep |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
95-102 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.725 |
Marian |
She wanders nightly through a world of streets |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
203-204 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.749 |
Marshal St Arnaud |
The heroes that the sculptor hews |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
290-294 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.699 |
Moonrise |
O look at that superb autumnal moon |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
133 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.707 |
My old dog's grave |
My dog is buried near the garden seat |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
162-165 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.700 |
My own study |
If you have read some hundreds of these lines |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
134-142 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.734 |
My own violin |
I wish that all that eloquence |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
236-244 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.685 |
On a turret of the keep |
On a turret of the keep |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
56 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.679 |
Once the Island of the Blest |
One the Island of the Blest |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
12 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.743 |
Parable of the stream |
I am a priest of nature, and I preach |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
263-265 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.710 |
Parasites |
Insects that draw their living from a steed |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
172 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.716 |
Perfume |
False girl! Thy sweetness had a price |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
182 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.709 |
Revelry |
Merrily, merrily, drink we all |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
170-172 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.724 |
Self-command |
I have the pleasure now in self-command |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
202 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.736 |
Singing with Constantia |
Our voices mingle, and the waves of sound |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
248-249 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.755 |
Sir De Lacy Evans at Inkerman |
In a heavy fog their watch they kept |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
311-314 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.741 |
Skating before the wind |
Look down - the ice streams under us |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
258-259 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.740 |
Skating song |
The lake is frozen bright and clear |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
256-257 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.742 |
Sledging in Lancashire |
The sun has set an hour ago |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
260-262 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.695 |
Staffa |
I entered Fingal's cave, where some have learned |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
121-124 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.692 |
Sunrise on Loch Lomond |
A little boat was half across the loch |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
105-109 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.756 |
The Allies in the Crystal Palace April 20th, 1855 |
Down from his niche with England's Queens and Kings |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
315-323 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.726 |
The Australian shepherd |
Tis cold and rainy on this winter night |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
205-206 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.738 |
The bath |
Upon a daisied sward I sank |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
251-252 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.698 |
The beacon |
There was of old a low and moated Peel |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
128-133 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.765 |
The Britannia Bridge |
Some have iron thews and sinews, some are muscular of mind |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
356-357 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.760 |
The Central Hall in the new Palace of Westminster |
Between those glorious chambers whence proceed |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
333-335 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.753 |
The child-soldier |
A little boy stood on the field |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
303-305 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.721 |
The confines of thought |
We cannot look before us and behind |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
195-197 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.737 |
The dying student |
October found an humble-bee half dead |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
250 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.764 |
The empty pupa case |
You cannot turn a pebble in the stream |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
352-355 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.681 |
The Fair Rosamund 1154 - 1189 |
The fairest island on the lake |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
28 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.727 |
The fire on the moor |
The sun is setting. On the hill |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
207-208 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.702 |
The glow-worm |
The rolling worlds above |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
152-153 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.717 |
The helmeted skull |
I put a helmet on a skull |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
183-184 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.677 |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
I passed Loch Awe as tourists do |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
3 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.708 |
The last link |
His dwelling is a palace of the arts |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
166-169 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.769 |
The night train |
The night's as dark as pitch |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
372-374 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.732 |
The Palace and its inscription: a reminiscence of Chatsworth |
Sorrow and Death - unwelcome everywhere |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
227-232 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.694 |
The pilgrim of Windermere |
I dwell in lands whose beauty is unknown |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
112-120 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.731 |
The pilgrimage of grace; or, the ballad of Sir Stephen Hamerton |
The Church was spoiled by sacrilege |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
220-224 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.748 |
The pillar of peace |
Within the Palatine of Lancaster |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
287-289 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.693 |
The pools of Cladich |
Below the bridge of Cladich are five pools |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
110-111 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.704 |
The Sanyassi |
I have subdued at last the will to live |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
156-158 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.751 |
The ship of misery |
Fifteen hundred wounded men |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
298-299 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.735 |
The teachers |
All the world is written over |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
246-247 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.714 |
The widowed swan |
The valley narrowed, and the lofty cliffs |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
178-179 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.715 |
Thorwaldsen's death |
The play is interrupted - every eye |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
180-181 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.712 |
To a sarcastic beauty |
Your breast is heaped like mountain snows |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
175 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.705 |
To Beatrice at parting |
Your image, love, when you depart |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
159 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.744 |
To BH, Christ Church, Oxford |
My passionate love of nature and of truth |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
266-268 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.754 |
To General Scarlett, leader of the Heavy Cavalry at Balaklava |
We knew that there was more beneath |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
306-310 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.713 |
To her brother |
An angel guarded me at birth |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
176-177 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.720 |
To the meadow saffron |
Thou art purple with cold |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
193-194 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.722 |
Turner |
Turner had strength to bear that tempering |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
198-200 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
4.733 |
Unforgotten |
Old friend, it grieved me to remember you |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
The Isles of Loch Awe |
HAMERTON, Philip Gilbert |
M0127677LC |
486.972 |
1.859 |
233-235 |
Author was a Burnley artist and writer |
86.791 |
Today |
You who are reading |
HAMILTON, Donald |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
123 |
|
81.463 |
Who is she? |
As I look in the mirror |
HAMILTON, Laura |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
93 |
|
1.035 |
A bit o' good feighr |
There's nowt loike a bit o' good feighr |
HAMPSON, W. F. |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
160 |
|
1.037 |
A flittin' |
Owd Jack o' Bob's bin flittin' an' he's come to live i th' fowt |
HAMPSON, W. F. |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
163-164 |
|
542 |
Keep peggin' away |
There's one thing aw've noticed while maulin' areawnd |
HAMPSON, W. F. |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
115-116 |
Lancashire poetry |
1.151 |
Owd Ephraim Woods |
Owd Ephraim Woods he kept a shop |
HAMPSON, W. F. |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
162-163 |
|
1.036 |
Turton Fair |
Aw've just bin up to Turton Fair |
HAMPSON, W. F. |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
161 |
|
82.648 |
Owd England |
Th'art welcome, thrice welcome, Owd England |
HAMPSON, Walter |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
92-94 |
2nd ed rev |
4.340 |
A cup o' tay |
Some like whisky, an' some like ale |
HAMPSON, William Fielding |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
27 |
|
4.318 |
Eaur Mary's chap is comin' to his tay |
By gum Ah never seed sich wark |
HAMPSON, William Fielding |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
13 |
|
4.339 |
It's grand |
It's grand to get whum once again |
HAMPSON, William Fielding |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
27 |
|
4.338 |
Sally Brown |
A winsome lass is Sally Brown |
HAMPSON, William Fielding |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
26 |
|
82.935 |
Victorian schoolroom |
Boy concentrates, reading his book |
HANKINSON, Aaron |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
136 |
|
81.562 |
A winter poem |
The snow is falling |
HANNAH, Kathryn |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
147 |
|
87.854 |
Faith |
A leaf, that's all |
HANNAH, Roger |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
143 |
|
332 |
Shoulder yo'r own wheel |
When things dunnot move as yo'd like em' why fret? |
HARDMAN, S. |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
112 |
|
82.015 |
The rose of Lancashire |
The briar rose its beauty shows |
HARDMAN, S. |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
51 |
|
376 |
The rose of Lancashire |
The brier rose its beauty shows |
HARDMAN, Sam |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
29 |
|
81.055 |
A Father's appeal to his son |
Aw've worked i' coal-pits, damp un drear |
HARDMAN, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
174-175 |
|
575 |
A father's appeal to his son (abridged) |
Aw've worked i' coal-pits, damp un drear |
HARDMAN, Samuel |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
164-165 |
Lancashire poetry |
81.056 |
Eawr Feyre Brigade |
Eawr Feyre Brigade are what aw co |
HARDMAN, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
175-177 |
|
212 |
Howcombe hikers |
While wawkin eawt near my abode |
HARDMAN, Samuel |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
56-57 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
1.038 |
It's nice! |
It's nice to get whum on a dark winter's neet |
HARDMAN, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
166-167 |
|
213 |
My first suit |
When my fust suit were donn'd th' fust time |
HARDMAN, Samuel |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
58 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
140 |
My fust suit |
When my fust suit were donn'd th' fust time |
HARDMAN, Samuel |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
76-77 |
|
907 |
Sing un bi jolly |
If yo're stomach bi empty, yo'r shoon worn to th' welt |
HARDMAN, Samuel |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
110-112 |
|
908 |
The rose of Lancashire |
The brier rose its beauty shows |
HARDMAN, Samuel |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
112 |
|
1.145 |
Th'owd cobbler |
Workin' away fro' youth to owd age |
HARDMAN, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
168 |
|
1.039 |
Tum Stopport |
Tum Stopport he were a funny owd mon |
HARDMAN, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
167 |
|
1.146 |
When we were lads at skoo |
Thoose days when we were lads at skoo |
HARDMAN, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
169-170 |
|
372 |
Tethered astronauts |
The night is huge with snow |
HARDY, D. |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
26 |
|
32 |
Loss |
A girl walked here, I follow the narrow path |
HARDY, Dorothy |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
183 |
|
31 |
Summer days |
Outside in the garden birds swoop |
HARDY, Dorothy |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
182 |
|
848 |
Tethered astronauts |
The night is huge with snow |
HARDY, Dorothy |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
124 |
|
81.433 |
The man in the moon |
The man in the moon winked at me |
HARGREAVES, Nicola |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
76 |
|
82.986 |
Amazing |
My mum's amazing, she can |
HARGREAVES, Katie and MORAN, Sarah |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
164 |
|
214 |
A Rossendale greeting |
Welcome! Ay! Yes, ah'll say t'agen |
HARGREAVES, Walter |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
59-60 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers. Pseudonym was Shepster |
909 |
A Rossendale greeting |
Welcome! Ay! Yes, ah'll say t'agen |
HARGREAVES, Walter |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
113-115 |
|
216 |
Th'owd corner cubbord |
Fine furniture's grand in its place |
HARGREAVES, Walter |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
62-64 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
1.148 |
Th'owd corner cupboard |
Fine furniture's grand in its place |
HARGREAVES, Walter |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
176-178 |
|
215 |
Th'owd weyver's farewell to his looms |
Mi weyvin's welly done, for sure, aw'm beawn to finish here |
HARGREAVES, Walter |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
60-62 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
1.147 |
To th' dialect |
Ne'er mind, let fooak say whod they will |
HARGREAVES, Walter |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
174-176 |
|
858 |
Heysham Head - November scene |
Such colours as are constantly |
HARLAND, Frances |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
178 |
|
82.588 |
Lowly worth |
Is the lily less pure, that it springs from the earth |
HARLAND, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
464-465 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.466 |
Poets' fictions |
I pity the poets that deck the loved fair |
HARLAND, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
335-336 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.574 |
Reeth Bartle Fair |
This mworning as I went to wark |
HARLAND, John |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
53-56 |
2nd ed rev |
82.512 |
The Christmas tree |
The lofty cedar of Lebanon |
HARLAND, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
400-401 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.440 |
To Mary |
As the thirsty desert-wanderer seeks the oasis green and fair |
HARLAND, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
297-298 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.380 |
To Mary |
As the thirsty desert-wanderer seeks the oasis green and fair |
HARLAND, John |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
74 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.850 |
My brother |
Ginger hair |
HARLING, Katie |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
89 |
|
81.392 |
Space |
I set off at noon |
HARRIS, Joel |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
56-57 |
|
910 |
Work and rest |
Oh, splendour in the east! |
HARRIS, Standford |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
116 |
|
582 |
Baptism |
Baptism |
HARRIS, Ted |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
7 |
|
601 |
Birds on Morecambe Bay |
Swooping, wheeling sea birds |
HARRIS, Ted |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
21 |
|
602 |
Cable TV |
Cable TV has arrived in our street |
HARRIS, Ted |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
21 |
|
583 |
Litter |
The pavements of Preston are dirtied |
HARRIS, Ted |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
7 |
|
611 |
Silver Jubilee |
I've never got used to this decimal cash |
HARRIS, Ted |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
26 |
|
600 |
The view from Hest Bank |
Westward to Barrow across the bay |
HARRIS, Ted |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
21 |
|
620 |
Winter - premature |
Autumn, when golden brown |
HARRIS, Ted |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
31 |
|
86.873 |
Trapped |
T'wife started knitting for me once again |
HARRISON, George |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
125 |
|
85.532 |
A Christmas Eve's Vision |
Twas Christmas Eve, I had wandered alone |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
79-84 |
|
85.545 |
A Contrast |
What Gospel I should like to know |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
117-120 |
|
85.539 |
A modern Daniel |
Onward, brave Daniel, true scion of Heaven |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
102-103 |
|
85.511 |
A Plea for the Unemployed |
Work, work, work |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
35-36 |
|
85.538 |
A Poem (dedicated to the rev. Thomas Waugh) |
Onward, brave soldier, thy Master commands |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
100-101 |
|
85.503 |
A Sad Story |
She was tired and hungry and sad |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
17-25 |
|
85.529 |
A Satire |
What has he done? Are you really quite sane |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
73-76 |
|
85.557 |
A Voice from beyond |
No sorrows we know in these realms of delight |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
143-144 |
|
85.502 |
A wasted life |
Nay, ask me not to leave this grave |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
Dec-16 |
|
85.524 |
An Appeal |
Once again we must turn to our annals of sorrow |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
58-60 |
|
85.533 |
An Impromptu Farewell |
These farewells will soon be over |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
84-85 |
|
85.537 |
Bitter memories; or, the ballet girl's remorse |
Oh! memory, why bring back tonight |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
97-99 |
|
85.518 |
Can this be true |
Two hundred million Christians! |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
46-50 |
|
85.559 |
Dr Clayton |
One by one, our friends are passing |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
146-147 |
|
85.528 |
Homeless |
The old man turn'd at his cottage door |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
71-73 |
|
85.540 |
Honour To Christ |
Oh! had this good Jesus but lived in our day |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
103-106 |
|
85.556 |
Hymn on the Death of Eli Higham, Junior |
We shall meet beyond the river |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
141-142 |
|
85.519 |
Impromtu on primrose day |
Honour your statesman! ye friends of the blue |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
50-51 |
|
85.500 |
In memoriam - Benjamin Hargreaves |
Repose, noble soul! thou art worthy of rest |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
6 |
|
85.551 |
In memoriam - Edwin Waugh |
All hail! emancipated soul |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
131-132 |
|
85.553 |
In memoriam - Mrs Newell |
It is not death, oh no not death |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
136-137 |
|
85.543 |
In memoriam - WM. Bury, Esq. |
They are not thine, proud cruel death |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
114-115 |
|
85.554 |
In memoriam (Albert Dobson) |
Tis in truth a world of sorrow |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
138-139 |
|
85.547 |
In memoriam (Alexander Hargreaves) |
In the bloom of youth and beauty |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
122-123 |
|
85.555 |
In memoriam (Alice Higham) |
For ever, for ever, at rest with her God |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
139-140 |
|
85.558 |
In memoriam (Miss Annie Wilkinson) |
When life's sad fitful dream is o'er |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
144-145 |
|
85.549 |
In memoriam (Mrs John Bury) |
Another friend has left me |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
126-128 |
|
85.515 |
In memoriam (Mrs Smith, Spring Hill) |
One angel less on earth |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
42-43 |
|
85.535 |
In memory of Mrs Lang Bridge |
Some lives in their day |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
88-89 |
|
85.525 |
In Mermoriam |
Poor, innocent darlings, whose pen shall portray |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
60-62 |
|
85.544 |
Jealousy |
Beware, O beware! of this dangerous sin |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
115-116 |
|
85.506 |
Leopold, Duke of Albany (in memoriam) |
He is not dead! Oh! no, not dead |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
28-30 |
|
85.527 |
Lilly May, or the Bachelor's story |
I saw her in her youthful pride |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
64-71 |
|
85.536 |
Man's inhumanity to man |
I knew him in life ere a sorrow had passed |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
90-96 |
|
85.521 |
Mother's boy |
A mother deprived of her heart's dearest joy |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
53-55 |
|
85.505 |
My childhood's home |
Ye might have spared my childhood's home |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
27-28 |
|
85.513 |
No Creed |
What a noise in our day about teaching the way |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
38-40 |
|
85.512 |
One by one |
One by one the are passing away |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
37 |
|
85.550 |
Only a pauper |
She had walked from the refuge, a weary two mile |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
128-131 |
|
85.522 |
Our Cemetery |
What memories awake as we gaze on this scene |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
55-56 |
|
85.507 |
Pity me not |
Pity me not! It were pity indeed |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
30-31 |
|
85.552 |
Remeber the Poor |
The night was a bitter one, piercing and cold |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
133-136 |
|
85.514 |
Reverie written in Oak Hill Grounds |
Tis sweet at the hour of twilight to roam |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
40-42 |
|
85.542 |
Rich and Poor |
Earth held not in all her proud palaces one |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
110-113 |
|
85.546 |
She's only gone to sleep |
Yes, baby, sister's gone to sleep |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
121-122 |
|
85.523 |
Shipwrecke'd |
Words full of meaning and painfully true |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
57-58 |
|
85.508 |
Song - the Drunkard's Dying Child |
Dear father, come stay with your darling |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
31-32 |
|
85.509 |
Song - the Father's Vow |
No, they can never tempt me now |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
33-34 |
|
85.530 |
Song - The Wandering boy |
Wearily, drearily, lonely and sad |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
77-78 |
|
85.531 |
Song - The Wandering Boy's Return |
Again the loved shores of my dear native land |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
78-79 |
|
85.517 |
Song of hope |
Poor earth - wearied mourner, despair not |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
45-46 |
|
85.516 |
Song of the weary |
Yes, I am weary of waiting |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
44-45 |
|
85.541 |
Spirit Love |
The day had been one of June's brightest and best |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
106-110 |
|
85.501 |
The Angel's Wreath |
I sat me in twilight's poetical hour |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
9-Nov |
|
85.548 |
The Muse |
Wearily pondering over the past |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
124-126 |
|
85.504 |
The Suicide's Grave |
Judge him not, O mortal man |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
25-26 |
|
85.510 |
To the memory of Lifeboat Crew |
Honour the brave-hearted heroic band |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
34-35 |
|
85.526 |
To The Memory Of Lord Frederick Cavendish |
Where the weary heart forever |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
62-63 |
|
85.520 |
To the Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone |
Hail Gladstone! all hail to the time - honour'd day |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
52-53 |
|
85.534 |
Woman's Mission |
When the earth in her beauty stood forth at the call |
HARRISON, Matilda |
The poet's wreath, being a selection of poems |
HARRISON, Matilda |
M0031082LC |
117.995 |
1.890 |
85-87 |
|
82.927 |
Hamsters |
Warm, cute, very soft |
HART, Hannah |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
133 |
|
81.518 |
Winter wonderland |
Warm feeling inside though outside it's cold |
HARTILL, Emily |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
121 |
|
82.886 |
The forest of the night |
In the woods I saw it |
HARTLEY, Christina |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
109 |
|
470 |
Christmas Day |
No need to turn green |
HARTLEY, J. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
19 |
|
479 |
The devil rides out |
The girl from Atlantis has |
HARTLEY, J. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
30 |
|
456 |
Too warm |
They said our love |
HARTLEY, J. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
2 |
|
522 |
A hawpoth |
Whear is thi Daddy, boy? Whear is thi mam? |
HARTLEY, John |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
92 |
Yorkshire poetry |
82.578 |
Bite bigger |
As I hurried through t'taan to my wark |
HARTLEY, John |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
63-66 |
2nd ed rev |
82.576 |
Nelly o' Bob's |
Who is it at lives i' that cot on the lea |
HARTLEY, John |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
62-63 |
2nd ed rev |
535 |
Parson Drew tho' Pudsey |
He shut his een an' sank to rest |
HARTLEY, John |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
105-106 |
Yorkshire poetry |
82.605 |
Rollickin' Jack |
I know a workin' lad |
HARTLEY, John |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
66-67 |
2nd ed rev |
82.691 |
T' first o' t' sooart |
I heeard a funny tale last neet |
HARTLEY, John |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
135-136 |
2nd ed rev |
84.227 |
There are no dead |
There are no dead. To be is e'er to be |
HARTLEY, L Conrad |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
127 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
82.164 |
Mind me feight |
Throughout 'is life I allus thowt |
HARVEY, Celia |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
78-79 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
82.759 |
The caterpillar |
The constant drizzling rain flashed diagonally down to the ground |
HARVEY, Ellis |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
36 |
|
4.493 |
Daisy Nook |
What memories linger round this peaceful vale |
HARVEY, Harry |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
84 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.379 |
Dusty Bob |
Bob Bowker wur a dustmon |
HARVEY, Harry |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
52-53 |
|
4.380 |
Old Sarah |
Old Sarah wur a widow |
HARVEY, Harry |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
53 |
|
81.541 |
Raid |
Hear the haunting engine drone |
HARVEY, Paul |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
132 |
|
82.952 |
Fairies |
Fairies are big |
HARVEY, Sian |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
146 |
|
86.687 |
If |
If I could swim across the sea |
HARWOOD, Anita |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
35 |
|
1.156 |
Lowliness |
O, gi me t'mahntains wild an' 'igh |
HARWOOD, Constance |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
101 |
Lancashire poetry |
5.227 |
Bowton |
Has't bin i' Bowton lately |
HARWOOD, Kathy |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
48 |
|
4.115 |
Harmony |
When tha talks of a Reet Good Do, I think |
HARWOOD, Lilian |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
32 |
|
4.155 |
T' seawnd o' t' sea |
Ah've getten a memory i' my 'eart |
HARWOOD, Lilian |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
77-78 |
|
4.136 |
The day we went t' sea |
Dosta remember that gowden day |
HARWOOD, Lilian |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
49-50 |
|
4.348 |
To one beloved |
It's not so oft we think fert' say |
HARWOOD, Lilian |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
34 |
|
5.245 |
What the woman said |
Ah went an' 'ad me fortune towd |
HARWOOD, Lilian |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
54 |
|
87.481 |
A Soldiers Story |
I'm very forgetful these days, I admit |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
16-19 |
|
87.472 |
A Touch Of Gentleness |
Eh, cum on, Luv, sit thee deawn |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
11-Dec |
|
87.499 |
After Many Years |
Walk with me Love, beside the river |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
22 |
|
87.482 |
Candle-Glow |
Outside, the rain is beating down |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
19 |
|
87.477 |
Childrens Campaign |
Are you coming to Ashley Moss? |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
14 |
|
87.483 |
Christmas, 1974 |
O Little town of Bethlehem, we sing |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
19-20 |
|
87.473 |
Day-Dream |
When I get down to dreaming, then |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
Dec-13 |
|
87.468 |
Forsaken |
E'll Stond by yon doorway an' listen |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
6-Jul |
|
87.503 |
Grandad |
I can see his old brown ganzy now |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
24 |
|
87.479 |
Halloween |
A stillness, as the depths within a pool |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
15-16 |
|
87.470 |
Jig Broo, Tyldesley |
When there's such a housing shortage |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
8-Sep |
|
87.498 |
Little Flower |
Peeping out among the grass |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
22 |
|
87.480 |
Memory |
What a wonderful gift is memory |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
16 |
|
87.495 |
New Year, Tyldesley |
There seems to be a hush, right through the day |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
20-21 |
|
87.502 |
Remembering |
So, 18, Schofield Street is gone |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
23-24 |
|
87.466 |
Saga of a Television |
It started o't' day Joe's endowment come through |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
1-Feb |
|
87.467 |
Seaside Sage |
It started one sunday, i't' middle o' june |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
3-Jun |
|
87.475 |
Silence |
O, does your heart not crave to win |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
13 |
|
87.497 |
The Blackbird |
He sits and sings his fulsome joy |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
22 |
|
87.493 |
The Journey |
I met a man with a heavy pack |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
20 |
|
87.496 |
The Things That Money Cannot Buy |
Grant me such things as money cannot buy |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
22 |
|
87.474 |
Time |
The pendulum swings to and fro |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
13 |
|
87.501 |
Trains |
Up the Red Steps to the Station |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
23 |
|
87.500 |
Tyldesley Night |
Ten o'clock blown, and Larums checked and wun |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
23 |
|
87.504 |
Unchartered Voyage |
My man is with his boat at sea |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
25 |
|
87.476 |
Weeding |
I like to spend the summer hours |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
14 |
|
87.469 |
Were it a Prur? |
Lord, ah'm no 'ond at sayin' prurs |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
7-Aug |
|
87.478 |
Whitworth Bells |
The Whitworth Bells peal forth their lay |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
15 |
|
87.494 |
Why? |
Why can't every day be a fine one |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
20 |
|
87.471 |
Yon Blackbird |
I wacken up i't' mornin' |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
First Selected Poems |
HARWOOD, Lilian Grace |
M0164570LC |
591.629 |
0 |
10 |
|
81.359 |
In the dark |
Bats flying out of my window |
HASLAM, Kayleigh |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
36 |
|
87.844 |
I thank you |
I thank you for the air I breathe |
HATTIE, Sheila |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
132 |
|
525 |
Aar Maggie |
An believe aar Maggie's courtin' |
HATTON, Edmund |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
95-96 |
Yorkshire poetry |
82.609 |
Aar Maggie |
I believe aar Maggie's coortin' |
HATTON, Edmund |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
74-75 |
2nd ed rev |
87.852 |
Forever Night |
Some people tell me darkness is comforting |
HATTON, Lisa |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
141 |
|
81.479 |
Tiggie the cat |
Tiggie the cat, is a bit fat |
HAUXBY, Elaine |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
102 |
|
81.447 |
Nature |
Tree standing tall |
HAWLEY, Nicola |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
86 |
|
81.444 |
My cat |
My cat is really fat |
HAWLEY, Stephanie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
84 |
|
87.563 |
Beautiful Skylark |
Beautiful Skylark, where is your nest? |
HAWORTH, J. E. |
MARY'S miscellany: prose and verse by Lancashire writers, compiled by Mary Carter Clark |
|
M0040456LC |
151.580 |
1.966 |
31 |
|
18 |
Pendle Village |
At the foot of dear old Pendle |
HAWORTH, J. E. |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
118-119 |
|
324 |
Cure 'em quick |
Aw've getten a stikin cowd in t' yed |
HAWORTH, John J. |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
147-148 |
|
85 |
Reply in verse |
Aw yerd tell o' a feller |
HAWORTH, John J. |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
103-104 |
|
364 |
The rose and the thorn |
Did Eden boast a fairer flower |
HAWORTH, Tom |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
21 |
|
82.032 |
If I could find |
If I could find my youth again |
HAYDEN, Rosa Ayscoughe |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
107 |
|
82.024 |
The charm of the North |
Oh, I have left my heart in the North-countree |
HAYDEN, Rosa Ayscoughe |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
79-80 |
|
82.012 |
The hills of Cumberland |
The hills were gray the day I gazed |
HAYDEN, Rosa Ayscoughe |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
41 |
|
81.408 |
The alien spaceship |
When I was flying in my rocker |
HAYES, Dexter |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
65 |
|
82.138 |
Gulls at Penzance |
I think that I |
HAYES, Jackie |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
30 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
81.501 |
My school day |
Miss blows the whistle, toot, toot |
HAYNES, Emily |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
113 |
|
82.905 |
My dog |
She's cute |
HAYTON, Danielle |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
120 |
|
81.464 |
We need a classroom caretaker |
We need a classroom caretaker |
HEANEY, John |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
94 |
|
81.554 |
Mixed colours |
What is blue |
HEATON, Michael |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
140 |
|
82.745 |
My dog |
I love my dog |
HEATON, Niels |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
27 |
|
2.458 |
Apostrophe to home |
Oh Home! dear Home! where all delight to move |
HEAVISIDES, Henry |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
168-169 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.459 |
To the press |
Hail! might Power! that on the lucid page |
HEAVISIDES, Henry |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
169-170 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
81.553 |
Colours of day |
What is black? A witch's cat |
HEDLEY, Martin |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
140 |
|
646 |
Grannie's attic |
Up to grannie's attic you take a winding stair |
HELLIWELL, Margaret |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
32-33 |
|
141 |
The homes of England |
The stately homes of England |
HEMANS, Felicia |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
81-82 |
|
911 |
Our daily paths |
There's beauty all around our paths, if but our watchful eyes |
HEMANS, Felicia Dorothea |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
118-120 |
|
82.602 |
England's dead |
Son of the ocean isle |
HEMANS, Mrs. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
482-484 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.462 |
England's dead |
Son of the ocean isle |
HEMANS, Mrs. |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
176-177 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.583 |
Our daily paths |
There's beauty all around our paths, if but our watchful eyes |
HEMANS, Mrs. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
451-454 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.449 |
Our daily paths |
There's beauty all around our paths, if but our watchful eyes |
HEMANS, Mrs. |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
162-164 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.598 |
The song of night |
I come to thee, O earth |
HEMANS, Mrs. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
477-479 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.259 |
The song of the night |
I come to thee, O earth |
HEMANS, Mrs. |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
269-271 |
|
82.490 |
The songs of our fathers |
Sing them upon the sunny hills |
HEMANS, Mrs. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
360-362 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.485 |
A thought of the sea |
My earliest memories to thy shores are bound |
HEMANS, Mrs. Felicia |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
211 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.484 |
Casablanca |
The boy stood on the burning deck |
HEMANS, Mrs. Felicia |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
210 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.486 |
Distant sound of the sea at evening |
Yet, rolling far up some green mountain dale |
HEMANS, Mrs. Felicia |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
211 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.406 |
The songs of our fathers |
Sing them upon the sunny hills |
HEMANS, Mrs. Felicia |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
104-105 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
6.209 |
An ode |
The sweet young Spring is roving merrily |
HENDERSON, Fred |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
47-50 |
|
81.498 |
Pleasure Beach |
Come on down to the Pleasure Beach |
HENDERSON, Sean |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
111 |
|
3.915 |
A song for A E Housman |
I walk the lanes of Wenlock |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
36 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.928 |
A song in April |
The buds of April bursting |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
63 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.421 |
Adrian Henri's Last will and Testament |
To whom it may concern |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
27-28 |
Revised Edition |
3.417 |
Adrian Henri's talking after Christmas blues |
Well I woke up this mornin' it was Christmas Day |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
17-18 |
Revised edition |
3.924 |
An incident at Longueville |
It is early afternoon. Late summer sunlight fills the street |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
51-52 |
After the Mersey sound Actual first line - 1 - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.932 |
Any prince to any princess |
August is coming |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
68-69 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.912 |
Autumn leaving |
Dead leaves |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
22-26 |
After the Mersey sound Actual first line - 1 - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.427 |
Batpoem |
Take me back to Gotham City |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
39-40 |
Revised edition |
3.425 |
Bomb commercials |
A. Get PAD nuclear meat for humans |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
35 |
Revised edition |
3.917 |
Butterfly |
Cry |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
38 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.436 |
Car crash blues or Adrian Henri's interminable talking surrealistic blues |
You make me feel like |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
59-61 |
Revised edition |
3.911 |
Citysong |
Angel |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
18-21 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.909 |
Death in the suburbs |
The end of the world will surely come |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
13-15 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.916 |
Don't look |
Don't look in my eyes, then |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
37 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.918 |
Epilogue |
Autumn |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
39-40 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.913 |
From autobiography |
1 Part one 1932 - 1951 |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
27-32 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.435 |
From city, part three |
Coming back |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
56-58 |
Revised edition |
3.428 |
Galactic lovepoem |
Warm your feet at the sunset |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
41 |
Revised edition |
3.925 |
Girl bathing |
You step from the bath |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
53 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.910 |
Hostage |
Urban guerilla |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
16-17 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.420 |
I want to paint |
I want to paint |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
24-26 |
Revised edition |
3.418 |
In the midnight hour |
When we meet |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
19-20 |
Revised edition |
3.423 |
Liverpool poems |
Go to work on a braque |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
31-33 |
Revised edition |
3.429 |
Love from Arthur Rainbow |
In a villa called Much Bickering |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
42-43 |
Revised edition |
3.419 |
Love is |
Love is feeling cold in the back of vans |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
21 |
Revised edition |
3.430 |
Me |
Paul McCartney Gustav Mahler |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
44-45 |
Revised edition |
3.914 |
Metropolis |
Gravelponds along long lines |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
33-35 |
After the Mersey sound Actual first line - 1 - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.933 |
Morning song |
Of meat and flowers I sing |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
70 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.272 |
Mrs Albion you've got a lovely daughter |
Albion's most lovely daughter sat on the banks of the |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
15-16 |
Revised edition |
3.931 |
Night carnation |
Night carnation |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
67 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.424 |
Nightsong |
So we'll go no more a-raving |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
34 |
Revised edition |
3.919 |
Poem for Liverpool 8 |
Liverpool 8 |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
41-42 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.927 |
Red card |
Right from the off |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
62 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.920 |
Scenes from the permissive society |
1 There were no survivors from the dawn raid |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
43-44 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.433 |
See the conkering heroine comes |
Thinking about you |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
51-52 |
Revised edition |
3.434 |
Short poems |
Love Poem/Colour Supplement |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
53-55 |
Revised edition |
3.930 |
Short poems |
What shall we do with the drunken poet |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
66 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.921 |
Spring poem |
Be quiet, say nothing |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
45 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.437 |
Spring song for Mary |
Lovers twain that cannot wed |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
62-65 |
Revised edition |
3.929 |
The dance of death |
Autumn to winter |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
64-65 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.431 |
The entry of Christ into Liverpool |
City morning, dandelionseeds blowing from wasteground |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
46-48 |
Revised edition |
3.432 |
The new, fast, automatic daffodils |
I wandered lonely as |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
49-50 |
Revised edition |
3.922 |
The triumph of death |
Thunder in the dark at Adrian Henri's |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
46-48 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.271 |
Tonight at noon |
Tonight at noon |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
13-14 |
Revised edition |
3.923 |
Two lullabys |
Here is a poem written on the clouds for you |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
49-50 |
After the Mersey sound Actual first line - 1 - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.426 |
Who? |
Who can I |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
36-38 |
Revised edition |
3.422 |
Without you |
Without you every morning would be like going back to work |
HENRI, Adrian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
29-30 |
Revised Edition |
3.926 |
Words without a story |
In the city we meet. Incurious lightening flickers in the |
HENRI, Adrian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
54-61 |
After the Mersey sound Actual first line - 1 - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
85.369 |
A Child's Guide To Philosophy |
Things as they are |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
212 |
|
85.191 |
A Very Small Casualty |
Flower |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
177 |
|
85.048 |
Abscence |
You come in colums |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
135 |
|
85.372 |
Academic |
He collected facts |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
215 |
|
85.030 |
Acquaintances |
We meet each other in glass |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
116 |
|
85.195 |
After Ecclesiastes |
And the end of a party is better than the beginning |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
180 |
|
85.189 |
Analyst |
Not content with eyes |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
175 |
|
84.892 |
And Fall |
Why am I sad |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
106 |
|
85.379 |
Autumn At Whitewell |
I stand upon dry leaves |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
222 |
|
84.888 |
Beginning |
Beginning is |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
103 |
|
85.197 |
Between |
Poised |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
184 |
|
84.802 |
Between The Thought And The Word |
This is the Moment |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
18 |
|
84.850 |
Bleadsdale The Wooden Circle |
In the sun of the late summer I return |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
63-64 |
The Wooden Circle at Bleadsdale are believed to be the oldest in Britain |
84.813 |
Blue Tits |
Blobbing on willow branches blue and yellow |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
31 |
|
85.203 |
Bolton-Le-Moors, 1960 |
From Vernon Street in Bolton |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
188 |
|
84.896 |
Boy drowning |
Drowning is pushing through |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
110 |
|
85.363 |
Boy With Kite |
I am a master of my kite, and |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
206 |
|
85.035 |
Brief Encounter |
No Howess, please, in plastic hoods |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
121 |
|
84.897 |
Bronwen |
Bronwen with the long brown hair |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
111 |
|
84.890 |
Bull Alone |
Black bull, square and strong |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
105 |
|
85.040 |
Call of North |
We rebuilt are childhood, leaf by leaf |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
127 |
|
84.860 |
Cats |
Cats are contradictions; tooth and claw |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
78 |
|
85.031 |
Christmas Blackmail |
Like early snow they come |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
117 |
|
85.214 |
Clown |
He was safe |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
200 |
|
85.307 |
Clown Flowers |
Three astonished sunflowers |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
204 |
|
85.065 |
Cornfield |
These cornsheaves corned waist high |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
149 |
|
85.193 |
Credo |
I believe in Nothing |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
179 |
|
84.898 |
Cross |
He was thorn |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
112 |
|
84.816 |
Daphne And Apollo |
Even as I fly |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
34-35 |
|
84.872 |
Dead Blackbird |
The blackbird used to come each day |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
94 |
|
84.817 |
Death in the Winter |
The hunting horn no longer |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
35 |
|
84.863 |
Death of a Garderner |
He rested through the winter, watched the rain |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
1989 |
|
84.899 |
Different |
Even at school he was different |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
113 |
|
84.867 |
Dilemma |
As he lay dead |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
86 |
|
85.374 |
Emily dinckinson |
Others wore colours; I wore white |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
217 |
|
84.855 |
Evergreen |
The Language of Life is Green |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
69 |
|
84.861 |
Fisherman Poet |
He was farouche |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
80 |
|
84.887 |
From a Train Window in Licolnshire |
Green miles of rye and barley |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
99 |
|
84.865 |
Geriatric Word |
Feeding time is the geriatric word |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
84 |
|
84.815 |
Giraffes |
Beyond the brassy non-strare where each shock |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
33 |
|
84.864 |
Going away and returning |
The best of going away and returning |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
83 |
|
85.033 |
Gone Away |
When we thought him near |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
119 |
|
84.858 |
Green-Apple Harvest |
Green applles burnning in the Evening sun |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
74 |
|
85.377 |
Haiku |
Flowers fill a room |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
220 |
|
84.857 |
Halequin |
Beyond The Junk- shop of the mind |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
73 |
|
84.868 |
He saved others |
He's in the dark room again |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
87-88 |
|
84.870 |
Heat Wave |
Heat over all; not a look can rise |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
92 |
|
85.375 |
Hibiscus |
But you said, he said |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
218 |
|
85.180 |
Hobson's Choice |
Now comes the choice between two fears |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
168 |
|
85.064 |
I am |
Considering Stars |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
148 |
|
84.819 |
I am not resigned |
The will forbids the; heart has flown |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
37 |
|
85.034 |
I cannot look into the Sun |
In your green anorak |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
120 |
|
84.895 |
I give death to a son |
Rhythmic pincher-jaws clench |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
109 |
|
84.820 |
I was not I |
There came I night I slept for hate of day |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
38 |
|
84.833 |
Imagination |
The primrose shape was printed on his mind |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
55 |
|
84.832 |
Intergration |
The Undertow is strong tonight, my love |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
54 |
|
85.070 |
Invitation |
It was the smoke blue |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
157 |
|
85.032 |
Ivy |
I am happy |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
118 |
|
85.051 |
Ivy |
Voictourios my breathes |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
136 |
|
85.056 |
Joice De Mounir |
Look at me I was a man once |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
140 |
|
85.060 |
Jounrney |
I have died many times |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
142-43 |
|
84.873 |
Kingfisher |
Brown nettle beer, the stream |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
95 |
|
85.306 |
La Belle Jardiniere |
Hesitant fingers |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
203 |
|
85.366 |
Ladybird |
And where is home? |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
209 |
|
85.059 |
Lakeland Fox |
Red as autumm braken |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
141 |
|
85.043 |
Letter To Vincent |
You never painted this picture, Vincent |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
129 |
|
85.364 |
Limbo |
Flung with door-slam and whistle-blow |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
207 |
|
85.208 |
Loneliness Is A Lyric Poem |
Loneliness is searching the yellow pages |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
193 |
|
85.186 |
Looking Back |
One step from the escalator top |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
173 |
|
84.854 |
Love Without Frontiers |
To have met you and loved you and not to have |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
68 |
|
85.207 |
Love's Advocate |
I remember sitting together in parks |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
192 |
|
84.807 |
Lyric Evening |
The Afternoon closed round us like a witch |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
24 |
|
85.211 |
Man is born free |
Having free rein |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
196-197 |
|
85.038 |
Mary |
Mary under the hawthorn |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
125 |
|
85.204 |
Metamorphosis |
Painted stars in a vestibule |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
189 |
|
85.054 |
Move Than Grass |
In the cockpit they found his rotted tunic |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
138 |
|
85.376 |
Moving Staircase |
Living in the present is |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
219 |
|
84.893 |
Museum |
The word 'museum' |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
107 |
|
85.213 |
My Faithful Lover |
Though only his shadow |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
199 |
|
85.215 |
Myth |
She felt herself a white mouse |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
201 |
|
84.814 |
Northern Stone |
Sap of the Sullen moor is blood of mud |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
32 |
|
84.829 |
November Story |
The pathless autumm lured are wondering footpaths |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
48 |
|
84.894 |
Old Corinth |
The market-place at Old Corinth |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
108 |
|
85.046 |
Old Woman |
Now She is old and frayed |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
131 |
|
85.209 |
On Doeford Bridge |
Unquestioning, we weave the pattern in |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
194 |
|
84.835 |
On Iona |
Boy and Girl are picking irises |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
60 |
|
85.076 |
On wansfell |
I belong nowhere |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
163 |
|
85.196 |
Oppenheimer's Song |
On the eighth day |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
183 |
|
84.812 |
Over The Water |
I must return to recent places |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
30 |
|
85.184 |
Owl |
The owl's a clock-face without fingers |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
171 |
|
85.362 |
Paint Box |
He tried to tell them what he felt |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
205 |
|
85.198 |
Paperweight |
Denied the fifth freedom |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
185 |
|
85.178 |
Parting at a Country Station |
Your train is late; in time's arrest |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
166 |
|
85.050 |
Plaything |
Rags |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
136 |
|
84.859 |
Prayer For Sun |
Two trees outside my window stood |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
75-77 |
|
85.037 |
Preparing To Leave |
Attics cleared, shales and drawes emptied |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
122 |
|
85.052 |
Prisioners |
I see through glass now |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
137 |
|
85.179 |
Quid Pro Quo |
Having eaten her second husband |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
167 |
|
85.073 |
Rasion 'etre |
Every day is sunday for the sisters |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
160 |
|
84.852 |
Recapitulation |
Whenever I return |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
65 |
|
84.853 |
Reclaimed |
A fallen star |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
66-67 |
|
85.066 |
Renassance |
I lie Still |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
150 |
|
85.368 |
Reply to a Philistine |
Not even if you went on hands and knees |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
211 |
|
85.373 |
Retreat |
The mountain above them rose |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
216 |
|
84.891 |
Rise |
Summer lies thick along the hedgerows |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
106 |
|
85.380 |
Roots |
Even a tree has inclination |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
223 |
|
84.869 |
Sally |
She was a clog-nose kind of girl |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
91 |
|
85.370 |
Scapegoat |
The ancients - all males, of course |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
213 |
|
85.061 |
Second Childhood |
Free as a thistle, white hair blowing |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
144 |
|
84.826 |
She |
She is air and light |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
45 |
|
84.828 |
Silence |
Nothing is sol telling as Silence |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
47 |
|
85.201 |
Silent Music |
I am a violin |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
187 |
|
85.077 |
Single Footprints |
Saturday night outsider |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
164 |
|
85.072 |
Sisters |
The elder, holding the whip |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
159 |
|
84.831 |
Skeleton Bride |
I come to you now to woo your mind |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
52-53 |
|
85.216 |
Snow Leopard |
All things compose him |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
202 |
|
85.365 |
Snowdrops |
What are they writing on the white wall |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
208 |
|
85.069 |
Solo |
following the sun |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
155 |
|
84.808 |
St Luke's Summer |
Now is the tolling time |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
25 |
|
85.047 |
Stillborn |
Brides pick Death clean |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
132 |
|
85.039 |
Stranger |
I'm a stranger to myself |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
126 |
|
85.381 |
Sun Up |
Apollo, Christ and God, all three |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
224 |
|
85.192 |
Survivor |
Still upright, picking her way |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
178 |
|
84.810 |
Swan Sang |
Naked must be the swan whose feathers come |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
26 |
|
85.205 |
The Betterwear Man |
The Betterwear man |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
190 |
|
84.834 |
The Buttercup Children |
Down the crusty lone of summer |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
59 |
|
84.830 |
The Claire Dreaming |
Midday is golden bell tent stanied |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
51 |
|
84.866 |
The Dark circle of the moon |
Twenty hundered and twenty five |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
85 |
|
85.067 |
The eighth day |
On the eighth day he woke up |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
151-52 |
|
84.800 |
The First Day |
The spotted fawn |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
17 |
|
84.836 |
The Fox |
It was twenty years ago I saw the fox |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
62 |
|
84.862 |
The Frog Prince |
He was cold as slime |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
81 |
|
84.889 |
The Horses |
Between waking and sleep |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
104 |
|
85.371 |
The Joke |
Explain the joke, he said |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
214 |
|
85.188 |
The Leap Not Taken |
I rode my horse last night |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
174 |
|
84.824 |
The Mallard |
Brown Checked, neat as new spring tweed |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
43 |
|
84.901 |
The meths man |
A short spit from Strangeways |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
115 |
|
85.206 |
The Mill Clock |
The day he brought that old clock from the mill |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
191 |
|
84.803 |
The Panther And The Antelope |
Black Queen teaching the Night |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
19 |
|
85.378 |
The Party |
The best party of all is when |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
221 |
|
85.049 |
The Race |
I am nothing |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
136 |
|
84.871 |
The River Idle |
Here the river idle slides lesurely accross th plain |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
93 |
|
84.818 |
The Serpent |
Twinning her concience in a careful coil |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
36 |
|
85.212 |
The Skaters |
In magic rings and figures |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
198 |
|
85.190 |
The Stronger Suit |
Spades were always his strong suit |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
176 |
|
85.182 |
The Tunnel |
They are dragging me back |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
170 |
|
84.809 |
The Tyrants (1942) |
Winter's Ruthless Horsemen ride |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
26 |
|
84.856 |
The Vine |
All my fruit to yours for you are mine |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
70 |
|
84.805 |
The Wilderness |
I love this Cinderella of the garden |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
22-23 |
|
84.885 |
Thrush |
Timorously I write about a thrush |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
96 |
|
85.210 |
To lose by having, to have by letting go |
I am hungry and you feed me |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
195 |
|
84.804 |
Tom Rich |
Tom Rich, the garderner |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
20-21 |
|
85.055 |
Traitor |
Who says time heals forgets to add |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
139 |
|
84.811 |
Truant |
Sing a song of Sunlight |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
29 |
|
85.367 |
Understudy |
She's a trained low-profile lady |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
210 |
|
85.185 |
Unicorns |
Absent when the Word thundered names |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
172 |
|
85.071 |
Victorian Childhood |
Emma and Jane |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
158 |
|
85.042 |
Vincent |
Blue he stove for pure colbalt |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
128 |
|
85.074 |
Violet at Ninety |
Descedants stretching beyond her reach |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
161 |
|
85.181 |
Waiting |
Driftwood I have become |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
169 |
|
84.900 |
Walking away |
Last night he walked out on himself |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
114 |
|
84.825 |
Walking on Air |
To see her walking down the Street |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
44 |
|
85.068 |
Walled In |
When closer then breathing |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
156 |
|
84.886 |
Ward F4 |
There is no weather in my room |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
97-98 |
|
85.062 |
What is a person |
Pull the rose apart |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
144-46 |
|
85.063 |
What is god |
I have not seen god face to face |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
147 |
|
85.075 |
Widowhood |
After thrteen years |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
162 |
|
85.045 |
Winter Daffodills |
Not on my kness praising god |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
130 |
|
84.821 |
Wither |
I followed the signs; turned left, turned right |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
41 |
|
85.200 |
Words |
Skimming, bruising, overloading |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
186 |
|
84.822 |
Wordsworth's old Age |
Sunlight once played upon the granite ledges |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
42 |
|
85.177 |
Yew Tree Guest House |
In guest-house lounges |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
165 |
|
84.827 |
Your Faces of Love |
The Pair onceheart-Locked and elate |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
Netting the sun: new and collected poems |
HESKETH, Phoebe |
1870612353 |
306.927 |
1.989 |
46 |
|
82.754 |
Spring to summer to autumn to winter tree |
I see blossom growing on fingers like pink nail polish |
HESKETH, Steffi |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
34 |
|
81.545 |
Mars |
Daring soldiers, flames of fire |
HETHERINGTON, Jenny |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
135 |
|
81.413 |
Blue |
Blue is the cold that you can't see |
HEWITT, Adrienne |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
67 |
|
83.575 |
Evening's meditation |
As I walked beside streamlets and fountains |
HEY, David |
SKETCHES and poems by local writers, edited by John U. Smith |
|
M0129272LC |
491.715 |
18 |
16 |
Editor was member of the Burnley Literary and Philosophical Society |
74 |
The still small voice |
I heard the rustling of the leaves |
HEYS, Alice |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
82 |
|
4.329 |
A gradely Lancashire toast |
Gradely good health |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
20 |
|
82.182 |
A gradely toast |
Gradely good health to thee an' thine |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
110 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot. Pseudonym - Bill o' Bow's |
4.337 |
A preycher's prayer |
Lord, give to me an opp'n mind |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
25 |
Pseudonym of Clifford Heyworth is Bill o' Bows |
867 |
Ah've started a-courtin' agen |
This world is a place full o'trouble an' care |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
227-228 |
Pseudonym is 'Bill o Bows' |
224 |
An' mony on 'Em |
Com', com' mi lass, hutch up to t' fire |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
75 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
219 |
Demobb'd |
Dost not know thi fayther lad? |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
69-70 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
83 |
Eawr Nutters |
Eawr Nutters are comin', they're dancin' in t'street |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
97-99 |
Pseudonym Bill o' Bows |
89 |
Farewell, owd brid |
Farewell, owd drid, thy singin's done |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
122 |
|
225 |
For what is writ, is writ |
O thou who wouldst a poet be |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
76 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
222 |
Get that chip pon on, mother |
Get that chip pon on, mother |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
73-74 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
539 |
Get that chip pon on, mother |
Get that chip pon on, mother |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
108-110 |
Yorkshire poetry - Pseudonym Bill o' Bowes |
4.328 |
Get that chip pon on, mother |
Get that chip pon on, mother |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
20 |
|
192 |
Good neet, Bert; good neet (To the memory of J H Brearley) |
Good neet, good neet, thi day is done |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
6-Jul |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers.Author pseudonym is Bill o' Bows |
220 |
Gooin' off |
Don't get disheartened, mother, neaw |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
70-71 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
217 |
Grand owd Bacup |
What! Seventy-five years now a Borough? Weel done |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
66-68 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers. Pseudonym Bill o' Bows |
5.226 |
Han yo' yerd |
It's nobbut t' same owd tale again |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
47 |
Clifford Heyworth also known as 'Bill o' Bows'; rumours |
223 |
It's same as aw said to Sarah |
It's same as aw said to Sarah |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
74 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
5.225 |
Nature's weather forecast |
When t' wind blows t' leaves all upside deawn |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
47 |
Clifford Heyworth also known as 'Bill o' Bows' |
118 |
Newly Born |
God bless thee, little bonny face |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
216-217 |
|
122 |
Nobbut a thought (heart o' Rossendale) |
I've spent a week in Rossendale |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
221 |
|
221 |
Nobbut one cob |
It's time we mended t'fire, owd lass |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
71-73 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
401 |
Reminiscence |
Aw often think o'er t'days of owd |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
101-102 |
|
218 |
Th'owd Bacup Co-op clock |
As we are passin' thro' this world |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
68-69 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
68 |
Th'owd days (at Bacup End ut valley) |
I often think ut days gone by when I were but a lad |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
75 |
Pseudonym Bill o' Bows |
82.148 |
When Aw were nobbut a lad |
When Aw were nobbut a bit of a lad |
HEYWORTH, Clifford |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
49 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
116 |
Song of the Rossendale Charity Cup |
We sing in praise of football |
HEYWORTH, H. |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
204-206 |
Pseudonym Harry O' Pegs |
309 |
The end of an era |
The end of an era - or so it may seem |
HEYWORTH, Jessie H. |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
199 |
|
117 |
A Mon's Best Friend |
Com on neaw, Bruce, un set thi deawn |
HEYWORTH, Robert |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
215 |
|
343 |
The Irwell |
Dear Bacup, hill - encircled town |
HICKS, Florence M. |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
58-59 |
|
82.756 |
The black dustbin liner |
Like the black sky at night |
HICKSON, George |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
35 |
|
81.998 |
Songs in the house of my pilgrimage |
Oh, give me songs - the earth is full of sighs! |
HIGGS, Mary |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
5-Jun |
|
82.039 |
Sunrise at Sawrey |
It is early morning, the clock strikes four, I wake to a startling vision |
HIGGS, Mary |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
133-134 |
|
912 |
Sunrise at Sawrey |
It is early morning, the clock strikes four, I wake to a startling vision |
HIGGS, Mary |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
122-124 |
|
366 |
Sunset at Sawry |
It is early morning, the clock strikes four, I wake to a startling vision |
HIGGS, Mary |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
22 |
|
80.813 |
Imagination |
Imagination is my name |
HIGHET, Graham |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
43 |
|
82.635 |
Th' boggart o' Gorton Chapelyord |
There stood insoide the chapelyord |
HIGSON, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
536-539 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.164 |
Th' boggart o' Gorton Chapelyord |
There stood insoide the chapelyord |
HIGSON, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, (part 2, modern). Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
715811827 |
79.254 |
1.976 |
536-539 |
Reprinted from 3rd edition, first published 1882. Revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd edition in 1875. |
1.397 |
Th' heart - brokken |
Mi honds un mi faze ur' quoite ceawd |
HIGSON, John |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
94 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.472 |
The heart-brokken |
Mi honds un mi faze ur' quoite ceawd |
HIGSON, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
344-345 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.207 |
Back at wark |
Cheer up mi lads: its noan so bad |
HILL, Ken |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
32 |
|
5.208 |
Ratchda's treasure shop |
Owd Morris's shop wor a treasure |
HILL, Ken |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
33 |
|
86.661 |
An interview with a difference |
I went to a job interview for a placement manager post |
HILL, Patricia |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
9 |
|
81.059 |
Address to a human skull |
Com' here, owd beauty, com' thy ways |
HILL, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
185-187 |
|
1.043 |
Only a cranky owd foo' |
Aw wonst know'd (as a lad) |
HILL, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
190-192 |
|
81.057 |
Owd Anvil |
Ther'd use't be a blacksmith 'ut liv't deawn i' th' teawn |
HILL, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
181-183 |
|
1.042 |
Owd Anvil |
Ther'd use't be a blacksmith 'ut liv't deawn i' th' teawn |
HILL, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
189-190 |
|
1.153 |
Owd Polyant |
Owd Polyant a garden had |
HILL, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
187-189 |
|
81.060 |
Owd Polyant |
Owd polyant a garden had |
HILL, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
187-189 |
|
81.058 |
Th' edge o' dark |
Owd Anvil lean'd o'er th' ceaw-lone gate |
HILL, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
183-185 |
(Owd Anvil's Prayer) |
1.041 |
Th' edge o' dark |
Owd Anvil lean'd o'er th' ceaw-lone gate |
HILL, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
184-186 |
|
4.494 |
Th' edge o' dark: or owd Anvil's prayer |
Owd Anvil lean'd o'er th' ceaw-lone gate |
HILL, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
85-86 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
913 |
Wait till the turn of the tide |
Cheer up, mi owd chicken, an'don thi best smile |
HILL, Samuel |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
125-127 |
|
369 |
Bygone Burnley |
An old street of tired roofs |
HILTON, Josephine |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
24 |
|
821 |
Railway sleepers |
Black are the cinders that grind in the grit |
HILTON, Josephine |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
88 |
|
851 |
Rain in the gutter |
The street is soaking in the dripping wet |
HILTON, Josephine |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
136 |
|
914 |
Towneley Holmes |
Fond memories ever cling around |
HINDLE, George |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
128-129 |
|
4.148 |
T' seawnd o' t' sea |
It wer at me gran's i' Colne, when I 'eard it first |
HINDLE, Jackie |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
69 |
|
82.990 |
Fire and ice |
Skiing is tremendous fun |
HINDLE, Megan |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
167 |
|
83.002 |
Santh land |
There is a good land called Santh |
HIRD, Gabrielle |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
173 |
|
20 |
A scene of beauty in Sabden |
Have you ever been to Sabden |
HIRST, Eliza |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
120 |
Author Pseudonym Perian |
82.998 |
Goodnight |
I'm in bed really warm |
HITCHINSON, Lucy |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
171 |
|
80.834 |
Into the valium of dreams |
Living on the valium of dreams |
HIVEY, Ray |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
103 |
|
1.428 |
Angel Annie |
She came a little fairy one |
HOBSON, Mrs William |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
138-139 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.518 |
Angel Annie |
She came, the little fairy one |
HOBSON, Mrs William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
414-416 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.519 |
My ideal home |
Nor in the city, nor the crowded town |
HOBSON, Mrs William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
416-418 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.429 |
My ideal home |
Nor in the city, nor the crowded town |
HOBSON, Mrs William |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
140-141 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.199 |
The friends of Auld Lang Syne |
Here's to the friends who have cheer'd our youth |
HOBSON, Mrs William |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
262-263 |
|
82.593 |
The friends of Auld Lang Syne |
Here's to the friends who have cheer'd our youth |
HOBSON, Mrs William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
470-471 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.514 |
The kiss beneath the holly |
Be merry and wise, says the good old song |
HOBSON, Mrs William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
403-404 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.425 |
The kiss beneath the holly |
Be merry and wise, says the good old song |
HOBSON, Mrs William |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
133 |
From Songs of my leisure hours. Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.405 |
The music in our home |
Tis not the harp that fairy fingers |
HOBSON, Mrs William |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
103 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.488 |
The music in our home |
Tis not the harp that fairy fingers |
HOBSON, Mrs William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
357-358 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.536 |
Think not of failure |
Think not of failure |
HOBSON, Mrs William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
440-441 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.441 |
Think not of failure |
Think not of failure |
HOBSON, Mrs William |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
154 |
From Songs from my leisure hours. Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.454 |
Welcom Whitsuntide |
Welcome, with thy face of beauty |
HOBSON, Mrs William |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
169-170 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.587 |
Welcome Whitsuntide |
Welcome, with thy face of beauty |
HOBSON, Mrs William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
462-464 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.314 |
An elegy: on the death of a young child (that died November 23rd 1827) |
Dear child! I cannot fetch thee home |
HODGSON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
26 |
|
5.313 |
Blackburn elections |
These ten-pound electors can guzzle in beer |
HODGSON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
25 |
|
5.308 |
George |
For whate'er is wild and vicious |
HODGSON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
19-21 |
Extracts from a pamphlet entitled ' Owen's social system examined, and proved to be unnatural, antiscriptural, and false |
5.309 |
Infidelity its own punishment and fidelity its own happiness: extract |
The Atheist sure a fool must be |
HODGSON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
21-23 |
|
5.311 |
The evils of monopoly, and the curses of war |
These cursed wars, with Russian Czars |
HODGSON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
23 |
First and last verse only |
5.312 |
The steam-engine coffee grinder |
He grinds his coffee now with steam |
HODGSON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
24-25 |
|
5.310 |
The weaver's complaint |
Ye Weavers of Blackburn, give ear to my song |
HODGSON, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
23 |
First verse only |
604 |
A glimmer of light |
A glimmer of light, on an insect's wing! |
HODSON, Renee |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
22 |
|
594 |
As seen from the window |
Ordinary things!! |
HODSON, Renee |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
14 |
|
595 |
Before harvest |
A feeling came to me, - 'twas very fleet |
HODSON, Renee |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
14 |
|
621 |
City flats |
A sight to make one cry! |
HODSON, Renee |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
32 |
|
584 |
Elusive joy |
Like a shadow on a pool |
HODSON, Renee |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
8 |
|
622 |
Motherhood |
When four little feet come running home |
HODSON, Renee |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
32 |
|
585 |
Return of the wild geese |
Across the sky of pink clover |
HODSON, Renee |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
8 |
|
603 |
Things dear to me |
The whisper of the wind in the wheat |
HODSON, Renee |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
22 |
|
612 |
Worden Park |
We walked within the withered park |
HODSON, Renee |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
27 |
|
81.474 |
Bees |
Bees, bees all around |
HOGAN, Michael |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
99 |
|
5.091 |
A hymn |
Jesus, meekest of the meek |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
80-83 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.101 |
Acrostic |
Pretty, pleasant, praiseworthy sight |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
128-129 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.100 |
An Album |
The autographs of friends, which |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
125-127 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.145 |
Christmas acrostic |
Jane, I wish that Christmas may to thee |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
204-205 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.081 |
Death of Childhood |
That season of my golden dreams |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
25-28 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.082 |
Death of Richard Cobden M P |
The hero of a hundred glorious, bloodless |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
29-32 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.151 |
Epistle to a friend |
Last Thursday witnessed me safely home |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
232-236 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.095 |
From Hollingworth to Rochdale |
Now adown the western slope |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
93-102 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.102 |
God bless the prince and princess |
A hostile visit did the Saxon |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
130-134 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.103 |
Going a-maying |
The violet is dight |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
135-138 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.087 |
Good time for Lancashire |
Some evil genius o'er our shire |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
56-62 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.108 |
Henry Kirke White |
Blest be thy sweet and sacred memory |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
160-161 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.089 |
Invocation to spring |
Come, wonder-working spring |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
68-73 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.083 |
Lily Gray |
Already through the western gates |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
33-44 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.099 |
Lines on the death of Count Cavour |
Up rose the sun as he was wont |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
120-124 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.093 |
Lines written in a lady's album |
Accept frae me, for friendships sake |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
84-85 |
in scotch dialect. Poems by Rochdale author |
5.088 |
Little Claribel |
O little, little Claribel |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
63-67 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.097 |
May-day morn |
Aurora's bosom friend - the lark |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
104-109 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.098 |
My garden |
My garden is a home to me |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
110-119 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.146 |
O dig it near the Western gate |
O dig it near the Western gate |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
206-212 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.152 |
On the cliffs |
Twas in the depth of Summer's pleasant clime |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
237-240 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.124 |
On the death of a favorite rabbit |
Thee, poor thing, we must consign |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
167-168 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.147 |
On the death of F. A. R |
I have seen full many a rose |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
213-215 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.105 |
Picture of a hayfield |
Most towns of which this district's full |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
141-152 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.150 |
Prologue |
Tis known to you that we are come to spend |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
227-231 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.122 |
Robert Burns |
O poet of the plough! we own thy sway |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
162-164 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.128 |
Robin's Fix |
Aw'r coming thro' fields yesterneet |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
186-190 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.080 |
Summer |
Now is the golden time, mellow time |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
Sep-24 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.086 |
Sweet love of mine |
Constant's the trellis'd ivy-plant |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
52-55 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.085 |
Sweet love of mine |
Dainty, dainty is the moss-rose |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
48-51 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.125 |
The Emigrant's Return |
Tis first of May, and near five years |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
169-177 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.127 |
The Rifle Corps |
With looks majestic and mild |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
181-185 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.126 |
The Weeping Maid's Reply |
One day I saw an angel face |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
178-180 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.104 |
To- |
Enthroned upon thine inmost soul |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
139-140 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.129 |
To- |
Happy as a breeze from the south |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
191-192 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.148 |
To- |
Joys and sorrow both thou'lt have |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
216-217 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.123 |
To- |
May can boast its dews delicious |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
165-166 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.106 |
To- |
Roses may chance, at the first sight |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
153-154 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.130 |
To- |
See, on some moonless evening densely dark |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
193-194 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.084 |
To a certain lark at daybreak |
Wanderer through the silent sky |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
45-47 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.144 |
To a friend at Christmas |
Dear friend, I duly got your letter |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
195-203 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.096 |
To Elizabeth |
Poetic Zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
103 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.149 |
Votes of thanks to the ladies etc |
Tonight we're permitted to assemble again |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
218-226 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
5.107 |
Watch and Pray |
When the sun is shining |
HOLDEN, James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
155-159 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
370 |
Childhood nightmares |
I see witches and wizards |
HOLDEN, Jean |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
25 |
|
82.133 |
Mrs Envy |
As May-Time skipped ahead with ease |
HOLDEN, Joan |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
19 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
81.410 |
Blue |
Blue is the colour of the sea and the beautiful sky |
HOLDEN, Jordan |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
66 |
|
87.741 |
Searching |
What is this belief, 'assent of the mind' |
HOLDEN, Susan |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
26 |
|
5.090 |
The rose and the myrtle |
Twas on a lovely Summer's day |
HOLDEN,James |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
74-79 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
86.747 |
The buttercup |
How beautiful the Buttercup |
HOLDING, Anne |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
95 |
|
87.439 |
Adrian to his Soul when Dying |
Alas! my soul, once cheerful guest |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
25 |
|
87.456 |
Ballad from the Same |
Leondo was as brave a lad |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
55 - 60 |
|
87.430 |
Christmas |
Twas Christmas time |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
Dec-16 |
|
87.446 |
Cold Comfort |
There is a cottage by the Calder side |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
35 |
|
87.460 |
Conclusion of a Letter to a Friend |
Tho'a stretch of moor divides us |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
62 |
|
87.450 |
Conscience |
I dreamt that I soared far away in the skies |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
40 |
|
87.427 |
Distress and Happiness |
The wind was boist'rous, blowing fast |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
7-Sep |
|
87.442 |
Far from Home |
A sorrowing mother, bowed down in despair |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
29 - 30 |
|
87.461 |
For a Christmas Card |
Be this token of good cheer |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
62 |
|
87.462 |
For another Christmas Card |
One little verse - no more |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
62 |
|
87.448 |
Friendship |
What harmony is in the voice |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
38 |
|
87.443 |
Fruits of Folly |
I was born in a castle, and pleasures were mine |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
31 |
|
87.457 |
Happiness in Life |
They who have plenty, yet a grasping mind |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
61 |
|
87.428 |
Helena's Soliloquy over the Grave of her parents |
Here in the grave lie side by side |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
10 |
|
87.432 |
Holly-bush Summer-seat revisited |
Holly, thou loved retreat of my young days |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
18 - 20 |
|
87.435 |
II |
Fancy is sweet to me by sleepless night |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
22 |
|
87.444 |
Life and Death |
Tis a world of enigmas in which we exist |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
32- 33 |
|
87.452 |
Nmemona |
In Hadenzoland stands a lofty hill |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
43 - 46 |
|
87.433 |
On seeing a Child Weep |
Sweet infancy, why those apparent fears? |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
20 |
|
87.431 |
On the Profit of Writing |
If by writing come forth riches |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
17 |
|
87.451 |
Phillanesia |
Upon the banks of Odenflyde |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
41 - 42 |
|
87.449 |
Sociability |
Over the hills the sun has set |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
39 |
|
87.455 |
Songs from Crispinus |
Be not dismayed! 'tis better far |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
53 - 54 |
|
87.459 |
Spoken in Sickness |
Draw up the blind and let me see the sun |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
61 |
|
87.453 |
The Coronation of Edward VII |
Crowned! See the glory of the sun unfurled |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
47 - 49 |
|
87.441 |
The Cry of English Slaves |
Oh, say not equal freedom reigns |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
27 - 28 |
|
87.454 |
The Foundering of the Titanic |
What words can tell the story of the sea |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
51 - 52 |
|
87.434 |
The Lovers' Bower |
Softly the time glides on reclined beneath |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
21 |
|
87.437 |
The Moth |
To see the moth fly up and down |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
23 |
|
87.440 |
The Ocean Mail |
Hark! hark! with what intensity the waves |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
26 |
|
87.445 |
The Race of Life |
How varied is the race of life |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
34 |
|
87.436 |
The Tongue |
The tongue may be a friend or foe |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
23 |
|
87.429 |
To a Bard |
Thy rhymes are charming, and their genial ray |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
11 |
|
87.458 |
To a friend on his birthday |
Tis pleasing, as our years pass by |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
61 |
|
87.438 |
To Willord |
You say in your letter |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
24 |
|
87.447 |
Too Precious to Lose |
A widow sat lonely, with sorrow oppressed |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
36 - 37 |
|
87.465 |
Written in a Visitors' Book |
When in a stranger's house we feel |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
63 |
|
87.463 |
Written in an Autograph Album |
This little book, which all may understand |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
63 |
|
87.464 |
Written in another Autograph Album |
Of more concern my words would be |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
Poems from My Drawer Corner |
HOLDSWORTH, Edwin |
M0063833LC |
273.799 |
1.925 |
63 |
|
81.334 |
The rabbit haiku |
The rabbit is nice |
HOLGATE, Claire |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
24 |
|
87.808 |
Untitled Jesus |
Jesus if you are listening, hear what I have to say |
HOLLAND, Cliff |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
96 |
|
516 |
Yorkshire sayin's |
As heigh as a steeple |
HOLLOWAY, Wm Robert |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
88 |
Yorkshire poetry |
86.696 |
Kid courageous |
We know a little lad |
HOLMES, Lynn |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
44 |
|
82.907 |
In the land of Hex |
In the land of Hex |
HOLMES, Ross |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
121 |
|
474 |
Candle flickers |
See the candle buring bright |
HOLT, D. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
21 |
|
1.768 |
At the grave of Wordsworth: (In Grasmere Churchyard) |
Oh better far than richly sculptur'd tomb |
HOLT, David |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
45 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.767 |
Building up |
With infinite patience and toil to develop |
HOLT, David |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
44-45 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.766 |
The woodlands |
O 'tis sweet, 'tis sweet to wander in the greensward-paven alleys |
HOLT, David |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
43-44 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
86.665 |
Back end |
The autumn nights are drawing in |
HOLT, Eric |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
13 |
|
5.206 |
If Ah cud |
If Ah cud sing, Ah'd sing thi songs |
HOLT, Eric |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
32 |
|
82.132 |
If Ah cud |
If Ah cud sing, Ah'd sing thi songs |
HOLT, Eric |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
16 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
857 |
Jumpin' Jack |
Watch 'im goo, you gradely prancer |
HOLT, Eric |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
173 |
|
5.204 |
Levvin' whoam |
Theaw sez theaw'rt levvin' whoam, lass |
HOLT, Eric |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
31 |
Leaving home |
4.353 |
Saw't o' th' earth |
Ee swears a bit, an' sups a bit |
HOLT, Eric |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
38 |
|
5.205 |
Singer Jack |
Owd Jack's a singer, ov that there's no deawt |
HOLT, Eric |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
31 |
|
4.355 |
T' miner |
Ah'm sick o' workin' deauwn yon mine |
HOLT, Eric |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
39 |
|
4.356 |
Th' owd loner |
Ah've nobbut a bob i' mi pockit |
HOLT, Eric |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
39 |
|
82.134 |
The bridge |
Only last week walking by the allotments |
HOLT, Eric |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
20 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
808 |
T'spinner's tale |
Fer o'er a year th'owd mill's bin shut |
HOLT, Eric |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
30 |
|
820 |
Up fer t'cup |
Ah durn't care if it's pourin' deawn |
HOLT, Eric |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
80 |
|
411 |
Up fer t'cup |
Ah durn't care if it's pourin' deawn |
HOLT, Eric |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
110 |
|
4.354 |
Waythery world |
Lukkin' thro' t' winder it's so weet an' grey |
HOLT, Eric |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
38 |
|
4.295 |
It's nobbut me |
One winter's neet Ah'st ne'er forget |
HOLT, John |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
8-Sep |
|
915 |
It's nobbut me |
One winter's neet aw'st ne'er forget |
HOLT, John |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
130-131 |
|
82.822 |
Colour |
As blue as a bluebell, swaying in the breeze |
HOLT, Ryan |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
71 |
|
2.417 |
City notes |
I mind me of a garden quaint, with flaunting iris flowers |
HONEYWOOD, Patty |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
105 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.418 |
Past |
Let the dead past bury its dead |
HONEYWOOD, Patty |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
105-106 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.419 |
The holy rood |
A prophet's vision vague and crude |
HONEYWOOD, Patty |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
106 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.943 |
Education |
Behold the unconscious fragments of the sun |
HOPE-SCOTT, Edith |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
128 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.942 |
Peace |
Most mocked of all by those who take thy name |
HOPE-SCOTT, Edith |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
127 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.945 |
The cat |
With noiseless feet and stately pace |
HOPE-SCOTT, Edith |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
130 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.941 |
The fruit grower in spring |
I hear the spring tiptoeing round |
HOPE-SCOTT, Edith |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
126 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.944 |
The poet's outlook |
It do my heart a lot o'good |
HOPE-SCOTT, Edith |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
129 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
6.200 |
El Dorado |
The deepest sorrow is not felt by those |
HOPKINSON, Alfred |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
3-Aug |
|
86.676 |
First Date |
I called on my hairdresser for a needed style |
HORNBY, Marie Christine |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
24 |
|
81.534 |
Shooting stars |
Shooting stars |
HORRIGAN, Patrick |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
129 |
|
650 |
Reflections |
I sit relecting our love |
HORROCKS, J. |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
54 |
|
639 |
Easter Fair |
The hurdy gurdy grinds |
HORROCKS, Jenny |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
10 |
|
529 |
T'lang daay's owered |
T'lang daay's owered |
HORSPOOL, Robert |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
100 |
Yorkshire poetry |
80.855 |
A creak and a scream, a bat and a witch |
The wicked witch gave a terrible scream |
HOSKYN, Anna |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
134 |
|
80.856 |
A croak and a shriek, a frog and a wizard |
In the haunted house there is disease |
HOSKYN, Katy |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
134 |
|
81.353 |
Colours |
Yellow is the colour of the blazing sun |
HOUGH, Chloe |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
33 |
|
82.701 |
If |
If only I could score the winning goal for Everton in the FA Cup Final |
HOUGH, Josh |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
4-May |
|
81.472 |
Seasons |
Seasons come and seasons go |
HOUGHTON, Anita |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
98 |
|
2.503 |
Strangers yet |
Strangers yet! |
HOUGHTON, Lord |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
227-228 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.505 |
The brook-side |
I wandered by the brook-side |
HOUGHTON, Lord |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
231-232 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.504 |
The tent |
Why should a man raise stone and wood |
HOUGHTON, Lord |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
229-231 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.571 |
A birthday rhyme |
Yes, the weathers very cold, and the Muse is very mournful |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
164-165 |
|
1.575 |
A Cenotaph |
With happy radiance rose this April morn |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
176-183 |
April 23rd 1864 |
1.496 |
A dark day (Netherwood) |
There are no daisies in the grass |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
39-40 |
|
1.557 |
A dream of the past |
From the noise of the strife, from the battle of life |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
139 |
|
1.492 |
A Forest Dream |
Sing soft and low, wild forest stream |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
25-28 |
|
1.545 |
A keepsake |
If thou would'st keep with care |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
115-117 |
|
1.513 |
A lonely river |
I wait by a lonely river |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
72 |
|
1.560 |
A Meeting |
Within a quiet homestead far away |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
145-146 |
|
1.574 |
A Memory |
I passed through wonderful valleys |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
172-175 |
Of Edward Spenser and George Fox |
1.554 |
A might-have-been |
I saw an old man, thin and grey |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
134 |
|
1.549 |
A Night-watch |
I watch the night alone |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
121-122 |
|
1.524 |
A portrait |
So like, so sweet, so beautiful is this |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
91 |
|
1.570 |
A Quartette |
Within this little book |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
162-163 |
Written in a lady's album |
1.566 |
A Question of Immortality |
Askest me, are thou immortal? |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
154 |
To one who sneeringly doubted his own |
1.559 |
A Requiem |
Long before the limbs are weary |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
142-144 |
|
1.576 |
A rhyme of Jubilee |
A little stream began to flow |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
184-192 |
January 1883 |
1.573 |
A Silver Wedding |
How swift time flies on silver wings |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
170-171 |
|
1.551 |
A Song of Heros (1857) |
We need not search the scrolls of time |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
125-128 |
|
1.550 |
A Song of Rest |
When the day's work is done |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
123-124 |
|
1.532 |
A star |
A star shines on me from the darkening years |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
100 |
|
1.510 |
A still small voice |
O soul, I said to my soul one day |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
67-68 |
|
1.569 |
A True Forgetmenot |
I've roamed thro' woods and meadows wide |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
160-161 |
|
1.585 |
A Walk to Red Lees |
Silently in the silence of night |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
229-233 |
In winter time |
1.530 |
Accusation |
Why dost thou blame me that I have not been |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
95 |
|
1.593 |
Admer: a Mystery |
Where is Admer, the beautiful child? |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
317-320 |
|
1.523 |
After many years |
And we have met thus after many years |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
90 |
|
1.507 |
An unknown bourne |
Kind voice, and so sweet |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
63 |
|
1.517 |
Asphodels |
I brought my flowers to the market |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
79-81 |
|
1.521 |
Aspiration |
Whose thoughts in sympathy with natures move |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
88 |
|
1.544 |
At Hurstwood |
Did Colin Clout walk here beside the Brun |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
114 |
|
1.563 |
At Rest |
They lie at reast, the weary ones |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
148-149 |
|
1.489 |
Autumn leaves |
I walk where withered leaves are blown |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
11-Dec |
|
1.561 |
Benison |
A Benison be thine, true heart |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
147 |
|
1.536 |
Bereavement |
Dear child! of much the mournful past did hold |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
104 |
|
1.562 |
Boon |
A blessing on the day, my child |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
147 |
|
1.519 |
Boyhood |
He is a very Quixote, and will fleet |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
86 |
|
1.533 |
Brother and Sister |
It was thy life-long prayer, this side the tomb |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
101 |
|
1.488 |
By the river |
I walked in a lonely place |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
8-Oct |
|
1.511 |
By ways unknown |
A wandering outcast seeks his home |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
69-70 |
|
1.503 |
Change |
The tree is the same |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
57 |
|
1.518 |
Childhood |
Tis well that childhood has its own delight |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
85 |
|
1.565 |
Cleopatra |
The revels are ended |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
152-153 |
Suggested by a painting attributed to Michael Angelo |
1.535 |
Compensation |
Last of thy father's children, thou hast passed |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
103 |
|
1.568 |
Dalmally |
Oh, garnd are the hills looking over Dalmally |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
158-159 |
|
1.590 |
Dark Mornings |
I love not more the golden dawns of spring |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
313 |
|
1.512 |
Eden |
Among the distant mountains |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
71 |
|
1.578 |
Epilogue |
Once on a time there was an age of steel |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
196-200 |
|
1.541 |
Evangelist |
The holiest aspect of angelic light |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
109-110 |
|
1.547 |
Evening shadows |
The evening shadows fall |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
119 |
|
1.522 |
Evensong |
Tis better, sweet, to lose, yet still adore thee |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
89 |
|
1.581 |
Fairy Fancies |
Beneath a roof of immemorial trees |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
217-221 |
|
1.580 |
For a House of Healing |
The world is but a stage - you know the saying |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
206-213 |
|
1.577 |
For a 'Penny Reading' |
In her high palace, amid pomp and gold |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
193-195 |
Given in the Mechanics Institute, Burnley |
1.529 |
Forebodings |
If from the steep ascent of thirty years |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
94 |
|
1.500 |
Forgetfulness |
It was an old man and a child |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
50-52 |
|
1.546 |
Forgetmenot |
She gave me of her hair |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
118 |
|
1.587 |
Friar Dorien |
Friar Dorien, a holy man was he |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
251-259 |
|
1.520 |
Friendship |
Tis nature's finest, rarest harmony |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
87 |
|
1.592 |
Greetings |
Thou wert a wanderer on the hills my friend |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
316 |
|
1.504 |
Haunted |
All night, as one who dreameth |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
58-59 |
|
1.534 |
Heavenley Love |
If it be human for the human heart |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
102 |
|
1.531 |
Humility |
I do not judge the world: how should I so? |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
96 |
|
1.564 |
If I Remember |
If I remember the beautiful face |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
150-151 |
|
1.490 |
In a stony delve |
In a stony delve outside the town |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
13-16 |
|
1.494 |
In the wood |
If it be true I cannot tell |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
33-35 |
|
1.583 |
Invocation |
Thou spirit of the living universe |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
224-225 |
|
1.515 |
Inward light |
Sole star that in the sunset burns |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
74-76 |
|
1.495 |
Knotgrass |
I wander'd far o'er dale and down |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
36-38 |
|
1.567 |
Lock Achway |
An old, familiar scene |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
155-157 |
20th May 1877 |
1.552 |
Lullaby |
Death met my darling in the street |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
129-131 |
|
1.586 |
Malkin Tower |
Where the drifting shadows rolled |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
237-250 |
|
1.498 |
Meeting streams |
I know a place of meeting streams |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
44-45 |
|
1.582 |
Moonrise |
I walked beneath the calm autumnal trees |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
222-223 |
|
1.506 |
Nightcometh |
The day is dying |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
61-62 |
|
1.508 |
Nightshade |
As I went by a wayside lonely |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
64-65 |
|
1.572 |
On a certain poem |
What's this, ye auld 'sneck-drawing dog?' |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
166-169 |
Published in a certain paper, without the knowledge or consent of the editor |
1.543 |
Orsini |
Low lies Orsini's head! Justice hath claimed |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
112 |
|
1.553 |
Paean |
Sing Paean for the rescued one |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
132-133 |
|
1.497 |
Primroses |
If thou art weary of sorrow |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
41-43 |
|
1.579 |
Prologue |
Although't is four long months since last we met |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
201-205 |
|
1.540 |
Reality |
My fears were more than the reality |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
108 |
|
1.537 |
Regrets |
And now thy voice is silent as a dream |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
105 |
|
1.505 |
Shadows |
Out of the old house into the new |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
60 |
|
1.528 |
Summer skies |
Evermore a dream will haunt me |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
5-Jul |
|
1.502 |
Summerdays |
A little nook of wilderness |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
55-56 |
|
1.501 |
Sunrise |
Never have the poets told us |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
53-54 |
|
1.526 |
The dead years |
Look not behind thee, turn thou not thine eye |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
93 |
|
1.516 |
The King's garden |
There are flowers of light in the King's garden |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
77-78 |
|
1.525 |
The last pilgrim |
There was a pilgrim once, whose journey lay |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
92 |
|
1.556 |
The Locket |
That wither'd leaf in the locket |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
138 |
|
1.591 |
The Moon |
And thus i stood in spirit worshipping |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
314-315 |
|
1.584 |
The Ridge of Snow |
My friends and I together o'er the ridge |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
226-228 |
|
1.493 |
The Snow-spirits (Entwistle Moor) |
The snow has come in the cold dim night |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
29-32 |
|
1.491 |
The song of Brun |
In the time before the hills |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
17-24 |
|
1.558 |
The Trumpets are Sounding |
The trumpets are sounding, the heros are falling |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
140-141 |
|
1.548 |
The Two Spirits |
There is a spirit in thine eyes |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
120 |
|
1.588 |
The White Witch |
A tale of the times of old - when Pendle Hill |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
260-289 |
|
1.589 |
Thw Weird Woman |
Once, in a pathless and primeval glen |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
290-309 |
|
1.527 |
Times and flowers |
The meadow was full of sunshine |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
3-Apr |
|
1.499 |
Under the snow |
The flowers, blue, golden and red |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
46-49 |
|
1.514 |
Viaticum |
You go to morning service |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
73 |
|
1.539 |
Vision |
Since then a vision in my mind has been |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
107 |
|
1.538 |
Waiting |
The night was dark with clouds, the heavy rain |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
106 |
|
1.509 |
Whiter? |
Our hearts abide in patience |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
66 |
|
1.542 |
Yorick |
Alas, poor Yorick! oft would'st thou repeat |
HOULDING, Henry |
Rhymes and Dreams, Legends of Pendle Forest, and other poems |
HOULDING, Henry |
M0042609LC |
156.385 |
1.895 |
111-112 |
|
84.053 |
Stepping east |
As I went east, twixt Hurn and Sway |
HOUSMAN, Laurence |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
9 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
82.298 |
A child's first toy |
There's pleasure in good company when manhood is attained |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
85-86 |
Rossendale author |
82.216 |
A Christmas greeting to Rossendale readers |
Though I'll not be amongst you, nor hear the sweet chimes |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
13-14 |
Rossendale author |
82.249 |
A Christmas poem |
Come, lads, let's drive dull care away |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
45-46 |
Rossendale author |
82.250 |
A Christmas song |
Spend Christmas with me Jack! |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
45 |
Rossendale author |
82.324 |
A Christmas song |
With mistletoe, box and holly |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
112-114 |
Rossendale author |
82.323 |
A Christmas story |
Long years ago, one Christmas day |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
108-112 |
Rossendale author |
82.290 |
A Christmas wish |
To readers of the Echo and Free Press |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
81 |
Rossendale author |
82.284 |
A doggerel ditty |
When aw wur a youngster |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
75-76 |
Rossendale author |
82.256 |
A dying man's request |
Come, Betty, sit thi deawn awhile |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
50-51 |
Rossendale author |
82.305 |
A hymn |
Blest heavenly king whose works divine |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
91-92 |
Rossendale author |
82.292 |
A mother's lament |
Soon, soon again, in combe and glens |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
82-83 |
Rossendale author |
82.307 |
A mother's sweet smile |
When sickness and sorrow combining oppress you |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
94 |
Rossendale author |
82.269 |
A pipe and a glass of good beer |
Aw long not for land nor for riches |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
61-62 |
Rossendale author |
82.271 |
A plea for the cotton operatives |
Can this be true? Has England |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
63-64 |
Rossendale author |
82.285 |
A reverie |
I often wish that when I die |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
76-77 |
Rossendale author |
82.258 |
A song of Rossendale |
Aw landed at owd Waterfoot |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
52 |
Rossendale author |
80 |
A song of Rossendale |
Aw landed at owd Waterfoot |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
90-91 |
|
82.220 |
A tribute |
Oh! Dig him a grave where the sunbeams play |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
17-18 |
Rossendale author |
82.259 |
A wee gable window |
It lighted the room where in childhood I slumber'd |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
53 |
Rossendale author |
82.306 |
An affecting scene |
It was a chill December night, the wind blew loud and high |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
92-93 |
Rossendale author |
82.321 |
An old man's soliliquy |
The sun was sinking in the west |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
104-106 |
Rossendale author |
82.243 |
Autumn |
Good-bye birds and good-bye flow'rs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
39-40 |
Rossendale author |
82.239 |
Autumn musings |
The birds have fled, the flowers are dead |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
35-36 |
Rossendale author |
82.326 |
Autumn reflections |
The trees are all leafless |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
115-116 |
Rossendale author |
82.213 |
Be happy to-day |
Be happy to-day, lad |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
10-Nov |
Rossendale author |
82.262 |
Bill and Bob |
The mill is now silent |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
55-56 |
Rossendale author |
233 |
Billy Cottam's chip-shop queue |
At Billy Cottam's chip-shop dooer |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
85-86 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
82.251 |
Bonny owd Bacup |
There's no special beauty abeawt it 'tis true |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
47 |
Rossendale author |
73 |
Bonny owd Bacup |
There's no special beauty abeawt it 'tis true |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
81 |
|
82.278 |
Bygone yuletides in Rossendale |
I am back again in boyhood |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
69-71 |
Rossendale author |
82.231 |
Christmas |
Avaunt! Melancholy! |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
26-27 |
Rossendale author |
82.253 |
Christmas |
Come, fill up the bumper |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
48-49 |
Rossendale author |
82.233 |
Christmas |
Midst mistletoe, holly |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
28-30 |
Rossendale author |
82.236 |
Christmas chimes |
Old Christmas chimes, old Christmas chimes |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
32-33 |
Rossendale author |
82.254 |
Christmas musings |
Ring our once more sweet Yuletide bells |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
49 |
Rossendale author |
82.214 |
Come, Bill, let's spend one long, long day |
Come, Bill, let's spend one long, long day |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
11-Dec |
Rossendale author |
75 |
Come, Bill, let's spend one long, long day |
Come, Bill, let's spend one long, long day |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
83 |
|
82.252 |
Courting on Rough Lee |
There's a lone shady nook on the side of Rough Lee |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
48 |
Rossendale author |
226 |
Courting on Rough Lee |
There's a low shady nook on the side of Rough Lee |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
78 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
82.225 |
Dad |
Just a line from father |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
21 |
Rossendale author |
82.288 |
David and Dorothy |
He is but a weaver |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
79-80 |
Rossendale author |
82.277 |
Dr O'Keeffe's victory |
Long life and success to the people of Parr |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
69 |
Rossendale author |
82.308 |
Elegy on Mrs Kerigan |
Yes, she is dead and o'er her grave |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
94-95 |
Rossendale author |
82.315 |
Epitaph on General Scarlett |
This simple cross doth mark the spot |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
99 |
Rossendale author |
82.310 |
Epitaph on my tailor |
Hear lie the dead bones of old gentleman Jones |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
95 |
Rossendale author |
82.224 |
Friends of other days |
As lone we sometimes wander |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
20-21 |
Rossendale author |
82.327 |
Gilbert de Rossendale, or A Rossendale Romance |
Sweet Rossendale! Has thou no bard divine |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
116-130 |
Rossendale author |
82.227 |
Home |
Dear children, when I'm from your sight |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
23 |
Rossendale author |
82.274 |
In memoriam |
Draw down the curtains |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
66-67 |
Relates to King Edward VII. Rossendale author |
82.325 |
Leaving Ireland |
I am leaving behind the old land |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
114-115 |
Rossendale author |
82.247 |
Lines on the death of Dr Robert Wilson |
Tenderly, lovingly, lay him to rest |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
43-44 |
Rossendale author |
82.320 |
Lines on the death of James Lancelot Wilson, Esq., of Newchurch |
While nature with a lavish hand |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
102-103 |
Rossendale author |
82.287 |
Lines on the death of Mr C. S. Wilkinson of Waterfoot |
Oh! Dig his grave where song birds sing |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
78-79 |
Rossendale author |
82.229 |
Lines on the death of Mr T. H. Whitehead, J.P |
Lay him gently, to rest, lay him tenderly down |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
24-25 |
Rossendale author |
82.291 |
Lines on the death of the editor of the Rossendale Free Press |
Yes, vacant is the editorial chair |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
82 |
Rossendale author |
82.242 |
Lines to a fellow scribbler |
My dear 'Obadiah', I'm dying to glean |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
38-39 |
Rossendale author |
82.215 |
Lines to a lost friend |
Should these few stanzas meet thine eye |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
Dec-13 |
Rossendale author |
82.232 |
Lines written in a shady nook in Derbyshire |
A limpid river riplles by |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
27-28 |
Rossendale author |
82.240 |
Lines written on re-visiting old scenes |
It may be but an idle thought |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
36-37 |
Rossendale author |
82.228 |
Lines written on the threatened removal of the Thrutch Rocks, Waterfoot |
Bold rocks of Thrutch, soon shall your glory fade! |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
24 |
Rossendale author |
82.212 |
Mary Lee |
In a cottage, clean and low |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
9-Oct |
Rossendale author |
82.302 |
Mayo |
There's many a spot in Innisfail more beautiful 'tis true |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
88-89 |
Rossendale author |
82.282 |
Molly Magee |
Good-bye, dear old Erin, I'm off to the west |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
74-75 |
Rossendale author |
232 |
Molly Magee |
There's many a maiden, both handsome and dear |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
83-84 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
82.272 |
Molly Magee |
There's many a maiden, both handsome and dear |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
64-65 |
Rossendale author |
82.328 |
Molly Molly |
Come over to Erin, sweet Molly Molly |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
130-131 |
Rossendale author |
82.219 |
My book |
Let dukes and kings their might proclaim |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
16-17 |
Rossendale author |
82.304 |
My old Irish home |
Ne'er tell me that time can erase from the mind |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
90-91 |
Rossendale author |
82.248 |
Old chum Jack |
We have schoolboys been together |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
44 |
Rossendale author |
82.319 |
On te death of Mr W McLachlan |
And art thou dead my gentlest friend? |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
101-102 |
Rossendale author |
82.303 |
On the death of a favourite child |
Ye birds of the wood chant a long plaintive lay |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
90 |
Rossendale author |
82.260 |
On the death of an old Rossendale friend |
Lay him tenderly to rest |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
53-54 |
Rossendale author |
82.299 |
On the death of Councillor Alderson |
Rest on, old friend, rest on |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
86 |
Rossendale author |
82.300 |
On the death of Mr Thomas Gill |
Peace be thine, old brother writer |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
87 |
Rossendale author |
82.268 |
On thoughtlessness |
We close them carelessly and lay them by |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
600-61 |
Rossendale author |
82.261 |
Poets |
I've read thy verses, good friend Lord |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
54-55 |
Rossendale author |
82.333 |
Poets |
What high delights are ours, and fine |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
136 |
Rossendale author |
82.301 |
Reply to a Newchurch friend |
Cheer up mi lad, don't downcast be |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
87-88 |
Rossendale author |
82.283 |
Restore me my boyhood again |
In vain am I told of old age and its pleasures |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
75 |
Rossendale author |
82.234 |
Rossendale |
Boast not to me of brighter scenes |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
30-31 |
Rossendale author |
82.211 |
Sabbath musings |
Tis Sunday, and I'm musing on bright Sabbaths long ago |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
8-Sep |
Rossendale author |
82.275 |
Solitary reflections |
In boyhood's bright days when our spirits are light |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
67-68 |
Rossendale author |
82.218 |
Solitary reflections |
Oh, sing me a song that I used to know |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
15-16 |
Rossendale author |
82.255 |
Song |
There's a spot one loves to call his home |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
50 |
Rossendale author |
82.223 |
Spring |
Haste on, haste on, dear spring |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
19-20 |
Rossendale author |
82.322 |
Spring |
Thou art welcome gentle springtide, with thy sunshine and thy showers |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
106-108 |
Rossendale author |
231 |
Th' owd Edgeside drum and fife band |
A've knocked abeawt this country some |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
82-83 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
82.237 |
Th' owd Edgeside drum and fife band |
Aw've knocked abeawt this country some |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
33-34 |
Rossendale author |
82.217 |
The bard's farwell to politics |
I'll wash my hands of politics |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
14-15 |
Rossendale author |
82.270 |
The falling leaves |
The trees are sighing their leaves are dying |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
62 |
Rossendale author |
227 |
The girls of Holly Mill |
Let cities grand their lasses toast |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
78-79 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
82.226 |
The girls of Lolly mill |
Let cities grand their lasses toast |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
22-23 |
Rossendale author |
82.279 |
The grand old man |
Oh! His soul is pure and noble |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
71-72 |
Rossendale author |
82.235 |
The maid of water |
She owns no land or mansion grand |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
31-32 |
Rossendale author |
228 |
The 'Moor Cock' on the hill |
Now Nature licks in fairy bloom |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
79-80 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
82.286 |
The 'Moor Cock' on the hill |
Now nature tricks in fairy bloom |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
77-78 |
Rossendale author |
82.297 |
The Old Church Bell |
Oh, a homely sound hath the old church bell |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
84 |
Rossendale author |
82.257 |
The old folks and Christmas |
Don't forget the old folks |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
51 |
Rossendale author |
82.293 |
The poet's farwell to his pen name |
Thou'rt cast aside for evermore |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
83 |
Rossendale author |
82.222 |
The slipper dispute |
Old Rossendale, old Rossendale |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
19 |
Rossendale author |
82.289 |
To an owd Rossendale friend |
Owd friend, aw geet thi note n' neet |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
80-81 |
Rossendale author |
82.267 |
To an unknown friend |
I thank thee much my unknown friend |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
59-60 |
Rossendale author |
82.329 |
To Andrew Houston |
Here's to th' lad! Eawr Forest Bard |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
132 |
Rossendale author |
82.241 |
To Ben Brierley, in t'other world |
Aw wish tha'd just drop us a line, Ben |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
37-38 |
Rossendale author |
82.311 |
To John Kerrigan |
My worthy friend and comrade true |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
96-97 |
Rossendale author |
82.273 |
To Mr John Lord (an old brother bard) |
Come, Lord, take up your quill once more |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
65-66 |
Rossendale author |
82.313 |
To my brother in America |
Bereft am I of all that made life sweet |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
97-98 |
Rossendale author |
82.276 |
To my collie dog |
Thou'rt e'er to me a trusty friend |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
68 |
Rossendale author |
82.266 |
To my first grandchild |
Little stranger, namesake dear |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
58-59 |
Rossendale author |
82.312 |
To my native village |
When all my brightest days are past |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
97 |
Rossendale author |
82.265 |
To my old friend John Ireland |
My dear old friend, I've heard with pain |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
58 |
Rossendale author |
82.280 |
To my old friend S. Sutcliffe |
Good bye to thee Sam, lad |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
72-73 |
Rossendale author |
82.238 |
To my old friend, John Lord |
I'd just like to know what you're doing |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
34-35 |
Rossendale author |
82.317 |
To my old schoolmaster |
My worthy friend, dear Mr Terry |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
99-100 |
Rossendale author |
82.309 |
To my son Thomas |
May he whose name appears above |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
95 |
Rossendale author |
82.245 |
To my study |
My study, 'tis to thee I fly |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
41-42 |
Rossendale author |
82.221 |
To Sir WIlliam Harcourt - good-bye |
Cover the embers |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
18-19 |
Rossendale author |
82.244 |
Tum o' Mary |
Who but remembers good owd Tum |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
40-41 |
Rossendale author |
230 |
Tum o' Mary |
Who remembers good owd Tum |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
81-82 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
229 |
Tum o' Mary's lane |
When aw wur young, an' straight an' strong |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
80-81 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
82.246 |
Tum o' Mary's lane |
When aw wur young, an' straight an' strong |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
42-43 |
Rossendale author |
82.263 |
Valedictory stanzas |
Loved denizens of mead and dell |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
56-57 |
Rossendale author |
82.318 |
Valedictory stanzas to club canvassing |
Farwell! Thou begging bustling trade |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
100-101 |
Rossendale author |
82.230 |
Waugh's well |
Dear Waugh, loved minstrel of my youth |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
25-26 |
Rossendale author |
82.281 |
When I was a gay little boy |
far dearer than treasures of silver and gold |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
73-74 |
Rossendale author |
82.264 |
When mother's away |
The house is untidy |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
57 |
Rossendale author |
82.314 |
Written on meeting with an old friend |
Old friend of my youth, I have met thee once more |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
98-99 |
Rossendale author |
82.965 |
Colonel Fazack |
It was just a year later when Colonel Fazack |
HOWARD, Ellen |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
154 |
|
86.699 |
Love hurts |
I used to have a boyfriend |
HOWARD, Lisa |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
47 |
|
6.734 |
A dream of power |
I lie in dreamy reverie |
HOWARTH, Albert |
Selected poems from the works of Albert Howarth |
HOWARTH, Albert |
M0129420LC |
492.279 |
1.905 |
Dec-17 |
Burnley poet |
6.732 |
A memory of olden-time |
Tis twenty years since last I heard |
HOWARTH, Albert |
Selected poems from the works of Albert Howarth |
HOWARTH, Albert |
M0129420LC |
492.279 |
1.905 |
10-Nov |
Burnley poet |
6.736 |
A question |
Ten thousand feet above the vale |
HOWARTH, Albert |
Selected poems from the works of Albert Howarth |
HOWARTH, Albert |
M0129420LC |
492.279 |
1.905 |
19 |
Burnley poet |
6.729 |
A reverie |
Westminster, home of our lustrous dead |
HOWARTH, Albert |
Selected poems from the works of Albert Howarth |
HOWARTH, Albert |
M0129420LC |
492.279 |
1.905 |
5-Jul |
Burnley poet |
6.731 |
An ode to the sun |
O! orb of day! O! Glorious light! |
HOWARTH, Albert |
Selected poems from the works of Albert Howarth |
HOWARTH, Albert |
M0129420LC |
492.279 |
1.905 |
8-Sep |
Burnley poet |
6.735 |
Averting a tragedy |
He came and took the old arm-chair |
HOWARTH, Albert |
Selected poems from the works of Albert Howarth |
HOWARTH, Albert |
M0129420LC |
492.279 |
1.905 |
18 |
Burnley poet |
6.730 |
Ether |
There is a gas called ether |
HOWARTH, Albert |
Selected poems from the works of Albert Howarth |
HOWARTH, Albert |
M0129420LC |
492.279 |
1.905 |
7 |
Burnley poet |
6.737 |
Gran'dad's made-up tale |
The mantle of night has fallen |
HOWARTH, Albert |
Selected poems from the works of Albert Howarth |
HOWARTH, Albert |
M0129420LC |
492.279 |
1.905 |
19-26 |
Burnley poet |
6.733 |
Jimmy Breawn |
Mooast gaumless lad aw ever knew |
HOWARTH, Albert |
Selected poems from the works of Albert Howarth |
HOWARTH, Albert |
M0129420LC |
492.279 |
1.905 |
11-Dec |
Burnley poet |
6.738 |
To a working-man |
I'd like a word with you, sir |
HOWARTH, Albert |
Selected poems from the works of Albert Howarth |
HOWARTH, Albert |
M0129420LC |
492.279 |
1.905 |
27-29 |
Burnley poet |
6.739 |
To 'Owd Tat |
O aged seer, whose restless brain |
HOWARTH, Albert |
Selected poems from the works of Albert Howarth |
HOWARTH, Albert |
M0129420LC |
492.279 |
1.905 |
29-30 |
Burnley poet |
86.729 |
Reminiscence |
Are the cattle ambling along Meadow Lane |
HOWARTH, Jack |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
77 |
|
82.800 |
How strange |
How strange to think that someone else |
HOWARTH, Lucy |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
59 |
|
81.552 |
Dolphins |
Dolphins live in the sea |
HOWARTH, Stuart |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
139 |
|
81.288 |
Bonfire night |
Rockets soaring in the sky |
HOWSON, Carla |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
2 |
|
82.857 |
My rabbit |
My rabbit Floppy can jump and hop |
HOYLE, Daniel |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
94-95 |
|
87.797 |
Corpus Christi |
The sun was long gone, and the evening drew nigh |
HUDSON, J. J. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
84 |
|
81.292 |
Fireworks |
A huge red rocket explodes in the misty darkness |
HUGHES, Adam |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
4 |
|
82.954 |
My magical box |
My box is made of |
HUGHES, Elliot |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
147 |
|
86.706 |
My friend - the wind |
He walks with me upon the hill |
HUGHES, James |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
54 |
|
87.806 |
Space in your heart |
Why does your heart not let Him in? |
HUGHES, Joan |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
94 |
|
81.338 |
Ode to my bacon butty |
Ode to my bacon butty |
HUGHES, Laura |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
26 |
|
82.883 |
A false world |
A computer with no processor |
HUGHES, Mark |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
107 |
|
87.760 |
Pain |
Pain pain what is this pain? |
HUGHES, Stella |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
45 |
|
1.614 |
A broken heart |
Lay her gently to rest by her own mother's side |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
31-32 |
|
1.632 |
A Christmas Carol |
Hark! The bells are gaily ringing |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
63-64 |
|
2.594 |
A Christmas Carol |
Hark! the bells are gaily ringing |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
6-Jul |
|
2.656 |
A country life for me |
A country life for me, mi lads |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
103-104 |
|
2.497 |
A country life for me |
A country life for me, mi lads |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
240-241 |
|
5.258 |
A country life for me: an extract |
A country life for mi, mi lads, a country life for me |
HULL, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
xxv-xxvi |
First and last verses of the poem only |
2.386 |
A story of King Alfred |
King Alfred, rightly styled The Great |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
144-148 |
|
1.599 |
A Thousand Rhymes |
In the 'huge folios' of the Blackburn Times |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
Dec-13 |
|
2.387 |
A voice from heaven |
Mother of mine, mother of mine |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
148-150 |
|
1.673 |
Adelaide Anne Procter |
Sweet Poetess! Though all too brief thy star |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
120-121 |
|
1.669 |
An Afternoon in November |
The sky in leaden, through the drenching rain |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
118 |
1883 |
2.639 |
An afternoon in November |
The sky in leaden, through the drenching rain |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
69-70 |
|
1.644 |
An angel's name |
You turned away your radiant face |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
84-86 |
|
2.606 |
An angel's name |
You turned away your radiant face |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
30-33 |
|
2.593 |
At a baby's grave |
The shining lilies white, love |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
5-Jun |
|
2.383 |
At a baby's grave |
The shining lilies, white, dear |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
141 |
|
2.603 |
At the golden gate |
I am sinking, sister, sinking |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
22-24 |
|
1.641 |
At the golden gates |
I am sinking, sister, sinking |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
76-79 |
|
2.403 |
Billy an' betty |
Said Billy to Betty, 'tha's getten drest up' |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
203 |
|
2.395 |
Billy Bantam's bride |
Billy Bantam went a-cooartin' |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
182-188 |
|
2.640 |
Charles Swain |
How truthful are the verses, noble singer |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
70 |
|
1.668 |
Charles Swain |
How truthful are thy verses, noble singer |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
117 |
|
2.408 |
Come Jack owd lad |
There's a little nook i' th' Blegburn Times |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
212-213 |
|
2.393 |
Con Freddy come? |
Th'young doctor's a gradely nice mon |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
177-179 |
|
1.623 |
Cuthbert de Hoghton and Helen MacDonald |
Dear shrine of Saint Mary in Thomas More's Chelsea |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
50-51 |
|
2.648 |
Deawn bi t' Ribble side |
When the settin' sun shines breet |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
84-86 |
|
2.441 |
Deawn bi' t' Ribble side |
When the settin' sun shines breet |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
223-224 |
|
2.629 |
Deep love, deep sorrow |
Dost thou remember, sweet departed wife |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
62-63 |
|
5.120 |
Dicky Blue |
Mony a kindly heart aw've known, i' mi time |
HULL, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
xxii-xxiii |
|
2.390 |
Dicky Blue |
Mony a kindly heart i've known |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
169-171 |
|
1.636 |
Duty and delight |
What tender sweetness fills thy joyful strain |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
69 |
|
2.598 |
Duty and delight |
What tender sweetness fills thy joyful strain |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
Dec-13 |
|
5.118 |
Eawr Dick's beawn a-cooartin' to-neet |
There's twopence bin gi'n to eawr Johnny |
HULL, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
xix-xx |
|
2.499 |
Eawr Dick's beawn a-cooartin' to-neet |
There's twopence bin gi'n to eawr Johnny |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
242-243 |
|
2.657 |
Eawr Dick's beawn a-cooartin' to-neet |
There's twopence bin gi'n to eawr Johnny |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
105-106 |
|
1.672 |
Edward the Confessor |
The saintly Saxon King, in early days |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
120 |
|
5.270 |
Faith |
There came an Angel-King to dwell with men |
HULL, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
xxix |
|
2.619 |
Faith |
There came an Angel-King to dwell with men |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
60 |
|
1.659 |
Faith |
There came an Angel-King to dwell with men |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
110 |
|
1.666 |
Father Richard Dunderdale |
There is a grief words have no power to tell |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
115-116 |
Rector of St Mary's, Islington, Blackburn |
1.616 |
For Erin |
T'was the prayer of each hero |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
34-35 |
Written for, and now inscribed to Father P. J. Kirwan |
1.618 |
Gentle Mary |
Gentle Mary, ever faithful |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
40-41 |
|
2.655 |
Give every man his due |
Aw've rambled up an' deawn this waurld |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
101-102 |
|
2.495 |
Give every mon his due |
I've rambled up an' deawn this waurld |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
238-239 |
|
2.407 |
God bless thee Dick |
God bless thee Dick! I'm gradley fain |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
210-211 |
|
2.491 |
He couldn't come |
One fine Sunda' mornin' when th' church bells were ringin' |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
235-237 |
|
2.654 |
He couldn't come |
One fine Sunda' mornin' when th' church bells were ringin' |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
98-100 |
|
1.663 |
Hendrik Conscience |
Dear Hendrick Conscience, Master of Romance |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
113 |
|
1.630 |
Henry Neville |
Never more in the streets of Blackburn I'll meet thee |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
59-60 |
|
5.271 |
Hoghton Tower |
Not solely that thou speakest of the hour |
HULL, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
xxix-xxx |
|
1.667 |
Hoghton Tower |
Not solely that thou speakest of the hour |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
116-117 |
|
2.638 |
Hoghton Tower |
Not solely that thou speakest of the hour |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
69 |
|
2.411 |
Honest Roger |
Here's good luck to honest Roger |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
217-218 |
|
2.645 |
Honest Roger |
Here's good luck to honest Roger |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
77-79 |
|
5.121 |
Honest Roger |
Here's good luck to honest Roger! find his match 'at con |
HULL, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
xxiii-xxiv |
|
1.628 |
James Shorrock |
He loved his fellow men, and amongst them |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
57-58 |
23rd January 1916 |
1.626 |
James Watson Lonsdale, M.D |
O friend of long ago |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
55-56 |
|
2.402 |
Jim Gradely! |
Jim Gradley waur a daicent chap |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
200-202 |
|
1.664 |
John Critchley Prince |
Amongst the workmen-poets of our land |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
113-114 |
|
2.634 |
John Critchley Prince |
Amongst the workmen-poets of our land |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
66 |
|
2.405 |
Johnny and Jane |
Eawr Jane's bin wed a week or two |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
205-207 |
|
2.649 |
Johnny's watch |
Theer's Johnny! He's nowt but a tenter |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
86-89 |
|
2.456 |
Johnny's watch |
Theer's Johnny! He's nowt but a tenter |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
225-227 |
|
1.152 |
Lancashire fun |
When the leet fades away at the closin' o' day |
HULL, George |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
182-189 |
|
5.272 |
Lancashire fun |
When the leet fades away at the closin' o' day |
HULL, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
xxx-xxxi |
|
916 |
Lancashire fun |
When the leet fades away at the closin' o' day |
HULL, George |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
134-135 |
|
2.651 |
Lancashire Jim |
When the leet fades away |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
92-93 |
|
1.608 |
Lines for 'The Times' |
Hail to thy fiftieth birthday, Blackburn Times |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
23 |
|
1.645 |
Love and anger |
O breathe no more that angry word |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
86-87 |
|
5.268 |
Love and anger |
O breathe no more that angry word |
HULL, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
xxvi-xxvii |
|
2.607 |
Love and anger |
O breathe no more that angry word |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
33-35 |
|
2.636 |
Love eternal |
We walked one summer eve - my wife and I |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
67 |
|
2.659 |
Merry mates |
Merry mates are we |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
109-110 |
|
2.502 |
Merry mates |
Merry mates are we |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
246-247 |
|
1.651 |
My freidn across the main |
I've scanned the page of many a Bard whose strain melodios rings |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
96-98 |
Henry W Longfellow: died March 24th 1882. |
1.650 |
My freidn across the main |
I've scanned the page of many a Bard whose strain melodios rings |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
96-99 |
Henry W Longfellow: died March 24th 1882. |
1.607 |
My love was but a lassie |
My love was but a lassie |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
21-22 |
|
2.391 |
Nowt for Nowt |
Enoch an' Isaac wer true twin brothers |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
172-174 |
|
2.375 |
O listen gallant fellows! |
O fighting sons of England; of Scotland - Northern Queen |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
129-130 |
|
1.619 |
Ode to a Sister of Notre Dame |
For a brief, happy space |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
41-43 |
|
2.401 |
Ony good lord afoor nooan |
Eawr Marg'et Ann's beawn to be wed |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
199-200 |
|
1.629 |
Oswald Duxbury |
My heart is sore for thee |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
58-59 |
|
1.620 |
Our lady of Blackburn |
O Mary ever Virgin |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
43-46 |
|
81.062 |
Owd Betty's dowters |
Eh! dear o' me! owd Betty said |
HULL, George |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
195-196 |
|
2.389 |
Owd Betty's dowters |
Eh! dear o' me! owd Betty said |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
167-169 |
|
1.040 |
Owd Betty's dowters |
Eh! dear o' me! owd Betty said |
HULL, George |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
180-181 |
|
573 |
Owd Betty's dowters |
Eh! dear o' me! owd Betty said |
HULL, George |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
159-160 |
Lancashire poetry |
5.256 |
Owd Betty's dowters |
Eh! dear o' me! owd Betty said 'wodever mon aw do |
HULL, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
xxiv-xxv |
|
2.406 |
Owd England needs us o |
Come, gradley lads frae Lancashire |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
208-210 |
written in 1914 |
2.652 |
Owd Jemmy |
What! Never knowed Owd Jemmy, lad |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
94-96 |
|
2.487 |
Owd Jemmy |
What! Never knowed Owd Jemmy, lad |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
231-233 |
|
5.257 |
Owd Jemmy: an extract |
But most ov o, owd Jemmy loved a pratty little child |
HULL, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
xxv |
Two verses only of this poem |
2.392 |
Owd Pinder's fiddle |
Ned Waugh said Pinder waur a foo' |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
175-177 |
|
1.610 |
Past-time pictures |
When I was quite a little lad |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
25-27 |
To Luke S Walmsley |
1.646 |
Peace |
Peace walked with me along the ways |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
88-89 |
|
2.609 |
Peace |
Peace walked with me along the ways |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
38-40 |
|
2.612 |
Persevere |
Brother! Choose the path of duty |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
45-46 |
|
2.370 |
Peter Lonsdale |
True gentleman true gentleman true priest of god |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
123 |
|
2.501 |
Philisopher Bill |
I'm just gooin' deawn for a pipe an' a gill |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
244-245 |
|
5.119 |
Philosopher Bill |
Aw'm just gooin' deawn for a pipe an' a gill |
HULL, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
xxi-xxii |
|
2.658 |
Philosopher Bill |
Aw'm just gooin' deawn for a pipe an' a gill |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
107-108 |
|
1.647 |
Preserve |
Brother! Choose the path of duty |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
89-90 |
|
1.656 |
Saint Augustine of England |
Let us, heart and voice united |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
105-106 |
|
1.670 |
Scandal |
Behold! This man, with handsome form and face |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
118-119 |
|
2.641 |
Scandal |
Behold! This man, with handsome form and face |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
71 |
|
2.412 |
Schoo' mates together |
When we were o' schoo' mates together mi lads |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
219-220 |
|
2.646 |
Schoo' mates together |
When we were o' schoo' mates together mi lads |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
79-81 |
|
1.638 |
Sea and river |
Man! Thou art like the ever restless sea |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
71-72 |
|
2.600 |
Sea and river |
Man! Thou art like the ever restless sea |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
16-17 |
|
1.617 |
Shall England be re-conquered? |
Shall England be re-conquered? |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
35-39 |
|
85.124 |
Song |
Though short is the time since we parted |
HULL, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
406-407 |
|
2.630 |
Sunshine after gloom |
O sweet spring day, that followeth weeks of rain |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
63 |
|
1.661 |
Sunshine after gloom |
O sweet spring day, that followeth weeks of rain |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
111-112 |
|
2.382 |
Sweet Hannah |
Oh! Long you'll remember sweet Hannah my Mary |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
140-141 |
|
2.404 |
Sweet Maggie |
Sweet maggie is a bonny lass |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
204-205 |
|
1.660 |
Tennyson |
O prince, by right devine, of English song! |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
111 |
October 6th 1892 |
2.409 |
Th' fost cab |
If there's a two-o'-thre' farmers here that's bin to Turton fair |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
213-215 |
A tale of Owd Tuton |
2.400 |
Th' new babby |
I never did see sich a darlin |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
197-198 |
An Old Wife's Tale |
2.644 |
Th' owd cot aw wer born in |
Aw've landed once moor i' th; owd country this mornin' |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
76-77 |
|
2.410 |
Th' owd cot I were born in |
I've landed once moor i' th' owd country this mornin' |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
215-216 |
|
2.413 |
Th' owd gate deawn at th' end of eawr fowd |
They tell me this wauld's allus changin' |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
220-222 |
|
2.647 |
Th' owd gate deawn at th' end ov eawr fowd |
They tell me this waurld's olez changin' |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
82-84 |
|
1.613 |
The angel bride |
When I first met Lily-Mary, many years ago |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
29-31 |
|
1.640 |
The angel-mother |
When life is dark, and all seems drear |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
75-76 |
|
2.602 |
The angel-mother |
When life is dark, and all seems drear |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
20-21 |
|
2.614 |
The ballad of Lily-Mary |
God sent me Lily-Mary |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
48-52 |
|
1.649 |
The ballard of Lily-Mary |
God sent me Lily-Mary |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
92-95 |
|
1.598 |
The Bard and the Barrister |
I sat and read, the other night |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
9-Nov |
|
2.620 |
The double blessing |
Thy love became my blessing on the day |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
61 |
|
2.615 |
The evening star |
Whan daylight hath faded |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
53-54 |
|
1.652 |
The Evening Star |
When daylight hat faded |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
99-100 |
|
2.643 |
The first cab |
Iv there's a two-o'-thre' farmers here |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
73-76 |
A legend of Turton |
2.599 |
The fountain of love |
There is but one true love the poet saith |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
13-16 |
|
1.637 |
The fountain of love |
There is but one true love, a poet saith |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
69-71 |
|
2.608 |
The friend unseen |
I've scanned the page of many a bard |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
35-38 |
|
2.380 |
The Great peace |
Now that the long and bitter fight is o'er |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
137 |
28th June 1919 |
1.597 |
The heart of Robert Burns |
Tis but the south of Scotland |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
6-Sep |
|
1.631 |
The heroes of the heart |
O the world knows who the heroes are |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
60-63 |
|
2.592 |
The heroes of the heart |
O the world knows who the heroes are |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
1-Apr |
|
2.376 |
The heros |
For Flanders and the Lion! was the cry in days of yore |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
131-133 |
|
2.489 |
The hooam of a Lancashire mon |
I've tramped a good deeal through mi own native land |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
233-235 |
|
2.653 |
The hooam ov a Lancashire man |
Aw've tramped a good deal through mi own native land |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
96-98 |
|
1.600 |
The hour of rest |
When the toilsome day has ended |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
13-14 |
|
2.372 |
The isle of peace |
The world scarce mindful of the loftiest song |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
124-125 |
|
1.643 |
The King's visit |
In a city old and splendid |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
81-84 |
|
2.605 |
The King's visit |
In seville the old and splendid |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
27-30 |
|
2.385 |
The knight and the squire |
There was a young Wilfred of Ivanhoe |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
143-144 |
|
2.384 |
The lily and the rose |
When on earth is born a little maiden |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
142-143 |
|
2.610 |
The lily and the rose |
When on earth is born a little maiden |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
40-42 |
|
1.595 |
The Lily Maid of Brindle |
Within a cot down yon hill-side |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
3-May |
|
5.269 |
The lily-maid of Brindle |
Within a cot down yon hill-side |
HULL, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
xxvii-xxviii |
|
2.633 |
The lion of Flanders |
Dear Hendrik Conscience, master of romance |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
65 |
|
1.622 |
The little church under the hill |
On the crown of the hill stands the old Parish Church |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
48-49 |
|
2.388 |
The little orphans |
T'was Christmas Eve, the moon shone clear and bright |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
151-162 |
|
1.612 |
The little thatched cot in the nook |
O, the lttle thatched cot in the nook |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
27-29 |
|
1.624 |
The 'Months Mind' of Father Thomas Bolton |
Where Mary's pictured form looks down |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
51-53 |
Nov-07 |
2.616 |
The music on the hill |
Last night my heart was filled with woe |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
55-56 |
|
1.653 |
The music on the wind |
Last night my heart was filled with woe |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
100-102 |
|
1.615 |
The old home in Bonnie Hoghton Lane |
The bleak days of Winter are going, Mary mine! |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
32-34 |
|
1.633 |
The old year and the new |
He rests upon his bed |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
64-66 |
|
2.595 |
The old year and the new |
He rests upon his bed |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
7-Sep |
|
1.596 |
The pleasures of toil |
Let the worldling who seeks for the pleasures of wealth |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
5-Jun |
|
5.116 |
The poet's reward |
The worldling said unto the bard |
HULL, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
xvii-xviii |
|
1.594 |
The poet's reward |
The worldling said unto the bard |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
1-Mar |
|
2.611 |
The poet's reward |
The worldling said unto the bard |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
42-44 |
|
1.605 |
The pure heart's prayer |
Tis midnight on a raging sea |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
18-19 |
|
1.648 |
The rebound |
Against a stately forest tree |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
90-91 |
|
2.613 |
The rebound |
Against a stately forest tree |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
46-47 |
|
2.637 |
The Rev Richard Dunderdale |
There is a grief words have no power to tell |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
68 |
Rector of St Mary's, Blackburn, died 9th August 1887 |
1.639 |
The Seven Years War |
When the busy day had fled |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
73-75 |
|
2.601 |
The Seven Years War |
When the busy day had fled |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
17-20 |
|
1.634 |
The smile of a friend |
When cares or afflictions our short lives have clouded |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
66-67 |
|
2.596 |
The smile of a friend |
When cares or afflictions our short lives have clouded |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
9-Oct |
|
1.654 |
The Toiler's wife |
My wife looks bright - her heart is light |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
102-103 |
|
917 |
The toiler's wife |
My wife looks bright - her heart is light |
HULL, George |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
135-136 |
|
2.617 |
The toiler's wife |
My wife looks bright - her heart is light |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
57 |
|
2.632 |
The trinity of love |
Once, in my earliest days of wedded life |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
64-65 |
|
1.601 |
The two noble brothers |
I hold the one faith of the Church of Old England |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
14-16 |
|
2.604 |
The white-haired singer |
A year ago today |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
25-27 |
Written for the first anniversary of Longfellow's death |
1.642 |
The white-haired singer |
Again comes round the day |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
79-81 |
|
81.061 |
The winter's comin' on, mi lass |
The winter's comin' on, mi lass |
HULL, George |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
193-195 |
|
2.650 |
The winter's comin' on, mi lass |
The winter's comin' on, mi lass |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
89-91 |
|
2.483 |
The winter's comin' on, mi lass |
The winter's comin' on, mi lass |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
228-230 |
|
5.117 |
The winter's comin' on, mi lass |
The winter's comin' on, mi lass, the north wind's blowin' cowd |
HULL, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
xviii-xix |
|
2.377 |
The Yankees |
With Tommy Atkins on the land |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
134 |
|
2.373 |
The young crusaders |
O brave were the red cross legions in the far off olden times |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
126-128 |
1914 |
1.674 |
Theobald Mathew |
Theodore, not Theobald, should have been thy name |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
121 |
|
1.625 |
Thomas Ashworth |
My stream of song runs low today |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
53-55 |
|
1.627 |
Thomas Shorrock |
For those who knew him in his early prime |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
56-57 |
January 3rd 1916 |
1.657 |
To a friendly critic |
Good friend, grieve not because in my poor song |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
107 |
|
1.609 |
To a hospital nurse |
Sometimes, as o'er the tide |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
23-25 |
|
5.115 |
To a lark |
What ails my little warbler? |
HULL, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
xv-xvi |
|
1.635 |
To a lark |
What ails my little warbler? |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
67-68 |
|
2.597 |
To a lark |
What ails my little warbler? |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
10-Dec |
|
1.603 |
To another Mary |
Thy name is Mary, my dear girl! |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
16 |
|
1.665 |
To hope |
Hail! Brightest star of multitudes immense |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
114-115 |
|
2.635 |
To hope |
Hail! Brightest star of multitudes immense |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
66-67 |
|
1.602 |
To Mary Winefride: On her second birthday |
Our Lady and Saint Winefride |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
16 |
|
2.642 |
To Mr Orby Shipley, M. A |
Thanks for thy noble words! For they have taught |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
71-72 |
|
1.604 |
To my old schoolmaster |
My muse hath sung the 'friend unseen' |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
17 |
|
1.676 |
To My Son |
Vengence is mine, I will repay said he |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
122-123 |
|
1.671 |
To Orby Shipley |
Thanks for thy noble words! For they have taught |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
119 |
|
1.606 |
To Tennyson |
May God's eternal benison |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
19-20 |
|
1.675 |
To The Belgians |
When this great war is over, when each crime |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
122 |
|
2.621 |
To the memory of Alfred, Lord Tennyson |
O prince, by right divine, of English song! |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
61-62 |
|
2.631 |
To the memory of William Billington |
The singer has departed, and no more |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
64 |
|
2.374 |
To the Prussian war lords |
We've read of tyrants many a time |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
128-129 |
|
2.371 |
To two Alfreds |
How daer the name you bear my faithful friends |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
124 |
1916 |
1.611 |
Twenty-one |
Though we cannot expect 'Many happy returns' |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
27 |
|
1.658 |
Two judgements |
Not fit for business! That judgement was passed on him |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
108-109 |
|
2.381 |
Two little Wills away (In Hospital) |
Where there's a will there's a way, boys |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
138-139 |
|
2.378 |
Victory! |
Two Georges of Old England |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
135-136 |
13th November 1918 |
1.621 |
Walton-le-Dale |
Old Hoghton's lofty tower is grand, on rocky height sublime |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
46-47 |
|
2.394 |
When farmin' doesn'd pay |
Eh dear! eh, dear o' me! |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
180-181 |
|
2.397 |
When Rowland coom over the lea |
Young Rowland coom over the lea |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
190-193 |
|
2.485 |
When th' leet fades away |
When th' leet fades away at the closin' o' day |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
230-231 |
|
1.655 |
Why should I Fear? |
Why should I fear to bear my part |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
103-104 |
|
2.618 |
Why should I fear? |
Why should I fear to bear my part |
HULL, George |
The heroes of the heart and other lyrical poems |
HULL, George |
M0067578LC |
282.420 |
1.894 |
58-59 |
|
1.662 |
William Billington |
The singer hath departed, and no more |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
112 |
3rd January 1884 |
2.396 |
Yo're welcome King George an' Queen Mary |
Yo're welcome King George an' Queen Mary |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
188-189 |
Daily Mail Prize Poam |
2.399 |
You little lad next door |
Just like mi grandad, I've bin fond |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
195-196 |
|
2.398 |
You little lass o mine |
I've ne'er bin blest wi' this waurld's wealth |
HULL, George |
English lyrics and Lancashire songs |
HULL, George |
M0041381LC |
153.648 |
1.922 |
193-195 |
|
82.768 |
The disco queen |
I can't wait until tomorrow |
HULL, Karla |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
42 |
|
76 |
Men that matter |
There's a chap with the Can't, and the chap with the won't |
HUNGERFORD, James Edward |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
84 |
|
5.249 |
Birds nestin' |
It wer one a them ot summers, wen t' sun did nowt but shine |
HUNT, Dave |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
57 |
|
5.248 |
Nok an' run |
We used t' play a game, as drove fowk reawnd the bend |
HUNT, Dave |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
56 |
|
87.408 |
A wedding has been arranged |
The groom |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
20 |
|
87.422 |
Animal plurals |
Hippopota-mi or hippopota-musses |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
40 |
|
87.397 |
Beds are much better |
They lock up our parks at night |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
9 |
|
87.426 |
Blackbird |
I didn't mean to kill so live a thing |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
46 |
|
864 |
Brossen Quarry |
Twice Brossen's thunder startles |
HUNT, Irvine |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
212-213 |
|
87.413 |
Bullet |
Cousin Will lies well ploughed, has been now for |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
26 |
|
87.399 |
Come dancing |
It's the night of the dance, of the dance, of the dance |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
10 |
|
87.414 |
Dark roads |
Death round the next corner |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
27 |
|
87.409 |
Girl in a cafe |
Say, don't be shy |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
21 |
|
87.395 |
Hedgehog |
Hedgehog, old hedgehog |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
47 |
|
87.423 |
Hippopota pologia |
A kind of hippopoto telegram |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
41 |
|
87.424 |
Hippopotamud |
When it's puffacating hot |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
44 |
|
87.407 |
I and you too |
I, and at first you too, kissed |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
19 |
|
87.411 |
It can't be you're afraid |
Kiss your grandma goodbye |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
24 |
|
87.419 |
Journey out of the human race |
It was the last train to anywhere |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
36 - 37 |
|
87.405 |
Leotard |
She's the girl you see on the Underground |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
18 |
|
87.421 |
Munch |
Crowds at a football match |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
40 |
|
87.396 |
New Suburbia |
I searched for where the windmill blew |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
8 |
|
87.398 |
Pay day |
Overwhelmed by the monthly cheque |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
9 |
|
87.400 |
Photographs |
Poor old gran's rooting again |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
11 |
|
87.404 |
Pisces |
Do they wee, too? |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
16 |
|
87.410 |
Pledged |
Light your cigarette |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
22 |
|
87.406 |
Pupil love |
Seleba, watchful Seleba |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
18 |
|
86.652 |
Sally Jones |
She's dreamy is sweet Sally Jones |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
7 |
|
87.418 |
Shimmering rain |
Of course the corn came up again |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
35 |
|
87.425 |
Sockage |
A plot: Six shades of navy socks |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
45 |
|
87.403 |
Stop up my ears |
Stop up my ears, don't let me see |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
14 |
|
87.412 |
Termination |
I cut my head into |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
25 |
|
87.416 |
The book of death is black |
The book of death is black |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
30 |
|
87.417 |
The galactic tapes |
Cosmos |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
32 - 34 |
|
87.402 |
The saturday astronauts |
They're giants of men, the motorbike clan |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
13 |
|
87.415 |
The worms are growing bolder |
So, here I am, four feet down |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
28 - 29 |
|
860 |
Trailes Funeral Parlour had charge of the arrangements |
Dear friends I must apologise for cancelling my funeral |
HUNT, Irvine |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
187-188 |
|
87.401 |
We kids |
Mum has got her curlers in, we kids recognise the sign |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
12 |
|
87.420 |
Wilderness 2,000 A.D. |
Someone cried |
HUNT, Irvine |
The worms are growing bolder |
HUNT, Irvine |
M0096076LC |
363.435 |
1.971 |
38 |
|
371 |
Hippopotomud |
When it's puffacating hot |
HUNT, Irving |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
25-26 |
|
86.700 |
Lover mine |
Give me a rose to treasure |
HUNTER, Harry |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
48 |
|
5.263 |
Ah'v getten t' flu |
It meks no odds, what th' docter sez |
HUNTER, Sarah |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
12 |
|
5.264 |
God mentions sparras |
What arta singin' little brid |
HUNTER, Sarah |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
13 |
Sparrows; Birds |
81.473 |
Mum |
My mum is kind |
HUNTER-BARNETT, Tamika |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
98 |
|
82.899 |
Who did this? |
Who dug the garden up |
HURST, Emily |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
116-117 |
|
82.758 |
A tree for seasons |
Spring is here and the buds at the end of my branches |
HURST, Gemma |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
36 |
|
81.517 |
Autumn |
It is now autumn |
HURST, Kimberley |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
120 |
|
82.717 |
Eid mubarak |
Enjoy Eid day |
HUSSAIN, Aksa |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
13 |
|
82.887 |
The golden sea |
In the deep sea water I went in |
HUSSAIN, Dooti Malik |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
109 |
|
2.685 |
A different perspective |
Innocence, aggression |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
Pennine haven |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
M0176579LC |
653.679 |
1.997 |
20 |
Poems by Burnley author |
2.677 |
Almost reality |
The minstrel traversed the Pennine Way |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
Pennine haven |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
M0176579LC |
653.679 |
1.997 |
7 |
Poems by Burnley author |
2.683 |
Amidst the roses - Todmorden |
Upon the bleak fell |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
Pennine haven |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
M0176579LC |
653.679 |
1.997 |
17-18 |
Poems by Burnley author |
2.684 |
Bitter fruit of bitter truth |
Sorrow, pain, heartache |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
Pennine haven |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
M0176579LC |
653.679 |
1.997 |
19 |
Poems by Burnley author |
2.674 |
Emotions running deep |
My love for you |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
Pennine haven |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
M0176579LC |
653.679 |
1.997 |
2-Mar |
Poems by Burnley author |
2.681 |
Frankenstein's monster |
Love, where art thou |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
Pennine haven |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
M0176579LC |
653.679 |
1.997 |
13-15 |
Poems by Burnley author |
2.680 |
Magic of the Dales |
Tiny snail, or whale |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
Pennine haven |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
M0176579LC |
653.679 |
1.997 |
11-Dec |
Poems by Burnley author |
2.686 |
Negative thinking |
Love, a dream, lover's scream |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
Pennine haven |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
M0176579LC |
653.679 |
1.997 |
21-22 |
Poems by Burnley author |
2.676 |
Seasonal wind in Todmorden |
With such grace and ease |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
Pennine haven |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
M0176579LC |
653.679 |
1.997 |
6 |
Poems by Burnley author |
2.679 |
The Obegon |
The Obegon lives in the hills |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
Pennine haven |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
M0176579LC |
653.679 |
1.997 |
10 |
Poems by Burnley author |
2.678 |
The Pendle Witches |
A narrative of woe in Lanca-shire |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
Pennine haven |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
M0176579LC |
653.679 |
1.997 |
8-Sep |
Poems by Burnley author |
2.675 |
The poet and the girl |
What is pleasure |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
Pennine haven |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
M0176579LC |
653.679 |
1.997 |
5 |
Poems by Burnley author |
2.682 |
Wild rose country |
Gifts in December |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
Pennine haven |
HUSSAIN, Ibrar |
M0176579LC |
653.679 |
1.997 |
16 |
Poems by Burnley author |
82.708 |
Houses are everywhere |
Houses are everywhere |
HUSSAIN, Mevesh |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
8 |
|
82.953 |
Rocket! |
Flying around at night |
HUTCHINGS, Brittany |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
147 |
|
4.330 |
Billy Cottam's chip-shop queue |
When t' whissle's gooan fer hofe-past-five |
HUTCHINSON, Mary E. |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
21 |
|
86.726 |
Pungent aroma |
When man was created, God gave us a nose |
HUTCHINSON, Pauline M. |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
74 |
|
84.050 |
Arabia infelix |
Under a ceiling of cobalt |
HUXLEY, Aldous |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
4-May |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
81.550 |
The seasons |
When spring arrives daffodils appear |
HYNES, Julia |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
138 |
|
409 |
Bonfire Neet |
We've ed ar Bobby in a pram |
IDDON, Josephine |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
108 |
|
4.367 |
Decoratin' |
We've bin decoratin at ar 'ouse |
IDDON, Josephine |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
46 |
|
5.214 |
Gooin' t' Southpooart |
Mi Dad's bahn to teck us to Southpooart |
IDDON, Josephine |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
38 |
|
82.168 |
Known to God |
Whoa arta, thee, th'art known to God |
IDDON, Josephine |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
87 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
4.106 |
Mi Uncle Bill's band |
There's a firm call'd Leyland Motors |
IDDON, Josephine |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
23-24 |
|
5.213 |
T' char |
Ah'm t' char, Ah give gret satisfaction |
IDDON, Josephine |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
37 |
|
5.212 |
T' spadger's visit |
Ah were fain as t' cat were asleep bi t' feigher |
IDDON, Josephine |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
36 |
Sparrows |
5.215 |
Th' owd fisherman |
Owd Bill were t' keenest fisherman as ever cast a line |
IDDON, Josephine |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
38 |
|
4.366 |
The comedienne's prayer |
This is Thy servant callin' Lord |
IDDON, Josephine |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
46 |
|
82.705 |
Numbers |
When I was 1 I was none |
ILYAS, Sana |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
6 |
|
6.455 |
A workman's home |
Let lordlings sing, and ladies cling to wealth, and fame, and place |
INCE, Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
322 |
|
6.456 |
Alone with the dead: occasioned by a calamity which befel the author's wife, who was drowned accidentally within six weeks after their marriage and in her 24th year) |
Twas a cold winter's night, and my friends had departed |
INCE, Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
323 |
Written December 17th 1875 |
6.454 |
By the way |
When you sit at home in comfort, round your hearthstone snug and warm |
INCE, Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
321 |
Homelessness |
6.457 |
What does it matter? |
What does it matter although you be poor |
INCE, Thomas |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
324 |
|
5.224 |
No contest |
When I were a lad and watched footba' |
INGHAM, Robert |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
46 |
Football; Tom Finney |
3.193 |
The return |
In Manchester.. I only know |
INGRAM, J. V. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
60 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
82.766 |
Poem emergencies |
Red alert |
IQBAL, Qais |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
41 |
|
81.337 |
The wolf pack |
W olf's snapping |
IRELAND, Rebecca |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
25 |
|
82.891 |
Deep, deep down what could I find? |
Way down in the deep blue sea |
IRELAND, Rebecca J. |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
112 |
|
87.826 |
Despair |
If I could pick some clothes to wear |
ISAAC, David |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
114 |
|
87.812 |
A matter of faith |
In yarmulke and prayer shawl he |
ISAACS, Eileen A. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
100 |
|
508 |
Live and let live |
A King lives in his castle conforming to protocol |
ISHERWOOD, Ann |
Preston Writers '72 |
PRESTON WRITERS |
M0017962LC |
78.606 |
1.972 |
15 |
|
6.596 |
At thy cross I plead |
Waning fast is now the day |
ISHERWOOD, Gideon |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
415-416 |
|
6.595 |
Those bonny old church bells |
I wandered away on a sweet Sabbath morn |
ISHERWOOD, Gideon |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
414 |
|
82.045 |
Andrian |
Whisper to me thou art coming, beloved! |
ISHERWOOD, Margaret Vane |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
164-165 |
|
82.054 |
Night |
O lovely night, what spell hast thou been weaving! |
ISHERWOOD, Margaret Vane |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
200 |
|
5.301 |
Remembrance of a little favourite |
Ah! sweetest child! tho' ne'er again |
J. B. |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
9 |
An early fugitive poem written Blackburn 15 October 1820; death |
5.297 |
The thrasher |
The Summer now has spent her genial heat |
J. R. |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
5-Jun |
An early fugitive poem written Blackburn 15 November 1796 |
83.568 |
A dream of heaven |
And lo! I dreamed, and in my dream I saw |
J. U. S. |
SKETCHES and poems by local writers, edited by John U. Smith |
|
M0129272LC |
491.715 |
18 |
10-Nov |
Editor was member of the Burnley Literary and Philosophical Society |
6.304 |
A skylark rising |
A lyric of the morning years |
JACKSON, A. W. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
200 |
|
6.300 |
At dusk |
Dear friend, on nights like these when you are by |
JACKSON, A. W. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
196-197 |
|
6.299 |
Boyhood dead |
A heather-covered grave it is |
JACKSON, A. W. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
196 |
|
6.301 |
Life of the world |
Blue of the summer doming over |
JACKSON, A. W. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
197 |
|
6.302 |
The old gods |
I saw the great wheel of the sun |
JACKSON, A. W. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
198 |
|
6.263 |
To - Sonnet during the Russian atrocities |
Out of the blood-red ocean dawn there came |
JACKSON, A. W. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
155 |
|
6.303 |
To Arthur, on his twelfth birthday |
Ladies have diamonds |
JACKSON, A. W. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
199-200 |
|
87.796 |
We thank you Heavenly Father |
We thank you Heavenly Father, for things You've given to us |
JACKSON, Caron |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
83 |
|
87.740 |
Heavenly Saviour |
I saw your heavenly face, o Lord |
JACKSON, Christine |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
25 |
|
81.443 |
Parents say |
Parents say |
JACKSON, Christopher |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
83 |
|
81.314 |
Puppies |
Puppies like to play with a ball every day |
JACKSON, Danielle |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
15 |
|
918 |
Autumn |
The mists of Autumn veil Nature's face |
JACKSON, Elizabeth |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
137-138 |
|
919 |
Immortality |
Say not that he is dead who wrought anew |
JACKSON, Elizabeth |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
138 |
|
82.036 |
Immortality |
Say not that he is dead who wrought anew |
JACKSON, Elizabeth |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
126 |
|
2.421 |
The voice of change |
The brown rocks lie on the land, just as they did of old |
JACKSON, Florence |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
108 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.420 |
We six |
There were Tracy and me, and Rolly Dick |
JACKSON, Florence |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
107-108 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
81.340 |
Sitting on the garden gate |
Sitting on the garden gate |
JACKSON, Hal |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
27 |
|
3.204 |
A lullaby |
Rest thee, my little one |
JACKSON, P. Hoole |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
75 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.202 |
Beauty |
A spray of leaves against a moonlit sky |
JACKSON, P. Hoole |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
72 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.199 |
Gallipoli: a memory |
Crouched on historic cliffs |
JACKSON, P. Hoole |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
67-68 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.200 |
Scarlet and gold: an Armistice Day memory |
The glory of the sky was dying |
JACKSON, P. Hoole |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
69-70 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.195 |
Thanksgiving |
Good books upon my study shelf |
JACKSON, P. Hoole |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
63 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.201 |
The alien |
Amid the parts of Western lands |
JACKSON, P. Hoole |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
71 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.198 |
The conquerors |
Drive round the earth your iron bonds |
JACKSON, P. Hoole |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
66 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.197 |
The eternal quest |
I met a beggar in the street to-day |
JACKSON, P. Hoole |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
65 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.203 |
The flower legend |
When God sealed up The Garden |
JACKSON, P. Hoole |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
73-74 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.194 |
Three pedlars |
Three pedlars tramping down a dusty road |
JACKSON, P. Hoole |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
61-62 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.196 |
Three riders |
Three riders came to Busy Town |
JACKSON, P. Hoole |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
64 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
160 |
Pendle Hill Witches |
Penigent, Pendle hill, Ingleborough |
JAMES, Richard |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
31 |
|
159 |
The fisherman |
Lett us varie sportes |
JAMES, Richard |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
30-31 |
|
462 |
Ruby |
Forty years of living with him |
JAMES, S. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
7 |
|
5.223 |
A bun in the oven |
Am gooin to mi Auntie Annie's |
JAMES, Sally |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
45 |
|
4.350 |
Lonely hearts snub |
Ah'm attractive un vivacious |
JAMES, Sally |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
36 |
|
82.915 |
Funky friends |
Fiona is a funky friend |
JAMESON, Beth |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
125 |
|
6.659 |
Autumn |
Now radiant Autumn brings Harvest again |
JARDINE, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
465-466 |
|
6.468 |
Blackburn's bonnie lasses |
Let other poets tune their lays |
JARDINE, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
341-342 |
|
6.464 |
Curling at midsummer: Blackburn v Preston |
They say that wonders never cease - and, faith! I think it's true |
JARDINE, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
332-333 |
|
6.466 |
Lines written on reading the account of the death of the poet, William Billington, in the Blackburn Times January 5th, 1884 |
Call'd away! Oh it cannot be true! |
JARDINE, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
337-338 |
|
6.660 |
My mither's frae hame |
Oh! my mither's frae hame, - 'tis too plainly seen |
JARDINE, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
466 |
|
6.467 |
Physic versus poker: or the doctor outwitted |
It happened once upon a time, there dwelt in this our town |
JARDINE, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
339-341 |
|
6.661 |
The right good fellow |
Oh! listen, all good fellows, to you a song I'll sing |
JARDINE, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
466-467 |
|
6.463 |
To Robert Burns: on the anniversary of his birth |
With eager and with gladsome hearts on this auspicious day |
JARDINE, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
331-332 |
|
6.462 |
To the birds: singing at the mill on the morning of the 1st of May |
Pour forth, merry warblers, your rapturous notes |
JARDINE, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
329-330 |
|
6.465 |
Willie's gaun awa: written on the departure of my dear friend, William H Aitchinson, for New Zealand, November, 1883 |
That I am glad he kens right weel to meet him here to-night |
JARDINE, Joseph |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
335-336 |
|
839 |
The Inn Keeper |
Breekfast! Why lass, Ah's nut ungery |
JARRATT, Arthur |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
72-74 |
|
86.739 |
Strange landscapes |
I see strange landscapes in my dreams |
JARRETT, Christopher |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
86 |
|
4.154 |
Wattershatten thowts |
Wilta coom deawn to watter's edge wi' mi |
JARRETT, Edna Wilson |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
75-76 |
|
82.791 |
Space |
Space is a dark, gloomy place |
JARVIS, Liam |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
54 |
|
84.228 |
Ruth |
A posy sweet she culled for me |
JEEVES, W. B. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
128 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
82.934 |
A Victorian schoolroom |
A girl watches boys playing noughts and crosses |
JEFFERS, Suzanne |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
135 |
|
86.762 |
The Nutters |
One sunny morning in early September |
JEFFERSON, Elsie |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
108 |
|
81.483 |
Weather |
Weather, weather is just like a feather |
JEFFERSON, Stefi-Leah |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
104 |
|
3.206 |
Ballade of surrender |
I yield, enchanted by her eyes |
JEFFERY, Sydney |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
77 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.205 |
Death, when you come |
Death, when you come: you will find me waiting |
JEFFERY, Sydney |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
76 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
80.803 |
The new arrival |
When I was born |
JEFFREY, Brian |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
29-30 |
|
80.835 |
Expectations |
I expected to be burgled but was flooded |
JENKINS, Tricia |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
103-104 |
|
82.017 |
Nocturne |
Blood-red, the sun in the Occident's descending |
JENKINS, W. H. |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
60 |
|
920 |
Th' grip uv a gradely mon's hond |
I'll sing you' a sung abeaut th'owd-feyshunt grip |
JENKINS, William Henry |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
139-140 |
|
86.656 |
A little Yorkshire village |
Oh liitle Yorkshire village where life for me began |
JENKINSON, Vera |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
4 |
|
87.834 |
Sometimes |
Sometimes in the morning when the world is waking up |
JEPSON, Peter |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
122 |
|
824 |
October |
The morning mist is thicker now |
JIMIFEL |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
102 |
|
3.207 |
The white witch |
On the eve of last St Markes Day |
JOHNES, Edith M |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
78-79 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
81.344 |
Cats |
Cats are here |
JOHNSON, Caroline |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
28 |
|
82.951 |
My grandparents |
My grandparents are groovy |
JOHNSON, Charlotte |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
146 |
|
4.104 |
Wheer thers brass |
Ahve bin a grafter awll mi life un yet Ahve nowt tu show |
JOHNSON, Eric |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
20 |
|
87.749 |
Bethlehem Child |
I honour you, O Bethlem child |
JOHNSON, Kathleen |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
34 |
|
81.374 |
Venus |
Galileo tried hard to see Venus' face |
JOHNSON, Kelly |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
44 |
|
82.736 |
The old man |
Wet winter's day |
JOHNSON, Sarah |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
23 |
|
428 |
Dull rhythm |
Dull rhythm |
JOHNSON, Valerie C. |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
9 |
|
429 |
Waste ground |
Strangely brown and almost bare |
JOHNSON, Valerie C. |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
9 |
|
87.858 |
Untitled O Lord |
O Lord I thank you for giving me a home |
JOHNSTON, Cath |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
147 |
|
6.239 |
A Roman rhyme |
When engine's shriek and steamy roar |
JOHNSTONE, Hilda |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
133-134 |
|
86.669 |
Christmas |
The nights are dark, the air is cold |
JOINSON, John |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
17 |
|
86.727 |
Racing raindrops |
Have you ever wondered when the rain is pouring down |
JOLLEY, Jill |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
75 |
|
82.839 |
The forest's story |
I remember when life was good |
JONES, Christel |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
83 |
|
82.950 |
Help! |
Help me, help me, I need some help |
JONES, David |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
145 |
|
80.838 |
Remember |
Remember the days, now think back hard |
JONES, Derek |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
105-106 |
|
640 |
Fancy footwork |
After the full-back rolls me in the mud |
JONES, Donald |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
16 |
|
80.866 |
Imagination |
The little girl with the angelic face |
JONES, Doris |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
148 |
|
87.804 |
A Lost Soul |
She walks softly through the night |
JONES, Eileen |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
90 |
|
921 |
The soul of a man |
A man is not his flesh - he is a soul |
JONES, Frederick |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
141 |
|
80.818 |
Idle river |
Silent now, the river flows |
JONES, James F. |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
51-52 |
|
87.818 |
My Saviour |
Oh, what a Saviour is Jesus my Lord |
JONES, Joyce |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
106 |
|
83.435 |
A bride stood at the altar |
A bride stood at the altar, dressed in gleaming silk and lace |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
27-28 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.634 |
A cloud with a silver lining |
Come, dry up thy tears, my darling |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
49 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.423 |
A lament for the River Ribble |
Oh! What has become of our beautiful river |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
10-Nov |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.782 |
A mansion near Preston, Lancashire |
Serene it stands, a stately home |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
99-100 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.439 |
A merry heart |
A merry heart, a merry heart, it shines upon the face |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
35 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.699 |
A morning serenade |
A rise, love, and come o'er the mountain with me |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
63 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.625 |
A poem on tea |
What is it I should like to know |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
42-43 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.704 |
A prayer |
Almighty Father from the throne above |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
69 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.420 |
A song of welcome to Queen Victoria |
Arise, arise, lift up your hearts and vocies |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
6-Jul |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.640 |
A story of ants |
Once a famous local preacher |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
53-57 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.784 |
Acrostic |
Great is the man, with heart and mind |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
101 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.721 |
Address to Penwortham Church, near Preston |
Noble old pile! How oft I stop to gaze |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
84-85 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.700 |
Aileen |
Awake from thy slumber, ome Aileen awake |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
64 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.702 |
Alone |
The heart that feels most desolate, is not his that sits alone |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
65 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.636 |
Beautiful river |
Beautiful river! Say where is your home |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
51 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.424 |
Boating on the Dee, in the month of June |
On the winding Dee we're gliding so lightly |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
12 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.720 |
Charity |
No royal robes doth the maiden wear |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
83 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.705 |
Come, Jessie |
Come Jessie, come Jessie: oh! come and away |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
69 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.661 |
Cradle song |
Sleep thee, my darling one, sink thee to rest |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
60 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.648 |
Daybreak |
With gladness we great thee, the goddess of morning |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
59-60 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.707 |
Epigram |
A modern David born to rule with wisdom, power and skill |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
70 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.724 |
Father Christmas |
Father Christmas is come, let us welcome him now |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
88-89 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.432 |
Greetings to Mrs Gladstone in Italy |
Accept these greetings, noble lady |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
22-24 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.710 |
Gwendolin, the miller's daughter |
By the Dee there lived a miller, and a happy man was he |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
73-74 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.427 |
Happy homes |
How bright is the morning when o'er the blue mountains |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
15 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.663 |
I'll think of thee |
When the early morning sunbeams |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
61-62 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.638 |
In memoriam |
And he is gone, he, whom we have seen so lately |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
52 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.701 |
Inconstancy |
I've been thinking, darling Johnnie |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
64-65 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.718 |
Ingratitude |
Meanest of the human passions |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
82 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.438 |
Lament of the Countess of Leicester in Cumnor Castle |
A lady sat in her chamber |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
32-34 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.433 |
Lines on the death of a young friend, aged 22 |
She has gone to her est, now her troubles are o'er |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
25 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.631 |
Live in love |
Live in love, 'tis beautiful to see |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
46-47 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.666 |
Love's influence |
Oh love, sweetest love, how shall I woo thee |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
62 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.434 |
May |
Warble forth your songs of praise |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
25-27 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.635 |
May-Day |
Welcome, May-Day! With its brightness |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
50 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.787 |
My Mary |
Meet me, my Mary, down the green meadows |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
103 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.713 |
My soldier boy |
My heart's more light and gladsome |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
77 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.422 |
Ode to the primrose |
Beautiful Primrose! Whose home is the bowers |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
9-Oct |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.428 |
Ode to the thrush |
Pretty bird, thy song so sweet |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
16-17 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.430 |
Oh! Let us be happy |
Oh let us be happy and cheerful |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
18-19 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.632 |
Old memories |
I remember, I remember, when a happy child I played |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
47-49 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.419 |
On the birthday of Her Majesty Queen Victoria |
Again with joy and gladness, the natal day appears |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
5-Jun |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.421 |
On the death of the late Dr Tomlinson |
He lay like a beautiful flower cut down |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
7-Aug |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.725 |
Onward |
Onward, onward, up and doing |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
89 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.437 |
Recollections on a visit to St John's College, Grimsargh, Near Preston |
A right happy party we entered the chase |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
29-32 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.518 |
Resignation |
Cease, my spirit, cease repining |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
41 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.786 |
Slander |
When slanderous tongues assail you |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
102 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.440 |
Spring |
Hail! All hail to beautiful spring |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
35-36 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.706 |
Summer evenings |
How lovely the summer evenings, when the sun in his golden rays |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
70 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.717 |
Summer song |
Oh let us away from the hot dusty street |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
81 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.426 |
The beauty of Earth |
How beautiful is earth if we look around and see |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
14-15 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.777 |
The blackbird's song |
A blackbird was singing so sweetly |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
94-95 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.711 |
The blessing of thought |
Thoughts, what are ye that gladden my way |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
75-76 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.436 |
The blind girl to her mother |
Mother, dear mother, how bright is the day |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
28-29 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.726 |
The comfort of faith |
Let not your heart be troubled, or your mind with grief oppressed |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
90 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.714 |
The croakers |
There are some delight in croaking |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
78-79 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.626 |
The dying child |
Hush, and tread softly, a spirit is passing |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
43 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.645 |
The faded lily |
It was only a faded lily |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
59 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.783 |
The first meeting |
You ask if I remember the time when we first met |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
100 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.785 |
The flower on the Wye |
Down the green meadows where cowslips are blowing |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
101 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.788 |
The gentle shepherd (Psalm XXIII) |
Gentle shepherd, lead Thy children |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
103-104 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.628 |
The heart's yearnings |
I am weary with the city, with its turmoil and its din |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
44-45 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.418 |
The heir of Winmarleigh |
Glad was the day, Winmarleigh's heir |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
1-May |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.441 |
The holly |
Oh, the holly! oh the holly! how its scarlet berries gleam |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
37 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.716 |
The Lord's prayer |
Hear my prayer, oh, heavenly Father |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
80 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.712 |
The loveliness of nature |
Oh! Lovely earth, I will sing thy praises |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
76 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.780 |
The milkmaid |
A milkmaid went out from her dairy |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
97 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.719 |
The orphan girl to her mother in heaven |
You are gone, my mother, to a far brighter home |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
82-83 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.715 |
The patriot's farewell to Erin |
Erin, dear Erin, must I leave thee for ever |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
79-80 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.425 |
The sanctity of marriage |
Mrs Mona lacks experience, or she would never try |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
13 |
Written in answer to Mrs Mona Caird, suggesting the dissolution of unhappy marriages. The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.431 |
The Silver Wedding |
Tis five-and-twenty years to-day |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
20-22 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.774 |
The snowdrop |
The snowdrop is peeping again from the earth |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
91-92 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.781 |
The song of the fairy |
I'm a merry, merry fairy |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
98 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.643 |
The song of the weaver |
With the lark in the early morning, I rise, and away, away |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
58 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.698 |
The withered rose bud |
I found a withered rose bud among my treasures rare |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
63 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.429 |
There are moments |
There are moments in our lives when all seems so dark and drear |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
17-18 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.722 |
To a Christmas rose |
From the frosty earth upspringing |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
86-87 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.709 |
To May |
Thy very name brings gladness unto my lonely heart |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
72 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.629 |
To my friend Mrs - |
In friendship's sweet communion |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
45 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.723 |
To my mother |
You are gone, my dearest mother |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
87 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.776 |
To the brook |
Brooklet so busy, you toil night and day |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
93 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.443 |
To the daisy |
Pretty flower with golden eye |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
39-40 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.642 |
To the skylark |
Sweet happy songster, soaring on high |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
57 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.778 |
To the violet |
Pretty unassuming floweret, rising from thy mossy bed |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
95 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.775 |
Tribute to Mr C S Parnell |
Bravely he breasted the storm waves of life |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
92 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.779 |
Wail of Autumn |
I come o'er the mountains, hills and plains |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
96-97 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.708 |
What is envy? |
Envy is an evil passion |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
71-72 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.703 |
What is life? |
Oh! What is life? The cynic cries |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
66-68 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
83.442 |
Winter |
Old winter has come, we hear once again |
JONES, Mrs. A. |
Poems and songs: written in spare moments |
JONES, A. |
M0043484LC |
159.118 |
1.890 |
38-39 |
The author lived at Ashton-on-Ribble |
641 |
Molar malady |
Fear is fundamental |
JONES, P. |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
20 |
|
645 |
Hair today gone tomorrow |
When I was a little boy |
JONES, Peter |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
28 |
|
86.722 |
Perfection |
Until they make a camera |
JONES, Peter |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
70 |
|
82.135 |
Summer sonnet |
Brown bales of hay dotted in fields of green |
JONES, Peter |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
23 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
82.992 |
In the night |
The owls swooping past |
JONES, Sarah |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
168 |
|
82.789 |
My room |
All night my room is all spooky |
JONES, Sarah |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
53 |
|
81.525 |
Fireworks |
Firework, firework |
JONES, Stephanie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
124-125 |
|
87.830 |
Betrayed with a kiss |
In the Garden heavy with sorrow |
JOY, Nicola |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
118 |
|
81.512 |
Travel |
There are many ways to travel |
JUDGE, Shaun |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
118 |
|
1.456 |
Farewell |
Soon we feel the sad impression |
JUST, John |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
172-173 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.596 |
Farewell |
Soon we feel the sad impression |
JUST, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
474-475 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
80.846 |
The plight of the pussycat |
The Owl and the Pussycat |
K, Sarah |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
123-124 |
no surname, just initial K |
3.208 |
Anglesey |
The distant sea was faded as a dream |
KAHLA, Edna A. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
80 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.211 |
Crucifixion |
Nails for those wearied feet |
KAHLA, Edna A. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
83 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.209 |
In Syria |
Out yonder, in the stillness of the night |
KAHLA, Edna A. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
81 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.210 |
Nightmare |
O'er this dread night |
KAHLA, Edna A. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
82 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.212 |
Reminiscence |
Now falls the lingering glory of the sun |
KAHLA, Edna A. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
84 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
82.991 |
Crystal caves |
The stalagmites are as sharp as a shark's tooth |
KAY, Abigail and TOOTLE, Jessica |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
167 |
|
82.980 |
The boy and the swan |
Poor boy in trouble, day and night |
KAY, Rosie |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
161 |
|
82.999 |
My grandad |
My grandad is |
KAY, Ruby |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
172 |
|
922 |
A dream of rest |
Dull and drear is the waning year |
KAY, Thomas |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
143 |
|
82.805 |
My mum |
My mum likes cats |
KAYES, Jessica |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
62 |
|
1.065 |
Kitty an' Robin |
Whear hast the been roaming, Kitty? |
KAY-SHUTTLEWORTH, Sir James P |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
256 |
|
777 |
Meg or Jenny? |
Woe betide the evil eye |
KAY-SHUTTLEWORTH, Sir James P |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
257-258 |
|
778 |
Rochdale rushbearing |
Castleton an' Hurstwood's comin' |
KAY-SHUTTLEWORTH, Sir James P |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
258-260 |
|
81.356 |
Colours |
Red is the heart beating fast |
KAZMI, Nadia |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
35 |
|
82.940 |
Hidden treasure |
Come into my toy room |
KEARLSEY, Simon |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
138 |
|
80.819 |
The perfect marriage |
Slight taste of the absolute |
KEEGAN, John J |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
52-54 |
|
81.312 |
Dolphin |
Dolphins are friendly |
KEEGAN, Shawny |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
14 |
|
82.908 |
My cat |
There, lying on my bed |
KELLAWAY, Peter |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
121 |
|
81.446 |
Brothers |
Waa! Waa! Waa! Goes my brother |
KELLEY, David |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
85 |
|
82.699 |
Death |
Death is like darkness creeping closer every day |
KELLY, Ben |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
4 |
|
82.790 |
Football |
The commentators are on their feet |
KENDALL, Peter |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
54 |
|
81.547 |
Angels' candles |
The stream runs trickling |
KENNEDY, Kirsty |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
136 |
|
81.391 |
Hedgehogs |
When a baby hedgehog's born |
KENNEDY, Natalie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
56 |
|
86.718 |
Panic |
The ground trembled, echoing the palpitations of the heart, and shook |
KENNEDY, Shaun |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
66 |
|
81.460 |
Tadpoles |
The tadpole looks like a miniature black fireball |
KENT, Liam |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
92 |
|
235 |
Moorland pictures |
Across the quiet moorlands, where the dark is slowly creeping |
KENYON, Clifford |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
119 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
81.422 |
Alien |
Aliens are green |
KENYON, Dean |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
72 |
|
80.867 |
E T |
As the ion engines warmed up, throwing photons out behind |
KERR, John |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
148 |
|
4.386 |
A bonny seet |
Th'bonniest seet 'at can warm a mon's heart |
KERSHAW, Harvey |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
56 |
|
4.119 |
A reet good doo |
Aunt Betsy an' mi Uncle Tim, han just been celebratin' |
KERSHAW, Harvey |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
36-37 |
|
4.118 |
A reet good doo |
Neaw t' tap-rawm lads i' t' Crown one neet |
KERSHAW, Harvey |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
35-36 |
|
420 |
A tribute to the memory of Gracie Fields |
Th'nightingale's sweet song is o'er |
KERSHAW, Harvey |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
116 |
|
399 |
Intak |
To traipse up t'rake to t' moors aboon |
KERSHAW, Harvey |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
99 |
|
82.147 |
Life is a song |
This life is a song 'at we o han to sing |
KERSHAW, Harvey |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
47 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
4.385 |
Nobbut a cockstride away |
When Ah first geet wed |
KERSHAW, Harvey |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
56 |
|
4.145 |
T' seawnd o' t' sea |
When Aw were a nipper, Aw were capped wi' th' spell |
KERSHAW, Harvey |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
66 |
|
4.144 |
T' seawnd o' t' sea |
When wharty folk - jaded, - a holiday tak |
KERSHAW, Harvey |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
65 |
|
4.124 |
T'day we went to t' seaside |
A day at th' sea-side's a god-send to folk |
KERSHAW, Harvey |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
44-45 |
|
823 |
Th' bells o' Saddleworth |
Aw walked today wheer Ammon trod |
KERSHAW, Harvey |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
101 |
|
861 |
Three owd maids |
Mi onsetters were born an' bred |
KERSHAW, Harvey |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
194-195 |
|
82.727 |
My monster |
My monster has |
KERSLAKE, Jade |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
18 |
|
3.214 |
A portrait |
Do you know the loveliness that lies in upland waters |
KESSLER, N. J. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
86 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.215 |
A song of Chile |
Valparaiso's great and strong |
KESSLER, N. J. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
87 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.216 |
Landscape |
The rearguard of the year lay dead |
KESSLER, N. J. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
87 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.213 |
The sea |
As in some great cathedral of old |
KESSLER, N. J. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
85 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
478 |
My baby |
I cradled my baby once in the cushion of my arms |
KHAN, S. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
29 |
|
2.482 |
Christmas chimes |
We are the latest heirs of time |
KIDSON, Robert |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
204 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.481 |
My friend |
He has taken the vow of poverty |
KIDSON, Robert |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
203-204 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.484 |
What of the night |
Watchman! What of the night? |
KIDSON, Robert |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
205-206 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.480 |
Why should I write a weary poem? |
Why should I write a weary poem |
KIDSON, Robert |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
202-203 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
80.857 |
Solitude |
The cool autumn air silently hung upon dusky brown moors |
KING, June |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
135 |
|
82.874 |
The moon |
If I could go to the moon |
KING, Ryan |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
102-103 |
|
82.166 |
Calder fisherman |
In the murky rain he sits |
KING-WILKINSON, Averil |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
84 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
1.399 |
Bertha |
Low, by Ribble's scaury side |
KIRK, Henry |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
96 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
5.670 |
Bertha |
Low, by Ribble's scaury side |
KIRK, Henry |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
294 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
1.379 |
Bertha |
Low, by Ribble's scaury side |
KIRK, Henry |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
73 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.443 |
England's maidens |
I've seen the lovely spring-time pass |
KIRK, Henry |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
299-300 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.168 |
England's maidens |
I've seen the lovely spring-time pass |
KIRK, Henry |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
91-92 |
|
82.539 |
Love, honour and death |
Oh, gladly the breeze over sweet Devon's land |
KIRK, Henry |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
443-444 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.017 |
Love, honour and death |
Oh, gladly the breeze over sweet Devon's land |
KIRK, Henry |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
235-236 |
|
82.464 |
Minona |
Again the soft season of spring |
KIRK, Henry |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
331-332 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.177 |
Minona |
Again the soft season of spring |
KIRK, Henry |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
123-124 |
|
1.166 |
Peggy Dill |
The world has not a shyer nook |
KIRK, Henry |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
84-85 |
|
5.668 |
Peggy Dill |
The world has not a shyer nook |
KIRK, Henry |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
292-293 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
82.457 |
Sulina |
Ye rude cliffs of Abydos, how dear to my soul |
KIRK, Henry |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
322-323 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.154 |
Sulina |
Ye rude cliffs of Abydos, how dear to my soul |
KIRK, Henry |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
114-115 |
|
5.653 |
The ballad of James and Jane |
Sad was Scotland's king! |
KIRK, Henry |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
262-265 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
1.362 |
The ballad of James and Jane |
Sad was Scotland's King! |
KIRK, Henry |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
47-49 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.461 |
The faithless |
I said that from my faithful heart |
KIRK, Henry |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
327 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.196 |
The faithless |
I said that from my faithful heart |
KIRK, Henry |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
119 |
|
82.453 |
The loved and lost |
The grass waves green above the tomb |
KIRK, Henry |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
317-318 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.386 |
The loved and lost |
The grass waves green above the tomb |
KIRK, Henry |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
80 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
2.233 |
The old place |
I'm sitting again on the old mossy stone |
KIRK, Henry |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
151 |
|
82.489 |
The old place: stanzas for music |
I'm sitting again on the old mossy stone |
KIRK, Henry |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
359 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.465 |
To Miss M B |
The sacred muse has told |
KIRK, Henry |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
333-334 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.178 |
To Miss M B |
The sacred muse has told |
KIRK, Henry |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
125-126 |
|
82.449 |
We met |
We met, as only two can meet |
KIRK, Henry |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
312-313 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.383 |
We met |
We met, as only two can meet |
KIRK, Henry |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
77 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
80.836 |
Tiger |
They had to shoot her |
KIRKLAND, Michael |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
104 |
|
34 |
Cathedral |
The first impact - terror, windows |
KIRKUS, Guy H. |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
184 |
|
33 |
Epitaph to Failure |
He leaves |
KIRKUS, Guy H. |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
183 |
|
390 |
Laughter is a lovely thing |
Laughter is a lovely thing |
KIRKUS, Guy H. |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
37 |
|
45 |
What must be |
Not for us |
KIRKUS, Guy H. |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
193 |
|
81.423 |
The stars at night |
The stars at night |
KISSICK, Peter |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
72 |
|
80.820 |
To a white rose |
It battled its way all Winter |
KIVI, Mary J. |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
54 |
|
483 |
The dream |
It hovers there in my mind's eye |
KNIGHT, B. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
35 |
|
82.174 |
Strangers i' th' Chapel |
When I walked into th' Chapel a week or two back |
KNIGHT, Elsa |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
93-94 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
3.217 |
A linnet's song |
No skylark I, to scale the blue |
KNOWLES, Annie L. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
88 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.218 |
Chess |
What makes me think of that just now |
KNOWLES, Annie L. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
89 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.220 |
Realism and idealism: a retort |
Thus saith the Realist - A pictured lie |
KNOWLES, Annie L. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
91 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.219 |
Sympathy |
From heart to heart I went and softly knocked |
KNOWLES, Annie L. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
90 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
86.786 |
The wedding prayer |
As hand in hand together |
KNOWLES, Mary |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
118 |
|
81.495 |
Snow |
When I open |
KOUDELLAS, Maria L. |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
110 |
|
82.740 |
My teacher |
My teacher's really strict and stern |
KRAFT, Helen |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
25 |
|
82.975 |
Lively limerick |
There was a young girl at Polam Hall |
KUMAR, Gayathri |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
158 |
|
82.875 |
Classroom |
The boys come in |
L'ABERT, Sophie |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
103 |
|
80.837 |
My bottle of wine |
This delicious fermented juice of the grape |
LACEY, Joe |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
105 |
|
1.044 |
Owd Robbin's recollections o' Kesmas |
Aw tell yo' what it is, good folk |
LAHEE, Margaret Rebecca |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
195-196 |
|
81.566 |
Colours of the rainbow |
What is red |
LAITHWAITE, Nina |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
149 |
|
81.540 |
My visit to space |
I'm riding along in my spaceship |
LAMBERT, Sarah |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
132 |
|
87.860 |
What is this warmth |
What is this warmth that glows inside |
LAMOND, Ian |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
149 |
|
82.607 |
A Yorkshire farmer's address to a schoolmaster |
Good day to you, Misther skealmaisther, the evenin' is desperate fine |
LANCASTER, George |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
69-71 |
2nd ed rev |
2.522 |
How the widow's goose came there |
Twas a case which happened in court; the prisoner's name was Ward |
LANCASTER, George |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
246-250 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.524 |
Lines supposed to be written by Robinson Crusoe |
Dear Nellie, I set sail to-morrow |
LANCASTER, George |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
254-257 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.523 |
Matilda, ye pryde of ye belle towre walke |
Oh, why is the Humber soe dysmal and browne |
LANCASTER, George |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
250-253 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
82.170 |
The gulf between (memorial to a Rochdale soldier) |
A Lancashire voice on the desert breeze |
LANCASTER, James |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
89 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
82.829 |
The forest's story |
I remember when life was good |
LANDER, Jessica |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
75 |
|
82.697 |
On the beach |
On the beach you can see white fluffy clowds |
LANDRUM, Jack |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
3 |
|
6.243 |
Enigma |
He steals about the Union |
LAPAGE, G. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
139-141 |
Muda - nom de plume |
6.244 |
On the back of a lady's neck |
Delia, at night when in my bed I lie |
LAPAGE, G. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
141-142 |
Muda - nom de plume |
4.102 |
As ah remember clogs |
Ah wer browt up in a cotton town |
LAVISHER, David |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
17-18 |
|
86.237 |
A Ballad Of The Maid Of Norway |
Six hundred years ago and more |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
77-80 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.211 |
A lament for Beatrice Cenci |
O help me all pure things in earth and heaven |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
43-45 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.199 |
A March Thrush |
Wake up! Wake up! |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
14-17 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.222 |
A thanksgiving |
OThou whose fiat knows no tarryings |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
59 |
Poems by Altham author |
35 |
A Thrush at Dawn |
Is it dawn yet? |
LAW, Alice |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
184-186 |
|
86.201 |
A Thrush at Dawn |
Is it dawn yet? |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
20-24 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.220 |
After visiting Lincoln cathedral, March 1903 |
Millions of men in murderous toil half bent |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
57 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.229 |
Autumn |
The petals fell long since, and now the leaves |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
66 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.200 |
Bird Notes: A Lark and a Peewit |
Right over the lea |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
18-19 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.234 |
Cloud-Changes: a Sonnet |
How wonderful the infinite deeps of sky |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
70 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.204 |
Hark, Hark, The Lark! |
Joy, undiluted joy! |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
30-31 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.205 |
Lines |
Alas! that godlike man could do this thing! |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
32 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.212 |
Lines (on John Donne) |
Two differing portraits have we of the man |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
46-49 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.231 |
October |
Once more, O earth, thy golden locks are sheared |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
67 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.208 |
On hearing Dvorak's pastorale |
First trooped the shepherds piping soft yet clear |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
35 |
Poems by Altham author |
40 |
On looking down into a valley |
My soul drinks in the beauty of these hills |
LAW, Alice |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
190 |
|
86.218 |
On looking down into a valley |
My soul drinks in the beauty of these hills |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
55 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.219 |
On the thought of Keats viewing the Elgin marbles |
Here didst thou come and pause and stand at gaze |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
56 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.197 |
On Viewing A Landscape In Lancashire |
Though out of hearing of the world I sing |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
5 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.214 |
Sirens |
Hush! hush! that music! must I stop mine ears |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
51 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.232 |
Sonnet (Death of Goethe) |
So death at length plucked heart to silence thee |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
68 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.238 |
Sonnet (On Picking Up A Fallen Rose) |
Not the famed looms of Arras or of Ghent |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
65 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.226 |
Spring |
O damsel seated on a carpet green |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
63 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.213 |
The Barberini Faun |
Soft, lest he waken and should find us here |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
50 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.203 |
The Chant of the Robins |
Like a flame of fire in the bush glows the redbreast within it |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
27-29 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.210 |
The cup-bearer's song |
Lo! there thou liest |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
37-42 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.236 |
The Founding of Liverpool Cathedral, July 1904 |
Build! Can we build as we built of yore |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
75-76 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.216 |
The Heights |
At length this peerless summit I have won |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
53 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.217 |
The heights revisited (to R H L) |
O'er the high moors I ride to meet the blast |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
54 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.224 |
The Russian Massacres |
There was an hour, high Caesar big with fate |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
61 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.198 |
To "Piers Plowman" |
Glorious Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
Sep-13 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.202 |
To a Thrush silent in February |
Open your throat, Brown Bird |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
25-26 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.233 |
To Cowper |
Here wast thou used to sit, perchance to sigh |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
69 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.223 |
To death that came gently |
As many a warrior dreads the first essay |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
60 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.209 |
To one who sent me flowers |
With loving thoughts of me |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
36 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.227 |
To Summer That Was Long Expected |
O lovely maiden blushing o'er a bowl |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
64 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.207 |
To The Dawn |
Now rose Aurora rubbing drowsy lids |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
34 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.215 |
To the moon |
Bright shepherd-moon that keep'st a watchful eye |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
52 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.221 |
Upon looking on a portrait of Queen Victoria, June 1901 |
O aged white majesty of England! She |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
58 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.235 |
Wallace |
Riding by night, lurking by day |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
71-74 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.206 |
Windermere |
Thy silent waters drew me, Windermere |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
33 |
Poems by Altham author |
86.225 |
Winter Holly |
O wasted bank,O dark, brave holly trees! |
LAW, Alice |
Songs of the Uplands |
LAW, Alice |
M0067375LC |
281.965 |
1.908 |
62 |
Poems by Altham author |
82.734 |
Merlin |
Long beard and very long hair |
LAWLER, Berwick |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
22 |
|
81.405 |
The alien case |
The aliens have a Grand Prix base on the moon |
LAWRENCE, Edward |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
64 |
|
82.752 |
Seasons poem |
Spring |
LAWRENSON, Becky |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
33 |
|
87.799 |
Cumbrian Christmas |
The first Noel, the carol tells, was sung in Bethlehem |
LAWS, Howard W. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
86 |
|
702 |
Tyneside's garden |
As I was rambling thro' Jesmond Dene |
LAWSON, Fred |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
215-216 |
Tyneside |
923 |
Hie to the fields |
Hie to the fields, for the fields are green |
LAWTON, David |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
147-148 |
|
82.022 |
Hie to the fields |
Hie to the fields, for the fields are green |
LAWTON, David |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
72 |
|
87.551 |
The Day Eaur Alice Sed Her Piece |
It wer Mrs. Lord that axed her |
LAYCOCK, J. |
MARY'S miscellany: prose and verse by Lancashire writers, compiled by Mary Carter Clark |
|
M0040456LC |
151.580 |
1.966 |
10 |
|
87.555 |
Visiting |
I went to see mi sisters |
LAYCOCK, J. |
MARY'S miscellany: prose and verse by Lancashire writers, compiled by Mary Carter Clark |
|
M0040456LC |
151.580 |
1.966 |
15 |
|
6.588 |
A father's lament for his absent son |
Thank you the same, but while that chair is vacant |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
298-300 |
|
83.307 |
A father's lament for his absent son |
Thank you the same, but while that chair is vacant |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
308-309 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.164 |
A Lancashire candidate for the Laureateship: read at the Christmas dinner of the Manchester Literary Club, December 20th, 1892 |
It's but seldom one gets to these dooments |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
231-234 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.120 |
A little bit o' boath sides: part first |
He's just come whoam fuddelt ogen |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
131-132 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.496 |
A little bit o' boath sides: part first |
He's just come whoam fuddle't agen |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
170-172 |
|
6.497 |
A little bit o' boath sides: part second |
He's just signed a pledge has eawr John |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
173-175 |
|
83.121 |
A little bit o' boath sides: part second |
He's just signed a pledge has eawr John |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
133-134 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.065 |
A respectable mon |
Between these shoe soles an' this hat |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
13-14 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.110 |
A respectable mon |
Between these shoe soles an' this hat |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
51-53 |
|
83.274 |
A sea-side incident |
Good people attend, while I briefly relate |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
260-261 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.500 |
A smart way o' curin' drunkards |
Ther's a capital tale comes across the Atlantic |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
181-183 |
|
83.134 |
A 'smart' way o' curin' drunkards |
There's a capital tale comes across the Atlantic |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
162-163 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.637 |
A Song For Summer |
It is glorious summer time |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
310-311 |
|
83.294 |
A song for summer |
It is glorious summer time |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
285-286 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.649 |
A Stalybridge supper hoax |
Good people, attend; have you heard of the hoax |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
341-4 |
|
83.324 |
A Stalybridge supper hoax |
Good people, attend; have you heard of the hoax |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
337-339 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.640 |
A thorn grows near the rose |
The sweets of life are mingled up |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
318-9 |
|
83.301 |
A thorn grows near the rose |
The sweets of life are mingled up |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
297 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.091 |
A tribute to the drowned |
Lads! Doff yo'r hats, an' gether reawnd |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
xxviii-xxxi |
|
83.109 |
A tribute to the drowned |
Lads! Doff yo'r hats, an' gether reawnd |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
109-110 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.127 |
A trip to Grimsby |
A lovely Sabbath morn it wur, tort th' eend o' last July |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
145-147 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.311 |
A winter's night at Blackpool |
Tis a wintry Sunday evening, I am here in the house alone |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
314-315 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.499 |
Adam an' Mary |
On th' borders o' Scotland a long toime ago |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
178-180 |
|
83.129 |
Adam an' Mary |
On th' borders o' Scotland a long toime ago |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
151-152 |
Subscribers' edition |
82.359 |
Allis to' lat'! |
There's a chap livin' somewheer on Huddersfield way |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
181-182 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.297 |
An affectionate tribute to the memory of my mother |
Ah! cruel Death! why thus my peace destroy? |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
290-292 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.552 |
An affectionate tribute to the memory of my mother |
Oh! cruel Death! why thus my peace destroy |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
292-295 |
Who died August 8th, 1860. Aged 69 years |
83.328 |
An appeal on behalf of an hospital for Blackpool |
When asked to assist you this evening |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
344-347 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.645 |
An appeal on behalf of Sunday schools |
At the outset, I think I can truthfully say |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
329-331 |
|
83.308 |
An appeal on behalf of Sunday schools: read at a bazaar at Oswaldtwhistle |
At the outset, I think I can truthfully say |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
310-311 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.310 |
An essay on a cow |
It is said that a girl living out in the West |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
313 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.278 |
An evening prayer |
One night, when all was hushed and still |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
267 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.644 |
An evening prayer |
One night, when all was hushed and still |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
327-8 |
|
83.312 |
At the grave of Joseph Cooper ('The Derbyshire Bard') |
To-day, 'neath the clods of the green graveyard |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
316 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.395 |
Aw've hard wark to howd up mi yead |
Wheerever aw trudge neaw-a-days |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
7-Aug |
|
4.498 |
Aw've hard wark to howd up mi yead |
Wheerever aw trudge neaw-a-days |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
92-93 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
83.076 |
Aw've hard wark to howd up mi yed |
Wheerever aw trudge neaw-a-days |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
45-46 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.084 |
Aw've just been a-lookin' at th' scholars |
Aw've just been a-lookin' at th' scholars |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
61-62 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.103 |
Aw've just bin a-lookin' at th' scholars |
Aw've just bin a lookin' at th' scholars |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
29-31 |
|
83.082 |
Aw've turned mi bit o' garden o'er |
Aw've turned mi bit o' garden o'er |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
57-58 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.101 |
Aw've turned mi bit o' garden o'er |
Aw've turned mi bit o' garden o'er |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
23-25 |
|
4.866 |
Aw've turned mi bit of garden o'er |
Aw've turned mi bit of garden o'er |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
107-108 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
83.321 |
Bethesda: read at the meeting held to celebrate the re-opening of Bethesda Chapel, Blackpool, February 16th, 1876 |
Mr Chairman and friends, it affords me delight |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
331-332 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.646 |
Beware! for the clouds are gathering |
Beware! for the clouds are gathering |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
332-4 |
|
83.306 |
Beware! for the clouds are gathering |
Beware! for the clouds are gathering |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
306-307 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.121 |
Bichop Fraser an' th' collier |
Sit still an' aw'll tell yo' a bit ov a skit |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
82-83 |
|
6.495 |
Bispham |
Bispham here pratty |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
168-169 |
|
83.141 |
Bispham |
Bispham here pratty |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
187-188 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.277 |
Blackpool: light and shade |
Near the ancient town of Poulton |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
264-266 |
Subscribers' edition |
1.195 |
Bowton's Yard |
At number one, i' Bowton's yard, mi gronny keeps a schoo |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
251-254 |
|
82.586 |
Bowton's Yard |
At number one, i' Bowton's yard, mi gronny keeps a schoo |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
459-462 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
81.066 |
Bowton's Yard |
At number one, i' Bowton's yard, mi gronny keeps a schoo |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
203-206 |
|
83.060 |
Bowton's Yard |
At number one, i' Bowton's Yard, mi gronny keeps a skoo |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
3-Apr |
Subscribers' edition |
1.045 |
Bowton's Yard |
At number one, i' Bowton's Yard, mi gronny keeps a skoo |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
201-202 |
|
855 |
Bowton's Yard |
At number one, i' Bowton's Yard, mi gronny keeps a skoo |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
156-157 |
|
6.107 |
Bowton's Yard |
At number one, i' Bowton's Yard, mi gronny keeps a skoo |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
42-44 |
|
4.344 |
Bowton's Yard |
At number one, i' Bowton's Yard, mi gronny keeps a skoo |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
31 |
|
4.816 |
Bowton's Yard |
At number one, i' Bowton's Yard, mi gronny keeps a skoo |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
20-21 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
4.499 |
Bowton's Yard |
At number one, i' Bowton's Yard, mi gronny keeps a skoo |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
93-96 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
565 |
Bowton's Yard |
At number one, i' Bowton's Yard, mi gronny keeps a skoo |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
145-146 |
Lancashire poetry |
83.292 |
Bright days |
Bright days; how soon they seem to pass |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
282 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.643 |
Bright Days |
Bright days; how soon they seemed to pass |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
325-6 |
|
83.148 |
Charles Bradlaugh |
Another comrade's said 'Good-neet', an' lett us |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
199 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.085 |
Cheer up a bit longer |
Cheer up a bit longer, mi brother i' want |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
63-64 |
Subscribers' edition |
82.616 |
Cheer up a bit longer |
Cheer up a bit longer, mi brothers i' want |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
500-501 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.473 |
Cheer up a bit longer |
Cheer up a bit longer,au brothers i' want |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
191 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
6.104 |
Cheer up a bit lunger |
Cheer up a bit lunger, mi brothers i' want |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
32-34 |
|
83.097 |
Cheer up Irish brothers |
Cheer up a bit, poor Irish brethren |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
86-87 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.118 |
Cheer up, toilin' brothers! |
Cheer up, toilin' brothers! Cheer up an' be glad |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
127-128 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.105 |
Cheer up, toilin' brothers! |
Cheer up, toilin' brothers! Cheer up an' be glad |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
37-39 |
|
83.322 |
Christmas song |
How Christmas-tide stirs our emotions |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
333 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.061 |
Cleawds an' sunshoine |
Well, readers, awm glad 'at we're met once ogen |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
5-Jun |
Subscribers' edition |
6.108 |
Cleawds an' sunshoine |
Well, readers, awm glad 'at we're met once ogen |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
45-47 |
|
83.062 |
Coartin' days |
Breet days! Heaw soon they pass away |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
7-Aug |
Subscribers' edition |
6.485 |
Coartin' days |
Breet days, heaw soon they pass away |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
141-142 |
|
83.095 |
Cock-cock-aw-laid |
Well, well, tha's no 'casion to mak' o' this bother |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
83-84 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.115 |
Cock-cock-aw-laid |
Well, well, tha's no 'casion to mak' o' this bother |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
65-66 |
|
6.545 |
Cure for th' tooth-warch |
I' this wonderful age ov invention we find |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
250-251 |
|
83.117 |
Cure for th' tooth-warch |
I' this wonderful age ov invention we find |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
125-126 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.639 |
Dear Old England, Good-Bye |
Dear home of my childhood, I bid thee good-bye |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
315-317 |
|
83.320 |
Dear old England, good-bye |
Dear home of my childhood, I bid thee good-bye |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
329-330 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.523 |
Dick o' th' Merrydale |
Lads, poo off thoose caps for a minute or two |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
213 |
|
83.093 |
Dick o' th' Merrydale |
Lads, poo off thoose caps for a minute or two |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
81 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.498 |
Eawr Jim |
Aw hardly know what to do wi' eawr Jim |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
176-177 |
|
83.123 |
Eawr Jim |
Aw hardly know what we're to do wi' eawr Jim |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
137-138 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.547 |
Eawr Pooastmen |
As aw'rn sittin' one day i' mi cottage |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
255-257 |
|
83.147 |
Eawr pooastmen |
As aw'rn sittin' one day i' mi cottage |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
197-198 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.125 |
Eighteen' ninety |
Tha'rt here, arto, Eighteen-ninety? |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
141-142 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.491 |
Eighteen-ninety |
Tha'rt here, arto, Eighteen-ninety? |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
155-157 |
|
83.138 |
Eighty-seven (sent to Mr Joseph Livesey, on his 87th birthday) |
Eighty-seven! A grand owd age |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
170-173 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.474 |
Extracts from a 'Municipal Lay' |
We travel life's journey together |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
115 |
|
6.477 |
Extracts from poem to a brother bard |
But B-, just one word o' caution |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
121-122 |
|
6.427 |
Feight fair |
Eh dear! What fain' ewat ther' is |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
95-97 |
|
83.067 |
Feight fair |
Eh dear! what foin' eawt there is |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
27-28 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.426 |
Foot passangers, keep to the right |
It's been said 'at there's sarmons i' stones |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
92-94 |
|
83.066 |
Foot passengers, keep to the right |
It's been said 'at there's sarmons i' stones |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
15-16 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.505 |
Forty-eight |
Forty-Eight? Wheer's th' lookin glass? |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
192-193 |
|
83.106 |
Forty-eight |
Forty-eight? Where's th' lookin' glass? |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
104-105 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.156 |
G Sharp an' the Band of Hope organ |
Mestur Heditir, thank yo for th' 'Onward' yon sent |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
212-213 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.647 |
Get in harness, young men |
There is something to our mind ennobling and grand |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
335-7 |
|
83.330 |
Get in harness, young men |
There is something to our mind ennobling and grand |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
351-352 |
Subscribers' edition |
1.472 |
God bless 'em, it shows they'n some thowt |
Is ther' nob'dy to thank these good folk? |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
189-190 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
6.100 |
God bless 'em, it shows they'n some thowt |
Is ther' nob'dy to thank these good folk? |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
21-22 |
|
83.081 |
God bless 'em, it shows they'n some thowt |
Is ther' nob'dy to thank these good folk? |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
55-56 |
Subscribers' edition |
82.624 |
God bless 'em, it shows they'n some thowt |
Is ther' nob'dy to thank these good folk? |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
515-516 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Cotton weavers; unemployment; poverty |
6.636 |
God help us |
God help us amid all the changes of life |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
308-309 |
|
83.296 |
God help us |
God help us amid all the changes of life |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
288-289 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.131 |
Good Templars' war song |
As Good Templars we're met once ogen |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
155-157 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.490 |
Good-bye, owd 1889! |
Good bye, owd ye'r, tha'rt goin' soon, aw reckon |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
153-154 |
|
83.124 |
Good-bye, Owd Year |
Good-bye, Owd Year; tha'rt goin' soon, aw reckon |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
139-140 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.116 |
Heaw to raise th' woind |
Aw tell yo what, foalk, it's surprisin' to think |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
123-124 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.117 |
Heaw to raise th' woind |
Aw tell yo' what, folk, its' surprisin' to think |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
70-72 |
|
83.057 |
Help yo'rsel's, lads |
Dunno steal, nor nowt, mi brothers |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
23-24 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.425 |
Help yo'rsel's, lads |
Dunno steal, nor nowt, mi brothers |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
89-92 |
|
6.432 |
Homely advice to th' unemployed |
Tho' unfit to tak' part i' loife's battles |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
110-112 |
|
83.086 |
Homely advice to th' unemployed |
Tho' unfit to tak' part i' loife's battles |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
65-66 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.326 |
Hugh Mason |
Another great man fallen |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
342 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.272 |
Ireland's Viceroyalty underpaid |
Well, it's shameful to ha sich a salary as that |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
256-257 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.524 |
Isaac Bradshaw |
Owd Isaac Bradshaw keeps a shop |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
214-216 |
|
83.112 |
Isaac Bradshaw |
Owd Isaac Bradshaw keeps a shop |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
114-115 |
Subscribers' edition |
4.497 |
It's hard to ceawer i'th' chimney nook |
It's hard to ceawer i'th' chimney nook |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
91-92 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
6.097 |
It's hard to ceawer i'th' chimney nook |
It's hard to ceawer i'th' chimney nook |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
Dec-14 |
|
83.078 |
It's hard to ceawer i'th' chimney nook |
It's hard to ceawer i'th' chimney nook |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
49-50 |
Subscribers' edition |
4.864 |
It's hard to ceawer i'th' chimney nook |
It's hard to ceawer i'th' chimney nook |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
104-105 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
83.128 |
Jack o' th' Nook an' t' lan'loard |
Owd Jack o' th' Nook - a Yorkshire chap |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
148-150 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.546 |
Jim Lee, an th' pooast office clerk |
What strange foalk we have i' this world, to be sure |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
252-254 |
|
83.132 |
Jim Lee, an th' pooast office clerk |
What strange foalk we have i' this world, to be sure |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
158-159 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.544 |
Joe an' Alice |
Aw yeard a chap tell a good tale t'other neet |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
247-249 |
|
83.091 |
Joe an' Alice: a Yawshur tale |
Aw yeard a chap tell a good tale t'other neet |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
77-78 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.126 |
John Booth an' th' vicar |
A certin owd vicar, noan fur fro' this spot |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
143-144 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.120 |
John Booth an' th' vicar |
A certin owd vicar, noan fur fro' this spot |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
79-81 |
|
83.276 |
John Bright: written on the eve of his death |
Sad news to-night |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
262-263 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.168 |
John Bull |
Aw've noa guinea aw con spend |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
243-244 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.135 |
John Bull an' his tricks |
Oh, forshame on thee, John! forshame on thee John! |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
164-165 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.481 |
John Bull an' his tricks |
Oh, forshame on thi, John! Forshame on thi, John! |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
133-135 |
|
83.282 |
John Critchley Prince |
Farewell, thou gifted singer! thy sweet songs |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
271 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.591 |
John Critchley Prince |
Farewell, thou gifted singer! thy sweet songs |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
304 |
Born 21st June 1808. Died 5th May, 1866 |
83.265 |
John Parkinson: a member of the Blackpool Lifeboat Crew |
Good-bye a bit, John; we shall meet ogen soon |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
245-246 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.318 |
Jubilee song |
God preserve and bless our Empress |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
327 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.482 |
Life |
Life's a wearisome journey to travel |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
136 |
|
83.167 |
Life |
Life's a wearisome journey to travel |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
242 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.283 |
Lines on the death of a young mother |
It was a cold and dull December day |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
272-273 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.142 |
Lines written in a volume of poems, and sent to the Rev Robert Collyer, America |
To the once Yorkshire blacksmith - now parson - I send |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
188 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.281 |
Lines written in Mrs Fisher's album |
Mrs Fisher may fish in the river |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
271 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.161 |
Loines: read at th' Owd Foalks' tea party, held at Stubbins Vale Schoo', on Saturday evening, January 8th, 1870 |
One loikes to see childer i' frolicksome glee |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
223-225 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.055 |
Mally an' Jonas |
Come, Mally, owd woman, it's near forty year |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
19-20 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.484 |
Mally an' Jonas |
Come, Mally, owd woman, it's near forty year |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
138-140 |
|
6.551 |
Marsden: the author's birthplace |
It was upon thy lovely hills |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
290-291 |
not in dialect |
83.273 |
Marsden: the author's birthplace |
It was upon thy lovely hills |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
258-259 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.102 |
Mary an' Betty |
Well, aw've certainly heard some queer tales i' mi time |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
97 |
Subscribers' edition |
82.360 |
Mashers |
Shut up, yo political wranglers |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
183-184 |
Subscribers' edition |
1.426 |
Mi gronfeyther |
Aw've just bin a havin' a peep at th' farm-heawse |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
134-135 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.511 |
Mi gronfeyther |
Aw've just bin a havin' a peep at th' farm-heawse |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
398-400 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
4.817 |
Mi gronfeyther |
Aw've just bin a havin' a peep at th' farm-heawse |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
21-22 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
4.501 |
Mi gronfeyther |
Aw've just had a ramble to th' owd farmheawse |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
97-99 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
6.502 |
Mi gronfeyther |
Aw've just had a ramble to th' owd farmheawse |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
186-188 |
|
83.162 |
Mi gronfeyther |
Aw've just had a ramble to th' owd farmheawse |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
226-227 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.501 |
Mi gronny |
Hoo's turned eighty-one, mi gronny is neaw |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
184-185 |
|
83.094 |
Mi gronny |
Hoo's turned eighty-one, mi gronny is neaw |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
82 |
Subscribers' edition |
4.500 |
Mi gronny |
Hoo's turned eighty-one, mi gronny is neaw |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
96-97 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
83.314 |
Mr Sopkin's misadventures at Blackpool |
When down at Blackpool last July, and walking on the pier |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
319-322 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.275 |
My garden |
My home is my garden, and thousands of hours |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
261 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.092 |
My garden |
My home is my garden, and thousands of hours |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
xxxi- |
|
83.280 |
O give me a home in some quiet glen |
O give me a home in some quiet glen |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
270 |
Subscribers' edition |
2.076 |
Ode to th' sun |
Hail, owd friend! aw'm fain to see thi |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, (part 2, modern). Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
715811827 |
79.254 |
1.976 |
550-552 |
Reprinted from 3rd edition, first published 1882. Revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.492 |
Ode to th' sun |
Hail, owd friend! aw'm fain to see thi |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
158-160 |
|
143 |
Ode to th' sun |
Hail, owd friend! aw'm fain to see thi |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
96 |
|
83.005 |
Ode to th' sun |
Hail, owd friend! aw'm fain to see thi |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
550-552 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
81.064 |
Ode to th' sun |
Hail, owd friend! aw'm fain to see thi |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
199-201 |
|
83.069 |
Ode to th' sun |
Hail, owd friend! aw'm fain to see thi |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
31-32 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.056 |
Oh! This boil! |
Oh dear! Oh dear! Aw do feel queer |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
21-22 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.111 |
Oh! This boil! |
Oh dear! Oh dear! Aw do feel queer |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
54-56 |
|
83.309 |
Oh! this rain! |
Oh! this rain, rain, rain |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
312-313 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.267 |
On receiving a letter from a friend who had previously written another one, but had neglected to post it |
Dear D, thy epistle has just come to hand |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
247-248 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.291 |
On the death of Ernest Jones |
Oh! cruel Death! could'st thou not lay thine hand |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
281 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.533 |
On the death of James Whittaker, the popular and well known vocalist |
When one's friends are cast deawn wi' bereavements an' cares |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
235-236 |
|
6.538 |
On the death of James Whittaker, the popular and well-known vocalist |
When one's friends are cast deawn wi' bereavements an' cares |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
235-236 |
|
83.271 |
On the death of James Whittaker, the popular and well-known vocalist |
When one's friends are cast deawn wi' bereavements an' cares |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
254-255 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.313 |
On the death of the late Richard Oastler: the successful champion of the Ten Hours Bill |
Weep on! weep on! a People's tears due |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
317-318 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.478 |
Only a poet |
Only a poet, a schemer o' schemes |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
123-125 |
|
83.157 |
Only a poet |
Only a poet, a schemer o' schemes |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
214-215 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.113 |
Owd Fogey |
Owd Fogey lives i' Turner's Fowd |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
116-117 |
Subscribers' edition |
4.876 |
Owd Fogey |
Owd Fogey lives i' Turner's Fowd |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
122-124 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
6.116 |
Owd Fogey |
Owd Fogey lives i' Turner's Fowd |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
67-69 |
|
4.504 |
Owd Fogey |
Owd Fogey lives i' Turner's Fowd |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
103-104 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
6.089 |
Owd playmates |
Wheer are my dear owd playmates neaw |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
xxv-xxvii |
|
83.068 |
Owd playmates |
Wheer are my dear owd playmates neaw |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
29-30 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.423 |
Poor pussy |
Theawr't one o' God's creatures, come in here, come in |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
84-86 |
|
83.151 |
Poor pussy |
Theawr't one o' God's creatures, come in here, come in |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
204-205 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.122 |
Prayin' Jemmy |
As aw're passin' by th' corner o' th' church th' other day |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
135-136 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.140 |
Prologue: written on the occasion of the presentation to Robert Bickerstaffe, on his retirement as coxswain of the Blackpool lifeboat, December 5th, 1887 |
Twenty year' sin, - come th' furst o' next April |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
177-178 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.088 |
Quality Row |
Bein' a poor workin' mon, it's but little aw know |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
70-71 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.113 |
Quality Row |
Bein' a poor workin' mon, it's but little aw know |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
59-61 |
|
83.100 |
R R Bealey's furst choilt |
What! has theaw th' bonniest lad i' th' world |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
93-94 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.329 |
Read a temperance meeting, of which the writer was chairman |
My dear friends, I must say I feel out of my sphere |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
348-350 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.166 |
Read at a Band of Hope meeting at South Shore |
When axed bi eawr friend, Mr Newsholme, to come here an' help yo a bit |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
238-242 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.165 |
Read at a meeting held at Mossley, to celebrate Mr William Heap's 60th birthday |
Aw'm reet glad tobe wi' yo this evenin' |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
235-237 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.508 |
Read At The Bonny Brid's Wedding Party, 8th November 1886 |
Well, Schofield, tha'rt welcome to Hannah |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
200-202 |
|
83.105 |
Read At The Bonny Brid's Wedding Party, 8th November 1886 |
Well, Schofield, tha'rt welcome to Hannah |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
102-103 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.529 |
Read on the occasion of a presentation to Edwin Waugh, April 11th 1887 |
Well, aw'm fain thi good friends here have gan thee this stick |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
223-226 |
|
83.163 |
Read on the occasion of a presentation to Edwin Waugh, April 11th 1887 |
Well, aw'm fain thi good friends here have gan thee this stick |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
228-230 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.642 |
Rest to-morrow |
Christian life is one great warfare |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
322-4 |
|
83.298 |
Rest to-morrow |
Christian life is one great warfare |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
293-294 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.592 |
Roger Bell |
Of all my good and faithful friends |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
305-307 |
|
83.303 |
Roger Bell |
Of all my good and faithful friends |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
300-301 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.493 |
Rowl away, theaw grand owd ocean |
Rowl away, theaw grand owd ocean |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
161-164 |
|
83.087 |
Rowl away, theaw grand owd ocean |
Rowl away, theaw grand owd ocean |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
67-69 |
Subscribers' edition |
81.068 |
Rowl away, theaw grand owd ocean |
Rowl away, theaw grand owd ocean |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
206-209 |
|
6.527 |
Sam Bamford |
Th'owd veteran brid's toppled deawn fro' his pearch |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
217-219 |
Born 28th February, 1788. Died 13th April, 1872 |
83.104 |
Sam Bamford |
Th'owd veteran brid's toppled deawn fro' his pearch |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
100-101 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.638 |
Seaside pictures |
Dashing and splashing upon the sea shore |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
312-314 |
|
83.302 |
Seaside pictures |
Dashing and splashing upon the sea shore |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
298-299 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.103 |
Second visit to Quality Row |
Well, aw've bin reawnd ogen, wi' mi basket an' poke |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
98-99 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.114 |
Second visit to Quality Row |
Well, aw've bin reawnd ogen, wi' mi basket an' poke |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
62-64 |
|
2.131 |
Sewin' class song |
Come, lasses, let's cheer up, an' sing, it's no use lookin' sad |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
302-303 |
|
82.622 |
Sewin' class song |
Come, lasses, let's cheer up, an' sing, it's no use lookin' sad |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
510-511 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
83.077 |
Sewin' class song |
Come, lasses, let's cheer up, an' sing, it's no use lookin' sad |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
47-48 |
Subscribers' edition |
4.868 |
Sewin' class song |
Come, lasses, let's cheer up, an' sing, it's no use lookin' sad |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
109-110 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
6.396 |
Sewin' class song |
Come, lasses, let's cheer up, an' sing, it's no use lookin' sad |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
9-Nov |
|
83.137 |
Shut up! Yo Liberals! |
Neaw, then, what's this grumblin' an' growlin' abeawt |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
168-169 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.489 |
Sixty-six |
Good bye owd sixty-six |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
150-152 |
|
83.111 |
Sixty-six |
Good bye owd sixty-six |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
112-113 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.549 |
Sketches in prose |
A wholesale Kessunin' dooment at Torrington |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
269-277 |
In the Lancashire dialect |
6.548 |
Sketches in prose |
Heaw Billy Armatage managed to get a neet's lodgin's |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
259-267 |
In the Lancashire dialect |
6.550 |
Sketches in prose |
Lancashire Kesmus singin' fifty year sin' |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
278-288 |
In the Lancashire dialect |
6.479 |
Starved to death |
Starved to death, did yo' say? dear-a-me! |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
126-128 |
|
83.089 |
Starved to death |
Starved to death, did yo' say? dear-a-me! |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
72-73 |
Subscribers' edition |
924 |
Sunshine and shade |
While we tread this world below |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
150-151 |
|
6.641 |
Sunshine and shade |
While we tread this world below |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
320-21 |
|
83.299 |
Sunshine and shade |
While we tread this world below |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
295-296 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.064 |
Teetotal? Of course awm teetotal! |
Teetotal? Of course awm teetotal! |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
11-Dec |
Subscribers' edition |
4.495 |
Th' coartin' neet |
It's time for me to leov mi wark |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
87-89 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
554 |
Th' coartin' neet |
It's time for me to leov mi wark |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
131-132 |
Lancashire poetry |
6.486 |
Th' coartin' neet (Part first) |
It's time for me to leov mi wark |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
143 |
|
83.145 |
Th' coartin' neet: part first |
It's time for me to leov mi wark |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
193-194 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.146 |
Th' coartin' neet: part second |
Aw've made it up wi' Rosy Bell |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
195-196 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.080 |
Th' owd barber eawt o' wark |
Here aw'm ceawerin' beawt custom fro' mornin' to neet |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
53-54 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.399 |
Th' owd barber eawt o' wark |
Here aw'm ceawerin' beawt custom fro' mornin' to neet |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
18-20 |
|
83.004 |
Th' owd bellman |
They may talk o' Tom Breawn bein' as soft as a cawve |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
547-549 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
83.133 |
Th' owd bellman |
They may talk o' Tom Breawn bein' as soft as a cawve |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
160-161 |
Subscribers' edition |
4.502 |
Th' owd bellman |
They may talk o' Tom Breawn bein' as soft as a cawve |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
99-102 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
6.118 |
Th' owd bellman |
They may talk o' Tom Breawn bein' as soft as a cawve |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
73-75 |
|
82.358 |
Th' owd dur sneck |
There's nowt very grand in an owd dur sneck |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
179-180 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.506 |
Th' Owd Dur Sneck |
Ther's nowt very grand in an owd dur sneck |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
194-196 |
|
6.543 |
Th' owd pedlar's gone whoam |
Th'owd pedlar's packed up an' gone whoam |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
245-246 |
|
83.144 |
Th' owd pedlar's gone whoam |
Th'owd pedlar's packed up an' gone whoam |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
191-192 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.433 |
Th' peers an' th' people |
Clear us a ring, lads, an' let's have a feight |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
113-114 |
|
83.115 |
Th' pulpit an' th' pews |
Dear, dear, whatever's comin' next |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
120-122 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.054 |
Th' quack doctor |
Here you are! I'm the great and renowned Doctor Bell |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
17-18 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.512 |
Th' Queen's visit to Liverpool, to oppen th' exhibition |
Soa th' Queen's been to Liverpool, bless her |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
210-212 |
|
83.099 |
Th' Queen's visit to Liverpool, to oppen th' exhibition |
Soa th' Queen's been to Liverpool, bless her |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
91-92 |
Subscribers' edition |
1.475 |
Th' shurat weaver's song |
Confeaund it! Aw ne'er wur so woven afore |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
193-194 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.620 |
Th' shurat weaver's song |
Confeaund it! aw ne'er wur so woven afore |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
506-508 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Surat cotton; cotton weaving |
83.079 |
Th' shurat weaver's song |
Confound it! aw ne'er wur so woven afore |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
51-52 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.494 |
Th' storm at Blackpool, March, 1876 |
Aw tell thi what, friend, tha's bin carryin' on strangely |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
165-167 |
|
83.052 |
Th' storm at Blackpool, March, 1876 |
Aw tell thi what, friend, tha's bin carryin' on strangely |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
185-186 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.154 |
Th' stricken stokers |
Whatever's to do wi' yo Manchester way |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
209 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.542 |
Th' village pedlar |
Th'village pedlar's a jovial owd brick |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
243-244 |
|
83.119 |
Th' village pedlar |
Th'village pedlar's a jovial owd brick |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
129-130 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.488 |
Thank God for o these bonny fleawers |
Thank God for all these bonny fleawers |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
147-149 |
|
83.098 |
Thank God for o these bonny fleawers |
Thank God for o these bonny fleawers |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
88-90 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.424 |
Thank yo' sir! |
Last setterday neet, as aw're nursin eawr Bob |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
87-88 |
|
83.149 |
Thank yo', sir!: on receivin' a kesmus goose fro' a parson |
Last Setturday neet, as aw'r nursin' eawr Bob |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
200-201 |
Subscribers' edition |
4.877 |
Tha's noan so fur to tramp, owd friend |
Tha's noan so fur to tramp, owd friend |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
124 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
6.507 |
Th'bony brid's' birthday |
It's thi birthday, mi love, come ger on mi knee |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
197-199 |
|
83.153 |
Th'bony brid's' birthday |
It's thi birthday, mi love, come ger on mi knee |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
207-208 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.487 |
The coartin' neet (part second) |
Aw've made it up wi' Rosy Bell |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
145-146 |
|
83.327 |
The excursionists' song |
All hail to the season when Nature is drest |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
343 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.475 |
The Municipal Elections |
What! Me have a seat i' th' Teawn Ceawncil? Dear, dear! |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
116-117 |
|
83.139 |
The Peers an' th' people |
Clear us a ring, lads, an' let's have a feight |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
174 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.480 |
The pulpit an' th' pews |
Dear, dear, whatever's comin' next |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
129-132 |
|
6.648 |
The quack doctor |
Here you are! I'm the great and renowned Doctor Bell |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
338-340 |
|
83.316 |
The reformer's monument: supposed to be discovered on re-visiting the earth |
What! here a Monument, and this a graveyard |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
324-325 |
Subscribers' edition |
142 |
The Shurat weaver's song |
Confound it! Aw ne'er wur so woven afore |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
95 |
|
6.098 |
The Shurat weaver's song |
Confound it! Aw ne'er wur so woven afore |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
15-17 |
|
81.070 |
The Shurat weaver's song |
Confound it! Aw ne'er wur so woven afore |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
|
|
4.861 |
The Shurat weaver's song |
Confound it! Aw ne'er wur so woven afore |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
99-100 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
6.106 |
The stricken strokes |
Whatever is to do wi' yo' Manchester way |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
40-41 |
|
4.503 |
The village pedlar |
Th'village pedlar's a jovial owd brick |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
102-103 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
81.069 |
Thee an' me |
Tha'rt livin' at thi country seat |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
209-211 |
|
4.875 |
Thee an' me |
Tha'rt livin' at thi country seat |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
120-122 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
83.063 |
Thee an' me |
Tha'rt livin' at thi country seat |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
9-Oct |
Subscribers' edition |
6.109 |
Thee an' me |
Tha'rt livin' at thi country seat |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
48-50 |
|
83.075 |
There's no good i' ceaw'rin' i' th' dust |
Come, Dick, let's have howd o' thi hond |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
43-44 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.391 |
Ther's No Good I' Ceawrin' I'Th' Dust |
Come Dick. let's have howd o' thi hond |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
4-Jun |
|
6.094 |
Ther's no good I' ceaw'rin' I'th' dust |
Come, Dick, let's have howd o' thi hond |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
4-Jun |
|
83.130 |
Thinks I to misel' (read at a Harvest Festival in Blackpool) |
As aw're ceawered bi mysel' here a bit th' other day |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
153-154 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.541 |
To a bereaved friend |
Excuse me, dear friend, for intrudin' |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
241-242 |
|
83.266 |
To a cricket |
Sing on, ther's nobbut thee an' me |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
246 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.483 |
To a cricket |
Sing on, ther's nobbut thee an' me |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
137 |
|
81.067 |
To a cricket |
Sing on, ther's nobbut thee an' me |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
206 |
|
6.589 |
To a friend on his birthday |
Dear friend, on this thy natal day |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
301 |
|
83.300 |
To a friend on his birthday |
Dear friend, on this thy natal day |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
296 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.293 |
To a literary friend |
My dear old friend, you kindly state |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
283-284 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.590 |
To a literary friend |
My dear old friend, you kindly state |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
302-303 |
|
83.279 |
To a son on his thirtieth birthday |
You are thirty years old to-day, dear son |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
268-269 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.535 |
To an aged and infirm friend |
These strokes come thick an' heavy mon |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
239-240 |
|
6.540 |
To an aged and infirm friend |
These strokes come thick an' heavy, mon |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
239-240 |
|
83.305 |
To an unknown friend, on receiving from him some verses entitled 'Words of cheer' |
I know not who thou art, my friend |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
305 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.110 |
To George Harry Bardsley, on his eighteenth birthday |
So th'art eighteen year' owd to-day, arto, mi lad |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
111 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.155 |
To Henry Nutter, on receiving a volume of his poems |
Dear Nutter, accept mi best thanks for thi book |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
210-211 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.531 |
To Henry Nutter, on receiving a volume of his poems in 1890 |
Dear Nutter, accept mi best thanks for thi bok |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
230-232 |
|
83.304 |
To Hugh Mason, Esq M P |
My Dear Sir, - May I ask you to kindly excuse |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
302-304 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.325 |
To my brother bard, Thomas Barlow (born on the same day as myself) |
Dear and worthy Mr Barlow |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
340-341 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.268 |
To my brother John, on his sixty-first birthday |
My compliments, dear brother John |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
249 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.331 |
To my brother: on revisiting my birthplace |
Once again (perhaps the last time) |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
353-354 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.150 |
To my daughter Bertha, on her 20th birthday |
Bertha, mi lass, it's twenty year |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
202-203 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.509 |
To My Daughter Bertha, On Her Twentieth Birthday |
Bertha, mi lass, it's twenty year |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
203-205 |
|
83.092 |
To my dear friend, Edwin Waugh |
Dear Waugh, aw must say aw feel sorry |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
79-80 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.317 |
To my friend Councillor W H Buckley, J P: on receiving from him a number of old Manchester 'Observers' containing - amongst other matter - an account of the trial of Henry Hunt, and others |
I am pleased with the present you sent me |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
326-327 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.152 |
To my friend, Councillor Joseph Heap, Blackpool |
Excuse me, friend Heap, for intrudin' |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
206 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.528 |
To my friend, Edwin Waugh |
Dear Waugh, aw must say aw feel sorry |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
220-222 |
|
83.143 |
To my friend, Isaac Bardsley |
I' thoose lines 'at tha' sent |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
189-190 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.530 |
To my friend, Isaac Bardsley |
I' thoose lines 'at tha's sent |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
227-229 |
|
83.295 |
To my friend, S Wolstenholme |
To my old fellow-traveller, and excellent friend |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
287 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.537 |
To my friend, Samuel Ashton |
Howd thi noise, Sam Ashton, wilta |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
233-234 |
|
83.160 |
To my friend, Samuel Ashton |
Howd thi noise, Sam Ashton, wilta |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
221-222 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.090 |
To my owd friend, Thomas Kenworthy |
These strokes come thick an' heavy, mon |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
xxvii-xxviii |
|
83.107 |
To my owd friend, Thomas Kenworthy |
These strokes come thick an' heavy, mon |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
106 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.553 |
To my son Arthur, on his twenty-first birthday |
To-day you attain unto manhood, dear son |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
296-297 |
Not in dialect |
83.319 |
To my son Arthur, on his twenty-first birthday |
To-day you attain unto manhood, dear son |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
328 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.510 |
To my son John Edward on his birthday |
John Edward, it's thi birthday, lad: it's th' twenty-ninth o' May |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
206-209 |
|
83.159 |
To my son John Edward on his birthday |
John Edward, it's thi birthday, lad: it's th' twenty-ninth o' May |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
218-220 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.112 |
To poverty |
Tha'nt here again, well, come this way |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
57-58 |
|
83.059 |
To poverty |
Th'rt here again, well, come this way |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
25-26 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.114 |
To Superintendent James Bent |
Aw've read th' book tha gave me, an' - flattery aside |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
118-119 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.534 |
To th' owd Derbyshire bard, Joseph Cooper |
Supposin' one felt a desire for a stroll |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
237-238 |
|
83.096 |
To th' owd Derbyshire bard, Joseph Cooper |
Supposin' one felt a desire for a stroll |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
85 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.315 |
To Uncle Matthew |
Dear Uncle, we hope you arrived safe at home |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
323 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.101 |
To William Edwards (In reply to his 'words of welcome') |
Well, Edwards, awm certainly very weel pleased |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
95-96 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.270 |
Tommy o' Dan's |
A chap up i' Yorkshur, a little bit soft |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
252-253 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.430 |
Uncle Dick's advice to sengle men |
As sengle young women have had some advice |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
104-106 |
|
6.429 |
Uncle Dick's advice to sengle women |
No deawt it ud look a deol better o' me |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
101-103 |
|
6.431 |
Uncle Dick's advice to wed men |
What to say to wed fellows aw conno weel tell |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
107-109 |
|
6.428 |
Uncle Dick's advice to wed women |
Neaw women, God bless yo'! Yo' know aw'm yo'r friend |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
98-100 |
|
83.072 |
Uncle Dick's advoice to sengle men |
As sengle young women have had some advoice |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
37-38 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.071 |
Uncle Dick's advoice to sengle women |
No deawt it ud look a deol better o' me |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
35-36 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.073 |
Uncle Dick's advoice to wed men |
What to say to wed fellows aw conno weel tell |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
39-40 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.070 |
Uncle Dick's advoice to wed women |
Neaw, women, God bless yo! yo know aw'm yo'r friend |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
33-34 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.323 |
Verses read at a Jubilee Tea Meeting: held in the Congregational School, Stalybridge, on Saturday evening, April 23rd, 1887 |
Mr Chairman and friends, it affords me delight |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
334-336 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.093 |
Welcome bonny bird |
Th'art welcome, little bonny bird |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
1-Mar |
|
6.390 |
Welcome Bonny Brid |
Thar't welcome, little bonny brid |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
1-Mar |
|
4.496 |
Welcome, bonny brid |
Tha'rt welcome, little bonny brid |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
89-90 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
187 |
Welcome, bonny brid |
Tha'rt welcome, little bonny brid |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
144-146 |
|
4.343 |
Welcome, bonny brid |
Tha'rt welcome, little bonny brid |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
30 |
|
862 |
Welcome, bonny brid |
Tha'rt welcome, little bonny brid |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
199-201 |
|
82.501 |
Welcome, bonny brid |
Tha'rt welcome, little bonny brid |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
377-379 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
4.847 |
Welcome, bonny brid |
Tha'rt welcome, little bonny brid |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
73-75 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
559 |
Welcome, bonny brid (written during the 'Cotton Panic') |
Tha'rt welcome, little bonny brid |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
137 |
Lancashire poetry |
1.416 |
Welcome, bonny brid! |
Tha'rt welcome, little bonny brid |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
117-118 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
81.065 |
Welcome, Bonny Brid! |
Tha'rt welcome, little bonny brid |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
201-203 |
Written in the time of the cotton famine |
83.074 |
Welcome, bonny brid! |
Tha'rt welcome, little bonny brid |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
41-42 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.119 |
What aw loike |
Attention, please, an' look at me |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
76-78 |
|
83.269 |
What aw loike to see |
Attention, please, an' look at me |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
250-251 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.504 |
What Is Home Without A Mother |
That depends; if hoo's bad tempered |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
189-91 |
|
83.158 |
What is home without a mother |
That depends; if hoo's bad tempered |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
216-217 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.476 |
What! another cracked poet |
What! another cracked poet! bi thi mass, Jim, owd lad |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
118-120 |
|
83.108 |
What! another cracked poet |
What! another cracked poet! bi thi mass, Jim, owd lad |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
107-108 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.136 |
What's to do 'at th'rt lookin' soa sulky, John |
What's to do 'at th'rt lookin' soa sulky |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
166-167 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.083 |
What's up wi' thee, Tum |
Mon, tha howds deawn thi yead loike a thief |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
59-60 |
Subscribers' edition |
6.102 |
What's up wi' thi tum? |
Mon, tha howds deawn thi yead loike a thief |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
The collected writings of Samuel Laycock |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0003879LC |
9.080 |
1.908 |
26-28 |
|
83.284 |
Whitsuntide hymns: no. I |
Sing aloud, ye British children |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
274-275 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.285 |
Whitsuntide hymns: no. II |
Though home is so endearing |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
275 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.286 |
Whitsuntide hymns: no. III |
The birds their songs are singing |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
276-277 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.287 |
Whitsuntide hymns: no. IV |
Brightly the morning sun |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
277-278 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.288 |
Whitsuntide hymns: no. V |
Now that every heart rejoices |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
278 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.289 |
Whitsuntide hymns: no. VI |
Come to the Sunday school |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
279 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.290 |
Whitsuntide hymns: no. VII |
Another year has passed away |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
280 |
Subscribers' edition |
83.090 |
Written for a meeting held at Great Eccleston |
So this is Great Eccleston, is it? Well, well |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
Warblin's fro' an owd songster |
LAYCOCK, Samuel |
M0041178LC |
153.183 |
0 |
74-76 |
Subscribers' edition |
81.320 |
Cosmic |
One day I'll go up there |
LEA, Amanda |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
18 |
|
81.425 |
Magic Mars |
You may think Mars is gloomy |
LEACH, Adele |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
73 |
|
82.810 |
My best friend |
She's playful and kind |
LEATHAM, Carmen |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
65 |
|
86.872 |
Toledan twilight - a swallows delight |
With fading blue sky-line, stage set for the ball |
LEAVER-HEATON, Geoffrey |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
124 |
|
82.897 |
Sounds of the forest |
Swish go the trees swaying in the wind |
LEE, Christopher |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
115 |
|
1.046 |
Feaulach Fowt |
My gronfeyther's heawse stood i' th' middle o'th fowt |
LEE, Helen |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
204-206 |
|
81.563 |
My pet hamster |
T is for Tigger, that is his name |
LEE, Michael |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
147 |
|
82.967 |
The worst dinner lady |
I don't like that dinner lady who serves the chips |
LEE, Rebecca |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
155 |
|
1.047 |
Jone O' Grinfilt |
Says Jone to his woife on a whot summer's day |
LEES, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
209-210 |
|
82.004 |
The native shire |
I've wandered o'er the breezy heights |
LEICESTER, Geo. B. |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
20 |
|
925 |
My birthplace |
There's a quaint little cottage up yonder green lane |
LEIGH, James |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
152-154 |
|
6.781 |
The hermit of Kersall cell |
A gallant knight he sallied forth |
LEIGH, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
142-146 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.609 |
The hermit of Kersall cell |
A gallant knight he sallied forth |
LEIGH, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
142-146 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
86.715 |
Ode to Pendle hill |
Oh hill that's witnessed a thousand lifetimes |
LEIGHTON, E. J. |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
63 |
|
2.493 |
Awake |
The sun is flooding the eastern sky |
LEIGHTON, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
217-218 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.492 |
Baby died to-day |
Lay the little limbs out straight |
LEIGHTON, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
216-217 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.494 |
My nest |
The shadows lengthen; and the twilight is falling |
LEIGHTON, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
219 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
3.226 |
A late spring in Sussex |
God made the primroses |
LEJEUNE, H. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
96 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.225 |
A northern town garden |
The trees were sombre and the sky was grey |
LEJEUNE, H. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
95 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.222 |
John the Baptist |
O voice prophetic, calling in the wild |
LEJEUNE, H. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
92 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.224 |
St Michael and all angels: a cry |
O Michael, draw thy sword |
LEJEUNE, H. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
94 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.223 |
Sweet, cold evenings of Spring |
Sweet, cold evenings of Spring |
LEJEUNE, H. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
93 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.221 |
The pageant of life |
As from the April of young days |
LEJEUNE, H. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
92 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
81.416 |
Me and the alien |
I've seen a little alien, I really, really have |
LEMAN, Lizzie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
69 |
|
337 |
Bacup |
Industry Wanted For Bacup |
LENNEY, Caroline |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
93-94 |
|
693 |
The Lambton worm |
One Sunday mornin' Lambton went a-fishing in the Wear |
LEUMANE, C. M. |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
205-206 |
Tyneside |
87.756 |
Dunblane |
Your little children that black day |
LEWIS, Cathryn R. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
41 |
|
82.558 |
Elegy on the death of a frog |
Ya summer day when I were mowin' |
LEWIS, David |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
20-22 |
2nd ed rev |
81.536 |
My telescope |
I like looking through my telescope |
LIDDLE, Rebecca |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
130 |
|
87.782 |
Follow in my footsteps |
I pray each day that when I rise |
LIDDLE, Thomas Allan |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
67 |
|
82.146 |
Five star angel |
My mummy says I'm an angel, when I'm good |
LIGHTFOOT, Betty |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
43 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
4.351 |
Harvest brought home |
Livin wer cheyp, fowk mooar willin |
LIGHTFOOT, Betty |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
37 |
|
86.728 |
Remember? |
Lads sparking clogs on old cobblestones |
LIGHTFOOT, Betty |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
76 |
|
6.655 |
Autumn leaves |
Leaves of Autumn, sadly falling |
LING, Ellen |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
462 |
|
6.658 |
God's harvest field |
Go, work for God, - there's work for all |
LING, Ellen |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
464 |
|
6.657 |
The thrush on the old hawthorn |
A thrush sings clear on our hawthorn tree |
LING, Ellen |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
463 |
|
6.656 |
To a mother on the death of a child |
By the stream of death the Shepherd stood |
LING, Ellen |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
463 |
|
5.874 |
The angel of the cot |
I took her to my home and heart |
LITTLE, David |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
135-136 |
Written Blackburn October 1st 1861 |
5.875 |
The voice of want |
Tis hard to bear our spirits |
LITTLE, David |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
136-137 |
|
81.427 |
Six little spacemen |
Six little spacemen walking upstairs |
LITTLE, Ross |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
74 |
|
182 |
King Henry's well |
It chanced upon a summer's day |
LITTLEDALE H. A. |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
126-127 |
|
6.654 |
The death of Prince Louis Napoleon |
He fell; and o'er the spot a settled gloom arose |
LITTLETON, E. S. |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
460-461 |
|
82.961 |
The snow |
The snow falling |
LLOYD, Eleaner |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
152 |
|
81.437 |
Creatures with stings and things |
I am a bee |
LLOYD, Ruth |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
79 |
|
82.044 |
A sonnet to spring |
O Spring! beloved of Gods and Mortals too |
LLOYD, W.H. |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
161 |
|
82.027 |
Trust in the Almighty |
When you are tempted to repine |
LLOYD, W.H. |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
89 |
|
82.647 |
Then an' nae |
When I were but a stripling |
LODGE, E A |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
91-92 |
2nd ed rev |
6.307 |
Poetry |
Like some fair vision of what shall be |
LOMAS, Laura A |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
202-203 |
L A L - nom de plume |
81.442 |
I have someone special in my life |
I have someone special in my life |
LONGTON, Laura-Jayne |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
82-83 |
|
81.363 |
Hamster |
You are a hamster, a rodent |
LONSDALE, Christopher |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
38 |
|
86.999 |
A hiding place from the wind |
A shelter from the storm, a hiding place |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
51 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.953 |
A lark was singing in the rain |
A lark was singing in the rain |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
9 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.970 |
A marriage song |
O christ the Lord who did in olden story |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
25 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.972 |
A memory |
I know a vale, a green retreat |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
27 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.961 |
A message |
Breathe on her, O clean winds and free |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
17 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.991 |
A message: Christmas Eve |
Beloved, we send a kindly word |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
45 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.004 |
A song for Grannie |
Haply, Grannie is growing old |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
55 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.979 |
A song in the dark |
I know the full gladness is coming |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
35 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.976 |
A song of the dawn |
I lay me down, and with closed eyes |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
32 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.985 |
Aftermath |
Out of the wild wet wind and snow |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
41 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.983 |
Beyond |
We look up from the quiet plain |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
39 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
44 |
Birds of a Feather |
Birds of a feather flock together |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
192 |
|
87.003 |
Blessed be drudgery |
Blessed be drudgery, the daily need |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
54 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.989 |
Christmas |
A sense of gladness in the air |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
44 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.963 |
Come! |
The babe upon the mother's breast |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
19 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.992 |
Consolation |
She waitd in the silence, out of sight |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
46 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.986 |
De Profundis |
To Thee I come, O Love Supreme |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
41 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.965 |
Divine love |
All the music in the world |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
21 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.006 |
Heights and depths |
Up in the heights is the Love Divine |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
56 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.997 |
Hope |
If down to lowest nether deeps |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
50 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.980 |
Hymn for a little child |
Little child with springing feet |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
36 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.001 |
If |
If thou canst be all quiet, restless soul |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
52 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.959 |
If all served |
If the faith we hold were wrought each day |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
15 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.982 |
In memoriam |
In memory of a woman, loving, lowly |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
38 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.975 |
It may be |
It may be you will never claim |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
31 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.988 |
Jubilance |
Let him rejoice, he is at the beginning |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
43 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.964 |
Jubilate |
Dear Lord, in my utter jubilance I sing |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
20 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.990 |
Lead on softly |
Lead them on softly, the children will weary |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
44 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.978 |
Little One Too Many |
Poor "Little One Too Many" |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
34 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.968 |
Love song |
In the November mist one night |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
23 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.958 |
Neighbours |
My next door neighbour is a frail old lady |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
14 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.974 |
No more twain |
I may not serve you with my willing hands |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
30 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.955 |
Outside the Gate |
You are in the warmth and light |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
11 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.981 |
Reminiscence song |
In the quiet early morning |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
37 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.966 |
Rest |
O to rest! |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
21 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.971 |
Robert Falconer |
O let me tell you, if I can |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
26 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.995 |
Song of the mountains |
I climb up toward the mountain's brow |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
49 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.967 |
Spring fires |
Down from the Central Life they came |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
22 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.960 |
The angels' song to the dying |
Pilgrim, let thy burden go |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
16 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.954 |
The daisy went on growing |
Mid transient sunshine one Spring morn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
10 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.957 |
The End |
The end will be full life, no more for aye |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
13 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.000 |
The joy of living |
While love is left and friends are true |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
52 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.977 |
The mountains |
Not yet can I reach the mountain height |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
33 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.998 |
The prodigal |
Herein is hope, sure hope for every soul |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
51 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.984 |
The Promised land |
We shall lack nothing in it, we shall find |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
40 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.987 |
The Virgin's song |
My little child, there was no room for thee |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
42 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.994 |
The waiting answer |
Always the love is waiting |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
48 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.962 |
The waiting mother |
Beloved, I wait for you |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
18 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.002 |
Thou openest thy hand |
O Lord 'tis Thine, Thine own to feed |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
53 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.996 |
To my comrade |
O friend of mine, oppressed with many a care |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
50 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.973 |
Vision |
I am Thine, and all my foes |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
29 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.993 |
Waiting |
Thy smile lit up the world for me |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
47 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.956 |
Waiting for the sun |
The rose-tree by the southern wall |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
12 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.005 |
When John came home |
It rained, and rained, and rained |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
56 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.969 |
Widowhood |
Where art thou, my Beloved? Where? O Where? |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
Songs between Dark and Dawn |
LONSDALE, Mary L. |
M0041041LC |
152.928 |
1.933 |
24 |
Poems by Clayton-le-Moors author |
86.879 |
Yesterdays Hero |
He was just an ordinary man |
LORD, Alma |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
131 |
|
82.744 |
My friends don't like me |
My friends don't like me |
LORD, Heather |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
27 |
|
82.332 |
A reply to my friend, Mr A Houston |
If a line from my pen will but bring you |
LORD, John |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
134-135 |
Rossendale author |
82.331 |
To Mr A Houston |
I take my quill at your request |
LORD, John |
Poems and songs |
HOUSTON, Andrew |
M0042601LC |
156.371 |
1.912 |
133-134 |
Rossendale author |
3.675 |
On reading Edwin Waughs Lancashire poems |
Simple tales of simple lovers |
LORT BADELS, Edith C. |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
202-203 |
appendix |
82.895 |
My pirate life |
I am a pirate, a funky little pirate |
LOVELOCK, Jodie |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
114 |
|
82.048 |
A ruined abbey |
Tread softly, for 'tis hallow'd ground |
LOWE, Edwin C. |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
180 |
|
82.053 |
The old hall |
The old hall stands 'mid tangled shrub and grass |
LOWE, Edwin C. |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
200 |
|
81.424 |
Look at the stars |
Look at the stars twinkling above |
LOWE, Rhian |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
72 |
|
80.839 |
Youth in society |
I can't heat your voice. Have you lost your tongue |
LOWTON, Robbie |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
106 |
|
1.812 |
A midnight visitor |
He comes in the dead of night, they say |
LUMB, Kate |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
50 |
|
1.824 |
A wedding wish |
May lasting happiness be yours |
LUMB, Kate |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
48 |
|
1.851 |
Baby's bit |
I'm the youngest of the house |
LUMB, Kate |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
55 |
|
1.883 |
Cheer up, chucky |
Now! Listen while I tell you all |
LUMB, Kate |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
51-52 |
|
1.888 |
Christmas quips: granpa's guests |
Now, Nennie and Johnnie had come to stay |
LUMB, Kate |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
49-50 |
|
1.900 |
Daddy must have sent it |
It does not seem like Christmas |
LUMB, Kate |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
55 |
|
1.997 |
Khaki: a song |
It's the stuff which has covered our heroes |
LUMB, Kate |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
49 |
|
2.110 |
Recognized |
As I passed a shop window one day |
LUMB, Kate |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
47 |
|
2.146 |
Spring beckoneth and reckoneth |
Where bees o'er buds are straying |
LUMB, Kate |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
58-59 |
|
2.242 |
The price of peace |
We bid goodbye, and watched him go |
LUMB, Kate |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
53-54 |
|
2.264 |
The stranger in the snow |
As we sit round the hearthside |
LUMB, Kate |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
51 |
|
2.280 |
There is always tomorrow |
However, dull and dreary |
LUMB, Kate |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
52-53 |
|
2.339 |
When the King said come |
When the King said come |
LUMB, Kate |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
54-55 |
|
1.817 |
A reverie |
I see the sun sink in the west |
LUMB, Whiteley |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
135-137 |
|
1.990 |
Jesus, we sing Thy praise |
Jesus, we sing Thy praise |
LUMB, Whiteley |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
139-140 |
|
2.072 |
O Lord, we thank thee |
O Lord, we thank thee for this day |
LUMB, Whiteley |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
140-141 |
|
2.075 |
Ode to Spring |
Hail! welcome dawn of spring's fair day |
LUMB, Whiteley |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
137 |
|
2.119 |
Ripponden's charms |
Ripponden Vale! cabined between |
LUMB, Whiteley |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
132-134 |
|
2.210 |
The Grave-Digger |
The sexton digs a narrow ditch |
LUMB, Whiteley |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
138-139 |
|
2.296 |
To a throstle at the nurseries |
Bonny brown bird, proudly pearched on the bough |
LUMB, Whiteley |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
139 |
|
2.335 |
What is man? |
O man, whose mighty mind may mould |
LUMB, Whiteley |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
134-135 |
|
81.533 |
Snow |
Watch the snow fall round and round |
LUNT, Toni |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
128 |
|
430 |
Jimmy Pudding |
Jimmy Puddin' is mi name, an' sometimes Suet-Feet |
LYNCH, Lol |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
14 |
|
86.691 |
In the event of nuclear war - hey Mr. President |
Down in a cellar by the underground |
LYNCH, Paul |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
39 |
|
3.227 |
Kinship |
The Holy One, who rode to help the world |
LYSTER, Geraldine E |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
97 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
83.571 |
Tale of a teapot |
A good dame had a teapot stout |
M |
SKETCHES and poems by local writers, edited by John U. Smith |
|
M0129272LC |
491.715 |
18 |
13-14 |
Editor was member of the Burnley Literary and Philosophical Society |
469 |
A street in Calcutta |
Breathless day to foetid night |
MACDERMOTT, T |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
18 |
|
82.919 |
The storm |
The storm is a bloodthirsty giant |
MacKENZIE, Conal |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
127 |
|
80.847 |
The fall of woman |
In a garden green |
MacKENZIE, Noela |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
124-125 |
|
80.260 |
Advice |
Dear Lovelorn |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
7 |
Poems about cats |
80.283 |
Aquatics |
A pretty black kitty |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
32 |
Poems about cats |
80.282 |
Bring back the cat |
John disappeared |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
31 |
Poems about cats |
80.263 |
Casual caller |
I had a cat called Sammy |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
10 |
Poems about cats |
80.274 |
Ethnic problem |
Mohammed had a kitten |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
22 |
Poems about cats |
80.264 |
Felix culpa |
In the morning early |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
11 |
Poems about cats |
80.277 |
Fisticuffs |
Our James was in a state last night |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
25 |
Poems about cats |
80.275 |
Fully comprehensive |
A crash came from the kitchen |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
23 |
Poems about cats |
80.276 |
Gang warfare |
In Field Street live two yobbos |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
24 |
Poems about cats |
80.280 |
Local politics |
There's been a change of bosses |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
29 |
Poems about cats |
80.259 |
Lovelorn |
Dear Irma Katz |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
6 |
Poems about cats |
80.265 |
Neighbours |
A Jack Russell lives across the way |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
12 |
Poems about cats |
80.262 |
Over the garden fence |
My neighbours are a problem |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
9 |
Poems about cats |
80.268 |
Rags to riches |
A simple country maiden |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
16 |
Poems about cats |
80.273 |
Scavenger |
Thin as a rake |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
21 |
Poems about cats |
80.279 |
Smash and grab |
That black and white cat's a criminal |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
28 |
Poems about cats |
80.272 |
Spoilt brat |
She's dark and neat |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
20 |
Poems about cats |
80.270 |
Takeover |
The house in which I'm living |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
18 |
Poems about cats |
80.269 |
Terrorist |
He's big and black and very tough |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
17 |
Poems about cats |
80.261 |
The facts of life |
Our Buster is a eunuch |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
8 |
Poems about cats |
80.271 |
The rumble |
The cat-flap is bust up |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
19 |
Poems about cats |
80.281 |
Watch committee |
A lady lives next door |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
Catcalls |
MacKENZIE, Noela M. |
1872641008 |
330.727 |
1.989 |
30 |
Poems about cats |
82.009 |
Manchester hill |
I know by many a city door |
MACKERETH, Annie |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
35 |
|
6.207 |
Arctos |
Unknown, mysterious Pole, untrodden still |
MACKESON, P. T. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
38-43 |
|
432 |
Night shift clocks on |
Half a skyful of stars |
MacSWEEN, Richard |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
15 |
|
431 |
Production worker's lament |
Being dawn |
MacSWEEN, Richard |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
15 |
|
433 |
Sonnet for Edward Alderson |
If, a month ago you'd asked |
MacSWEEN, Richard |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
15 |
|
80.804 |
The end of the story |
He shook her hand and grabbed her neck |
MADDEN, Bob |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
31 |
|
82.715 |
Flowers |
Flowers are colourful |
MAHMOOD, Rabia |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
12 |
|
82.643 |
A kuss |
Ye may bring me gowd bi t' bowlful |
MALHAM-DEMBLEBY, John |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
85-86 |
2nd ed rev |
82.644 |
Huntin' song |
It's neet an' naa we're here, lads |
MALHAM-DEMBLEBY, John |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
85-86 |
2nd ed rev |
317 |
The blue milk Parliament |
On the 15th of August a meeting took place |
MALLALIEU, George |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
172 |
|
81.394 |
Stuck on the planet Byne |
I went to a place |
MALLINSON, Charles |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
58 |
|
82.782 |
Teachers |
Teachers |
MALONE, Amy |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
49 |
|
82.748 |
My grey cat |
Sometimes |
MANSFIELD, Richard |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
30 |
|
81.449 |
The swimming pool |
The swimming pool is full |
MANSI, Stephanie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
87 |
|
82.029 |
Ballade of April children |
What can I greet you with, maiden mine |
MARKLAND, Russell |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
95-96 |
|
3.229 |
Dawn |
A man may lie awake at early dawn |
MARKLAND, Russell |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
100 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
927 |
Summer night |
The mists hung low upon the grateful earth |
MARKLAND, Russell |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
156-157 |
|
82.005 |
Summer night |
The mists hung low upon the grateful earth |
MARKLAND, Russell |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
21 |
|
3.228 |
The bath |
Laved and lathered, and cleansed from fellow dust |
MARKLAND, Russell |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
98-99 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
926 |
To forget |
How can a thing so perfect die |
MARKLAND, Russell |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
155-156 |
|
82.038 |
To forget |
How can a thing so perfect die |
MARKLAND, Russell |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
132 |
|
382 |
The bubble |
A coloured bubble in a glass |
MARLAND, Dorothy |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
32 |
|
87.839 |
Birdsong |
The song reverberates |
MARSDEN, Christopher |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
127 |
|
82.809 |
That's my mum |
My mum is bright |
MARSDEN, Danielle |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
64-65 |
|
6.210 |
A Roman bridal song |
Thou dweller on mount Helicon |
MARSDEN, Victor E. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
51-56 |
|
482 |
Dollar bills - sorry William! |
I squander'd money in a crowd |
MARSH, A. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
34 |
|
81.561 |
Alphabet antics |
A is for Adam, who was married to Eve |
MARSH, Laura |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
146 |
|
86.716 |
On seeing a grey squirrel in Corporation Park, Blackburn |
I spied him sitting 'neath a tree in shaft of sunlight shining |
MARSH, Nora |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
64 |
|
127 |
Was Rossendale like this in Tudor |
Tudor Rossendale was dull |
MARSHALL, Ida |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
258 |
|
87.763 |
Who Cares |
When you lose the one you love |
MARTIN, E. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
48 |
|
491 |
Haiku |
Daisy - spattered knoll |
MARTIN, J. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
41 |
|
86.740 |
Summer holiday |
The sun was shining |
MARTIN-CLOUGH, Joyce |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
87 |
|
82.804 |
My teacher |
My teacher Mrs Grimshaw |
MARVELLEY, Ashleigh |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
61 |
|
80.825 |
Indolent youth |
Dull dank day |
MASSEY, Norah Laithwaite |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
67 |
|
86.721 |
Pen comes a courting |
Virgin paper |
MASTERS, Karen |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
69 |
|
81.457 |
The belly disaster |
It was Raz's birthday |
MASTERSON, Nicholas |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
91 |
|
80.812 |
Epitaph for John Lennon |
Rest in peace, John |
MATHEWS, Kenny |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
42 |
|
82.996 |
Mum and dad |
His head shines like a polished piano |
MATHIAS, Hannah |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
170 |
|
596 |
A rhymster's lament |
Oh! If only I could write a story! |
MAY, Michael |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
15 |
|
5.140 |
Amos Bradshaw's funeral |
Owd Amos Bradshaw wer bowlin' at t'club. Ee'd geet seventeen 'is mate ten |
MAY, Michael |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
20-21 |
|
5.141 |
Beatin' 'eart |
Aj've getten owder, nah, lass |
MAY, Michael |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
21 |
|
5.138 |
Eaur weshahse winda' plant |
I' eaur owd glass weshahse |
MAY, Michael |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
18 |
|
4.331 |
Fish, chips, an' peas |
Nowt's surer t' please |
MAY, Michael |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
22 |
|
605 |
Grandma's tom cat |
Ay! Wey've getten an owd tom-cat as lives in our 'ouse |
MAY, Michael |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
23 |
|
4.332 |
Grandma's tom-cat |
Ay, wey've getten an owd tom-cat as lives in eawr 'eawse |
MAY, Michael |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
22 |
|
613 |
In Fishergate, Preston |
Outside Marks |
MAY, Michael |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
28 |
|
5.267 |
Lancashire |
Its 'ed a deal o' moither, this Cahnty Palatine of eawrs |
MAY, Michael |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
16 |
|
586 |
My father |
His life was rough and hard, yet happiness |
MAY, Michael |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
9 |
|
597 |
Overheard in a pub |
I'm comin' in here |
MAY, Michael |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
15 |
|
5.139 |
Own'y a brick i't'wauhw |
Ah thowt, lookin' dahn weer ee'd bin laid t'rest |
MAY, Michael |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
19 |
|
614 |
Respect |
My grandmother |
MAY, Michael |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
28 |
|
623 |
Ribble swans |
I watched the river from the Ribble's banks |
MAY, Michael |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
33 |
|
587 |
The window |
Wind rattles the frame |
MAY, Michael |
The write stuff |
PRESTON WRITERS' GUILD |
M0114292LC |
442.816 |
1.993 |
9 |
|
5.137 |
T'trip ov a lifetime |
Ah picked mi own rooad, an' dahn it Ah went |
MAY, Michael |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
17 |
|
4.333 |
Wen Amos Bradshaw wer a lad |
Wen Amos Bradshaw wer a lad |
MAY, Michael |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
23 |
|
82.781 |
Flying high |
Softly floating through the sky |
MAYER, Natalie |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
48-49 |
|
82.746 |
My pets |
Sometimes |
McCABE, Alana |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
28 |
|
83.574 |
Look up |
A long time ago, as the fairy tales say |
McCANDLISH, A. |
SKETCHES and poems by local writers, edited by John U. Smith |
|
M0129272LC |
491.715 |
18 |
16 |
Editor was member of the Burnley Literary and Philosophical Society |
83.569 |
Spoons up |
In the days 'long ago', food was dear, as you know |
McCANDLISH, A. |
SKETCHES and poems by local writers, edited by John U. Smith |
|
M0129272LC |
491.715 |
18 |
6-Jul |
Editor was member of the Burnley Literary and Philosophical Society |
82.921 |
Friends |
Having friends is really fun |
McCARTHY, Niamh |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
129 |
|
80.548 |
49th fearless sleep |
In empty public waiting room |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
47 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.571 |
A billion bees in the borage |
And if, instead of passing |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
84 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.592 |
A man with children |
I am a man with children |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
131 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.574 |
All together now |
One, two, three, four |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
88-89 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.599 |
Anti-alarm call |
Don't get up just yet |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
141 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.554 |
Back in the USSR |
Flew in from Miami Beach BOAC |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
58-59 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.555 |
Backwards traveller |
Hey, did you know that I'm |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
60 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.552 |
Band on the run |
Stuck inside these four walls |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
55-56 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.567 |
Big boys bickering |
Big boys bickering |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
79 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.602 |
Black jacket |
Sadness isn't sadness |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
144 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.560 |
Black Vulcan |
Did you ever see a dog so strong and fast |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
67 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.517 |
Blackbird |
Blackbird singing in the dead of night |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
|
No page number - before contents etc. Edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.601 |
Blessed |
I would come back from a run |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
143 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.594 |
Calico skies |
It was written that I would love you |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
133 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.600 |
Call it a day |
It's only a matter of hours |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
142 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.538 |
Carry that weight |
Boy, you're gonna carry that weight |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
32 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.565 |
Chasing the cherry |
Fragile fragments |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
75-77 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.568 |
City park |
Twenty-seven press-ups |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
80-81 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.609 |
Dawn star |
You are |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
153 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.543 |
Day with George |
You have had your white hair cut |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
41 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.529 |
Dinner tickets |
My mother always looked |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
20 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.588 |
Eleanor Rigby |
Ah, look at all the lonely people |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
113-114 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.520 |
Figure of eight |
You've got me dancing |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
6 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.587 |
Flaming pie |
Making love underneath the bed |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
112 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.544 |
Fly by night |
You were the one |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
42 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.590 |
Flying to my home |
The sun is fading in the west |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
129 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.591 |
Full moon's eve |
On a full moon's eve |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
130 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.572 |
Give the man a break |
Workers on the picket line |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
85 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.526 |
Golden earth girl |
Golden earth girl, female animal |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
14 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.522 |
Heart of the country |
I look high, I look low |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
8 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.558 |
Helen wheels |
Said farewell to my last hotel |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
63-64 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.603 |
Her spirit |
Her spirit moves wind chimes |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
145 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.525 |
Here today |
And if I said |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
Dec-13 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.539 |
Hey Jude |
Hey Jude, don't make it bad |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
33-34 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.550 |
Hot as that |
As I emerge from a sandy short cut |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
49 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.518 |
In Liverpool |
I spent my early life in Liverpool |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
3-Apr |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.606 |
Irish language |
Those Irish chappies |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
149 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.534 |
Ivan |
Two doors open |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
27 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.545 |
Jerk of all jerks |
I'm a motorist that quite |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
43-44 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.584 |
Junior's farm |
You should have seen me with the poker man |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
106-107 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.532 |
Junk |
Motor cars, handlebars, bicycles for two |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
24 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.576 |
Lady Madonna |
Lady Madonna, children at your feet |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
95 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.541 |
Let 'em in |
Someone's knocking at the door |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
39 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.551 |
Little willow |
Bend, little willow |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
50-51 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.573 |
Looking for changes |
I saw a cat with a machine in his brain |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
86-87 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.611 |
Lost |
I lost my wife |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
155 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.582 |
Lovely Rita |
Lovely Rita, meter maid |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
104 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.549 |
Masseuse masseur |
Ah so, Japanese masseur |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
48 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.578 |
Maxwell's silver hammer |
Joan was quizzical, studied pataphysical |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
97-98 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.527 |
Maybe I'm amazed |
Maybe I'm amazed at the way that you love me all the time |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
15 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.604 |
Meditate |
Astride my inner peace |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
146-147 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.519 |
Mist the mind |
Mist the mind over |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
5 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.569 |
Moon's a mandarin |
Moon's a mandarin |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
82 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.523 |
Mull of Kintyre |
Mull of Kintyre |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
9 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.598 |
My love |
And when I go away |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
138 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.597 |
No rhyme |
No rhyme, no reason |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
137 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.580 |
Not on |
Take your hand off my knee, young man |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
100-101 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.613 |
Nova |
Are you there |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
157-158 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.585 |
Ob-la-di, ob-la-da |
Desmond has a barrow in the market place |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
108-109 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.530 |
Once upon a long ago |
Picking up scales and broken chords |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
21-22 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.579 |
Paperback writer |
Dear Sir or Madam will you read my book |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
99 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.547 |
Picasso's last words (drink to me) |
A grand old painter died last night |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
46 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.596 |
Pictures in song |
Most of her days |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
136 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.608 |
Rocking on! |
I want to smell |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
151-152 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.581 |
Rocky raccoon |
Now somewhere in the black mountain hills of Dakota |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
102-103 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.562 |
Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band |
It was twenty years ago today |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
69 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.531 |
She came in through the bathroom window |
She came in through the bathroom window |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
23 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.610 |
She is |
She is |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
154 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.577 |
Soily |
People gathered here tonight |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
96 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.553 |
Spirit of rock 'n' roll |
Hey alligator |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
57 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.589 |
Standing stone |
After heavy light years |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
117-125 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.607 |
Steel |
Steel yourself against the rapid fire |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
150 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.583 |
Tchaico |
I knew Tchaikovsy |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
105 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.593 |
The blue shines through |
You're responsible |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
132 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.536 |
The fool on the hill |
Day after day, alone on a hill |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
29-30 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.535 |
The long and winding road |
The long and winding road that leads me to your door |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
28 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.546 |
The note you never wrote |
Later on, the story goes |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
45 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.542 |
The poet of Dumbwoman's Lane |
The voice of the poet |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
40 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.563 |
The song we were singing |
For a while we could sit, smoke a pipe |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
70 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.564 |
The world tonight |
I saw you sitting at the centre of a circle |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
73-74 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.537 |
This is the way |
This is the way we put out the candle |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
31 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.612 |
To be said |
There's a lot to be said |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
156 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.605 |
To find the joy |
Seagulls bright white glint |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
148 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.521 |
Toy store |
I left for the toy store |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
7 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.570 |
Trouble is |
Rabbit running in circles |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
83 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.556 |
Velvet wave |
The velvet inside |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
61 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.561 |
Venus and Mars |
Sitting in the stand of the sports arena |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
68 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.566 |
Was it really twenty years ago? |
What's changed |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
78 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.595 |
Waterfalls |
Don't go jumping waterfalls |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
134-135 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.586 |
Wedding invitation |
I was told by an American woman |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
110-110 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.524 |
When I'm sixty four |
When I get older, losing my hair |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
10-Nov |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.557 |
Why don't we do it in the road? |
Why don't we do it in the road |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
62 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.528 |
Yellow submarine |
In the town where I was born |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
19 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.540 |
Yesterday |
Yesterday |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
35 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.533 |
Penny Lane |
In Penny Lane there is a barber showing photographs |
McCARTNEY, Paul and LENNON, John |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
25-26 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.575 |
She's leaving home |
Wednesday morning at five o'clock as the day begins |
McCARTNEY, Paul and LENNON, John |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
93-94 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
80.559 |
Monkberry moon delight |
So I sat in the attic |
McCARTNEY, Paul and McCARTNEY, Linda |
Blackbird singing: poems and lyrics, 1965 - 1999 |
McCARTNEY, Paul |
571207898 |
773.326 |
2.001 |
65-66 |
edited and with an introduction by Adrian Mitchell |
82.780 |
The four seasons |
In spring everything grows |
McCOMBE, William |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
48 |
|
82.803 |
Gabby |
Gabby is my friend |
McCORMACK, Dominique |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
60 |
|
82.753 |
Spring to summer tree |
Spring tree |
McCOY, Sarah |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
34 |
|
82.918 |
Do you know? |
Why is the sun so bright |
McCREADIE, Joe Gerard |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
127 |
|
82.720 |
The sea |
A sleepy dog |
McDONALD, Andrew |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
14 |
|
80.840 |
Someone's father |
Hey, old man, don't give in |
McEGAN, Derek |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
107 |
|
86.758 |
The Master cat |
The Master cat |
MCEVOY, Joan |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
106 |
|
87.825 |
Blood |
Hole in my wrist |
McFAUL, Anita |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
113 |
|
87.822 |
Servant |
Don't look at the Disciples to see Jesus |
McFAUL, Francie |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
110 |
|
3.951 |
40 - Love |
40 |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
94-95 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
81.078 |
A bolt from the blue |
In no way am I trying to lay claim |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
14 |
|
3.939 |
A cat, a horse and the sun |
a cat mistrusts the sun |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
79 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
81.100 |
A fine tooth comb |
When granny was young she was famous for her teeth |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
42 |
|
3.440 |
A lot of water has flown under your bridge |
I remember your hands |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
72-73 |
Revised edition |
3.443 |
A square dance |
In Flanders fields in Northern France |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
76-77 |
Revised edition |
81.099 |
After the reading |
Where do you get your ideas from |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
40-41 |
|
81.075 |
An apology |
Sincere apologies, too late I know, for not getting engaged |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
9 |
|
3.940 |
Apostrophe |
Twould be nice to be |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
80 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.439 |
Aren't we all |
Looks quite pretty lying there |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
70-71 |
Revised edition |
3.460 |
At lunchtime |
When the bus stopped suddenly |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
102-103 |
Revised edition |
81.082 |
Bees cannot fly |
Bees cannot fly, scientists have proved it |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
19 |
|
81.121 |
Birmingham |
Auschwitz with H and C |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
Dec-13 |
|
3.949 |
Blazing fruit |
During dinner the table caught fire |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
92 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
81.076 |
Bob Dylan and the Blue Angel |
What benign stroke of fate took Bob Dylan |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
10-Nov |
|
81.129 |
Bradford |
Knocked up after three hours sleep |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
23 |
|
81.128 |
Bradford |
Saris billow in the wind lile dhows off the shore |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
21-22 |
|
81.127 |
Bradford |
The occasional curry |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
20 |
|
81.147 |
Bravado |
And you still haven't ironed |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
48 |
|
81.125 |
Brighton |
A day to be reckoned with A cowboy |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
17-18 |
|
81.123 |
Canterbury |
In the no mans land |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
15 |
|
81.124 |
Canterbury |
Its like bashing your head against a brick wall |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
16 |
|
81.134 |
Cardiff |
and Cardiffs a tart with a heart of gold |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
30-31 |
|
81.136 |
Cardiff 11 a m |
Down first for breakfast |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
33 |
|
81.135 |
Cardiff 6 p m |
No. 12 a long room built under the eaves, tri- |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
32 |
|
3.438 |
Come close and sleep now |
it is afterwards |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
69 |
Revised edition |
3.945 |
Crusader |
in bed |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
88 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
81.140 |
Crusader |
in bed |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
39 |
|
3.453 |
Discretion |
Discretion is the better part of Valerie |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
94 |
Revised edition |
81.085 |
Don't read all about it |
He's there everyday on the corner |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
22 |
|
3.457 |
Dreampoem |
in a corner of my bedroom |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
98 |
Revised edition |
81.102 |
Echoes sound afar |
Halfway up the mountain it stops. Slips back |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
44-45 |
|
81.137 |
Epilogue (or cosy biscuit) |
What I wouldn't give for a nine to five |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
34 |
|
81.071 |
Everyday eclipses |
The hamburger flipped across the face of the bun |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
1-Feb |
|
81.146 |
Exsomnia |
in bed |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
47 |
|
3.941 |
First day at school |
A millionbillionwillion miles from home |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
81 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
81.084 |
Flight path |
A nice day for breakfast outside. Well-practised |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
21 |
|
3.942 |
George and the dragonfly |
George Jennings was spit almighty |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
82-83 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
81.138 |
George and the dragonfly |
George Jennings was spit almighty |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
37 |
|
3.456 |
Goodbat nightman |
God bless all policemen |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
97 |
Revised edition |
81.072 |
Greek tragedy |
Approaching midnight and the mezze unfinished |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
3-May |
|
81.149 |
Happiness |
Lying in bed ofa weekdaymorning |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
50 |
|
3.957 |
Head injury |
I do not smile because I am happy |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
104 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
81.077 |
Hey, dude |
Paul has probably forgotten about the incident by now |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
Dec-13 |
|
81.081 |
Honey and lemon |
Jogging around Barnes Common one April morning |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
18 |
|
81.120 |
Huddersfield |
Monster cooling towers stand guard |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
11 |
|
81.145 |
Humdinger |
There's not a one |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
46 |
|
3.934 |
I donÆt like the poems |
I don't like the poems they're making me write |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
73 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
81.112 |
I married a human cannonball |
I married a human cannonball |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
58 |
|
3.459 |
Icarus allsorts |
A meteorite is reported to have landed |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
100-101 |
Revised edition |
81.093 |
In two minds |
What I love about night |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
31 |
|
81.088 |
It's a jungle out there |
On leaving the house you'd best say a prayer |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
25 |
|
81.090 |
Learning to read |
Learning to read during the war |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
28 |
|
81.130 |
Leeds |
1 a.m. |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
24-25 |
|
3.462 |
Let me die a young man's death |
Let me die a youngman's death |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
105 |
Revised edition |
81.132 |
Loughborough |
It seems unlikely now |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
27-28 |
|
81.115 |
Love cycle |
Up against the wall |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
60 |
|
81.116 |
M I L T |
Blessed are the children and the happy spouses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
61 |
|
81.094 |
Meeting the poet at Victoria Station |
A day off for you to recover from jetlag |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
32-33 |
|
81.097 |
Memento mori |
I still have the blue beret that JFK |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
37 |
|
3.461 |
Mother the wardrobe is full of infantrymen |
Mother the wardrobe is full of infantrymen |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
104 |
Revised edition |
3.458 |
Motorway |
The politicians |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
99 |
Revised edition |
3.954 |
Mouth |
I went to the mirror |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
98-99 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.451 |
My bus conductor |
My busconductor tells me |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
90-91 |
Revised edition |
3.452 |
My bus conductress |
She is as beautiful as bustickets |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
92-93 |
Revised edition |
3.441 |
My cat and I |
Girls are simply the prettiest things |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
74 |
Revised edition |
81.111 |
My divine juggler |
Jugglers, as you can imagine |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
56-57 |
|
81.083 |
My life in the garden |
It is a lovely morning, what with the sun, etc |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
20 |
|
81.126 |
Newcastle |
All night |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
19 |
|
81.117 |
No message |
At first, picture postcards |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
62 |
|
3.955 |
Noah's arc |
In my fallout shelter I have enough food |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
100-101 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
81.133 |
Nottingham |
Stoned and lonely in the union bar |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
29 |
|
81.139 |
ofa sunday |
ofa sunday |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
38 |
|
81.104 |
On Dover beach |
For one magical moment you imagine |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
48 |
|
81.087 |
On having a first book of poetry published (the day the world ended) |
Oh, what dreadful timing! It couldn't have been worse |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
24 |
|
3.442 |
On picnics |
at the going down of the sun |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
75 |
Revised edition |
81.086 |
On the point of extinction |
An old man walks into his local newsagents |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
23 |
|
81.155 |
ONCE I LIVED IN CAPITALS MY LIFE INTENSELY PHALLIC |
but now i'm sadly lowercase |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
|
no page number next to 58 |
81.154 |
Out of sequence |
A task completed everyday |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
57-58 |
|
3.959 |
P C Plod at the pillar box |
It's snowing out |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
106 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.937 |
Pantomime poem |
He's behind yer |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
77 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
81.106 |
Persimmons |
Watching the video last night was good |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
50 |
|
3.938 |
Poem for a dead poet |
He was a poet he was |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
78 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
81.107 |
Porno poem |
I felt dirty having to write this poem |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
51 |
|
81.089 |
Pure jaguar |
Dark clouds. The fresh smell of new rain. The soft hiss |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
26 |
|
81.110 |
Right as rain |
Alan's had his things done. You know, down there |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
55 |
|
3.445 |
Sad Aunt Madge |
As the cold winter evenings drew near |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
80 |
Revised edition |
81.118 |
Sad music |
We fall to the earth like leaves |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
63 |
|
81.109 |
Say ah! |
It hangs from the ceiling |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
54 |
|
81.131 |
Sheffield |
Sometimes I dont smell so good |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
26 |
|
81.105 |
Sleep over |
No, I'd rather stand, thank you. Sorry it's so late |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
49 |
|
3.444 |
Snipers |
When I was kneehigh to a tabletop |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
78-79 |
Revised edition |
3.950 |
Take a poem, Miss Smith |
Take a poem, Miss Smith |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
93 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
81.079 |
Thank u very much |
Taking a break from recording at Olympic Studios |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
15 |
|
3.935 |
The birderman |
Most weekends, starting in the spring |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
74-75 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
81.119 |
The end |
What I love about everyday |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
64 |
|
3.446 |
The fallen birdman |
The oldman in the cripplechair |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
81 |
Revised edition |
3.450 |
The fish |
you always were a strange girl now weren't you |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
89 |
Revised edition |
3.943 |
The horse's mouth |
They bought the horse |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
84-85 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.447 |
The icingbus |
The littleman |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
82 |
Revised Edition |
3.956 |
The identification |
So you think its Stephen |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
102-103 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
81.153 |
the identification |
So you think its Stephen |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
55-56 |
|
3.944 |
The lake |
For years there have been no fish in the lake |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
86-87 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
81.095 |
The logic of meteors |
August in Devon and all its rain. A soft rain |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
34-35 |
|
81.101 |
The lottery |
At five o'clock our time a killer was fried |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
43 |
|
81.152 |
The most unforgettable character i've ever met gives advice to the young poet |
Give poetry a bad name |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
53-54 |
|
81.080 |
The one about the duck |
This duck walked into a pub |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
16-17 |
|
81.091 |
The Oxford book of twentieth-century english verse |
This havy volum is a must for popl who lik potry |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
29 |
|
81.114 |
The perfect crime |
The sword-swallower |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
60 |
|
81.150 |
the picture |
In the Art Gallery it is nearly |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
51 |
|
81.151 |
the power of poets |
the man on the veranda |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
52 |
|
3.953 |
The rot |
Some years ago the Rot set in |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
97 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.936 |
The scarecrow |
The scarecrow is a scarey crow |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
76 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
81.113 |
The tallest man in Britain |
I was in a room with the tallest man in Britain |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
59 |
|
81.073 |
The terrible outside |
The bus I often took as a boy to visit an aunt |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
6-Jul |
|
81.108 |
The theatre |
On arriving at the theatre in good time there was so queue |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
52-53 |
|
3.946 |
There are fascists |
there are |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
89 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.948 |
There was a knock on the door. It was the meat |
There was a knock on the door |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
91 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.454 |
There's something sad |
There's something sad |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
95 |
Revised edition |
81.092 |
This is one of those |
Poems in which the title is, in fact, the opening line |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
30 |
|
81.143 |
tigerdreams |
i go to sleep on all fours |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
44 |
|
81.144 |
tightrope |
At 7.55 this morning |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
45 |
|
81.096 |
Toffee |
It gives me no pleasure to say this |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
36 |
|
81.103 |
Tsutsumu |
Dear Satoshi |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
46-47 |
|
81.098 |
Two riddles |
To ease us |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
38-39 |
|
81.148 |
un |
the baby |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
49 |
|
81.142 |
vampire |
Blood is an acquired taste |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
43 |
|
3.947 |
Vegetarians |
Vegetarians are cruel, unthinking people |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
90 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.455 |
Vinegar |
Sometimes |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
96 |
Revised edition |
81.141 |
warlock poems |
when i fly |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
40-42 |
|
3.958 |
Waving at trains |
Do people who wave at trains |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
105 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
81.074 |
What does your father do? |
At university, how that artful question embarrassed me |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Everyday eclipses |
McGOUGH, Roger |
067091262x |
830.222 |
2.002 |
8 |
|
3.449 |
What you are |
you are the cat's paw |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
84-88 |
Revised edition |
81.122 |
Wolverhampton |
spiders are holding their wintersports |
McGOUGH, Roger |
Gig |
McGOUGH, Roger |
224009214 |
249.954 |
1.973 |
14 |
|
3.952 |
You and I |
I explain quietly. You |
McGOUGH, Roger |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
96 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.448 |
You and your strange ways |
increasingly oftennow |
McGOUGH, Roger |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
83 |
Revised edition |
81.477 |
Hills poem |
The valley is alive |
McGREAT, Leanne Lloyd |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
101 |
|
86.725 |
Pride of the North |
The Red Rose of Lancashire will bloom once again |
MCHUGH, Margaret |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
73 |
|
81.539 |
Cosmic questions |
I wonder why the sun is bright |
McILHATTON,Vicki |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
131 |
|
81.347 |
Boys |
Boys like to play with their toys |
McINTYRE, Kayleigh |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
30 |
|
80.822 |
After an argument |
Forgive me for being so selfish |
McKEON, D. K. |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
57 |
|
81.556 |
My favourite people poem |
R is for Ryan, he is my big brother |
McLEAN, Craig |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
141 |
|
87.817 |
The Lighthouse |
The rays from a lighthouse appear so bright |
McLURG, Kathleen |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
105 |
|
6.610 |
Dies irae |
Tell, thou wild and changing sea |
McMANUS, Cornelius |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
428-429 |
|
6.606 |
Good-bye! |
God be with you till we meet! wa the pious Saxon's prayer |
McMANUS, Cornelius |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
425 |
|
6.605 |
In memoriam - Charles Dickens: died June 9th 1870 |
The scent of the hawthorn is filling the glade |
McMANUS, Cornelius |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
424-425 |
|
6.607 |
John Barleycorn's diary: an uncoloured picture |
John Barleycorn walked eawt one morn |
McMANUS, Cornelius |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
425-427 |
|
6.609 |
Three thrones |
While o'er thy head the stormy waves, O Tyre |
McMANUS, Cornelius |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
427-428 |
|
6.608 |
Tis the hand, not the heart |
Tis the hand, not the heart, thou would'st offer to me |
McMANUS, Cornelius |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
427 |
|
499 |
Lifeforce |
I did not seek life |
McMANUS, M. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
50 |
|
82.845 |
Jumping Jeremy |
My rabbit Jeremy was a hunny bunny |
McVARISH, Luke |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
87 |
|
498 |
The rocking chair |
I found it in a junk shop |
McWILLIAM, E. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
49 |
|
87.781 |
Masterpiece |
A masterpiece created in flesh, God-like, up-standing and tall |
MEDWAY, E. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
66 |
|
82.767 |
The noisy poem |
Bow, wow says the dog |
MEIKLEHAM, Kerry |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
41 |
|
80.821 |
Elaborations |
Smiling, giggling, laughing, grinning, I wonder if they know |
MELIA, J. |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
57 |
|
446 |
Bouldsworth Hill |
There reclines my venus |
MELLING, Keith |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
31 |
|
445 |
It can be seen |
It can be seen |
MELLING, Keith |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
30 |
|
4.846 |
Eawr Jack |
Ther's tay kettle singin' a tune |
MELLOR, J. W. |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
72-73 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
1.845 |
At Folly's Voice |
At folly's voice why pale and start? |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
207-208 |
|
1.945 |
Goodbye to May |
Sweet May! Good-bye! With love, Good-bye! Sweet May |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
206 |
|
1.972 |
How to live |
Let that we live for be of sterling worth |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
205-206 |
|
1.975 |
I love him fondly as ever |
I love him fondly as ever |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
214-215 |
|
1.984 |
In memory of Nurse Cavell |
Still there live those who remember |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
218-219 |
|
2.000 |
Laddie at prayers |
The lad was kneeling down in prayer |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
220 |
|
2.006 |
Lines in a young lady's album |
If any say aught that touches your pride |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
213 |
|
2.069 |
Now there is only me |
Bordering the Pacific Ocean |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
222-224 |
|
2.080 |
On giving Tommy a new name |
There was talk of changing your name, Tommy |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
217-218 |
|
2.120 |
Robin's come home |
Come gi' me my frock and my Sunday shooin |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
209-210 |
|
2.143 |
Sonnets |
That blush of face, those glorious eyes, Cebelle |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
212-213 |
|
2.159 |
Sweet is the kiss |
Sweet is the kiss he deliciously sips |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
215-216 |
|
2.177 |
The brave old year |
Now has the old year done his embassy |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
206-207 |
|
2.211 |
The guests of the Poet |
What visions of beauty the poet beholds |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
204-205 |
|
2.258 |
The soldier-mother's ballad: I am singing |
I am singing, I am singing |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
221-222 |
|
2.265 |
The superman |
This is a world-wide war, its tentacles |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
216-217 |
|
2.271 |
The weaver's song |
Think not that because I sing, my dear |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
213-214 |
|
2.291 |
Time-the story-writer |
Time is a writer of stories |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
224-225 |
|
2.344 |
Whom should I marry? |
Get married! and whom should I marry, Jim? |
MELLOR, Sam |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
210-212 |
|
87.831 |
The Ultimate Point |
I sit so still and alone in my room |
METCALFE, Helen |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
119 |
|
81.335 |
Two people in a haiku |
Two little people |
METCALFE, Phillip |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
25 |
|
82.971 |
India |
Bright colours everywhere |
MIFFLIN, Natalie |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
156-157 |
|
81.448 |
Magic powers |
If I had magic powers |
MILES, Lisa |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
87 |
|
86.247 |
Adolescence |
Beneath a golden hanging moon, a velvet star-sprayed sky |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.265 |
Armour for Three |
To my dear Daddy |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.268 |
Autumnal Reflection |
Draw the curtains |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
811 |
Blackberryin' |
Ther gooin a-blackerryin' while it's still leet |
MILLER, Alice |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
43 |
|
86.239 |
Cage Without Bars |
Strong hands were they which touched the world with light |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.257 |
Cobweb in the Rain |
Gleaming web of spider |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.249 |
Crock Of Gold |
But yesterday |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.266 |
Dancing Sally |
Our Sal! you know our Sally? |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.261 |
Ecce Homo |
The healing backward ways are blotted out |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.259 |
English rose |
Beneath |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
363 |
Fylde harvester |
Look at this farming man, his face is brushed |
MILLER, Alice |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
20 |
|
86.273 |
Green and Silver |
You did so love the green touch |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.274 |
Hymn |
The lovely earth shall sing |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.240 |
Island of Light |
Runs the wind around the world |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.243 |
Last Straw |
There's mighty quare antics a'gooin' on to-day |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.271 |
Lavendar Ladies |
Tall ladies bow to me each morn with grave sedate precision |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.260 |
Little Grey Mill |
The little green hamlet |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.248 |
Little Things Stir |
From nibbled fields the ploughman disappears |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.267 |
Lost Lady |
The lady comes not to the tree |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.250 |
Me AnTh Owd Lass |
Me an' th' owd lass we just sit bi t'fire |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.256 |
Meet Joe and Sally |
Ever heard of Joe and Sally, as lives not far away? |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.242 |
Milestone |
We are near to the halting |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.253 |
November Dust |
Grey blue the distant hill |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
22 |
O'er t'tops |
T'long loyne o'er t'tops reyt weel Ah know |
MILLER, Alice |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
145 |
|
86.254 |
Part of the New Plenty |
Maybe as ticks the clock more, more distinct |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
562 |
Pendle nestlin' song |
Cook-a-loo, a-laddie, O |
MILLER, Alice |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
142 |
Lancashire poetry |
86.241 |
Procession Perpetual |
We are the young loves |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.245 |
Questionnaire |
What do you think? What do you think? |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.258 |
Remember |
As you walk in the lane |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.263 |
Sailor Laddie |
There's a handsome sailor laddie goes a-sailin' o'er the foam |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.272 |
Sanctuary |
The little house |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.264 |
Seven in a Mirror |
You want to get married! I daresay you do! |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
37 |
Surprise |
Upon the earth dropped shadow-sprays |
MILLER, Alice |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
187 |
|
86.269 |
The Apple Green Child |
Where men are busy binding sheaves |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.262 |
The Ballad of Green Mischief |
There lives on the earth with the Ever Has Been |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.278 |
The Child Heart |
When mummy |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.276 |
The Gateway |
The circling day links no more |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
36 |
The Miner Lad |
Young pigeons were his theme |
MILLER, Alice |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
187 |
|
86.251 |
The Owd 'Un |
Give me mi pipe an' mi bacca, an' switch off thad noisy owd thing |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.275 |
The Pine Tree |
While drop the nations cross on cross |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.255 |
The Stepping Out |
Over the shoulder |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.279 |
The Street Sweeper |
Such a lot o' processions come slowly this way |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.244 |
Time For White Weddings |
The flowers are peepin' in spite of hard weather |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.277 |
Trees in Moonlight |
O silver trees |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
86.246 |
Tryst |
Bramble's showing in the lane |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
398 |
Wild rooases |
Wild rooases are growing int' th' hedges i'plenty |
MILLER, Alice |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
98 |
|
57 |
Wild Rooases |
Wild rooases are growing int' th' hedges i'plenty |
MILLER, Alice |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
207 |
|
86.270 |
Woman |
We are not dumb |
MILLER, Alice |
Cage Without Bars |
MILLER, Alice |
M0067313LC |
281.879 |
1.942 |
|
Poems by Oswaldtwistle author |
805 |
Th'owd stormcock |
Th'owd stormcock clings to younder tree |
MILLER, George C. |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
16-17 |
|
87.755 |
Listen when you pray |
Why don't you listen when you pray |
MILLER, Merle |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
40 |
|
82.156 |
In my father's house there are many mansions |
I do not want a Mansion, Lord |
MILLER, Olive |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
66 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
82.130 |
Open gates |
They beckon me beyond the safe confines |
MILLER, Olive |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
11 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
81.450 |
The phone |
One day I heard the phone go pop |
MILLER, Sian |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
88 |
|
3.231 |
God's freight |
Man is God's freight, not master of the little ship |
MILLER, Sophia |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
104-105 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.230 |
Night's slumber loom |
When my last prayer is said |
MILLER, Sophia |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
101-103 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.232 |
Good-night |
There is a shimmering in the trees tonight |
MILLETT, Frances Evelyn |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
106 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.546 |
A letter from a friend to the author |
I just had risen frae my brose |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
108-113 |
|
3.516 |
Acrostics |
Known for his gratness, glory, fame |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
35-36 |
|
3.526 |
Burns vision |
The village clock wi aufu' knell |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
60-66 |
the idea was taken from Burns vision |
3.529 |
Dear Harry |
Ye hills and dales, ye murmuring rills |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
71-72 |
|
3.507 |
Emma |
Good Heaven! what haggard form art thou |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
Nov-15 |
|
3.538 |
Extempore on a pipe |
O canty pipe, my constant frien' |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
92 |
|
3.543 |
Former affection |
I once did love, as truly, firmly lov'd |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
103 |
|
3.547 |
In answer to Stewart Lewis' letter |
I maun for ever rest your debtor |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
114-118 |
|
3.522 |
Letter first from Chester |
A dear! A dear! a Lord be wi us |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
47-48 |
letters to a friend in Manchester |
3.525 |
Letter forth |
Let poets sing the flowering bowl |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
57-59 |
|
3.523 |
Letter second |
Ugh! out upon the ugly strumpet! |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
49-52 |
from Chester in continuation |
3.524 |
Letter third |
Of a that happens 'til I see thee |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
53-56 |
from Shrewsbury in continuation |
3.533 |
Lines on the death of Robert Burns and Allen Ramsay |
A! Rab and Allen, now you're dead |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
81-83 |
|
3.545 |
Lines written by the desire of a mother on her infant daughter |
Fair lovely bud, thy tender form |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
106-107 |
|
3.519 |
Lines written on the news of peace |
Now gentle Peace with all her smiling train |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
40-43 |
spoken by Mrs Aitken at theTheatre Royal, Plymouth |
3.518 |
Love and hope |
When love and hope together clinging |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
39 |
|
3.514 |
Loyal sketch |
Rous'd by Gallia's proud threats |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
27-31 |
meant to have been sung and recited |
3.520 |
On Lord Nelson's death |
Stpo fame! - and ere your trumpets sounds out to the world |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
44-46 |
|
3.539 |
On receiving a hare from my friend |
Mang every wish ha' I been hawkin |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
93-95 |
|
3.537 |
On seeing a beggar |
Now winter wi' her icy train |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
90-91 |
|
3.531 |
On the death of General Abercombie |
why stan's sae mute the ranks of war |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
75-76 |
|
3.513 |
Parody on R Bruns' man was made to mourn |
When lovely spring, with smiling train |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
21-26 |
|
3.506 |
Poetical Trifles |
Like Blue Bell, wet with morning dew |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
9-Oct |
|
3.548 |
Postscript |
Since this poor scrawl I have been writing |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
119-120 |
|
3.535 |
Song |
When first Maggie's ee its saft joys did impart |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
88-89 |
|
3.532 |
Song to be sung on St Andrews day |
In ancient time |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
77-80 |
Tune Highland Laddie |
3.534 |
Song, on the threatened invasion |
O What an unco noise and din |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
84-87 |
|
3.530 |
The Foy |
In Scotland they ha' got away |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
73-74 |
or Scotch invitation to a parting glass |
3.541 |
Three blank cards |
Is there on earth a bliss divine? |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
99-100 |
|
3.544 |
To content |
The great my envy ne'er shall meet |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
104-105 |
|
3.528 |
To Friends |
Oh, put me in the reddest low |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
69-70 |
in Manchester |
3.509 |
To Mary |
Think not, Mary, 'twas thy charms |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
16 |
|
3.511 |
To my mother |
Filial affection never reigned |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
17-18 |
|
3.515 |
Tobacco stopper |
To what base uses may we not return |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
32-34 |
Taken from the bottom of the Mars man of war |
3.540 |
Written after reading Robert Burns |
O Rab, you've set me a' on fire |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
96-98 |
|
3.542 |
Written among the rocks at Lover's Leap, Buxton |
From the mansion of pleasure and friendship I fly |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
101-102 |
|
3.527 |
Written in the birthday book |
Will ye, my friends,accept the wish |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
67-68 |
at Mrs Trevors ' , Boot Inn 1802 |
3.517 |
Written in the close of evening in Autumn |
The setting sun had sunk into the West |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
37-38 |
|
3.512 |
Written under a depression of spirits without any serious cause |
The giddy sailor on the rocking mast |
MILLS, J. H. |
Poetical Trifles |
MILLS, J. H. |
M0067362LC |
281.947 |
1.806 |
19-20 |
|
5.167 |
Who are the living of the earth? |
Who are the living of the earth? |
MILLS, John |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
44-47 |
|
1.782 |
A flower piece |
Along this narrow path, behold |
MILNER, George |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
68-69 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.783 |
A March evening |
The boughs are black, the wind is cold |
MILNER, George |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
69-70 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.784 |
Grey tower of Dalmeny |
The lovers are whispering under thy shade |
MILNER, George |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
70 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
929 |
Grey tower of Dalmeny |
The lovers are whispering under thy shade |
MILNER, George |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
163-164 |
|
1.786 |
Post cards |
Take cedar, take the creamy card |
MILNER, George |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
71 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
928 |
Post cards |
Take cedar, take the creamy card |
MILNER, George |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
163 |
|
1.785 |
Too soon |
Too soon, too soon! |
MILNER, George |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
70-71 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
832 |
The brookside |
I wandered by the brookside |
MILNES, Richard Monckton |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
38 |
|
87.766 |
A Prayer Of Thanksgiving |
I ask naught of thee this night Lord |
MILNES, Winnie |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
51 |
|
435 |
Fishing trip |
On a sea like a mill pond |
MILSOM, Keith |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
20 |
|
5.260 |
Autumn |
This summer's noan felt quite so waarm |
MITCHELL, Brian |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
10 |
|
5.135 |
Desirable residence |
Victorian 'eawses, back-ter-backs |
MITCHELL, Brian |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
8 |
|
5.136 |
Inbreeding |
Wi 'n aw bin wettin' t'babby's yed |
MITCHELL, Brian |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
8 |
|
5.259 |
R I P |
Bear up, lass, t'future's noan as black |
MITCHELL, Brian |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
9 |
|
4.364 |
Rebirth |
Wen t' river yon wur young an' free |
MITCHELL, Brian |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
44 |
|
4.361 |
The beast o' Cockey Moor |
O' Friday neets Owd Charlie |
MITCHELL, Brian |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
42-43 |
|
4.362 |
Urban renewal |
They'n flattened t' sthreet wheer Ah wur bred |
MITCHELL, Brian |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
43 |
|
81.319 |
Cosmic |
Floating |
MITCHELL, Rebecca |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
18 |
|
82.750 |
My hamster |
Sometimes |
MLYNEK, Nikkita |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
32 |
|
4.108 |
Silver and brass |
A love ter watch them likely lads |
MONGHAN, Joan |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
26 |
|
87.856 |
Heaven is... |
Heaven is a place with a sky deep blue |
MONK, Angela |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
145 |
|
82.916 |
The evil night |
The evil night |
MOONEY, Michael |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
126 |
|
437 |
Examinations |
At last in old age |
MOOR, George |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
21 |
|
436 |
When all the bees are gone |
When all the bees are gone and flowers die |
MOOR, George |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
21 |
|
85.891 |
A Disposable Society |
What a throw-away society |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
87.545 |
A little prayer |
Lord, Help me to think of those other people |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
86.658 |
Above Oswaldtwistle moors |
The well-worn road winds up towards the moors |
MOORE, Benita |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
6 |
|
85.892 |
All in the April Evening |
All in the April evening |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
82.185 |
Another spring |
Lord, let me live to see another spring |
MOORE, Benita |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
112 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
87.516 |
Autumns Glory |
On a glorious, golden Autumnal day |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
1 |
|
87.546 |
Be Thankful |
Be thankful for the simple things |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
85.896 |
Butterflies |
I walked amongst the trembling heath |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
85.880 |
Crocuses |
Purest gold, purple and white |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
85.897 |
Fighting Off The Flab |
Fighting off the flab, fighting off the flab |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
85.888 |
For "My" Bluetit |
I'd fed you every morning |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
85.900 |
Heidis Lament |
Oh why can't my mum be a real mum? |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
87.539 |
Hope |
When things look black |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
85.905 |
Just Blackpool |
Blackpool - Fish n' Chips |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
85.887 |
Life Begins at Fifty |
You're pushing fifty mother |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
87.635 |
Lifes Mysteies |
Life is a mixture of sunshine and showers |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
87.629 |
Lifes Simple Things |
No-one has time to think of now |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
85.890 |
Mi Old "Two-up Two-down" |
Oh I used to live in a little town |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
87.628 |
My Wish |
If i could have one wish today |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
85.899 |
Natures Way |
Let those who will junp in their cars |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
87.630 |
November Sun |
November sun, November sun |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
85.885 |
Ode to Spring |
When the Primrose spreads her sunny smile |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
87.538 |
Old Pendle |
I saw Old Pendle in the morning mist |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
85.904 |
On The Closure Of Blackburn Woolworths |
There's always been a woolworths |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
85.886 |
Ossie Cloggers |
Have you heard o' t' Ossie Cloggers |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
87.637 |
Our Village Church |
There it stands - steeped in history |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
85.881 |
Owd Grandad Bills Jeans |
Owd Grandad Bill as lives wi' me |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
85.889 |
Poor mans gold |
God has given man many gifts |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
87.542 |
Poor mans gold |
God has given man many gifts |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
85.882 |
Raindrops |
Whenever I see raindrops |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
85.906 |
Reflections On Life |
Do you remember |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
85.895 |
Space Age Versus Old Age |
When you and I are 82 |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
85.883 |
Tea at Grandmas in the 1930s |
When I was a little girl |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
85.884 |
Tea at Grandmas in the 1980s |
Oh hello love, yes come in love |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
87.636 |
Thank You God |
Each time I see a Celandine |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
87.541 |
Thank you lord |
Dear Lord I want to thank you |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
87.535 |
The Easter Cross On The Coppice |
The Easter Cross stands starkly |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
5.255 |
The old Ossie gobbin |
Have you heard of the township of Ossie? |
MOORE, Benita |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
63 |
|
85.898 |
The Old Ossie Gobbin |
Have you heard of the township of Ossie? |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
87.633 |
The Path Of Peace |
I love to wander at my will |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
87.536 |
The Smile of God |
See how humble celandine |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
85.893 |
The Teenage Rat Race |
Now I have two teenage daughters |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
85.901 |
Thowd Stanhill Mill Chimney |
O'er t'West end of Ossie, for seventy-seven years |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
87.632 |
To A Harebell |
I saw her hidden in the grass |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
87.515 |
To A Red Admiral Butterfly |
I've watched you there for half an hour |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
1 |
|
655 |
To a winter celandine |
I saw you nestling in the hedge |
MOORE, Benita |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
62 |
|
87.544 |
To a winter celandine |
I saw you nestling in the hedge |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
87.540 |
To an almond tree in flower on January 4th 1990 near the coppice |
I saw you on January 4th |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
87.627 |
To The First Snowdrop Of 1991 |
Sweet harbinger of spring |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
87.537 |
To the friend of man |
Dear friend of man I love you |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
87.543 |
To the woods |
I love these woodland paths and ways |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
85.903 |
Twas The Night After Christmas |
T'was the night after Christmas |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
87.638 |
Upon an April Day |
Here let me stand and drink my fill |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
85.902 |
Weeds, weeds |
Weeds, weeds, weeds, weeds |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
87.634 |
When The Rainbow Smiles For You |
There must be many times in life |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
87.631 |
Winter Jasmine |
Flower of the winter - heaven sent |
MOORE, Benita |
Rural Verses: Poems Of The Countryside |
MOORE, Benita |
M0103825LC |
394.496 |
0 |
|
|
85.894 |
Winter Landscape 1981 |
A bleak, barren February day |
MOORE, Benita |
Just life: a selection of humorous and reflective verses |
MOORE, Benita |
M0060230LC |
265.870 |
1.988 |
|
|
82.949 |
A summer's day |
The grass is fresh and green |
MOORE, Sammy |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
144-145 |
|
6.419 |
An Autumn evening |
I hear the sheep-bells tinkle on yonder grassy hill |
MOORE, Sarah Louisa |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
288-289 |
|
6.418 |
Charming May |
Come to the groves which lie in shade |
MOORE, Sarah Louisa |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
288 |
|
6.420 |
Speak softly, beloved, the angels are here |
Speak softly beloved, the angels are near |
MOORE, Sarah Louisa |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
289 |
|
82.903 |
Pond life |
There's a deep, deep pond |
MORAN, Bryony |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
119 |
|
80.814 |
The hero |
I can't live on this pension |
MORAN, G. |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
44 |
|
80.841 |
The exploited |
Fun and laughter on the factory floor |
MORAN, John |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
108 |
|
80.826 |
Little house |
A small house, a thing of lifeless brick and stone |
MORAN, Margaret |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
68 |
|
6.206 |
Ludlow Castle |
Old England's proud and lordly halls and towers |
MORANT, J. Sydney |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
33-38 |
|
87.783 |
One God |
There is only one God |
MORGAN, Margaret |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
69 |
|
87.101 |
A letter-card |
Looking at pictures in a book |
MORLAND, H. |
The Web in the Garden |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356063LC |
1.144.382 |
1.979 |
22 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.097 |
From a journal |
Xenophanes. The Wanderer. Over seas and mountains |
MORLAND, H. |
The Web in the Garden |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356063LC |
1.144.382 |
1.979 |
2 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.105 |
From a journal Three |
The butterfly released from the web |
MORLAND, H. |
The Web in the Garden |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356063LC |
1.144.382 |
1.979 |
36 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.103 |
From a journal Two |
This country of the mind. Unboundaried |
MORLAND, H. |
The Web in the Garden |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356063LC |
1.144.382 |
1.979 |
29 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.104 |
Letter Five |
The images flash back. To life in the act |
MORLAND, H. |
The Web in the Garden |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356063LC |
1.144.382 |
1.979 |
31 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.102 |
Letter Four |
The month was October. I walked in the sun |
MORLAND, H. |
The Web in the Garden |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356063LC |
1.144.382 |
1.979 |
24 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.098 |
Letter One |
I've been wandering over Europe long enough |
MORLAND, H. |
The Web in the Garden |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356063LC |
1.144.382 |
1.979 |
4 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.100 |
Letter Three |
What tricks have I to snare this Proteus? |
MORLAND, H. |
The Web in the Garden |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356063LC |
1.144.382 |
1.979 |
16 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.099 |
Letter Two |
Last night I listened again |
MORLAND, H. |
The Web in the Garden |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356063LC |
1.144.382 |
1.979 |
11 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.096 |
The web in the garden |
Looking again today at Paul van Somer's portrait |
MORLAND, H. |
The Web in the Garden |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356063LC |
1.144.382 |
1.979 |
1 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.907 |
A Return |
As in the old story - how the son of Semele |
MORLAND, Harold |
The Way It Was |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356064LC |
1.144.383 |
1.973 |
16-19 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.969 |
Alpine Ladys Mantle |
Only well-bred airs |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.908 |
And The Living Dance |
We lose the wild fertility of things |
MORLAND, Harold |
The Way It Was |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356064LC |
1.144.383 |
1.973 |
20-28 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.967 |
Cotton Grass |
The stiff grass that snatched |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.963 |
Dove Cottage |
In the cramped study |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.978 |
Dovedale |
The whole long summer's |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.906 |
Footprints |
I being here and now |
MORLAND, Harold |
The Way It Was |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356064LC |
1.144.383 |
1.973 |
Sep-15 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.954 |
From A Journal |
Is the picture false? |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters Roundabout |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356067LC |
1.157.348 |
1.978 |
35 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.956 |
From a Journal (Two) |
I went again to Crete |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters Roundabout |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356067LC |
1.157.348 |
1.978 |
41-44 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.506 |
From a Journal Five |
How strange to look in a mirror |
MORLAND, Harold |
Leaves and Letters |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356059LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
46 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.492 |
From a Journal In memoriam Steve Bico |
The scales would seem to have settled |
MORLAND, Harold |
Leaves and Letters |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356059LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
39 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.484 |
From a Journal One |
I was in a strange place |
MORLAND, Harold |
Leaves and Letters |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356059LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
1-Mar |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.510 |
From a Journal Seven |
I found I was looking, not in a mirror |
MORLAND, Harold |
Leaves and Letters |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356059LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
60-62 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.508 |
From a Journal Six |
Shrove-Tuesday today, and carnival |
MORLAND, Harold |
Leaves and Letters |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356059LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
51 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.488 |
From a Journal Three |
I left Palermo, flying home with souvenirs |
MORLAND, Harold |
Leaves and Letters |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356059LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
23-24 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.486 |
From a Journal Two |
Suppose the eagle |
MORLAND, Harold |
Leaves and Letters |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356059LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
Oct-16 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.511 |
General Postscript |
All this began in Spring, a year ago |
MORLAND, Harold |
Leaves and Letters |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356059LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
63 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.971 |
Goats Water |
In the blackest storm |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.980 |
Goldberg |
Hearing the summer |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.977 |
Hardknott |
Stone-age sheep; the fort |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.976 |
Harter Fell |
The summer evening |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.962 |
Hawkshead Churchyard |
Time, that turned their youth |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.950 |
Later |
The wheel turns endlessly roundabout |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters Roundabout |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356067LC |
1.157.348 |
1.978 |
8-Dec |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.490 |
Later, to the same |
I came quite early in the day to Cefalu |
MORLAND, Harold |
Leaves and Letters |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356059LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
31-34 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.489 |
Letter Three To A.P.C. |
My thanks. For whatever in Sicily |
MORLAND, Harold |
Leaves and Letters |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356059LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
25-Mar |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.960 |
Letter Eight |
For over a year whilst writing letters |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters Roundabout |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356067LC |
1.157.348 |
1.978 |
59-64 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.919 |
Letter Eight |
This morning I was listening to Bach |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
24-27 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.940 |
Letter Eight |
Today I went to Coniston |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters of Concern |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356056LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
26-30 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.929 |
Letter Eighteen |
You ask me for my articles of belief |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
59-61 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.922 |
Letter Eleven |
I move quietly so early in the morning |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
34-37 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.943 |
Letter Eleven |
There are times when I sit in my quiet chair |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters of Concern |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356056LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
43-46 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.947 |
Letter Fifteen |
Summer goes like a golden Orpheus |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters of Concern |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356056LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
60-62 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.926 |
Letter Fifteen |
What pattern do I see |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
50-51 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.955 |
Letter Five |
I write this letter 'for' not 'to' |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters Roundabout |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356067LC |
1.157.348 |
1.978 |
36-40 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.916 |
Letter Five |
In my mood of light |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
14-15 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.937 |
Letter Five |
So many comments and opinions |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters of Concern |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356056LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
18-20 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.507 |
Letter Five To Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji |
It was raining in Dublin. A dowdy city |
MORLAND, Harold |
Leaves and Letters |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356059LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
47-50 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.915 |
Letter Four |
Come homeward now. My quiet house |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
Oct-13 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.936 |
Letter Four |
I'm Thursday's Child |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters of Concern |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356056LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
15-17 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.953 |
Letter Four |
In an ancient midrash is the tale |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters Roundabout |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356067LC |
1.157.348 |
1.978 |
25-34 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.505 |
Letter Four To Arthur Cooper |
When I was young in London, with nothing to spare |
MORLAND, Harold |
Leaves and Letters |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356059LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
40-45 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.946 |
Letter Fourteen |
I had a letter from a friend, who'd seen |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters of Concern |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356056LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
57-59 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.925 |
Letter Fourteen |
The little beck by the sawmill |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
47-49 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.920 |
Letter Nine |
Now. What must I, may I choose? |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
28-31 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.941 |
Letter Nine |
Voltaire with his usual wit |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters of Concern |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356056LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
31-37 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.930 |
Letter Nineteen |
I must learn to live in doubt |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
62-63 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.933 |
Letter One |
A while ago I wrote- How long? A letter or two |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters of Concern |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356056LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
5-Jun |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.912 |
Letter One |
Here is my room and mind |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
2-Mar |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.949 |
Letter One |
In the changing light at the mere disturbance |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters Roundabout |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356067LC |
1.157.348 |
1.978 |
1-Jul |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.485 |
Letter one to Laura Villasenor |
I call this Hill Top - yet |
MORLAND, Harold |
Leaves and Letters |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356059LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
4-Sep |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.939 |
Letter Seven |
Appropriate, I suppose that this Child of Aquarius |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters of Concern |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356056LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
24-25 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.918 |
Letter Seven |
Earlier I wrote of the 'theologians |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
20-23 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.958 |
Letter Seven |
This evening, turning the leaves of a catalogue |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters Roundabout |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356067LC |
1.157.348 |
1.978 |
53-57 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.928 |
Letter Seventeen |
I've struggled with Spinoza since my youth |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
56-58 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.938 |
Letter Six |
A stranger came to the door - a young man |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters of Concern |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356056LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
21-23 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.917 |
Letter Six |
As night falls come outdoors with me |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
16-19 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.957 |
Letter Six |
Often even now, as I bend grunting a little |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters Roundabout |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356067LC |
1.157.348 |
1.978 |
45-52 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.509 |
Letter Six To My Nephew Colin |
Make no mistake, I'm a mere fell-walker facing |
MORLAND, Harold |
Leaves and Letters |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356059LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
52-59 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.927 |
Letter Sixteen |
Last night I saw again |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
52-55 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.942 |
Letter Ten |
Goethe's Faust has a God |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters of Concern |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356056LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
38-42 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.921 |
Letter Ten |
Perhaps I have played Spectator Mundi |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
32-33 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.945 |
Letter Thirteen |
True religion and undefiled |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters of Concern |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356056LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
52-56 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.924 |
Letter Thirteen |
Which of us can stay in a cell |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
44-46 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.935 |
Letter Three |
I must have been a lad with a curious mind |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters of Concern |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356056LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
Nov-14 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.914 |
Letter Three |
Preserver and destroyer |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
7-Sep |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.952 |
Letter Three |
The Tibetans call them Yidags |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters Roundabout |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356067LC |
1.157.348 |
1.978 |
21-24 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.923 |
Letter Twelve |
I had expected a fine austerity |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
38-43 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.944 |
Letter Twelve |
You sent me a cryptic card |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters of Concern |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356056LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
47-51 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.934 |
Letter Two |
Bodhisattva reaches for the Hare in t'moon |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters of Concern |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356056LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
7-Oct |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.913 |
Letter Two |
Life searches for itself. The agent |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
4-Jun |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.951 |
Letter Two |
One afternoon in Chania, drowsy with the heat |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters Roundabout |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356067LC |
1.157.348 |
1.978 |
13-20 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.487 |
Letter Two to John |
You sent me one of the cards they sell in the foyer |
MORLAND, Harold |
Leaves and Letters |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356059LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
17-22 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.932 |
Letters of Concern - praescript |
In the Ceremonial Hall |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters of Concern |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356056LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
1-Apr |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.911 |
Letters To Martin - praescript |
When I was sick you sent me a print |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
1 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.984 |
Other Mens Pictures - Goya |
To stand in a storm |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.983 |
Other Mens Pictures - Rembrandt |
Even in green youth |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.982 |
Other Mens Pictures - Watteau |
Only a picture |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.972 |
Packhorse Bridge at Wasdale |
The rough road, with true |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.964 |
Paradox |
At the coach-station |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.970 |
Peregrine |
Dour as a hermit |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.968 |
Place Fell |
Three heraldic deer |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.948 |
Postscript |
In two days' time the postman's holidays are due |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters of Concern |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356056LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
63-65 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.931 |
Postscript |
Time to seal the envelope |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters To Martin |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356068LC |
1.144.388 |
1.978 |
64-67 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.965 |
River Duddon |
Squatting on a stone |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.905 |
Roads |
Let difference lie between us |
MORLAND, Harold |
The Way It Was |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356064LC |
1.144.383 |
1.973 |
1-Aug |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.979 |
Rossett Ghyll |
The young frogs this spring |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.909 |
Souvenirs Along The Way |
We came in by the Sheep Gate called St. Stephen's |
MORLAND, Harold |
The Way It Was |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356064LC |
1.144.383 |
1.973 |
29-55 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.981 |
Speculations |
A butterfly lights |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.966 |
Stones on Scafell |
That stubborn grey wall |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.959 |
The Dance in God |
Quickly! Up to heaven mount |
MORLAND, Harold |
Letters Roundabout |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356067LC |
1.157.348 |
1.978 |
58 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.910 |
The Way Back |
I was wakened again by the cry from the minaret |
MORLAND, Harold |
The Way It Was |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356064LC |
1.144.383 |
1.973 |
57-59 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.491 |
To the same, later again |
I was in the garden again, and half-asleep |
MORLAND, Harold |
Leaves and Letters |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0356059LC |
1.144.371 |
1.978 |
34-38 |
Clayton-le-Moors author |
87.973 |
Wastwater Screes |
As if the mountain |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.974 |
Wetherlam |
Sheltered in itself |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
87.975 |
Wetherlam - 2 |
The miners have gone |
MORLAND, Harold |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
81.467 |
My mum |
I love my mum |
MORLEY, Chris |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
95 |
|
81.294 |
Fireworks |
Fireworks up |
MORRELL, Christopher |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
5 |
|
434 |
One by one |
One by one |
MORRIS, Tina |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
19 |
|
423 |
They didn't tell us |
They didn't tell us |
MORRIS, Tina |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
3 |
|
82.802 |
How strange |
How strange to think that someone else |
MORRIS, Zoe |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
60 |
|
1.382 |
Serenade |
I will come to thee, love, when the bright stars are shining |
MORT, William |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
76 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.445 |
Serenade |
I will come to thee, love, when the bright stars are shining |
MORT, William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
301 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.585 |
Songs of the people No 1. The gatherer |
Hack! To the hurried trampling |
MORT, William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
456-458 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.453 |
Songs of the people No 1. The gatherer |
Hack! To the hurried trampling |
MORT, William |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
167-8 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.534 |
The bride |
She left her father's land and the birthplace of her mother |
MORT, William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
437-438 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and T T Wilkinson |
1.193 |
The bride |
She left her father's land and the birthplace of her mother |
MORT, William |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
229-230 |
|
82.510 |
The last behest |
Come hither, wife! I'd speak with thee a while before I go |
MORT, William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
396-398 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.423 |
The last behest |
Come wither, wife! I'd speak with thee a while before I go |
MORT, William |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
130-131 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.417 |
The lost brother |
Mother, look forth on yon beautiful cloud |
MORT, William |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
119 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.502 |
The lost brother |
Mother, look forth on yon beautiful cloud |
MORT, William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
379-380 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.412 |
The pact to his wife |
I saw thee in the noisy town, a unit 'mid the throng |
MORT, William |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
112-113 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.496 |
The poet to his wife |
I saw thee in the noisy town, a unit 'mid the throng |
MORT, William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
369-370 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and T T Wilkinson |
82.871 |
I want to paint |
I want to paint people's faces red |
MORTON, Kirsty |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
101 |
|
5.210 |
All's well |
Ah reckon tha'll know young Jackie Wainwright |
MORTON, Trevor J. |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
35 |
|
5.209 |
Requiem for Coppice Pit |
Ah took a walk ter see a mate, lived on this new estate |
MORTON, Trevor J. |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
34 |
Fishing |
5.211 |
Swabby's chimbley |
When Ah were young Ah worked at t' mill |
MORTON, Trevor J. |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
36 |
Chimneys; Mill closures |
4.867 |
Eawr factory skoo |
Ther never wur such times as these, naw, nee'r sin th'world wur made |
MOSS, E. |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
108-109 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
82.981 |
The cave of curses |
The cave was as dark as midnight |
MOSS, Laura and RELTON, Rosie |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
162 |
|
115 |
Jacob from Bacup |
The place I was born in is a Lancashire town of renown |
MOSTER-MERRITT, E. |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
202-203 |
With music by E Moster-Merritt |
318 |
Jacob from Bacup |
The place I was born in is Bacup |
MOSTER-MERRITT, E. |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
173 |
|
80.858 |
Me Mam |
My mother was a lady |
MULLARKEY, Catherine |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
136 |
|
378 |
Mattins at Lourdes |
Jewel in a Pyranean setting |
MULLIGAN, Mary |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
30 |
|
816 |
The chosen maid |
More pure is she than blackthorn foam |
MULLIGAN, Mary |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
64 |
|
1.048 |
A Lancashire lad's vision |
Aw've allus had it i' mi yed at when Aw riach three-score |
MULLIN, John |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
213-214 |
|
1.049 |
The lint amung the yure |
Aw saunter't reawnd th' owd village yon' |
MULLIN, John |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
214-215 |
|
4.304 |
A Lankisher lass |
Ah've travell't a lot abeawt t' world i' mi time |
MUNDY, Randall |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
11 |
|
4.505 |
A Lenkisher lass |
A've travellt a lot abeawt t' world i' mi time |
MUNDY, Randall |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
105 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
1.154 |
A Lenkisher Lass |
A've travell't a lot abeawt t'word |
MUNDY, Randall |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
221 |
|
1.052 |
A potato pie |
Yo' may co me lung an' lenky |
MUNDY, Randall |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
222-226 |
|
4.506 |
A potato pie |
Yo' may even say a'm ectin' like a foo' - like a foo |
MUNDY, Randall |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
106-107 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
1.155 |
Mi bed |
When wayried eawt at th' eend o't'day |
MUNDY, Randall |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
227 |
|
4.302 |
Smookin' |
When talkin' o' smookin', owd smooker grow'n warm |
MUNDY, Randall |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
10 |
|
4.507 |
Springtime |
Deawn i' ev'ry dell an' dingle |
MUNDY, Randall |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
107 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
1.051 |
Spring-time |
Deawn i' ev'ry dell an' dingle |
MUNDY, Randall |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
220-221 |
|
1.053 |
Stalybridge Wakes |
T'Bridge Wakes is a fair 'ut coms off i' July |
MUNDY, Randall |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
226-227 |
|
1.050 |
Th' origin o' life |
Heaw did life originate, sir? |
MUNDY, Randall |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
219-220 |
|
4.263 |
A friend of mine |
That Light of Lights is on her face |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
65-66 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
6.625 |
A heart of gold |
These words fell on my ears to-day |
MUNRO, Margaret |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
447-448 |
|
4.220 |
A June Morning |
Listen! the birds are waking |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
23-24 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.245 |
A May morning |
Come to the woods with me |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
44-45 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.249 |
A spring day |
Now comes the merrie, merrie May |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
48-49 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
6.624 |
A spring day |
Now comes the merrie, merrie May |
MUNRO, Margaret |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
447 |
|
4.065 |
A stranger in a strange land |
He stood in the quiet street |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
Dec-13 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
6.627 |
An Easter thought |
In sauntering down the old familiar path |
MUNRO, Margaret |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
449 |
|
4.266 |
An Easter thought |
In sauntering down the old familiar path |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
67-68 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.248 |
An ideal man |
An ideal man has courage true |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
48 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.275 |
An old portrait |
Fair maid who lived so long ago |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
78 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.064 |
Apples of gold |
Dear, let your glad, sweet thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
11-Dec |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.233 |
Castleburgh Heights, Settle |
We climbed the rocky heights to-day |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
36 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.225 |
Christmas Eve |
In the firelight glow, as I sit dreaming |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
28-29 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.228 |
Clasped hands |
Be good, my boy, a mother murmured low |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
31-32 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.125 |
Come ye apart |
Come ye apart! and leave the thronging town |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
13-14 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.271 |
Distance lends enchantment |
The hills look green that are far away |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
|
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.234 |
Fair Women |
I see Priscilla spinning, beside her cottage door |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
37-39 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.273 |
Fetters and storms |
The captive lion in his narrow den |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
76-77 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.132 |
Friends |
Dear Friend of mine! If I could give |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
19-20 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.267 |
Friends for life |
So we are friends for life, - Well, be it so |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
68-70 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.246 |
Gathered gold |
Dear one could I but find the key |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
45-46 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.268 |
God's messenger |
Dear Heart she said, take courage still and trust |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
70 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.251 |
Good-night! |
Good night beloved, thy sleep is deep and peaceful |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
50-51 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.270 |
Grasmere |
Green are the distant hills, divinely fair |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
72 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.236 |
Hath the Rain a Father ? |
These words came into my mind to-day |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
39 |
Job 38. 28. Poems by Blackburn author |
4.247 |
How long O lord? |
How long, O lord, how long |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
46-47 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.240 |
I shall be satisfied when I awake |
When I awake! I shall begold him |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
40 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.262 |
In dull November |
Oh, dreary month of gloomy thought |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
64-65 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.063 |
In my heart's garden |
I paused to look into my heart one day |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
10-Nov |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.265 |
In pastures green |
He leadeth me where pastures gleam |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
67 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.258 |
In the garden |
I dreamed a dream. 'Twas in a garden fair |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
58-61 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.250 |
It is bright somewhere |
What shall we do when the light is fled |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
49 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.242 |
Loneliness |
The way lies long and dark before me now |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
41 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.238 |
Love's Departure |
But now-the skies are overcast |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
40 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.239 |
Love's Return |
Bur hark! a well-loved step she hears |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
40 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.127 |
Messenger of Spring |
A little bird came twittering to me |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
15 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.274 |
Mother's darling |
What is my rosebud thinking of now? |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
77 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.219 |
My Choice |
If God some night should say to me |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
21-23 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.230 |
My guardian Angel |
Were I an artist, I would paint thy face |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
33-34 |
Matt. xviii, 10. Poems by Blackburn author |
4.129 |
My Queen |
Near velvet sward and gay paterre |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
17 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.277 |
My wish |
I do not long to scale the heights of fame |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
80 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.226 |
Never |
Never ' is a high blank wall |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
29 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.269 |
On a flower |
Sweet faded flower! Thy eartly beauty |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
71 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.257 |
One summer day |
Joy seems to fill each living thing |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
57-58 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.259 |
Our atmosphere |
Some folks live in a selfish atmosphere |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
61-62 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.060 |
Prelude |
As I work amid Life's busy throng |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
6 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.241 |
Resignation |
Dear Father - God help us to tread with patience |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
41 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.232 |
Resting Time |
The busy stream of Life goes rushing on apace |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
35-36 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.252 |
Rydal Falls |
The sound of the rushing water |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
51-53 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.260 |
Ships that pass |
It was only a casual meeting |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
62-63 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.254 |
St Valentine's Day |
I have heard, in days of 'Auld Lang Syne' |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
54-55 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.126 |
Sunset at Dunoon |
The heavens are leaning down towards the earth |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
14-15 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.264 |
Sweet Lavender |
Who'll buy my flowers? Who'll buy? |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
66 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.231 |
The Captain of His Soul |
He stands serene, amidst the wreck |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
34-35 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.237 |
The Coming of Love |
He came-she new not that he came |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
40 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.244 |
The covenanter's bible |
I read of kingly, noble deeds |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
42 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
6.630 |
The Covenanter's bible |
I read of kingly, noble deeds, they did in days of yore |
MUNRO, Margaret |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
451-452 |
|
4.235 |
The Fairy Prince |
How shall I Know him ? With careless feet |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
38-39 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.276 |
The flight of song |
A maiden sat singing beside her door |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
79-80 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.218 |
The Gadarenes |
The master came, with his great heart of love |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
20-21 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.128 |
The Gates of Eden |
When by the Angel led from Eden |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
15-16 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.256 |
The grave of love |
It was dead: so I buried it out of sight |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
56-57 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.272 |
The Holy Land |
Come rest thy heart and walk awhile with me |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
73-75 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.224 |
The Last Look |
One last, long look ere the grave seals up |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
27 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
6.629 |
The last look |
One last, long look ere the grave seals up |
MUNRO, Margaret |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
450-451 |
|
4.253 |
The Nightingale's Song |
Oh! bird that ever haunts the lonliest place |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
53-54 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.243 |
The palm tree in the desert |
Majestic stood that stately tree |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
42 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.223 |
The Pastor's Dream |
I had a dream - a wondrous dream |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
26 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
6.628 |
The seasons |
The Spring, she is a tricky sprite |
MUNRO, Margaret |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
449-450 |
|
4.061 |
The Threshold of Life |
My school-days were over - I musing sat |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
7-Aug |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.130 |
The Two Angels |
The Angel Sorrow looketh pale |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
17-19 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.222 |
The Valley of Baca |
I entered in the gloomy vale Vale of Tears |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
25 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.261 |
The waters of Marah |
Peace! restless heart, when waves of trouble roll |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
63-64 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.229 |
There shall be no more sea |
The sea divides - two hearts are sundered wide |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
32-33 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.131 |
Those Eyes |
They haunt my waking dreams |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
19 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.227 |
To my dog |
Is it 'cupboard love', I wonder |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
30-31 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.221 |
Vain Regrets |
If I could only kiss you once and tell you |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
24-25 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
4.255 |
Wall-flowers |
The sweet wall-flowers in their homely dresses |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
55-56 |
Poems by Blackburn author |
6.626 |
Wall-flowers |
The sweet wall-flowers in their homely dresses |
MUNRO, Margaret |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
448-449 |
|
4.062 |
What shall it profit? |
Twas in a garden of roses fair |
MUNRO, Margaret |
A Cluster of Thoughts |
MUNRO, Margaret |
M0009732LC |
32.900 |
1.908 |
9-Oct |
Poems by Blackburn author |
82.906 |
On Everest |
On Everest |
MURPHY, Barney |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
120 |
|
87.081 |
A Tale of Two Donkeys |
I carried Him from Bethelem |
MURPHY, D. |
Close encounters |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312527LC |
879.114 |
0 |
4 |
Accrington poet |
87.084 |
And The Rains Came Down |
It was a foolish thing to do |
MURPHY, D. |
Close encounters |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312527LC |
879.114 |
0 |
8 |
Accrington poet |
87.094 |
Come Higher |
The feast was ready, the table set |
MURPHY, D. |
Close encounters |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312527LC |
879.114 |
0 |
22 |
Accrington poet |
87.085 |
I am here |
Where were you, Lord, when I was lonely |
MURPHY, D. |
Close encounters |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312527LC |
879.114 |
0 |
10 |
Accrington poet |
87.083 |
More than enough |
He was only a boy, and he never thought |
MURPHY, D. |
Close encounters |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312527LC |
879.114 |
0 |
6 |
Accrington poet |
87.086 |
Passing Through |
I only saw Him once, out yonder |
MURPHY, D. |
Close encounters |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312527LC |
879.114 |
0 |
11 |
Accrington poet |
87.095 |
Second Best |
When God made man and woman, too |
MURPHY, D. |
Close encounters |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312527LC |
879.114 |
0 |
23 |
Accrington poet |
87.082 |
Song of the Rainbow |
God of the vast and boundless sea |
MURPHY, D. |
Close encounters |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312527LC |
879.114 |
0 |
5 |
Accrington poet |
87.092 |
The Leper |
You see me crouching, day by day |
MURPHY, D. |
Close encounters |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312527LC |
879.114 |
0 |
20 |
Accrington poet |
87.087 |
The Prodigal |
It was a long and winding road |
MURPHY, D. |
Close encounters |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312527LC |
879.114 |
0 |
12 |
Accrington poet |
87.088 |
The Star |
It was a single star, nestling like a jewel |
MURPHY, D. |
Close encounters |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312527LC |
879.114 |
0 |
14 |
Accrington poet |
87.093 |
The Still, Small Voice |
Not in the earthquake, not in the fire |
MURPHY, D. |
Close encounters |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312527LC |
879.114 |
0 |
21 |
Accrington poet |
87.089 |
The Weaver |
He holds the colours in his hands |
MURPHY, D. |
Close encounters |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312527LC |
879.114 |
0 |
15 |
Accrington poet |
87.091 |
Where are You, Lord? |
How can we hope to understand |
MURPHY, D. |
Close encounters |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312527LC |
879.114 |
0 |
18 |
Accrington poet |
87.080 |
Who touched me? |
She touched Him; hoping in the crowd |
MURPHY, D. |
Close encounters |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312527LC |
879.114 |
0 |
3 |
Accrington poet |
87.090 |
Will you follow me? |
Will you follow me? the Saviour said |
MURPHY, D. |
Close encounters |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312527LC |
879.114 |
0 |
16 |
Accrington poet |
86.061 |
Christmas |
Born in a stable a long time ago |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
Think on these things |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312528LC |
879.115 |
2.000 |
15 |
Accrington poet |
86.054 |
Is it I Lord |
Who was to blame Lord, was it I |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
Think on these things |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312528LC |
879.115 |
2.000 |
7 |
Accrington poet |
86.053 |
My own Emmaus |
The road is long and the way is clear |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
Think on these things |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312528LC |
879.115 |
2.000 |
6 |
Accrington poet |
86.065 |
Noah |
Tell me, Noah, just why are you building a boat? |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
Think on these things |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312528LC |
879.115 |
2.000 |
20-21 |
Accrington poet |
86.066 |
Per Ardua Ad Astra |
God made the hills, the mountains, too |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
Think on these things |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312528LC |
879.115 |
2.000 |
22 |
Accrington poet |
86.052 |
Peter |
He stood in the shadows watching and waiting |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
Think on these things |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312528LC |
879.115 |
2.000 |
4-May |
Accrington poet |
86.060 |
Psalm |
Lord, you know me, you have always known me |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
Think on these things |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312528LC |
879.115 |
2.000 |
14 |
Accrington poet |
86.056 |
The Agnostics prayer |
You say there is a God |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
Think on these things |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312528LC |
879.115 |
2.000 |
8-Sep |
Accrington poet |
86.057 |
The Call To Worship |
The pews have been polished, the floor has been swept |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
Think on these things |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312528LC |
879.115 |
2.000 |
10 |
Accrington poet |
86.059 |
The Calling |
Above the world's clamour I hear the Lord |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
Think on these things |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312528LC |
879.115 |
2.000 |
Dec-13 |
Accrington poet |
86.063 |
The Legend Of The Olive Tree |
In the garden of Gethsemane |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
Think on these things |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312528LC |
879.115 |
2.000 |
18 |
Accrington poet |
86.058 |
The Old And The New |
The church is old and stands alone |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
Think on these things |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312528LC |
879.115 |
2.000 |
11 |
Accrington poet |
86.067 |
The Rich Fool |
He built his barns, the rich man |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
Think on these things |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312528LC |
879.115 |
2.000 |
23 |
Accrington poet |
86.062 |
The Stranger |
He came inside and bowed his head |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
Think on these things |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312528LC |
879.115 |
2.000 |
16-17 |
Accrington poet |
86.064 |
The Way, The Tuth And The Life |
Like a boat on a storm-tossed sea |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
Think on these things |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312528LC |
879.115 |
2.000 |
19 |
Accrington poet |
86.051 |
Think on these things |
God looked on all created things |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
Think on these things |
MURPHY, Dorothy |
M0312528LC |
879.115 |
2.000 |
3 |
Accrington poet |
80.842 |
Passing |
She sits alone in her hospital bed |
MURRAY, Paul |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
108 |
|
86.666 |
Battle of night and day |
There goes the bell |
MURRAY, Rebecca Louise |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
14 |
|
81.369 |
In the dark |
My coat looks as if it's a crooked old man |
MURRAY, Stuart |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
42 |
|
87.795 |
Christian Unity |
We pray and God answers, but seldom in the way |
MURRAY, Tom |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
82 |
|
81.287 |
A revenge spell |
Make their brain mad |
MURRAY, Zak |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
2 |
|
530 |
An old Dalesman's lament |
Ah'se fairly middlin' weel te saa |
MYRES, Irene E. |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
102 |
Yorkshire poetry |
81.331 |
Farrah |
Always loving person |
NADIN, Gianne |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
23 |
|
87.722 |
Son Of Man, Son Of God |
Dead of night in Bethlehem |
NASH, Michael |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
8 |
|
86.755 |
The hills of bonny Colne |
The hills of bonny Colne look down |
NAUGHTON, Hilda |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
103 |
|
87.736 |
The Seasons |
The earth awakens from her sleep |
NAUGHTON, Hilda |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
21 |
|
5.647 |
The billmen of Bowland |
Against tenfold his numbers on Agincourt's plain |
NED of the fell |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
247-248 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
87.773 |
The Good Samaritan In The Valley Of Tears |
As weeks turned to months I tried to hide |
NELSON, Andrew |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
58 |
|
688 |
Oh! Heh ye seen wor Jimmie |
Ah've lost that little son o'mine, ha've hunted up an' doon |
NELSON, Harry |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
199 |
Tyneside |
82.771 |
Flowers |
Bluebells blue as the sky |
NELSON, Melissa |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
43 |
|
65 |
A Welcome to owd scholars |
To all th' owd scholars sitting here |
NEMO |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
72-73 |
|
83.572 |
Follow me, a hymn |
Hark! the Saviour's voice is calling |
NEVINS, J. W. |
SKETCHES and poems by local writers, edited by John U. Smith |
|
M0129272LC |
491.715 |
18 |
14 |
Editor was member of the Burnley Literary and Philosophical Society |
81.310 |
Kittens |
K ittens are funny, cuddly, cute and furry |
NEWBERY, Clare |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
13 |
|
82.120 |
A child's song |
Little toiling humming bee |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
36-37 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.532 |
A Sailor Lad I Lo'e |
A sailor lad I lo'e |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
97-98 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.303 |
Ah! Bright thou sparklest, bonnie burn |
Ah! Bright thou sparklest, bonnie burn |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
30-31 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.197 |
Ardwall |
Say, blooms the daisy yet as fair |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
126-127 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
82.202 |
Ardwall's shore |
Swift flows the tide of Solway o'er |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
134 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.529 |
Arin's Well |
O hae ye seen my lassie braw |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
95 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.432 |
Auld Care |
Gae wa' wi' your sour-looking visage frae me |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
94 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.292 |
Bessy's grave |
O ken ye the dingle |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
20-21 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.194 |
Bethesda |
Methinks we see the poor man lie |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
121-122 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.413 |
Blink, wee star, blink |
Blink, wee star, blink, the sun hath sought |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
75 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.280 |
Boyhood's Home |
What recollections fill my mind |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
7-Aug |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.429 |
Cam' Ye By Craignethen Wood? |
Cam' ye by Craignethen wood? |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
90-91 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.373 |
Cardness Castle |
The hours are lang, the hours are drear |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
58-59 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.418 |
Cease railing at fortune |
Cease railing at fortune |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
79-80 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.370 |
Clyde |
Over the Corra |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
50-51 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.403 |
Come, bright-eyed contentment |
Come, bright-eyed contentment |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
64 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.196 |
Doth beauty haunt |
Doth beauty haunt a summer sky? |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
124-125 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.402 |
Flora is weeping |
Flora is weeping, her soldier is sleeping |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
62-63 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.401 |
Forward to Scotia |
The ship hies swiftly o'er the sea |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
61-62 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.310 |
Go, Mourn, ye Wooers |
Go, mourn, ye wooers, ane and a' |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
42-43 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.424 |
Haunts of Boyhood |
Haunts of boyhood, how i love thee |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
85-86 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.206 |
Her soldier son |
A widow sat in her poor lone room |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
146-147 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.372 |
He's owre the hills that I lo'e best |
He's owre the hills that I lo'e best |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
57-58 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.308 |
Hope |
Come, cheering Hope, with all thy lightsome train |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
38-40 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.203 |
Hope |
I've heard the dreary Winter's blast |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
135 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.426 |
How Bonnie is yon Mossy Brae |
How bonnie is yon mossy brae |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
88-89 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.404 |
I ken a young lassie |
I ken a young lassie, fu' tender and bonnie |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
64-65 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
1.750 |
In Rossendale there lives a lass |
In Rossendale there lives a lass |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
14 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
4.316 |
I've lost my Love |
I've lost my love! I've lost my love! |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
48 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.406 |
Jamie's guid and Jamie's braw |
Jamie's gawd and Jamie's braw |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
66 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.311 |
Jeanie Anderson |
Awa', wee bird, thou'rt joking noo |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
43-44 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.285 |
Lines on a favourite canary |
Now hush'd that merry pipe for aye |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
14 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.313 |
Lorn Lesley |
Lorn Lesley, she stands on the black sea-shore |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
45-46 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.209 |
Love and life |
All hail celestial love! Still cross my path |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
163-164 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
82.115 |
Love laughs at locksmiths |
Love laughs at locksmiths, sages say |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
29 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.408 |
Low down in the dingle |
Low down in the dingle |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
68-69 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.421 |
Mary |
One summer evening, as I strayed |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
82-83 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.412 |
Moose water |
Where waves the green brechan |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
73-74 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.306 |
Music (A fragment) |
When light of limb we scale the rugged steep |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
32-34 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.193 |
Music and memory |
Sweet is her gentle voice and clear |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
119-120 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
82.114 |
My guidman |
Dearer to me is my guidman |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
27-28 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
82.116 |
My lassie braw |
O have you seen my lassie braw |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
30 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.407 |
My lassie lo'es the violet |
May lassie lo'es the violet |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
67-68 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.419 |
My lassie's but a wee, wee thing |
My lassie's but a wee, wee thing |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
80-81 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.283 |
My Window Plants |
Tis very cheering thus to sit and gaze |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
9-Oct |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.117 |
O balmy June |
O balmy June! thy fragrant breath |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
31-32 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
82.121 |
O dear to me |
O dear to me the darling maid |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
38-39 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
1.749 |
O tell not me of sunless hours |
Life is a dreary round, they say |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
13-14 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
4.399 |
Oh! Houk my grave |
Oh houk my grave, cried Johnie Gee |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
59-60 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.187 |
Our old friend John |
Slow and scanty of speech, our old friend John |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
82-83 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.400 |
Out owre the lift |
Out owre the lift the moon shone clear |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
60-61 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.278 |
Prelude |
Far frae the city's endless din |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
1-May |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.299 |
Robin |
O, Johnie Frost! O, Johnie Frost! |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
29-30 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.191 |
Rossendale revisted |
Dear Rossendale! dear Rossendale! |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
89-91 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
82.198 |
Scotch sangs |
How cheer'ly slips awa' the night |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
128-130 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.533 |
Sing Na O' Summer Bow'rs |
Sing na o' summer bow'rs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
98-99 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.428 |
Sober Souter Wattie, O! |
O' a' the souters neath the sun |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
88-89 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.423 |
Song |
Life ois a dreary round, they say |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
85 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.291 |
Spring |
And Spring is here, parent of happy days |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
19-20 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.201 |
Spring |
See, Spring! With lap of budding sweets arrive! |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
133 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.369 |
Stanzas |
Scotland I love thee dear to this young heart |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
49-50 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.279 |
The Auld Beggarman |
Cauld is the blast, and drear's the day |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
5-Jun |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.431 |
The Auld Oak Stood |
The auld oak stood by the river side |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
93-94 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.186 |
The bold weaver |
Langsyne, when Frenchmen, ill at ease |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
79-81 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
82.119 |
The cares o' the warl' |
I once had a lover - haith he was a queer one |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
34-35 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.417 |
The carle lap across the burn |
The carle lap across the burn |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
78-79 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.281 |
The Dewdrap, and the Moonbeam |
O oozie cow'red the Lintie |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
8-Sep |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.284 |
The fairy's funeral |
Come and see the fairy's funeral |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
Oct-13 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.122 |
The gloaming came down |
The gloaming came down o'er the forest o' Guy |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
40-41 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.409 |
The lass o' inversnaid |
There's some wha woo for stocket farms |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
69-70 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.422 |
The lass that looked sae sly at me |
Ae day in Simmer I cam owre |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
84 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.410 |
The lav'rock he is up in air |
The lav'rock he is up in air |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
70-71 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.125 |
The lonely leaf |
Sere Autumn reigned, and fierce and rude |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
61-65 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.289 |
The lugubrious man |
One morn I met him in the street |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
18 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.427 |
The Mavis He Sings |
The mavis he sings by his nest |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
90 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.312 |
The Misanthorpe |
Far in the forest shade he sat |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
44-45 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.415 |
The mist is on yon mountain high |
The mist in on yon mountain high |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
76-77 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.297 |
The mountain maid |
Far from the busy world of strife |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
27-28 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.118 |
The nest is vacant |
The nest is vacant, all the brood |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
33 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
82.189 |
The old mill-wheel |
The old mill-whell goes straining |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
86-87 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
82.113 |
The old smithy |
See, frae yon smeaket tall lum head |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
13-16 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
82.207 |
The quest of the Holy cabinet |
An honoured trade is the carpenter's |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
148-149 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
82.123 |
The shepher's invocation |
Come my darling, come my bride |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
42 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
82.195 |
The snow |
Ah! Who hath not bounded with joy |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
123 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.371 |
The Soldier's Story |
When my heart it was young, when my bluid it was warm |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
51-54 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.425 |
The Stepping-Stanes |
Fu' rapid row'd the bonnie Fleet |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
86-87 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.190 |
The tramp |
Where do you live? growled his Worship |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
88 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
82.199 |
The trees were mirror'd |
The trees were mirror'd in pools |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
131 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
82.200 |
The vale of fleet |
I know of a pleasant nook |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
132 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
82.192 |
The village curlers |
Sing ho! For the ice of the winter |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
105-108 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.411 |
There stands a wee cottage fu' Bonnie |
There stands a wee cottage fu' Bonnie |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
72-73 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.530 |
There's Ae Bonnie Lassie |
There's ae bonnie lassie |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
96 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.416 |
There's an auld tree buds |
There's an auld tree buds |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
77-78 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
1.748 |
There's pleasure and health in contentment |
There's pleasure and health in contentment |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
Dec-13 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
4.314 |
To my Wee Cousin |
The birthday o' a princely boy |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.957 |
47 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.307 |
To the Auld Year |
Adieu, Auld Year! my glad hopes wither |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
35-38 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.309 |
To the cuckoo |
Ah, may a fond admiring bard |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
40-42 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.286 |
To the primrose |
How fair is Nature to the eye |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
15-17 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.204 |
To the war and to the tented field |
To the war and the tented field my lad has gone away |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
139-140 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.321 |
True Philosophy |
Go, help the poor and needy |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
49 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.205 |
Uncle Bob |
My uncle Bob is a sailor |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
141-145 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.405 |
Up, lad up |
Up, lads up, to the fields let's hie |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
65 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.188 |
Watching and praying |
Deacon Jonas one day - 'tis with sorrow confess'd |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
84-85 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.294 |
Wee Maggie |
Keeking by the window sill |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
21 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.430 |
When I Was A Lassie O' Merry Nineteen |
When I was a lassie o' merry nineteen |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
92 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.531 |
When Ilka Wee Gowan |
When ilka wee gowan has steekit his ee |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
96-97 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.414 |
When sleeps the wren beneath the broo |
Now ken ye yonder shady walk |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
75-76 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
4.420 |
When snaw lies thick |
When snaw lies thick on Tintock's tap |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
81-82 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.124 |
When sorrow glooms |
When sorrow glooms my noonday sky |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
43 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
1.751 |
Willie is waiting for me |
The mavis he sings by his nest |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
15 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
4.305 |
Winter |
Grey Winter hath a thousand charms for me |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
31-32 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.210 |
Youth and age |
Few are the joys that scale the bounding wall |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
164-166 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
82.208 |
Youth and solitude |
From thine abode, supernal Hebe, deign |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Sketches in prose and verse |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0040275LC |
151.171 |
1.905 |
161-163 |
Author spent most of his life in Blackburn and Rossendale |
4.296 |
Youthful associates |
Oft has thou been, fair memory |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
Poems and Songs |
NEWBIGGING, Thomas |
M0070397LC |
290.377 |
1.857 |
24-26 |
Author spent most of his life in Rossendale and Blackburn |
82.645 |
Spring |
Owd Winter gat notice to quit |
NEWBOULT, F. J. |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
87-89 |
2nd ed rev |
81.384 |
My hamster |
My hamster is gorgeous |
NEWBURN, Ashley |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
51 |
|
323 |
Christmas dinner 1960 |
Mi boss and his wife, they gave us our dinner |
NEWMAN, Gertie |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
146 |
|
126 |
Mi clogs |
I used to catch t' tram |
NEWMAN, Gertie |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
225 |
|
1.753 |
By the sea |
I stood by the sea when the sun shone bright |
NEWSAM, William Cartwright |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
18 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.752 |
Looking back |
Returned from travel, after many years |
NEWSAM, William Cartwright |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
16-17 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.754 |
Sweet mother, dear |
Sweet mother, dear! Sweet mother, dear! |
NEWSAM, William Cartwright |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
19 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
504 |
Slugs |
Away from ray of sun |
NEWTH, B. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
55 |
|
84.146 |
Modernity |
Life is a game, so they say! |
NEWTON, Walter |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
66 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.147 |
To the Peter Pans of today |
Fain would I steer my battered bark |
NEWTON, Walter |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
67-69 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
687 |
Ode to the first Christmas |
How came ye, travellers, to the humble cave |
NIBS |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
200 |
Pseudonym of Joe Macdonald |
6.306 |
A summer idyll |
I knew she did not love me as we sat |
NICHOLSON, G. R. H. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
202 |
L T H - nom de plume |
6.298 |
Gloria in excelsis |
I lay on the sun-splashed moor |
NICHOLSON, G. R. H. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
195 |
G N - nom de plume |
80.799 |
The parting |
I thought the passing years |
NICHOLSON, Hilda |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
24 |
|
82.852 |
When I go on a walk in the hills I must remember |
Busting boots |
NICHOLSON, Laura |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
91 |
|
86.690 |
In praise of th'owd money |
We knew their worth by name |
NICHOLSON, Raymond |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
38 |
|
82.455 |
Lovely Susannah |
Lovely Susannah's away to the wood |
NICHOLSON, Thomas |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
320 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.387 |
Lovely Susannah |
Lovely Susannah's away to the wood |
NICHOLSON, Thomas |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
81 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
84.221 |
Heritage |
By that still silent pool seeming asleep |
NOBLE, Frank W. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
119-121 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.222 |
I' very truth |
In days of old when knights were bold |
NOBLE, Frank W. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
122 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
2.363 |
Autumn, 1885 |
Yes, Austunm comes again and finds me here |
NOBLE, James Ashcroft |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
92 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.362 |
Father and child |
Father and child together lie at rest |
NOBLE, James Ashcroft |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
91 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.364 |
George Eliot: Christmas Eve, 1880 |
Thy prayer is granted; thou hast joined the Choir |
NOBLE, James Ashcroft |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081087LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
92 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.361 |
The red thread of honour: a modern ballad |
Among the hills of India |
NOBLE, James Ashcroft |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
89-91 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
82.898 |
The magic box |
I will put in the box |
NOBLETT, Matthew |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
116 |
|
86.723 |
Poetic poverty |
So far as I can find |
NORCROSS, John |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
71 |
|
87.788 |
Caring |
God created the world for everyone |
NORMAN, Audrey |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
75 |
|
82.834 |
The forest's story |
I remember when life was good |
NORMAN, Thomas |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
79 |
|
830 |
Country station |
We nobbut stopped a minute theer |
NORTH, Gordon Allen |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
26 |
|
519 |
Little piecer |
T'buzzer's bloin' Willie, lad |
NORTH, Gordon Allen |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
90 |
Yorkshire poetry |
86.688 |
I'm just a unicorn |
I'm a stranger to this land of yours |
NORTH, Peter M. |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
36 |
|
3.234 |
Be still, o thought |
My mind is in a chaotic state |
NOWELL, P. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
108-109 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.233 |
My heart |
My heart is like a singing bird |
NOWELL, P. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
107 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
81.456 |
The mowing disaster |
The grass looked like spiky hair |
NUTTALL, Aaron |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
91 |
|
83.362 |
A wooing I went |
Through love's flame grown intense |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
64-65 |
|
83.349 |
Address to Mr Flea |
Oh dear! I hav'nt slept a wink |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
43-44 |
|
83.352 |
Ambition |
Oh, proud ambition, thou dost rear thy head |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
47 |
|
83.357 |
Baby |
Baby, baby, breathing soft |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
54-56 |
|
83.417 |
Birth of Minerva |
Great Jove, forssoth, was not exempt from pain |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
119-120 |
|
83.415 |
Castor and Pollux |
Castor and Pollux unto seamen are |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
117 |
|
83.413 |
Cupid and Psyche (reconciliation) |
Up, up they winged them with elated flight |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
115 |
|
83.411 |
Cupid's wrath |
Avaunt, - thou faithless Psyche! Get thee gone! |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
113 |
|
83.363 |
Death |
Slayer am I, with brute destructive fang |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
66-74 |
|
83.360 |
Death's march |
Life is busy |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
60-61 |
|
83.353 |
Deliver me |
Deliver me |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
48 |
|
83.374 |
Demeter |
Seared are my days as the leaves |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
102-104 |
|
83.348 |
Epictetus |
Slave art thou? Nay: free as the wand'ring air |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
42 |
|
83.407 |
Hesperus |
Sweet Hesperus, the friend of tired day |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
106-107 |
|
83.335 |
In silvery dell |
Come with me to the brook, ho! |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
9 |
|
83.350 |
Income tax sheet |
Of documents supremely cursed |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
45 |
|
83.414 |
Ixion |
Why did'st thou slay thy sire importunate |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
116 |
|
83.337 |
Keats |
Was thy name in water wrtitten |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
12 |
|
83.354 |
Lead me |
Lead me |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
49 |
|
83.343 |
Listen! |
Now electors |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
26-33 |
|
83.336 |
Lux in tenebris |
Through fever of bettle |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
10-Nov |
|
83.406 |
Mercury |
Bewitching Maia, goddess of the plains |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
105 |
|
83.359 |
Modesty |
What, of all, stands forth more queenly |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
59 |
|
83.346 |
Mohammed |
Mohammed! Mohammed! Come forth of thy slumbers |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
39 |
|
83.342 |
Mr world |
Who is it the world calls clever? |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
23-25 |
|
83.332 |
My first-born (volume) |
Come hither, offspring, first-born of my line! |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
3 |
|
83.339 |
Napoleon |
Monarchs come, and monarchs go |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
15-18 |
|
83.408 |
Niobe |
Summer to Winter hath flown |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
108-109 |
|
83.409 |
Pandora |
Pandora the fair! how art thour reviled |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
110-111 |
|
83.371 |
Proserpine or spring |
Tell me - I prythee, thou maiden sweet |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
96-99 |
|
83.412 |
Psyche |
About thy shoulders filmy wings were spread |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
114 |
|
83.410 |
Psyche's folly |
One burning drop - ah, woeful 'tis to tell |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
112 |
|
83.373 |
Queen of Hades |
Come, sweet Proserpina, back |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
101 |
|
83.372 |
Rise proserpina |
Rise proserpina! Shun the ebon throne |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
100 |
|
83.355 |
Tears |
What more potent, suave, and seemly |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
50 |
|
83.338 |
The fallen leaf |
There dost thou lie, mutest leaf |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
13-14 |
|
83.345 |
The hour galss |
Come, weary monk, and take me to thy cell |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
36-38 |
|
83.358 |
The lost sheel |
Come, little shell |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
57-58 |
|
83.333 |
The primrose bank |
Show me a bank where the grasses grow |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
5-Jun |
|
83.364 |
The schoolroom |
Before stands the schoolroom on the hill |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
75-83 |
|
83.334 |
The sea gull |
Bravely the sea gull skims the wake |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
7-Aug |
|
83.347 |
The straying mouse |
Why, little mousie, hast thou stayed away |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
40-41 |
|
3.238 |
The village fete |
No village fete could ever be complete |
NUTTALL, Henry |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
115-116 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
83.368 |
The village fete |
No village fete could ever be complete |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
88-89 |
|
83.365 |
The village graves |
Hard by the school, the village dead repose |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
84 |
|
3.236 |
The village pastor |
Within the confines of yon rural space |
NUTTALL, Henry |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
112-113 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
83.366 |
The village pastor |
Within the confines of yon rural space |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
85-86 |
|
83.369 |
The village schoolmaster |
The village master, tall, and somewhat spare |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
90-93 |
|
3.235 |
The village tavern |
Within the tavern fronting down the lane |
NUTTALL, Henry |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
110-111 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
83.370 |
The village tavern |
Within the tavern fronting down the lane |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
94-95 |
|
3.237 |
The village wedding |
At every wedding he was ruling guest |
NUTTALL, Henry |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
114 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
83.367 |
The village wedding |
At every wedding he was ruling guest |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
87 |
|
83.416 |
Themis |
Blindfolded Themis with impartial hand |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
118 |
|
83.341 |
Time |
Time, time, withering time |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
21-22 |
|
83.351 |
Time's wheel |
As here I sit, and contemplate the while |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
46 |
|
83.344 |
To myold pipe |
Upon my couch |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
34-35 |
|
83.361 |
Uncertainty or doubt |
I could chose round and round |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
62-63 |
|
83.340 |
Were I a lark |
Could I but sing |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
19-20 |
|
83.356 |
What the hand |
What the hand |
NUTTALL, Henry |
Poems |
NUTTALL, Henry |
M0067287LC |
281.847 |
1.920 |
51-53 |
|
70 |
Presented to Martha and John Ormerod |
Dear Martha and John, I thought that I would |
NUTTALL, Hepzibah |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
77-78 |
|
86.788 |
Tims mistaken word |
Your dad is upstairs with flu |
NUTTALL, Margaret |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
120 |
|
5.811 |
A birthday rhyme |
The earth's daly motion brings darkness and light |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
62-63 |
|
5.808 |
A brave townsman |
When nations to war's wicked influence yeild |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
58-59 |
|
5.805 |
A burlesque |
Why all this useless squander, tell me why? |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
48-52 |
|
5.827 |
A Burnley fisherman's song |
In Burnley, the pride of the Calder and Brun |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
88-93 |
|
5.833 |
A Christmas song |
Old time is on the wing, my boys, the world is all in motion |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
104-108 |
|
5.840 |
A Christmas song |
When days are short and nights are cold, and cruel roars the blast |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
131-133 |
|
5.852 |
A New Year's address |
Dear Foden, our grand institution you make |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
155-157 |
|
5.819 |
A poem in Scotch |
Dear editor, you should na be stealin awa |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
74-76 |
|
5.797 |
A song of Buxton |
Oh! Buxton is a pretty place |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
32-34 |
|
5.818 |
A story of a poodle |
My dear Mister editor Houlding |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
72-73 |
|
83.039 |
Acrostic |
Remember, dear Chairman, I partly agreed |
NUTTER, Henry |
Rhymes for the Burnley Literary and Scientific Club |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0129167LC |
491.524 |
1.878 |
16-18 |
Reprinted from "Transactions of the Burnley Literary and Scientific Club" |
83.044 |
Address to Mr Tattersall Wilkinson, antiquarian |
Dear Wilkinson, old antiquarian friend |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
17-18 |
|
1.739 |
After reading the story of Nathan Barlow |
Dear Friend, the book that I enclose |
NUTTER, Henry |
Nathan Barlow: sketches in the retired life of a Lancashire butcher |
DOHERTY, Austin |
M0129193LC |
491.555 |
18 |
Flyleaf |
2nd ed. Manuscript poem pasted to flyleaf, signed by Henry Nutter, Darwin House, Burnley May 1, 1892 |
5.795 |
An answer to the Mayor's invitation to dinner |
My dear Mr Mayor, you may take it for granted |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
29-31 |
|
5.846 |
An elergy on Edwin Waugh |
Grim death, old nature's ancient foe |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
142-144 |
|
5.843 |
Answer to an invitation to a party |
Your kind invitation came duly to hand |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
139-140 |
|
5.790 |
Answer to an invitation to dinner |
My esteemed Mr Gott, I could see through the plot |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
16-17 |
|
5.841 |
Christmas astronomical song |
This wicked world still onward flies, and measures out a year, sir |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
134-137 |
|
5.851 |
Christmas song on co-operation |
As time rolls on and years expire |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
150-154 |
|
5.829 |
Dissolution of the Oddfellow's Club, Barrowford |
Most noble grand, and past grandmasters too |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
96-97 |
|
5.849 |
From Burnley |
All hail, fair Leeds, with Mayoral badge and apron |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
147-148 |
|
5.835 |
Geological Christmas song |
Tis Cronkshaw's feast my pen employs |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
111-115 |
|
1.957 |
Healey Height |
One morning I strayed on the heights of old Healey |
NUTTER, Henry |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, (part 2, modern). Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
715811827 |
79.254 |
1.976 |
535-536 |
Reprinted from 3rd edition, first published 1882. Revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.800 |
Healey height |
One morning I strayed on the heights of old Healey |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
39-40 |
|
82.634 |
Healey Height |
One morning I strayed on the heights of old Healey |
NUTTER, Henry |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
535-536 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.824 |
In answer to a present |
Dear Lady, the present's arrived, with your card |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
80-81 |
|
5.798 |
In answer to slanderous words |
Light hearts have good reason |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
34-36 |
|
5.815 |
Job Whittam Hartley, guardian |
The poor man's friend, the pauper's stay |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
68-69 |
|
5.806 |
Literary and scientific club dinner |
Ye noble men with learning fraught |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
52-56 |
|
5.848 |
Long sermons |
A little boy, named Simeon Pratt |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
145-147 |
|
5.837 |
Man and the ape |
Come list to what i've got to say |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
119-122 |
|
5.842 |
Michael the brave |
In a Barrowford dandyshop, long, long ago |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
137-139 |
|
5.838 |
New inventions |
Tis pleaseant to gather each year and behold |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
122-126 |
|
5.802 |
Old Jim the engineer |
We boast of British heroes brave |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
42-44 |
|
5.803 |
Old Jim, the engine driver |
Death throws gloom o'er every station |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
44-45 |
|
5.809 |
On the birthday of a niece |
Many happy returns of the day |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
59-60 |
|
5.830 |
On the death of a nephew in his 21st year, Nov 1, 1888 |
In silence I entered the home of my youth |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
97-98 |
|
5.796 |
On the marriage of Mr Charles Whittle and Miss Mary Bond, Burnley |
Dear Mary, you tender your freedom this day |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
31-32 |
|
5.813 |
On the occasion of Miss Horner leaving Burnley |
A miden's song we often heard |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
65-66 |
|
5.820 |
On the occassion of the Rev William Reid leaving Nelson |
I'm sorry, dear amos, in fact, I am grieving |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
77 |
|
5.814 |
On the presentation to Mr Lewis Grant |
When told that a gift was in stone for our friend |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
66-68 |
|
5.807 |
On the removal of the Mayor's lamps |
Ye neighbours, come join my affliction and sorrow |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
56-56 |
|
5.828 |
Opening of the town hall, Burnley |
With tuneful strains my simple lines infuse |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
93-96 |
|
5.794 |
Reply to H Burrows |
Dear Burrows, the verses you recently sent |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
28-29 |
|
5.792 |
Reply to the antiquarian |
Some verses from a friend I saw |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
18-22 |
|
5.812 |
Song |
Ye prudent and wise who are not very grave |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
63-64 |
|
5.854 |
Song - Old Bethesda |
I'll sing of Bethesda, the pride of my youth |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
159-160 |
|
83.038 |
Song for the Burnley Literary and Scientific Club |
Dear Chairman, friends and kindly neighbours |
NUTTER, Henry |
Rhymes for the Burnley Literary and Scientific Club |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0129167LC |
491.524 |
1.878 |
Mar-15 |
Reprinted from "Transactions of the Burnley Literary and Scientific Club" |
5.834 |
Song on evolution |
As years roll round with rapid flight |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
108-111 |
|
5.836 |
Spiritualism - a burlesque |
The world still moves around my boys |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
115-119 |
|
5.831 |
Sung at the Mayor's dinner, January 24th 890 |
Come, dear capricious, careless muse |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
99-103 |
|
5.793 |
The astronomer's reply to the antiquarian's second letter |
Dear friend of antiquarian fame |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
23-28 |
|
5.839 |
The Burnley water scheme |
Two years ago, when this borough was flourishing |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
127-130 |
|
5.799 |
The fall of Alexandria |
The British fleet on July tenth in eighteen eighty two sir |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
36-39 |
|
5.801 |
The girl in the calico dress |
In flowery July upon Healey's proud height |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
41-42 |
|
5.810 |
The Mayor of Brunswick |
Ye fountains bursting from the rock or fen |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
60-62 |
|
5.823 |
The Mayor's dinner |
My dear Mr Mayor, at your call i'll be there |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
79-80 |
|
5.789 |
The new borough of Nelson |
Come, listen to my simple song with patience and attention |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
Nov-16 |
|
5.822 |
The Queen and John Bright |
I'll sing you a song of a lady |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
78-79 |
|
5.821 |
The Royal visit to Burnley |
Hail! grandson of our noble Queen |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
77-78 |
|
5.804 |
The tram |
Come around, my merry boys, you that merit earthly joys |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
45-48 |
|
1.487 |
The tram |
Come around, my merry boys, you that merit earthly joys |
NUTTER, Henry |
The Tram |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0353488LC |
1.131.708 |
1.996 |
|
A song first sung at a Burnley Literary and Scientific Club soiree 1881. Contained in material at Burnley Library collected by tramways expert Michael Harrison. (30118098997517) |
5.850 |
The Turkish atrocities |
There arose from the East a loud cry o'er the sea |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
148-149 |
|
5.844 |
To Dr Burns on his silver wedding day |
I wish you most fervently many returns |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
140-141 |
|
5.817 |
To Miss F. E. J. on her twenty first birthday |
Dear Florence, this day is the last in the year |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
71-72 |
|
5.816 |
To Miss Nannie May C- |
Your appearance on earth was a blessing devine |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
70-71 |
|
5.853 |
To Mr A. Stansfield, Kersal Moor, Manchester |
Hail, brother bard, with cultured brain! |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
158-159 |
|
5.832 |
To Mr and Mrs H. S. on their wedding day |
I ish from this morning, dear Herbert and Annie |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
103-104 |
|
5.845 |
To Mr C, on receiving a brace of pheasants |
Your messenger came to my cottage this morning |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
141 |
|
1.738 |
To Mr G C Ogden |
With joy men are blooming, in life's autumn gloaming |
NUTTER, Henry |
Nathan Barlow: sketches in the retired life of a Lancashire butcher |
DOHERTY, Austin |
M0129193LC |
491.555 |
18 |
Flyleaf |
2nd ed. Manuscript poem pasted to flyleaf, signed by Henry Nutter, Darwin House, Burnley Oct 16, 1891 |
5.788 |
To Mr George Crompton, violinist, Laund |
This simple scroll in haste i've penned |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
8-Nov |
|
5.787 |
To Mr H Houding, Burnley |
Hail! Sweetest poet of the Brun |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
5-Aug |
|
5.847 |
To Mr William Christie, the real Scotch minstrel |
The theme of my verses, dear Christie, old friend |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
144-145 |
|
5.826 |
To the chairman of the Nelson Local Board |
I thank you, my friend, for your kind invitation |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
87-88 |
|
5.825 |
Written for the Victorian Assembly room, December 31 1887 |
The year will end when you observe this night |
NUTTER, Henry |
Local rhymes |
NUTTER, Henry |
M0001767LC |
4.513 |
1.890 |
81-87 |
|
6.222 |
Vote of sympathy |
O gallant Cretan heroes |
O. O. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
102-103 |
|
4.368 |
John-Willy Handcart |
So this is t' story o' John-Willy Handcart |
OAKLEY, John |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
47 |
|
82.161 |
Smokers warnin' |
Dusta' ever think ut somookin', mec's a rudy mess |
OAKLEY, John |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
71 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
5.244 |
Village folk |
If you'll just 'ark t' me, I'll tell thi' a tale |
OAKLEY, John |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
53 |
|
475 |
Independence Day |
I do not wish to stagnate |
O'BRIEN, J. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
25 |
|
82.860 |
My pets |
In my house we have lots of pets |
O'BRIEN, Kerry |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
96 |
|
81.516 |
The clock |
Round goes the fingers on the clock |
O'BRIEN, Robyn |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
120 |
|
82.873 |
Come with me |
Come with me |
O'CONNOR, Kieron |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
102 |
|
441 |
Hebden Bridge |
Towering terraced houses stand |
OLDHAM, Kenneth |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
29 |
|
440 |
Kinder Scout |
Dark sombre crag of massive grit |
OLDHAM, Kenneth |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
28 |
From: The Pennine Way |
444 |
Kirk Yetholm |
Legs like jelly in the speed of this descent |
OLDHAM, Kenneth |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
30 |
|
443 |
Malham |
Gordale's cyclopean crags |
OLDHAM, Kenneth |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
29 |
|
442 |
Withins Moor (The Bronte Country) |
Away from the cloud and veil of smoke |
OLDHAM, Kenneth |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
29 |
|
82.695 |
Pain |
Pain is like a storming bullet piercing through your skin |
OLYOTT, Thomas |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
2 |
|
80.845 |
Dreaming on a circle |
Don't we get lost in the landscape, like animals do |
O'NEIL, Mark Luke |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
122 |
|
82.757 |
The bin liner |
The dust bag has a dark, black shadow |
O'NEILL, Ross |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
35 |
|
81.328 |
A cosmic poem |
In space there is a planet |
O'NEILL, Siobhan |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
22 |
|
87.746 |
|
Jesus loves us dearly |
OPENSHAW, Margaret |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
31 |
|
425 |
In praise of the new |
Quiet green road |
OPENSHAW, Sheila |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
7 |
|
424 |
The planners |
This is a mean town, with wide, concrete streets |
OPENSHAW, Sheila |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
6 |
|
87.558 |
A Tomb in Cremona |
It was 90 and high noon, too hot even to stroll about the streets of this |
ORMEROD, L. |
MARY'S miscellany: prose and verse by Lancashire writers, compiled by Mary Carter Clark |
|
M0040456LC |
151.580 |
1.966 |
20-21 |
|
87.552 |
Mi Tackler |
Neaw my tackler's cawd Jim - 'ee's a Lancashire lad |
ORMEROD, L. |
MARY'S miscellany: prose and verse by Lancashire writers, compiled by Mary Carter Clark |
|
M0040456LC |
151.580 |
1.966 |
11 |
|
87.554 |
Once a Donkey |
Once a donkey, shaggy and brown |
ORMEROD, L. |
MARY'S miscellany: prose and verse by Lancashire writers, compiled by Mary Carter Clark |
|
M0040456LC |
151.580 |
1.966 |
14 |
|
19 |
Ribblesdale |
I know of a valley where rivulets three |
ORMEROD, Lilian |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
119-120 |
|
82.728 |
The monster |
A body like green, wobbly jelly |
ORMROD, Luci |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
18 |
|
81.323 |
Cosmic |
Stars, planets |
ORTON, Tom |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
20 |
|
87.784 |
Born Again |
I looked for Jesus not long ago |
OTTLEY, Brenda |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
70 |
|
81.415 |
Alien friends |
I was flying in my ship |
OTTNER, Marcus |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
68 |
|
2.935 |
Sanctuary |
The lucent moon clears the dark caverns of the night |
OVERTON, Florence |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
118 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
3.239 |
Shepherd of the hill |
O shepherd, on the moors remote and still |
OVERTON, Florence |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
117 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
87.729 |
Each Day |
I open my eyes each morning |
OWEN, I. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
14 |
|
82.946 |
Hidden treasures |
Octopuses and jellyfish guard the treasure |
OWEN, Michael |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
142-143 |
|
82.608 |
The window on the cliff top |
What! Margery, still at your window |
OXLEY, W H |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
71-73 |
2nd ed rev |
86.759 |
The Meeting |
In the unfamiliar room I crept, aware of atmosphere - so cold |
PALMER, Barbara Olive |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
107 |
|
410 |
A reyt good do |
Hasta geet thi clogs on, Joe? - Tha'll need'em on today! |
PALMER, Fred |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
109 |
|
4.099 |
A reyt good do |
Hester geet thi clogs on, Joe? - tha'll need 'em on today |
PALMER, Fred |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
14 |
|
8 |
Acres |
It's very near eight hundred years sin' things |
PALMER, Fred |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
58-61 |
|
59 |
Maggie |
It's a pity th'owd Queen deed - but then we all hev |
PALMER, Fred |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
210-212 |
|
4.146 |
T' seawnd o' t' sea |
Neaw t' seawnd o' t'sea's a funny seawnd |
PALMER, Fred |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
67 |
|
4.147 |
T' seawnd o' t' sea |
When Ah wor nobbut pey-siza, an' mi elders went away |
PALMER, Fred |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
68 |
|
58 |
The 'Sasparella Men' |
Ah'm deawnd to tell yo a story |
PALMER, Fred |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
208-210 |
|
86.710 |
My sweetheart |
I'd like to introduce you to my sweetheart |
PARKER, Sandra |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
58 |
|
81.357 |
Colour |
Black is the cauldron of a witch |
PARKES, Christopher |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
35 |
|
82.540 |
Lines written in a boat |
Pull! Pull! My boys, the stream runs fast |
PARKINSON, Rev. Richard |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
444-445 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.533 |
Song of the exile |
Farewell the shores I long have loved |
PARKINSON, Rev. Richard |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
435-436 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and T T Wilkinson |
82.589 |
Stanzas written to music |
Tis sadly sweet, in day's decline |
PARKINSON, Rev. Richard |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
465 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.454 |
The farewell |
Here have I loiter'd many an hour |
PARKINSON, Rev. Richard |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
319 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.636 |
The hunter's song |
With staff in hand, the hunter stood |
PARKINSON, Rev. Richard |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
237-239 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.444 |
Lines written in a boat |
Pull! Pull! My boys, the stream runs fast |
PARKINSON, Richard |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
157 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.440 |
Song of the exile |
Farewell the shores I have loved |
PARKINSON, Richard |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
153 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.458 |
Stanzus written to music |
Tis sadly sweet, in day's decline |
PARKINSON, Richard |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
173 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
2.197 |
The farewell |
Here have I loiter'd many an hour |
PARKINSON, Richard |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
111 |
|
1.352 |
The hunter's song |
With staff in hand, the hunter stood |
PARKINSON, Richard |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
28-29 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
81.360 |
My dad |
Wears a shirt and a tie |
PARR, Kathy |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
37 |
|
81.375 |
Space |
Space, space all black and white |
PARRY, Emma |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
45 |
|
930 |
Orrest Head, Windermere |
Three friends who climbed this rugged brow |
PARTINGTON, Samuel W. |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
170 |
|
82.901 |
My dog |
My dog is special |
PASSERINI, Paolo |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
118 |
|
87.961 |
In Memoriam |
You ask who thus commands |
PASTERNAK, Boris |
Beside the Lake: poems in the Japanese style |
MORLAND, Harold |
M0074346LC |
300.329 |
1.970 |
|
Author is from Clayton-le-Moors |
3.960 |
A blade of grass |
You ask for a poem |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
109 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.466 |
A creature to tell the time by |
I created for myself |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
112 |
Revised edition |
3.981 |
A drop of unclouded blood |
All day I will think of these cities floating fragile |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
135 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.965 |
A few sentences about beauty |
When something vanished from her face |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
116 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.468 |
A green sportscar |
And later, to come across |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
114 |
Revised edition |
3.477 |
A small dragon |
I've found a small dragon in the woodshed |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
130 |
Revised edition |
3.488 |
A talk with a wood |
Moving through you one evening |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
149 |
Revised edition |
3.470 |
After breakfast |
After breakfast |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
116-117 |
Revised edition |
3.983 |
Albatross ramble |
I woke this morning to find an albatross staring at me |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
137-140 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.476 |
Any volunteers |
He keeps his coat on constantly now expecting any moment |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
128-129 |
Revised edition |
3.484 |
Come into the City Maud |
Maud, where are you Maud |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
141-142 |
Revised edition |
3.469 |
Doubt shall not make an end of you |
Doubt shall not make an end of you |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
115 |
Revised edition |
3.962 |
Friends |
I met them in bars and in railway stations |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
112-113 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.980 |
Frogs in the wood |
How good it would be to be lost again |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
134 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.968 |
Ghost culture |
The Minister kneeling on the floor hunched over |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
119 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.967 |
Her song |
For no other reason than that I love him wholly |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
118 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.474 |
In a new kind of dawn |
In a new kind of dawn |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
126 |
Revised edition |
3.978 |
In the high-rise Alice dreams of wonderland |
She received a parcel through the post |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
132 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.974 |
Interruption at the Opera House |
At the very beginning of an important symphony |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
126-127 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.971 |
It is time to tidy up your life |
It is time to tidy up your life |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
122-123 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.972 |
January gladsong |
Seeing as yet nothing is really well enough arranged |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
124 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.464 |
Little Johnny's confession |
This morning |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
110 |
Revised edition |
3.490 |
Looking back at it |
At nineteen I was a Brave Old Hunchback |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
151 |
Revised edition |
3.482 |
Meat |
Some pretty little thoughts |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
135-138 |
Revised edition |
3.964 |
Ode to celestial music |
It's not celestial music. It's the girl in the bathroom singing |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
115 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.486 |
On a horse called autumn |
On a horse called autumn |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
147 |
Revised edition |
3.475 |
On the dawn boat |
On the dawn boat |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
127 |
Revised edition |
3.986 |
On time for once |
I was sitting thinking of our future |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
144 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.465 |
Party piece |
He said |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
111 |
Revised edition |
3.977 |
Proclamation from the new Ministry of Culture |
A festival is to be held during which |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
131 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.472 |
Prose poem towards a definition of itself |
When in public poetry should take off its clothes and wave to |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
119-124 |
Revised edition Actual first line - one |
3.483 |
Room |
Room you're toneless now |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
139-140 |
Revised edition |
3.485 |
Schoolboy |
Before playtime let us consider the possibilities |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
143-146 |
Revised edition |
3.480 |
Seascape |
Gulls kiss the sun |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
133 |
Revised edition |
3.973 |
Simple lyric |
When I think of her sparkling face |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
125 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.478 |
Sing softly |
Sing softly |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
131 |
Revised edition |
3.479 |
Sleep now |
Sleep now |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
132 |
Revised edition |
3.963 |
Someone coming back |
Now that the summer has emptied |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
114 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.473 |
Something that was not there before |
Something that was not there before |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
125 |
Revised edition |
3.984 |
Sometimes it happens |
And sometimes it happens that you are friends and then |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
141 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.463 |
Somewhere between heaven and Woolworths, a song |
She keeps kingfishers in their cages |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
109 |
Revised edition |
3.471 |
Song for last year's wife |
Alice, this is my first winter |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
118 |
Revised edition |
3.491 |
Spiritual awareness |
And when the doomy prophet says |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
152 |
Revised edition |
3.975 |
Spring song |
I thought the tree was rather ordinary until yesterday |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
128-129 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.487 |
The fruitful lady of dawn |
She walks across the room and opens the skylight |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
148 |
Revised edition |
3.492 |
The last residents |
Mayakovosky, sitting at your window one afternoon |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
153 |
Revised edition |
3.970 |
The likelihood |
At some time or other the dust will change its mind |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
121 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.966 |
The literary gathering |
In those rooms I become more distant than ever |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
117 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.961 |
The right mask |
One night a poem came to a poet |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
110-111 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.481 |
The River Arse |
The rain is teeming |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
134 |
Revised edition |
3.976 |
The stolen orange |
When I went out I stole an orange |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
130 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.969 |
The true confessions of a manuscript sniffer |
Deep down in the literary vaults protected by verse-loving |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
120 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.489 |
Travelling between places |
Leaving nothing and nothing ahead |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
150 |
Revised edition |
3.985 |
Tristan, waking in his wood, panics |
Do not let me win again, not this time |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
142-143 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.982 |
Waves |
And the one throwing the lifebelt |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
136 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
3.467 |
Where are you now, Batman? |
Where are you now, Batman? Now that Aunt Harriet has |
PATTEN, Brian |
The Mersey sound |
HENRI, Adrian, McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
140423184 |
552.251 |
1.967 |
113 |
Revised edition |
3.979 |
You come to me quiet as rain not yet fallen |
You come to me quiet as rain not yet fallen |
PATTEN, Brian |
New volume, [by] Adrian Henri [and others] |
HENRI, Adrian |
140423192 |
24.033 |
1.983 |
133 |
After the Mersey sound - McGOUGH, Roger, PATTEN, Brian |
81.999 |
Sunset |
Dead is the wind |
PAULDEN, Jas |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
6 |
|
80.823 |
They met at the bottom of the gardens |
They met at the bottom of the gardens |
PAYNE, A. T. |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
58 |
|
87.815 |
Remember... |
Remember who you are |
PAYNE, Lorraine |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
103 |
|
80.868 |
D S S |
Sitting in the D S S |
PAYTON, Rita |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
149 |
|
2.467 |
Night scenes in the city |
Doleful, and dreary, and sad |
PEACOCK, John Macleay |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
183-185 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.468 |
To a friend |
When I was but a bairn, I heard |
PEACOCK, John Macleay |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
185-186 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
463 |
The inevitability of the predatory imperative as perceived by a prowling panther in pursuit of it's prey |
slow prowl |
PEACOCK, M. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
10 |
|
81.568 |
His Set'dy Hawpen'y |
Eh lads, but that youngster of eawrs |
PEARCE, Alfred H. |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
215-216 |
|
82.013 |
King Christmas |
Hail, day of King Christmas, the heartiest day in the heartiest time of the year |
PEARCE, Alfred H. |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
41 |
|
81.569 |
Th' Mill Whistle |
Ay, deawn wi' th'mill whistle! That meitherin' nuisance |
PEARCE, Alfred H. |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
216-217 |
|
394 |
The lassie of the olden days |
Oh many a theme for a poet's dream |
PEARCE, Alfred H. |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
39 |
|
82.142 |
To my books |
O refuge from the sordid toil and strife |
PEARCE, Alfred H. |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
38 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
82.001 |
Wakes time |
O the wakes, O the wakes |
PEARCE, Alfred H. |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
16-17 |
|
1.054 |
Aw'm seein' mi lassie to-neet |
Aw'm stuck i' th' owd warks a' th' best heawrs o' mi day |
PEARCE, Alfred Henry |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
231-232 |
|
1.055 |
Cheerio! |
Ay! |
PEARCE, Alfred Henry |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
232-233 |
|
933 |
King Christmas |
Hail, day of King Christmas, the heartiest day in the heartiest time of the year |
PEARCE, Alfred Henry |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
175-176 |
|
934 |
Lanky |
Up i'th'dusk o'th' early morn |
PEARCE, Alfred Henry |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
176-178 |
|
931 |
Autumn leaves |
Falling, falling, slowly falling |
PEARCE, Edith |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
172-173 |
|
932 |
Snowflakes |
Slowly and silently, hither and thither |
PEARCE, Edith |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
173 |
|
367 |
Sunset and nighfall |
Eventide in flaming raiment |
PEARCE, Edith |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
23 |
|
82.006 |
To a red rose |
Hail, queenly Rose, with deepest crimson dyed! |
PEARCE, Edith |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
29-31 |
|
87.823 |
To A Church Far Away |
Guardian of faith of centuries past |
PEARSON, C. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
111 |
|
87.787 |
All Around |
Lord, I know you are all around |
PEERS, Barbara |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
74 |
|
87.726 |
Count On The Lord |
It's nice to place confidence and love |
PENDLEBURY, Ken |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
11 |
|
804 |
Witchery |
In the lea of sweet briar, its stucco bodice hanging untidely over |
PENN, E Josephine |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
11 |
|
387 |
Easter dawning AD33 |
After the splash and the salvos, the crow-plumed |
PENN, E. J. |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
35 |
|
849 |
Embankment track |
A bleary oil lamp marked the cindered patch |
PENN, Josephine E. |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
129 |
|
82.974 |
Ten things found in a witch's pocket |
A key that opens by itself |
PEPPER, Ashleigh |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
158 |
|
518 |
Pratty flowers o'er the Holmfirth anthem |
Abroad for pleasure as I was a -walking |
PERKINS, J. |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
89 |
Yorkshire poetry |
6.469 |
From 'The Servian slave's appeal' |
Thou goddess of Freedom, give ear to my prayer |
PERRING, Samuel |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
344-345 |
|
6.470 |
Night and death |
The light of day has passed away; deep silence reigns around |
PERRING, Samuel |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
345 |
|
86.874 |
Valentines Day |
A bouquet of flowers for Valentine's Day |
PERRIS, Ann |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
126 |
|
6.240 |
The 'Varsity undergrad |
He passes his life in a dusty rooom and lives upon maths or Greek |
PETER THE HERMIT |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
135-136 |
|
5.246 |
Gooin' t' Messiah |
Mi Dad wer' reet fond o' music |
PETERS, Eva |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
54 |
|
87.828 |
God's Natural World |
God gave us His natural world |
PETERS, Linda |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
116 |
|
82.876 |
Classroom |
The blackboard moaned at the chalk |
PETHERICK, Katie |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
103 |
|
82.884 |
It was so quiet |
It was so quiet that I heard |
PETHERICK, Lauren |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
107 |
|
80.859 |
The evacuee |
Mrs. Platt was a homely soul |
PETTIGREW, E. |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
136-137 |
|
87.700 |
20th Century Innovations |
Our forebears who lived in the last century |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
118 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.522 |
20th century innovations |
Our forebears who lived in the last century |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
18 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.682 |
A Commitment |
As those stories of tragedy and wars do unfold |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
97 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.624 |
A Gracious Lady |
This Lady has graced the highest court circles |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
41 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.619 |
A Great Harwood Scientist |
Doctor Anne is little known in her home town |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
34 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.625 |
A Lady Of Faith |
There was a lady supreme by the name of Irene |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
42 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.575 |
A Lancashire Lad |
I was born and bred in Lancashire in nineteen twenty-four |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
Dec-13 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.526 |
A lifetime in East Lancashire |
East Lancashire in the Twenties and Thirties |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
22 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.686 |
A lifetime of change |
Oh how life has changed in this lifetime of mine |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
101 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.530 |
A page or two of dialect |
A tewd thi I warnt gooin' upt theer |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
27 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.709 |
A Policemans Dilemma |
Whilst the Pope was in the U.S of A |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
129 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.567 |
A Ribblesdale Weekend |
From the pretty village of Whalley |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
3 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.642 |
A Tale Of The Orient |
The views from the ferry as we cross over the Channel |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
75 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.640 |
A Tale Of The Orient (Hong Kong) |
I arrived in Hong Kong its temperature so lavish |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
74 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.615 |
A visit to Coburg |
Verses compiled from notes and personal observations whilst |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
71 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.701 |
Ailments And Afflictions |
The ailments which befall us |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
120 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.704 |
Aims And Achievements |
Success in this world doesn't come easy |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
124 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.616 |
An Eastern Journey |
We started our flight at Gatwick |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
72 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.654 |
An International Team |
An international side of undoubted renown |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
89 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.598 |
An Irish Journey |
We have just returned from Ireland 'tis the gem of all the world |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
42-43 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.703 |
An Unmentionable Subject |
Only when one gets old, may one be bold |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
122 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.607 |
Arnhem |
We are the men of Arnhem |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
55 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
86.663 |
Arnhem 1944 |
W e are the men of Arnhem |
PHELAN, J. B. |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
11 |
|
87.652 |
Bill Shankly |
We were fans of Billy Shankly in the thirties |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
87 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.568 |
Blackburn and Darwen |
Blackburn is a Cathedral town in East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
4 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.648 |
Brindle Band |
When Brindle Band reformed at the end of the war |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
82 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.533 |
BSA Bantam John |
Those classic British Motor Cycles so supreme in their day |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
30 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.646 |
But For Days Off and Weekends |
Should you be looking, for North West places to explore |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
79 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.696 |
Discovering The Price of Liquid |
Every day liquid arrives in different strengths and volumes |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
113 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.596 |
Divided Ireland |
That land of thirty two Counties |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
40 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.531 |
Dusta know? |
Dusta know I wer brewt up in Snuffy |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
28 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.681 |
Family values and aims |
A is for Ancestors We should endeavour to trace |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
96 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.653 |
Football And The Game Compared |
Football like other things is no longer the same |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
88 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.650 |
Forgotten Genius |
He was a man who gave pleasure to millions |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
84 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.690 |
Fr Person's legacy |
Way back during the English Reformation |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
105 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.585 |
Ghandi and the cotton trade |
Mahatma Ghandi came to Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
25 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.622 |
Gracie Fields |
From her humble beginnings in Rochdale |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
37 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.534 |
Heroes of Great Harwood |
Gwen Mayor was a lady from Great Harwood |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
32 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.600 |
Homecoming |
Though the wide world I have travelled |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
45 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.581 |
Hyndburn Borough |
Do you know there's a place in Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
21 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.649 |
In Appreciation Of A Genius Team Member |
Brindle Band played the theme tune of 'Margie' |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
83 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.713 |
In Conclusion |
I consider I have lived through the best times |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
133 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.620 |
Jack Simmons |
Jack Simmons always wanted to be a sportsman |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
35 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.524 |
Junk mail letters and leaflets the exception |
As daily mailing intrusions drop through your door |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
20 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.572 |
Just a cot in Ribble Valley |
There's a spot in dear old England, that I oft long to see |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
8 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.517 |
Just a glimpse of our valley's beauty |
From the pretty village of Whalley |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
9 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.571 |
Just a glimpse of our valley's beauty |
From the pretty village of Whalley |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
7 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.621 |
Kathleen Ferrier |
Blow the wind southerly, southerly, southerly |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
36 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.603 |
Life in Britain 1941 |
Dimmed out headlights - Blacked out street |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
49 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.608 |
Life Under Fire |
War time experiences of a number of Ribble Valley and |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
56-61 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.647 |
Liverpool |
Few large cities can boast two Cathedrals |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
80 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.697 |
Mad Carew |
Theres a green eyed yellow idol to the north of kathmandu |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
114 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.694 |
Memories Of The Old Brass Band |
Solo cornets played the melodies |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
111 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.604 |
Men of the 'Teens and Twenties |
They were all born by the early nineteen twenties |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
50-51 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.605 |
Military Conscription 1942 |
In 1942 I was called up to the forces |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
52-53 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.683 |
Modern Standards |
Divorce in Britain is now widespread |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
98 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.684 |
Modern Standards Cont |
No doubt situations arise which are unavoidable |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
99 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.623 |
Mother Teresa |
She was born plain Agnes Bojahili |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
40 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.643 |
My Memory Of Macau |
The amazingly tangled unique tree of life |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
76 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.699 |
National Trust |
Many people like flying or seeing foreign parts |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
117 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.655 |
Natures Gifts |
The gifts and fruits we were born with |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
91 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.579 |
New Lancashire |
When old Lancashire lost its cities |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
19 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.614 |
Ode to a Salesman |
Super salesmen can usually be recognised in later life |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
70 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.685 |
Ode to parental control |
The love of a Mother for her child |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
100 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.705 |
Ode To Security |
Some robbers must find their task easy |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
125 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.574 |
Old Lancashire |
East Lancashire towns in the twenties |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
10-Nov |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.528 |
Old memories |
Only the old can know the progress we've made |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
24 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.532 |
On earning 'afe a crown |
The slutch wer stickin' like tracle |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
29 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.707 |
On Growing Old |
When you are fit and well and active |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
127 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.651 |
Opinions |
If God had been a footballer |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
86 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.513 |
Our 2nd Millennium Beginnings |
William the Conqueror was not readily welcomed |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
6 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.588 |
Our ancestors |
Young people never think of their forebears |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
28 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.693 |
Our friendly robots |
What would we do without robots |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
110 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.711 |
Our Future (In The 3rd Millenium) |
As we enter the 3rd Millenium |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
131 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.514 |
Our Historical Heritage |
Lancashire gems of our countryside and coastline |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
7 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.570 |
Our Historical Heritage |
Lancashire gems of our countryside and coastline |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
6 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.569 |
Our History of Change |
The twentieth century has seen a great change in our culture |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
5 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.626 |
Our Queen |
For fifty years she has been married |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
42 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.518 |
Our timeless river |
From Ribblehead towards Preston |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
10 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.573 |
Our timeless river |
From Ribblehead towards Preston |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
9 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.582 |
Our town of Great Harwood |
Great Harwood is a town that goes nowhere |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
22-23 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.520 |
Our town of Great Harwood |
We live in the town of Great Harwood |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
12 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.521 |
Our town's population 1847-1997 |
Our towns population increased over five times |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
13 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.519 |
Our weekend haunt |
Everyone knows of the National Parks |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
11 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.578 |
Our weekend haunt |
Everyone knows of the National Parks |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
18 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.645 |
Our Workforce |
In a workforce as widespread as ours |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
78 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.592 |
Peppards Castle |
There's a place in County Wexford |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
34 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.656 |
Religion |
From my early days religion was part of my life |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
92 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.610 |
Remembrance Sunday |
Survivors still remember, those days of long ago |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
63 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.710 |
Retirement Pleasures |
Days in retirement with time now to spare |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
130 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.527 |
Retirement pleasures |
Our days in retirement, with time now to spare |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
23 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.529 |
Retirement thoughts |
Everyone thinks they'll never get old |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
25 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.712 |
Retirement Thoughts |
Everyone thinks they'll never get old |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
132 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.618 |
Sgt. James Baron M.M. Irish Guards 1944 |
It could take a man who has seen action |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
33 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.657 |
Soul, Faith and Conscience |
Soul, faith and conscience are amongst the attributes God gave |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
93 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.689 |
Stonyhurst College |
In this beautiful spot in England |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
104 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.691 |
Teacher's payments by results |
Many parents do not readily support teachers |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
107 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.639 |
That Chinese Village |
On a main road made of concrete |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
73 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.613 |
The Accrington Pals |
Twas a day of tragic judgement |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
66-67 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.601 |
The Army Recruit 1942 |
By blacked out train then in darkened ship |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
47 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.593 |
The Ballad of O'Phelan |
Though the times are distinctly different |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
36-37 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.584 |
The Cotton Trade of Great Harwood |
It was in the 1850s, when cotton came our way |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
24 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.688 |
The daily miracle |
Everyone knows of the Miracle of Lourdes |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
103 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.589 |
The Days of Progress |
They were days of Irish famine |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
30 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.606 |
The Demise of the old Morse Code |
Hundreds of men in this country |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
54 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.611 |
The Forgotten Men |
Neat lines of soldiers |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
64 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.586 |
The Great Harwood Paper Chain 1974 |
The Guiness book of Records in nineteen seventy four |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
26 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.591 |
The Irish Connection |
In the midst of the eighteen hundreds |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
32-33 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.595 |
The Negative Image |
Not all nuns these days, dress in starched hats and veils |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
39 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.565 |
The Ribble Valley |
Five hundred square miles |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
ix |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.523 |
The road ahead |
The road to contentment is never 'Mineswept' |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
19 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.698 |
The Rocks Of Shivapur |
It was whilst passing over India on a Cathe Pacific flight |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
116 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.692 |
The school curriculum and the teachers lot |
Few people give credit to teachers |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
108 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.702 |
The Secret Cure |
The secret cure a Lancashire brew |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
121 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.687 |
The sensitive revolution |
Catholics who have been born since the Secon World War |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
102 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.708 |
The Shiny Sovereign |
I remember, so remember, over seventy years ago |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
128 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.594 |
The Sisters of Loreto |
There's an Irish Teaching Order |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
38 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.590 |
The Spinning Master |
I recall it distinctly, though over seventy years ago |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
31 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.564 |
The test for the new Millenium |
As the new Millenium comes along let us remember this song |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
vii |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.644 |
The Trecherous Highway Of Taipel |
Frightening observations experienced by the writer in 1988 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
77 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.597 |
The Troubled Isle |
There are the Glens of Antrim and the Mountains of Mourne |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
41 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.580 |
The Two Preston (or Burnley) Mashers |
We are two of the old Preston mashers |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
20 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.577 |
The Villages Between Preston and Blackburn |
There is a trio of Lancashire villages |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
16-17 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.566 |
This Small Piece of Britain |
One two hundredth part of Britain |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
2 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.525 |
Those baffling mortgages |
A mortgage can be an almighty burden |
PHELAN, J. B. |
Thoughts in Verse. Book 4 |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0183387LC |
675.515 |
1.998 |
21 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
87.695 |
Those Baffling Mortgages |
A mortgage can be an almighty burden |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
112 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.599 |
Those Irish Tunes |
Those old John McCormack recordings |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
44 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.609 |
Those Medals |
They are all now well into their seventies |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
62 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.587 |
Those Towns of Importance |
The towns of East Lancashire once great places of note |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
27 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.612 |
Thoughts on Apprehension |
As you rush past old men on the pavement |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
65 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.658 |
Thoughts to Ponder |
Propaganda enters your door by the bin full |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
94 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.576 |
Unknown Lancashire |
The villages of East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
14-15 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.602 |
War Time Britain |
The war years brought their problems |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
48 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.659 |
When A Child Was Born |
When a child was born in Bethlehem |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
95 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
87.706 |
When In Added Time |
When you've lived your lifespan of three score and ten |
PHELAN, J. B. |
The Millennium book of poems: embracing a lifetime of experiences in the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. B. |
M0296820LC |
723.466 |
1.999 |
126 |
Author lives in Great Harwood |
86.172 |
20th century innovations |
Our forebears who lived in the last century |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
90 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.159 |
A Commitment |
As those stories of tragedy and wars do unfold |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
74 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.026 |
A Lancashire Lad |
I was born and bred in Lancashire in nineteen twenty-four |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
14-15 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.163 |
A Lifetime of Change |
Oh how life has changed in this lifetime of mine |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
79 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.137 |
A lifetime of inflation |
Prices were uniform before the second world war |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
49 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.179 |
A police man's dilemma |
Whilst the Pope was in the U.S. of A |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
99 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.144 |
A Tale of the Orient (Hong Kong) |
I arrived in Hong Kong its temperature so lavish |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
56-57 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.141 |
A Visit to Coburg West Germany 1983 |
There is a bulge in Western Germany |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
53 |
And its Iron Curtain. Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.173 |
Ailments and Afflictions |
The ailments which befall us |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
92 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.176 |
Aims and Achievements |
Success in this world doesn't come easy |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
96 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.142 |
An Eastern Journey |
We started our flight at Gatwick |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
54 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.048 |
An Irish Journey |
We have just returned from Ireland 'tis the gem of all the world |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
44-45 |
Recollections of an Irish touring holidays in 1955 (Written at the time, so don't expect it still to be the same). Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.175 |
An Unmentionable Subject |
Only when one gets old, may one be so bold |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
94-95 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.147 |
Back Home |
In England we drive on the other side of the road |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
60 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.153 |
Bill Shankly |
We were fans of Billy Shankly in the thirties |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
67 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.019 |
Blackburn with Darwen |
Blackburn is a Cathedral town in East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
6 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.149 |
Brindle Band (In the post war years) |
When Brindle Band reformed at the end of the war |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
62 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.177 |
Discovering the price of liquid |
Every day liquid arrives in different strengths and volumes |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
97 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.046 |
Divided Ireland |
That land of thirty two Counties |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
42 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.148 |
Football and the Game Compared |
Football like other things is no longer the same |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
61 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.151 |
Forgotten Genius |
He was a man who gave pleasure to millions |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
64-65 |
10 Downing Street Letter Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.165 |
Fr. Person's Legacy |
Way back during the English Reformation |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
81 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.033 |
Ghandi and the cotton trade |
Mahatma Ghandi came to Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
25 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.031 |
Great Harwood |
Great Harwood is a town that goes nowhere |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
22-23 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.050 |
Homecoming |
Though the wide world I have travelled |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
47 |
With Daniel O'Donnell in mind |
86.016 |
Hyndburn, The Lancashire Borough |
Do you know there's a place in Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
3 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.150 |
In Appreciation of a Genius Team Member |
Brindle Band played the theme tune of 'Margie' |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
63 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.187 |
In conclusion |
I consider I have lived through the best times |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
108 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.022 |
Just a glimpse of our valley's beauty |
From the pretty village of Whalley |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
9 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.138 |
Just a job inthe 50's and 60's |
Every job has its stories every job has its laughs |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
50 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.036 |
Liverpool |
Few large Cities can boast two Cathedrals |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
28 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.038 |
Men of the 'Teens and Twenties |
They were all born by the early nineteen twenties |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
30-31 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.161 |
Modern Standards |
Divorce in Britain is now widespread |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
76-77 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.145 |
My Memory of Macau |
The amazingly tangled unique tree of life |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
58 |
A Portugese settlement on the mainland of China. Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.035 |
National Trust |
Many people like flying or seeing foreign parts |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
27 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.154 |
Natures Gifts |
The gifts and fruits we were born with |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
69 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.023 |
New Lancashire |
When old Lancashire lost its cities |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
10 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.140 |
Ode To a Salesman |
Super salesmen can be recognised, in later life |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
52 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.162 |
Ode to Parental Control |
The love of a Mother for her child |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
78 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.025 |
Old Lancashire |
East Lancashire towns in the twenties |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
Dec-13 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.183 |
On growing old |
When you are fit and well and active |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
103 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.152 |
Opinions |
If God had been a footballer |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
66 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.180 |
Our ancestors |
Young people never think of their forebears |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
100 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.168 |
Our Friendly Robots |
What would we do without robots? |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
86 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.021 |
Our Historical Heritage |
Lancashire gems of our countryside and coastline |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
8 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.020 |
Our History of Change |
The twentieth century has seen a great change in our culture |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
7 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.017 |
Our River, The Ribble |
There's a quiet peaceful river flowing westwards to the sea |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
4 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.024 |
Our timeless river |
From Ribblehead towards Preston |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
11 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.030 |
Our weekend haunt |
Everyone knows of the National Parks |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
21 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.139 |
Our Workforce |
In a workforce as widespread as ours |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
51 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.043 |
Peppards Castle |
There's a place in County Wexford |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
38 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.034 |
Potential Day Trips |
Should you be looking, for North West places to explore |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
26 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.155 |
Religion |
From my early days Religion was part of my life |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
70 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.037 |
Remembrance Sunday |
Survivors still remember, those days of long ago |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
29 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.184 |
Retirement pleasures |
Days in retirement with time now to spare |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
104 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.185 |
Retirement thoughts |
Everyone thinks they'll never get old |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
105 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.156 |
Soul, Faith, and Conscience |
Soul, Faith and Conscience are amongst the attributes God gave |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
71 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.164 |
Stonyhurst College |
In this beautiful spot in England |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
80 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.166 |
Teachers Payments by Results |
Everyone wants the best for their children |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
82-83 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.143 |
That Chinese Village |
On a main road made of concrete |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
55 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.171 |
That Night of Tragedy in the Irish Sea |
The sea with all its awesome power |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
89 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.032 |
The Cotton Trade of Great Harwood |
It was in the 1850s, when cotton came our way |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
24 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.167 |
The Daily Miracle |
Everyone knows of the Miracle of Lourdes |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
84 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.040 |
The Days of Progress |
They were days of Irish famine |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
34 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.042 |
The Irish Connection |
In the midst of the eighteen hundreds |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
36-37 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.045 |
The Negative Image |
Not all nuns these days, dress in starched hats and veils |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
41 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.018 |
The Ribble Valley |
Five hundred square miles |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
5 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.170 |
The Rocks of Shivapur |
It was whilst passing over India on a Cathe Pacific flight |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
88 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.181 |
The school curriculum |
Few people give credit to teachers |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
101 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.174 |
The Secret Cure |
The secret cure a Lancashire brew |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
93 |
Finic Pillseed (Anag.) Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.160 |
The Sensitive Revolution |
Catholics who have been born since the Second World War |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
75 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.178 |
The shiny sovereign |
I remember, so remember, over seventy years ago |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
98 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.044 |
The Sisters of Loreto |
There's an Irish Teaching Order |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
40 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.041 |
The Spinning Master |
I recall it distinctly, though over seventy years ago |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
35 |
Matt Phelan 1865-1929. Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.186 |
The test for the new Millenium |
As the new Millenium comes along let us remember this song |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
106 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.146 |
The Trecherous Highway of Taipei |
Frightening observations experienced by the writer in |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
59 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.047 |
The Troubled Isle |
There are Glens of Antrim and the Mountains of Mourne |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
43 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.028 |
The Villages Between Preston and Blackburn |
There is a trio of Lancashire villages |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
18-19 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.015 |
This Small Piece of Britain |
One two hundredth part of Britain |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
2 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.169 |
Those Baffling Mortgages |
A mortgage can be an almighty burden |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
87 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.049 |
Those Irish Tunes |
Those old John McCormack recordings |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
46 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.029 |
Those Towns of Importance |
The towns of East Lancashire once great places of note |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
20 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.039 |
Thoughts on Apprehension |
As you rush past old men on the pavement |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
32 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.157 |
Thoughts To Ponder |
Propaganda enters your door by the bin full |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
72 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.027 |
Unknown Lancashire |
The villages of East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
16-17 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.158 |
When a Child Was Born |
When a child was born in Bethlehem |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
73 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
86.182 |
When in added time |
When you've lived your lifespan of three score and ten |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
2000 years: thoughts and memories in verse of the Ribble Valley and East Lancashire |
PHELAN, J. Bernard |
M0298322LC |
732.735 |
1.999 |
102 |
Poems by Great Harwood author |
5.273 |
Adieu to the valley |
To thy charms, lovely valley, adieu |
PHILANDER |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
1-Feb |
An early fugitive poem written Blackburn July 1793 |
5.299 |
Sonnet |
Ah! why should I at gloomy fate repine |
PHILANDER |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
7 |
An early fugitive poem written Blackburn |
87.827 |
Friendship |
Friendship blooms and blossoms |
PHILLIPS, B. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
115 |
|
6.245 |
Sonnet I |
Oft have I wished, when heaven and earth were dark |
PHILLIPS, J. S. R. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
145 |
Einar - nom de plume |
6.246 |
Sonnet II |
I wear a mask - who will, may deem it sin |
PHILLIPS, J. S. R. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
145-146 |
Einar - nom de plume |
6.247 |
Sonnet III |
At times despair and bitterness draw nigh |
PHILLIPS, J. S. R. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
146 |
Einar - nom de plume |
6.248 |
Sonnet IV |
False doubt low whispered: why in fevered dream |
PHILLIPS, J. S. R. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
146-147 |
Einar - nom de plume |
6.253 |
Sonnet IX |
The old year passes forth with silent gait |
PHILLIPS, J. S. R. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
149 |
Einar - nom de plume |
6.249 |
Sonnet V |
Weary and sad, I called him best who holds |
PHILLIPS, J. S. R. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
147 |
Einar - nom de plume |
6.250 |
Sonnet VI |
There are, I know, who to our feeble sight |
PHILLIPS, J. S. R. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
147-148 |
Einar - nom de plume |
6.251 |
Sonnet VII |
I am as one beset by storm and night |
PHILLIPS, J. S. R. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
148 |
Einar - nom de plume |
6.252 |
Sonnet VIII |
In winter I bethought me of the spring |
PHILLIPS, J. S. R. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
148 |
Einar - nom de plume |
82.163 |
Hallo-ween - Hello witches |
For months we'd been a-twitching |
PHILLIPS, Joy |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
77 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
2.529 |
Me and my mate: a Whitby story |
Mates? ay, we've been mates together |
PHILLIPS, Mrs Susan K. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
265-268 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.528 |
The buried chime |
Under the cliffs at Whitby, when the great tides landward flow |
PHILLIPS, Mrs Susan K. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
264-265 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.530 |
Two |
In the bitter gloom of a winter's morn |
PHILLIPS, Mrs Susan K. |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
269-271 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
6.322 |
Transfiguration |
It shall descend upon you unawares |
PHILLIPSON, Sydney |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
218-219 |
|
84.062 |
A song |
Now lovers wander far and free |
PHILPOTTS, Eden |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
15 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
82.995 |
Christmas shopping |
Mums slapping |
PICKAVANCE, Laura and CONLON, Abigail |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
170 |
|
6.201 |
The quarries of Syracuse |
The night was over earth, and in the night |
PICKERSGILL, W. C. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
8-Dec |
|
865 |
Cleynin' neet |
On Thursda neets just after t'tay |
PICKLES, N. |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
218-219 |
|
82.181 |
A new hat |
If yo're thinkin' o' buyin' yersells a new hat |
PICKLES, Nellie |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
109 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
815 |
Summat fer nowt |
Aw corn't rest i' this heause tuday |
PICKUP, Beth |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
57 |
|
359 |
Sylvan Sorcery |
Whoever walks the witching ways worn smooth |
PICKUP, Beth |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
18 |
|
6.583 |
Cold winter is with us again |
Cold, cheerless and dark are the flowerless meads |
PICKUP, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
406-407 |
|
6.582 |
Song |
Though short is time since we parted |
PICKUP, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
406 |
|
6.584 |
The lass o' Ribbleside |
At foot of yonder wood-crowned hill there stands a little cot |
PICKUP, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
407 |
|
6.586 |
We s' see a breeter day |
Come, Jack, lad, just cheer up a bit, dorn'd look so glum an' sad |
PICKUP, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
408-409 |
|
6.581 |
When hawthorns are blooming |
When hawthorns are blooming and hedges are gay |
PICKUP, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
405-406 |
|
6.585 |
Yon lass o' top o' Mellor |
Aw've heeard a deeol o' toke abeawt the Belles o' Sunny France |
PICKUP, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
407-408 |
|
78 |
Musings by the grave of the oldest inhabitant |
Quite near to Bacup Centre lies |
PILLING, James V. |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
86-87 |
|
421 |
The last cob |
Ful weel ah knew id ad to be |
PILLING, James V. |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
117-118 |
|
82.885 |
Kellie's ABC |
A is for amusing, which makes you giggle |
PINNINGTON, Kellie |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
108 |
|
82.833 |
The forest's story |
I remember when life was good |
PITMAN, Sean |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
78-79 |
|
81.480 |
Ice-cream |
Ice-creams are wonderful |
PLANT, Jamie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
103 |
|
84.214 |
The sun and the cloud |
The sun held out its arms to me |
PLATFORD, Helen |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
112 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.215 |
Western sky |
When the wind blows |
PLATFORD, Helen |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
113 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
82.869 |
Green, green water dragon |
Fast runner |
PLATT, David |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
100 |
|
86.681 |
Frustration |
I seem to be going backwards |
PLUMMER, Kathleen |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
29 |
|
82.868 |
My mum |
Clothes knitter |
POLLARD, Lauren |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
100 |
|
87.851 |
My God of Love |
I know God watches over me |
POLLITT, Marion |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
140 |
|
1.057 |
Happy-Go-Lucky |
One day as I sheltered |
POLLITT, Robert |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
238-240 |
|
1.056 |
Owd Music |
A dacent chap Owd Music wur |
POLLITT, Robert |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
236-237 |
|
937 |
Portsmouth Harbour: sunset |
The day is almost o'er, the time well-nigh |
POLLITT, William |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
182-183 |
|
82.016 |
The King's county |
No tale is told of our own heroes bold |
POLLITT, William |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
56-57 |
|
938 |
The King's county: an active service song |
No tale is told of our heroes bold |
POLLITT, William |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
183-184 |
|
87.549 |
Letter to Anne |
I have just returned to-day |
POMFRET, J. |
MARY'S miscellany: prose and verse by Lancashire writers, compiled by Mary Carter Clark |
|
M0040456LC |
151.580 |
1.966 |
6-Jul |
|
4.334 |
Ah'm aside o' thee |
Hap what may o' weal or woe |
POMFRET, Joan |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
24 |
|
818 |
Candles at Gawthorpe |
But how shall we light the Long Gallery? |
POMFRET, Joan |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
71 |
|
4.336 |
Counthry concert |
Come on, lads, we're reight at t' last minute |
POMFRET, Joan |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
25 |
|
83.185 |
Island town |
Looking back at the Island |
POMFRET, Joan |
The old Peel Line and other poems of Lancashire and the Isle of Man |
POMFRET, Joan |
M0018732LC |
80.826 |
1.972 |
8 |
The author lived in Great Harwood |
574 |
Lookin' back |
When t'lamps aleet at t' top o' t' street |
POMFRET, Joan |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
163-164 |
Lancashire poetry |
82.145 |
Lookin' back |
When t'lamps aleet at t' top o' t' street |
POMFRET, Joan |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
41-42 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
38 |
Maps |
When I retire, my father used to say |
POMFRET, Joan |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
188 |
|
866 |
Merseyside pub |
All ports have pubs like these |
POMFRET, Joan |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
223 |
|
5.197 |
Mi grondad's weather book |
Mi grondad farmed fer fifty year |
POMFRET, Joan |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
26 |
|
5.198 |
Other folks' childer |
They're other folks' childer |
POMFRET, Joan |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
26 |
|
83.187 |
Peel Castle in November |
Tonight there is no need to wait |
POMFRET, Joan |
The old Peel Line and other poems of Lancashire and the Isle of Man |
POMFRET, Joan |
M0018732LC |
80.826 |
1.972 |
10 |
The author lived in Great Harwood |
83.190 |
River Path |
Oh, River Path, oh, River Path |
POMFRET, Joan |
The old Peel Line and other poems of Lancashire and the Isle of Man |
POMFRET, Joan |
M0018732LC |
80.826 |
1.972 |
13 |
The author lived in Great Harwood |
4.111 |
Silver an' brass |
Them big bands wi' big names 'at play on t' TV |
POMFRET, Joan |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
28 |
|
5.199 |
Sing lads fer me |
Of course there's Music up aboon |
POMFRET, Joan |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
27 |
|
83.186 |
T.T. Rider |
May he have fine clear weather on his daring way |
POMFRET, Joan |
The old Peel Line and other poems of Lancashire and the Isle of Man |
POMFRET, Joan |
M0018732LC |
80.826 |
1.972 |
9 |
The author lived in Great Harwood |
4.133 |
T'day we went to t' seaside |
T'day 'at we went to t' seaside |
POMFRET, Joan |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
45-46 |
|
4.134 |
T'day we went to t' seaside |
Wod did Ah iver hev wi yo |
POMFRET, Joan |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
46-47 |
|
39 |
Tea with Miss Celia |
I cannot write of afternoons like those |
POMFRET, Joan |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
189 |
|
5.196 |
Th' harvest whoam |
Eh dearie me, whenid's t' neet afore th' Harvest |
POMFRET, Joan |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
25 |
Harvest festival |
83.191 |
The bells of St. Mary's: written for the Great Harwood Male Voice Choir |
Our concert is nearly over now |
POMFRET, Joan |
The old Peel Line and other poems of Lancashire and the Isle of Man |
POMFRET, Joan |
M0018732LC |
80.826 |
1.972 |
14-16 |
The author lived in Great Harwood |
83.189 |
The little folk |
But did you ever see them - the Little Folk? she said |
POMFRET, Joan |
The old Peel Line and other poems of Lancashire and the Isle of Man |
POMFRET, Joan |
M0018732LC |
80.826 |
1.972 |
12 |
The author lived in Great Harwood |
83.050 |
The old Peel Line |
The old Peel Line is overgrown |
POMFRET, Joan |
The old Peel Line and other poems of Lancashire and the Isle of Man |
POMFRET, Joan |
M0018732LC |
80.826 |
1.972 |
5 |
The author lived in Great Harwood |
83.188 |
Time enough (in the dialect) |
Ah woaked eawt wi' an Island lad |
POMFRET, Joan |
The old Peel Line and other poems of Lancashire and the Isle of Man |
POMFRET, Joan |
M0018732LC |
80.826 |
1.972 |
11 |
The author lived in Great Harwood |
557 |
T'mothers' meetin' |
Eawr Mothers thowt they'd do a play |
POMFRET, Joan |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
134-135 |
Lancashire poetry |
60 |
T'trip |
We's start at nine at t'back o' t' schoo's |
POMFRET, Joan |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
212-213 |
|
400 |
Untilled land |
Eawn farm wor just up t'slope o' t' fell |
POMFRET, Joan |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
100 |
|
4.335 |
Untilled land |
Eawr farm wor just up t' slope o' t' fell |
POMFRET, Joan |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
24 |
|
83.184 |
Wakes Week |
Summer meant packin' th'owd tin trunk |
POMFRET, Joan |
The old Peel Line and other poems of Lancashire and the Isle of Man |
POMFRET, Joan |
M0018732LC |
80.826 |
1.972 |
6-Jul |
The author lived in Great Harwood |
82.129 |
West coast ports |
Long before Liverpool, they knew |
POMFRET, Joan |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
11 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
544 |
July wakes |
Looms are swept an' brass is drawn |
POMFRET, Richard |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
118-119 |
Lancashire poetry |
4.352 |
Ower t'tops |
Me heyd is mazed wi' t' shuttle's roar |
POMFRET, Richard |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
37 |
|
405 |
T'shrimp woman |
Hoo sits aside o' t' Market Hall |
POMFRET, Richard |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
106 |
|
87.802 |
Gods Treasures |
Who needs silver, who needs gold |
POPADIUK, Lucy |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
88 |
|
83.000 |
A place |
There was a place far, far away |
PORRITT, Fiona |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
172 |
|
82.806 |
My dad |
My dad is kind |
PORTER, Toby |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
62-63 |
|
81.570 |
Cottonopolis |
There blooms a magic flower on Nubian plains |
PORTEUS, Thomas Cruddas |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
221-228 |
|
188 |
Manchester |
Commerce, they say hath swift and secret power |
PORTEUS, Thomas Cruddas |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
146-147 |
|
6.213 |
Manchester Cathedral |
Here - where a myriad clamant voices speak |
PORTEUS, Thomas Cruddas |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
62-66 |
|
2.936 |
Aspiration |
The shades of night close in upon the world |
POTTER, Irene R. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
119 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
82.788 |
Harry Potter and the philosopher's stone |
Harry Potter is really good |
POTTER, Katie |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
53 |
|
82.794 |
How strange |
How strange to think that I am sat |
POTTER-WILD, Lorna |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
56 |
|
859 |
Folk song '73 |
T'new Motorway's comin', there's nowt we con do! |
POTTS, A. l. |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
182 |
|
81.372 |
Stars |
As the stars rise up in the air onto the black velvet sheet |
POWELL, Jenni |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
43 |
|
82.730 |
The volcano |
River of lava flowing lile orange juice |
POWELL, Raven |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
19 |
|
81.395 |
The gymnast |
I love the gym |
POWELL, Tanya |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
59 |
|
2.937 |
A desert song |
Dear Falukha, thou callest me |
PRALL, Mary |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
120 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.938 |
To L Raven Hill |
So dark and cold it is |
PRALL, Mary |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
121 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
84.743 |
A dedication (R. S. S) |
Where green Caerketton rises sheer |
PRATT, Tinsley |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
42 |
Contains poems by members of the Manchester Lyric Club |
84.124 |
Pentland Hills |
I've trod the hills o' Cumberland - I've trod the hills o' Wales |
PRATT, Tinsley |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
39-40 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.125 |
The lichts o' Tay |
O, come ye frae the eastward, an' come ye frae the sea |
PRATT, Tinsley |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
41 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
82.838 |
The forest's story |
I remember when life was good |
PREECE, Hannah |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
82 |
|
5.306 |
From 'A sketch of a bachelor' |
By cynic rules he smiles or frowns |
PRESCOTT, Rachel |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
15 |
|
5.304 |
From 'The Miser' |
Few are the vices unascrib'd to youth |
PRESCOTT, Rachel |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
13-14 |
|
5.307 |
On the death of an infant |
Fav'rite of Heaven! why does a mother's tear |
PRESCOTT, Rachel |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
16 |
|
5.305 |
The grave-digger |
Ah! see, at gloomy call, the sexton plod |
PRESCOTT, Rachel |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
14-15 |
|
836 |
Ah nivir can call hur my wife |
Aw'm a weyver ya know, an awf deead |
PRESTON, Ben |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
59-60 |
|
82.566 |
Come to thy gronny, doy |
Come to thy gronny, doy, come to thy gronny |
PRESTON, Ben |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
39-41 |
2nd de rev |
82.565 |
I niver can call her my wife |
I'm a weyver, ye knaw, an' awf deead |
PRESTON, Ben |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
37-39 |
2nd rev ed |
82.567 |
Owd Moxy |
Owd Moxy wrowt hard for his morsil o' breead |
PRESTON, Ben |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
41-43 |
2nd ed rev |
82.882 |
School, school |
School, school I like school |
PRESTON, Taryn |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
106 |
|
82.969 |
Frost |
When I step on the frosty jewels |
PRICE, Jack |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
156 |
|
935 |
(Dedication) |
To whom shall I devote, with love and truth |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
179-180 |
|
936 |
(Hymn) |
Lord, on this bright and auspicious day |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
180-181 |
|
5.997 |
(no title) |
If, 'mid the world's rude shock and strife |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
178 |
Untitled; four lines only |
5.963 |
A call to the people |
Awake! (the patriot poet cries) |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
76-77 |
|
81.618 |
A call to the people |
Awake! (the patriot poet cries) |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
43-44 |
|
81.977 |
A familiar epistle to my friend John Ball |
Dear friend, free for an interval of time |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
295-30 |
|
5.284 |
A familiar epistle to my friend John Ball |
Free for an interval of time |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
97-104 |
|
81.640 |
A Farewell to Poesy |
Another weary day was past |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
94-96 |
|
5.989 |
A farewell to Posey |
Another weary day was past |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
134-137 |
|
5.962 |
A father's lament |
A dreamy stillness in the calm air slept |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
72-75 |
|
81.617 |
A father's lament |
A dreamy stillness in the calm air slept |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
40-42 |
|
5.950 |
A fault confessed |
A fault confessed is half redressed |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
45-46 |
|
85.463 |
A fault confessed |
A fault confessed is half redressed |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
282-283 |
|
85.828 |
A fault confessed |
A FAULT confessed is half redressed |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
51-52 |
Wigan author |
85.470 |
A flower of the household |
Sweet darling of our wedded souls |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
296-298 |
|
85.836 |
A flower of the household |
Sweet darling of our wedded souls |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
67-69 |
Wigan author |
6.075 |
A fragment for the people |
Oh! I am sick of this degrading strife |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
222-226 |
|
81.669 |
A fragment for the people |
Oh! I am sick of this degrading strife |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
156-160 |
|
85.458 |
A good man gone |
Brought by the winged messenger of fire |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
269-272 |
|
85.823 |
A good man gone |
Brought by the winged messenger of fire |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
36-39 |
Wigan author |
81.965 |
A lay for the printer |
Who will deny the dignity of that enchanting toil |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
250-253 |
|
5.235 |
A lay for the printer |
Who will deny the dignity of that enduring toil |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
26-29 |
|
84.708 |
A love melody |
In the morning of Life, when our feelings are new |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
68-69 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
84.756 |
A May-Day Walk |
Blest be this bright and Breezy May |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
86-94 |
|
85.476 |
A night thought |
How grandly solemn is this arch of night |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
308 |
|
85.842 |
A night thought |
How grandly solemn is this arch of night |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
77 |
Wigan author |
85.467 |
A Pastoral |
I reclined 'neath an oak, from the noon's fervid heat |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
291-292 |
|
85.832 |
A Pastoral |
I reclined 'neath an oak, from the noon's fervid heat |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
62-63 |
Wigan author |
84.770 |
A Plea for Woman |
It is well that beauteous woman |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
147-149 |
|
85.424 |
A prayer for peace |
Peace for the nations, God |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
208-209 |
|
81.966 |
A rhyme for the time |
On! ye have glorious duties to fulfil |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
254-258 |
|
5.236 |
A rhyme for the time |
On! ye have glorious duties to fulfil |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
30-34 |
|
81.655 |
A sick man's fancies |
In the blessed time of the vernal spring |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
121-127 |
|
6.056 |
A sick man's fancies |
In the blessed time of the vernal spring |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
170-176 |
|
5.978 |
A sketch among the mountains |
Dark kinder! standing on thy whin-clad side |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
104-108 |
|
81.631 |
A sketch among the mountains |
Dark Kinder! standing on thy whin-clad side |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
66-70 |
|
84.642 |
A song for March |
Burly March rushes in with a boisterous wing |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
5-Jun |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
5.973 |
A song of freedom |
O beautiful world! Thou art fertile and fair |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
95 |
|
81.626 |
A song of freedom |
Oh, beautiful world! thou art fertile and fair |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
58 |
|
84.712 |
A Song to the Woodlands |
The fern and the foxglove for me, yes, for me! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
84-85 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. Lyric arrnaged as a quartette entitiled 'The Fern and the Foxglove' gained a prize for Prince of 10 guineas for the Tonic Sal-Fa Society |
85.419 |
A soul in shadow |
Lo, a Soul in Shadow! shaken |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
198-200 |
|
5.277 |
A summer evening sketch |
In tranquil thought, last eventide, I went my wonted way |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
70-72 |
|
5.968 |
A summer's day |
Scared at the aspect of advancing day |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
84-86 |
|
81.622 |
A Summer's day |
Scared at the aspect of advancing Day |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
50-51 |
|
81.970 |
A summer's evening sketch |
In tranquil thought, last eventide, I went my wonted way |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
273-275 |
|
84.845 |
A thought on war |
Tis strange, profanely strange, but men will stand |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
181 |
|
5.954 |
A vision of the future |
Grieved at the crimes and sorrows of mankind |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
53-57 |
|
81.610 |
A vision of the future |
Grieved at the crimes and sorrows of mankind |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
24-28 |
|
85.414 |
A Voice from the Factory |
I hear men laud the coming Exhibition |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
186-187 |
|
85.464 |
A widower's lament |
The traveller in desert lands |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
284-285 |
|
85.844 |
A Wifes Evening Prayer |
A day well spent, as a just God approves |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
80 |
Wigan author |
85.478 |
A wife's evening prayer (from the German) |
A day well spent, as a just God approves |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
311-312 |
|
81.961 |
A winter sketch from Oldermann |
Fair are the springtide features of the hills |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
241-242 |
|
5.232 |
A winter sketch from Oldermann |
Fair are the springtide features of the hills |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
16-17 |
|
6.064 |
A winter's evening |
High o'er the woody crest of yonder hill |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
189 |
|
81.664 |
A winter's evening |
High o'er the woody crest of yonder hill |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
142 |
|
84.696 |
A wish |
Oh! give me a cot in some wood-shaded glen |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
43-44 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
85.466 |
Abjuration |
Tis done! 'tis well! - I've freely signed |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
288-290 |
|
85.831 |
Abjuration |
Tis done! 'tis well! - I've freely signed |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
60-61 |
Wigan author |
85.491 |
Address |
Mid the gleam and the gladness of waters and vales |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
348-350 |
|
85.494 |
Alice the fair |
I deemed my affections were destined no more |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
357 |
|
81.645 |
An Appeal On Behalf Of The Uneducated |
Well may the pure Philanthropist complain |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
102-108 |
|
6.043 |
An appeal on behalf of the uneducated |
Well may the pure philanthropist complain |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
144-150 |
|
84.702 |
An Artisan's song |
I'm a brave-heared Artisan, honest and free |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
52-54 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
81.950 |
An Evening Song |
Tis wearing late! 'tis wearing late! I hear the vesper bell |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
194-199 |
|
6.045 |
An evening song |
Tis wearing late! 'tis wearing late! I hear the vesper bell |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
152-153 |
|
81.941 |
Anti-corn law lyric |
Hark! a nation's suppliant cry |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
185 |
|
81.983 |
April |
Sighing, storming, singing, smiling |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
312-315 |
|
5.290 |
April |
Sighing, storming, singing, smiling |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
129-133 |
|
82.495 |
As welcome as flowers in May |
As welcome as flowers in May |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
366-368 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.411 |
As welcome as flowers in May |
As welcome as flowers in May |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
110-111 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
84.706 |
As welcome as flowers in May |
As welcome as flowers in May |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
63-65 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
85.432 |
At my wife's grave side |
Six years have passed, my loved lost wife |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
224-225 |
|
84.971 |
Autum leaves |
O god! it is a pleasant thing |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
161 |
|
84.972 |
Autumm Leaves |
A king Devine? said Christopher |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
1621 |
|
81.986 |
Autumn |
Sweet is the prime of Autumn time |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
320-325 |
|
5.293 |
Autumn |
Sweet is the quiet prime of Autumn tiime |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
142-146 |
|
85.471 |
Autumn days |
The Autumn's loosened leaves are falling fast |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
299-300 |
|
84.766 |
Autumn leaves |
When the night cometh round, and our duties are done |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
137-139 |
Subtitle A book for the home fireside |
85.837 |
Autumnal Days |
The autumn's loosened leaves are falling fast |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
70-71 |
Wigan author |
84.767 |
Autumnal Sonnets |
It seems but yesterday, when merry Spring |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
140-141 |
contributed to Eliza Cook's Journal 30/11/1850 |
85.447 |
Birthday Sonnet |
Upon the threshold of another year |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
251 |
|
85.811 |
Birthday Sonnet |
Upon the threshold of another year |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
16 |
Wigan author |
85.427 |
Broad cast thy seed |
Broad cast thy seed |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
216-217 |
|
84.646 |
Buckton Castle |
Has Spring returned to give a golden close |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
16-19 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
5.745 |
Canzonette |
I know a star, whose gentle beams |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
54 |
Poem originally entitled 'The star and the flower' |
82.446 |
Canzonette |
I know a star, whose gentle beams |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
302 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
85.449 |
Canzonette |
I know a star, whose gentle beams |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
253 |
|
85.813 |
Canzonette |
I Know a star, whose gentle beams |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
18 |
Wigan author |
85.480 |
Christmas |
Blest morn, by the Redeemer made the holiest of the year |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
316-319 |
|
85.849 |
Christmas |
Blest morn, by the Redeemer made the holiest of the year |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
99-102 |
Wigan author |
84.707 |
Christmas |
One cannot choose but love the bells |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
66-67 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
84.843 |
Christmas Eve |
Christmas Eve came to us darkly |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
178-179 |
Contributed to the 'Preston Guardian' |
85.465 |
Christmastide |
How the heart leapeth up at the festival sound |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
286-287 |
|
85.829 |
Christmastide |
How the heart leapeth up at the festival sound |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
54-55 |
Wigan author |
6.053 |
Christmas-tide |
How the heart leapeth up at the festival sound |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
165-166 |
|
5.966 |
Clifton grove |
How rich is the season, how soothing the time! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
80-81 |
|
81.620 |
Clifton Grove |
How rich is the season, how soothing the time! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
46-47 |
|
5.276 |
Come to my home |
Come to my calm but lonely home |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
67-69 |
|
81.969 |
Come to my home |
Come to my calm but lonely home |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
271-273 |
|
5.351 |
Contrition |
Lord! in a wary labyrinth |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
162-164 |
|
81.990 |
Contrition |
Lord! In a weary labyrinth |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
341-343 |
|
84.652 |
Death's Doing |
Death on his steed of shadow |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
37-40 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
82.491 |
Domestic melody |
Though my lot hath been dark for many long years |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
362-363 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.969 |
Domestic melody |
Though my lot hath been dark for these many long years |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
87 |
|
81.623 |
Domestic melody |
Though my lot hath been dark for these many long years |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
52 |
|
5.972 |
Epistle to a brother past |
By some means or other I've gathered a hint |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
91-94 |
|
81.625 |
Epistle to a brother poet |
By some means or other I've gathered a hint |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
54-57 |
|
82.503 |
Evening song |
Tis wearing late! 'tis wearing late! I hear the vesper bell |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
381-382 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.418 |
Evening song |
Tis wearing late! 'tis wearing late! I hear the vesper bell |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
120-121 |
From Hours with the muses. Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
6.055 |
Extempore apology to a few friends |
Friends of my soul, ye must excuse |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
168-169 |
|
85.499 |
Extempore Lines |
Once more the mighty leveller hath been |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
368-369 |
|
84.695 |
Extempore Lines |
Take heed, my poor Friend, ere thou darest to to climb |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
41-42 |
Sub title To a young poet. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
5.744 |
Family feuds |
In truth, it is a grievous sight |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
53-54 |
Written Blackburn September 1st 1859 |
85.459 |
Family feuds |
In truth, it is a grievous sight |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
273-274 |
|
85.824 |
Family feuds |
In truth, it is a grievous sight |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
40-41 |
Wigan author |
5.743 |
Forgiveness |
Man hath two attendant angels |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
51-52 |
Dated December 1849 |
84.648 |
Forgiveness |
Man hath two attendant angels |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
22-23 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
85.430 |
Forgiveness |
My heart was galled with bitter wrong |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
221 |
|
85.492 |
Freedom of conscience |
Freedom of conscience! glorious theme for pencil, pen or tongue |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
351-354 |
|
84.842 |
Geraldine |
There thou goest, there thou goest |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
176-177 |
|
85.417 |
Happy Old Age |
I feel that age has overta'en |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
193-195 |
|
85.415 |
Harvest hymn |
The nations heave with throes of strife |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
188-189 |
|
84.771 |
Home |
Let us honour the gods of the household always |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
150-151 |
contributed to Eliza Cook's Journal October, 11 1851 |
5.961 |
Hope |
Veiled by the shadows of obscurest night |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
71 |
|
81.616 |
Hope |
Veiled by the shadows of obscurest night |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
39 |
|
1.448 |
Hope and perseverance |
Scive on, brave souls, and win your way |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
161 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.579 |
Hope and perseverance |
Strive on, brave souls, and win your way |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
446 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
85.429 |
Hope and perseverance |
Strive on, brave souls, and win your way |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
220 |
|
85.461 |
Hope and trust |
Oh! sigh not - weep not, if some day |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
278-279 |
|
85.826 |
Hope and trust |
Oh! sigh not - weep not, if some day |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
44-45 |
Wigan author |
82.530 |
Human brotherhood |
The king who is swathed in the splendours of state |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
432-433 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.437 |
Human brotherhood |
The king who is swathed in the splendours of state |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
150 |
From Autumn Leaves. Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
85.426 |
Human brotherhood |
The king who is swathed in the splendours of state |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
214-215 |
|
5.742 |
Hymn |
Lord, on this bright, auspicious day |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
50 |
Written for laying of the foundation stone of the Blackburn Infirmary on Whit Monday, May 24th 1858 |
6.065 |
Hymn to spring |
Thou comest once more, fairest child of the sun |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
190-191 |
|
81.661 |
Hymn to spring |
Thou comest once more, fairest child of the sun |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
133-134 |
|
81.963 |
Hymn to the creator |
Praise unto God! whose single will and might |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
243-245 |
|
5.233 |
Hymn to the creator |
Praise unto God! whose single will and might |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
18-20 |
|
85.846 |
Hymn to the creator |
Praise unto God! whose single will and might |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
84-87 |
Wigan author |
6.068 |
I go for evermore |
I go, but ere my steps depart |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
199 |
|
81.665 |
I go for evermore |
I go, but ere my steps depart |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
143 |
|
85.475 |
Italy awakened |
Well done at last, thou fair and storied land |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
306-307 |
|
85.841 |
Italy awakened |
Well done at last, thou fair and storied land |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
76-77 |
Wigan author |
81.982 |
January |
He cometh! the elder born child of the year |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
309-311 |
|
5.289 |
January |
He cometh! the elder-born child of the year |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
126-128 |
|
85.412 |
Judge not too hastily |
Oh! judge not too hastily man and his mind |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
182-183 |
|
81.984 |
July |
Proudly, lovely and serenely |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
315-318 |
|
5.291 |
July |
Proudly, lovely and serenely |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
134-138 |
|
84.697 |
June |
Hail! fervid, flowery, leafy, lusty June! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
45 |
Sub title A sonnet. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
82.597 |
Kindly words |
The wild rose, mingled with the fragrant bine |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
476 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
85.830 |
Kindly words |
The wild rose, mingled with the fragrant bine |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
59 |
Wigan author |
1.461 |
Kindly words |
The wild rose, mingled with the fragrant vine |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
175 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
84.647 |
Kossuth's prayer |
God of my Country! and her dauntless Brave |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
20-21 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
5.970 |
Land and sea |
The seaman may sing of his own vast sea |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
88 |
|
81.624 |
Land and sea |
The seaman may sing of his own vast sea |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
53 |
|
85.853 |
Legendary Fragment |
Maiden, as bright as the Hunter's star |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
110-111 |
Wigan author |
81.991 |
Leonore |
Oh! For a day of that departed time |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
344-346 |
|
5.352 |
Leonore |
Oh! for a day of that departed time |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
183-186 |
|
6.081 |
Let the boisterous Bacchanal |
Let the boisterous Bacchanal sing of his bowl |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
245-246 |
|
81.671 |
Let the boisterous Bacchanal |
Let the boisterous Bacchanal sing of his bowl |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
164 |
|
6.087 |
Let us drink to the bards |
Let us drink to the bards of our own native land |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
254-255 |
|
81.677 |
Let us drink to the bards |
Let us drink to the bards of our own native land |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
176-177 |
|
5.747 |
Let us drink to the bards |
Let us drink to the bards of our own native land |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
56-57 |
|
85.479 |
Lilly and her Newfoundland dog |
Truly 'tis a pleasant picture |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
313-315 |
|
85.845 |
Lilly and her Newfoundland dog |
Truly 'tis a pleasant picture |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
81-83 |
Wigan author |
5.975 |
Linda |
Along the moorland, bleak and bare |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
97-99 |
|
81.628 |
Linda |
Along the moorland, bleak and bare |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
60-62 |
|
81.679 |
Line |
Daughters of England! forms of love and grace |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
183-184 |
|
81.652 |
Lines |
Behold affection's garden, whose sweet flowers |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
117 |
|
6.050 |
Lines |
Behold affection's garden, whose sweet flowers |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
161 |
|
81.996 |
Lines |
Retreat of our fathers, who battled and bled |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
358-359 |
|
5.358 |
Lines |
Retreat of our fathers, who battled and bled |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
199-200 |
Written in Rhuddlan Castle, North Wales |
5.977 |
Lines on seeing a picture |
I saw two sisters |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
102-103 |
|
81.945 |
Lines On Seeing A Picture |
I saw two sisters |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
192-193 |
|
84.772 |
Look up |
Look up! cried the seaman, with nerves like steel |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
152-153 |
Addressed to Prince's literary friend, Mr George Markham Tweddell, July 26, 1851 |
84.774 |
Love |
Love is an odour from the heavenly bowers |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
157 |
|
6.082 |
Man of tail |
Man of tail, wouldst thou be free? |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
246-247 |
|
81.672 |
Man of toil |
Man of toil, wouldst thou be free? |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
165-166 |
|
5.952 |
May |
Bride of the summer! Gentle, genial May! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
50 |
|
81.608 |
May |
Bride of the Summer! gentle, genial May! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
21 |
|
85.418 |
May |
May, May! song-honoured May! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
196-197 |
|
84.769 |
Mercy |
God looked, and smiled upon the wakening earth |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
144-146 |
|
85.851 |
Midnight Imaginings |
With an angry wing, and an awful wail |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
103-107 |
Wigan author |
85.482 |
Midnight imaginings (composed during sickness) |
With an angry wing, and an awful wail |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
321-325 |
|
85.474 |
My birthday |
My birthday! - old familiar sound |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
304-305 |
|
85.840 |
My birthday |
My Birthday! - old familiar sound |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
74-75 |
Wigan author |
81.648 |
My Country and My Queen |
Rejoice, rejoice, ye loyal band |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
113-114 |
|
6.047 |
My Country and my Queen |
Rejoice, rejoice, ye loyal band |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
157-158 |
|
84.700 |
My Father's farm |
Methinks I see my father's farm |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
17-49 |
Inscribed to J.L., ESQ. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
85.423 |
My friends of Chorley |
The earth lay entranced in the glories of June |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
206-207 |
|
81.979 |
New Year's Day aspirations |
Great God! a mighty multitude of years |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
302-305 |
|
5.286 |
New Year's Day aspirations |
Great God! a mighty multitude of years |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
107-109 |
|
81.987 |
North Wales |
These records of thy wanderings awake |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
326-330 |
|
5.294 |
North Wales |
These records of thy wanderings awake |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
147-151 |
|
84.983 |
Not Bread alone |
Albeit for a lack of bread we die |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
167-68 |
|
84.773 |
Nothing is lost |
Nothing is lost; the drop of dew |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
154-156 |
|
85.454 |
Now And Then |
Now is a constant warning stroke |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
260-262 |
|
85.818 |
Now and then |
Now is a constant warning stroke |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
25-27 |
Wigan author |
81.985 |
October |
October, a blithe and benevolent fellow |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
319-320 |
|
5.292 |
October |
October, a blithe and benevolent fellow |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
139-141 |
|
6.086 |
Oh! Despise not my harp |
Oh! Despise not my harp - I have cherished it long |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
253-254 |
|
81.676 |
Oh! Despise not my harp |
Oh! Despise not my harp - I have cherished it long |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
174-175 |
|
5.964 |
On quitting North Wales |
Farewell proud region, where the living God |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
78 |
|
81.943 |
On quitting North Wales |
Farewell proud region, where the living God |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
189 |
|
84.701 |
On the death of Ebenezer Elliott |
Another Poet dead! and who will care |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
50-51 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
81.976 |
On the death of Robert Southey, late Poet Laureate |
Form the bright coronal of living minds |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
292-294 |
|
5.356 |
On the death of two infant children |
Alas for me |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
195-196 |
|
5.283 |
On thedeath of Robert Southey, late poet laureate |
From the bright coronal of living minds |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
93-96 |
|
85.460 |
One angel more |
A bonny and a blessed bird |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
275-277 |
|
85.825 |
One angel more |
A bonny and a blessed bird |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
42-44 |
Wigan author |
84.762 |
Pleurs; or, The Town of Tears |
Oh! sunny South! oh! bright Italian land! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
97-114 |
|
85.835 |
Poetry |
Pure and unstained, I live in Cowper's lore |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
66-67 |
Wigan author |
81.967 |
Poetry in common things |
Twas Saturn's night, dark, silent, chill and late |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
259-263 |
|
5.237 |
Poetry in common things |
Twas Saturn's night, dark, silent, chill and late |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
35-39 |
|
84.844 |
Precious Time |
When we have passed beyond life's middle arch |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
180 |
Contributed to 'Eliza Cook's Journal' Nov 30, 1850 |
85.495 |
Prologue |
Friends of the Drama! gathered here tonight |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
358-359 |
|
85.498 |
Prologue |
Patrons and friends, your presence here tonight |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
365-367 |
|
85.431 |
Random Rhymes |
Let stand-still souls bemoan the dreary past |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
222-223 |
|
85.485 |
Retrospection |
I might have been - oh! sad suggestive words! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
330 |
|
85.879 |
Retrospection |
I might have been - oh! sad suggestive words! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
117 |
Wigan author |
81.995 |
Sabbath evening thoughts |
In the calm shadow of this Sabbath night |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
356-357 |
|
5.357 |
Sabbath evening thoughts |
In the calm shadow of this Sabbath night |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
197-198 |
|
6.084 |
Sad and sick unto death |
Sad and sick unto death, on his pallet reclining |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
248-250 |
|
81.674 |
Sad and sick unto death |
Sad and sick unto death, on his pallet reclining |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
169-170 |
|
84.778 |
Saint Christopher |
My limbs wax strong, my thoughts expand |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
160-163 |
Saint Christopher and other Poems was the title Prince proposed for the volume called Autumn leaves |
6.052 |
Song |
I have rearly sung of love |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
164 |
|
81.658 |
Song |
Youthful widow! Lovely widow! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
130 |
|
6.060 |
Song |
Youthful widow! Lovely widow! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
182 |
|
81.951 |
Song! |
I have rarely sung of love |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
200 |
|
5.987 |
Sonnet |
How glorious is thy fall, rich summer's day |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
132 |
|
5.974 |
Sonnet |
Thanks for the song of Keats - as rich a boon |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
96 |
|
81.627 |
Sonnet |
Thanks for the song of Keats - as rich a boon |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
59 |
|
81.948 |
Sonnet (written in the Castle of Caernarvon) |
How glorious is thy fall, rich summer's day |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
195 |
|
85.469 |
Sonnet to a friend |
Though fate has willed that thou must change thy home |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
295 |
|
85.834 |
Sonnet to a friend |
Though fate has willed that thou must change thy home |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
66 |
Wigan author |
85.481 |
Sonnet to the old year |
Thou slumberest with the past, old forty-four |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
320 |
|
85.850 |
Sonnet to the old year |
Thou slumberest with the past, old forty-four |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
102 |
Wigan author |
85.444 |
Sonnet To Wordsworth |
But thy last gift! - how precious to my sight! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
246 |
|
85.808 |
Sonnet To Wordsworth |
But thy last gift! - how precious to my sight! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
11 |
Wigan author |
6.085 |
Sons of my mother England |
Sons of my mother England |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
250-253 |
|
81.675 |
Sons of my mother England |
Sons of my mother England |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
171-173 |
|
84.698 |
Spring |
How bountiful is Nature! how replete |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
46 |
Sub title: A sonnet. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
81.639 |
Spring |
I pause and listen, for the cuckoo's voice |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
93 |
|
5.988 |
Spring |
I pause and listen, for the cuckoo's voice |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
133 |
|
84.703 |
Spring |
Some renovating spirit seems to near me |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
55-56 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
85.814 |
Spring Sonnets |
Be glad my spirit |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
19 |
Wigan author |
85.450 |
Spring Sonnets |
Be glad, my spirits, for the world of snows |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
254 |
|
5.971 |
Stanzas |
Once more old trees, I seek your solemn shades |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
89-90 |
|
81.944 |
Stanzas |
Once more old trees, I seek your solemn shades |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
190-91 |
|
6.063 |
Stanzas |
Once mortal here, but now immortal one |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
185-188 |
Suggested at the grave of Shakespear |
81.638 |
Stanzas |
Young Ariel of the Poet's home |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
90-92 |
|
5.986 |
Stanzas |
Young Ariel of the poet's home |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
129-131 |
|
81.953 |
Stanzas (suggested at the grave of Shakespeare) |
Once mortal here, but now immortal one |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
204-206 |
|
85.497 |
Stanzas (to the memory of the late Joseph Brotherton) |
God sent his summons down |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
363-364 |
|
85.493 |
Stanzas for the new year |
The Old Year is numbered with those of the past |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
355-356 |
|
85.451 |
Sunshine |
A form of sweet simplicity, whose hand |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
255 |
|
85.815 |
Sunshine |
A form of sweet simplicity, whose hand |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
20 |
(A statue, by J. Durham). Wigan author |
85.486 |
Supplication |
Oh! help me in my deepest need |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
331 |
|
81.654 |
Temperance song |
Oh! tempt me no more to the wine-brimming bowl |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
120 |
|
6.054 |
Temperance song |
Oh! tempt me no more to the wine-brimming bowl |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
167 |
|
85.416 |
The Arab's song |
In Caypha's hallowed garden-grounds |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
190-192 |
|
6.057 |
The banks of Conway |
I lay me down to rest a while |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
177-179 |
|
81.952 |
The Banks of Conway |
I lay me down to rest awhile |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
201-203 |
|
85.446 |
The Beggar Boy |
A beggar boy sank at a lordly door |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
249-250 |
|
85.810 |
The Beggar Boy |
A beggar boy sank at a lordly door |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
14-15 |
Wigan author |
85.453 |
The Benefactress |
I know thee not, lady, in feature or form |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
259 |
|
85.817 |
The Benefactress |
I know thee not, lady, in future or form |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
24 |
Wigan author |
5.967 |
The blind enthusiast |
He loved and worshipped all that's fair |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
82-83 |
|
81.621 |
The blind enthusiast |
He loved and worshipped all that's fair |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
48-49 |
|
5.980 |
The captive's dream |
Deep in a loathsome dungeon's twilight gloom |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
110-121 |
|
81.632 |
The captive's dream |
Deep in a loathsome dungeon's twilight gloom |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
71-83 |
|
82.506 |
The child and the dewdrops: in memory of a lost son |
O dearest mother! tell me, pray |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
390-391 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.421 |
The child and the dewdrops: in memory of a lost son |
O dearest mother! tell me, pray |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
127 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
84.768 |
The child and the Dew-Grops |
O dearest mother! tell me, pray |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
142-143 |
Subtitle In Memory of a lost son |
81.646 |
The Child of Song |
A child of song! Oh, sadly pleasing name |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
109-111 |
|
6.046 |
The child of song |
A child of song! Oh, sadly pleasing name |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
154-156 |
|
85.440 |
The Coming Of The May |
All nature seems to feel the power |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
235-237 |
|
85.805 |
The coming of the may |
All Nature seems to feel the power |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
1-Mar |
Wigan author |
5.959 |
The contrast |
Twas evening's holy season, when the sun |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
65-67 |
|
81.614 |
The contrast |
Twas the evening's holy season, when the sun |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
33-35 |
|
85.489 |
the country wedding |
No more of grief: - the viol is awake |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
341-344 |
|
5.991 |
The courier to his pony |
Farewell to thee, Bobby! Since fate has decreed |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
141-142 |
|
81.642 |
The courier to his pony |
Farewell to thee, Bobby; since fate has decreed |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
98-99 |
|
85.457 |
The darkest hour |
Despair not, Poet, whose warm soul aspires |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
267-268 |
|
85.822 |
The darkest hour |
Despair not, Poet, whose warm soul aspires |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
34-35 |
Wigan author |
5.949 |
The darkest hour |
Despair not, Poet, whose young soul aspires |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
43-44 |
|
84.649 |
The desert and the city |
Pensive and sad, with weary steps I paced |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
24-26 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
84.711 |
The fairy's funeral |
It was a summer's eventide |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
78-83 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. Prince is said to have dreamt this poem 3 times before it was written. Part of it was contributed to the 'Ancint Shepards' magazine as 'A Summer Evening Shower |
84.709 |
The Golden Land of Poesy |
Forth on a venturous voyage |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
70-72 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
85.413 |
The happy change |
Oh! will he come? said Alice Wray |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
184-185 |
|
85.443 |
The Holy Land |
Oh! sad yet sacred land! lorn palestine |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
242-245 |
|
85.807 |
The Holy Land. Prologue to an unfinished sacred poem |
Oh! sad yet sacred land! lorn Palestine |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
7-Nov |
Wigan author |
84.839 |
The Household darling |
Little Ella, fairest, dearest |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
169-171 |
The Child refered to here was the daughter of Mr. John Brooks of Ashton-under- Lyne |
84.644 |
The Household Jewels |
A traveller, from jouneying |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
Oct-13 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
81.956 |
The Inquiry |
Tell me, where canst thou be seen, Poesy |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
215-219 |
|
6.077 |
The inquiry |
Tell me, where canst thou be seen, Posey? |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
230-234 |
|
84.801 |
The Lost One |
I mourn, albeit I mourn in vain |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
164-466 |
Written for Mr. Thomas Syms of Tyldesley, on the occasion of the death of his wife |
85.839 |
The Lovers Call |
Oh! when will the sweet spring come |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
73 |
Wigan author |
1.374 |
The lover's call |
Oh! When will the sweet spring come |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
67 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
5.663 |
The lover's call |
Oh! When will the sweet spring come |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
285 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
85.473 |
The lover's call |
Oh! When will the sweet spring come |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
303 |
|
5.956 |
The maid of a mountain land |
I met with a joyous few last night |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
61-62 |
|
81.612 |
The maid of a mountain land |
I met with a joyous few last night |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
30-31 |
|
85.445 |
The Mariner of life |
A mariner sailed on a perilous sea |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
247 |
|
85.809 |
The Mariner of life |
A mariner sailed on a perilous sea |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
Dec-13 |
Wigan author |
85.490 |
The meeting of the winds (from the French) |
From the four points of the horizon's ring |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
345-347 |
|
81.988 |
the merchant and the mourner |
I lingered at a lordly gate, before a lordly hall |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
331-337 |
|
5.349 |
The merchant and the mourner |
I lingered at a lordly gate, before a lordly hall |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
152-157 |
|
85.848 |
The Merchant And The Mourner |
I lingered at a lordly gate, before a lordly hall |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
93-98 |
Wigan author |
6.069 |
The mountain spring |
Alone I lingered at the rocky foot |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
200-203 |
|
81.954 |
The mountain spring |
Alone I lingered at the rocky foot |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
207-210 |
|
85.448 |
The mountain tarn |
Thou lonely tarn, with rocks begirt around |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
252 |
|
85.812 |
The mountain tarn |
Thou lonely tarn, with rocks begirt around |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
17 |
Wigan author |
85.477 |
The mountains |
I have a passion for the mountains; they |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
309-310 |
|
85.843 |
The mountains |
I have a passion for the mountains; they |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
78-79 |
Wigan author |
85.428 |
The New Year |
the poet sings of many things |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
218-219 |
|
6.080 |
The oak and the sapling |
I beheld an oak, a goodly oak |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
242 |
|
81.643 |
The Oak and the Sapling |
I beheld an oak, a goodly oak |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
100 |
|
85.452 |
The Palace Of Art |
Behold this treasury of glorious things |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
256-258 |
|
85.816 |
The palace of art |
Behold this treasury of glorious things |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
21-23 |
(The Manchester art-treasures exhibiton). Wigan author |
81.974 |
The partition of the Earth |
Take the earth uttered God from the height of his throne |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
289-290 |
|
5.281 |
The partition of the earth |
Take the earth uttered God from the height of his throne |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
89-90 |
|
81.975 |
The patriot's battle prayer |
father of life! To thee, to thee I call |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
290-291 |
|
5.282 |
The patriot's battle prayer |
Father of life! to thee, to thee I call |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
91-92 |
|
85.877 |
The Paupers Grave |
Behold ye how calmly he sinks to death! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
112-113 |
Wigan author |
85.484 |
The pauper's grave |
Behold ye how calmly he sinks to death! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
328-329 |
|
6.088 |
The pen and the press |
Young genius walked out by the mountains and streams |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
255-256 |
|
81.678 |
The pen and the press |
Young genius walked out by the mountains and streams |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
178-179 |
|
81.959 |
The Pen and the Sword |
Creative pen, destructive sword - dread powers |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
230-237 |
|
5.230 |
The pen and the sword |
Creative pen, destructive sword - dread powers |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
3-Nov |
|
6.076 |
The poet at the grave of his child |
A bard stood drooping o'er the grave |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
227-229 |
|
81.670 |
The poet at the grave of his child |
A bard stood drooping o'er the grave |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
161-163 |
|
5.953 |
The poet to his child |
Welcome! blossom fair! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
51-52 |
|
81.609 |
The poet to his child |
Welcome! blossom fair! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
22-23 |
|
5.948 |
The poet's sabbath |
Sabbath! thou art my Ararat of life |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
25-42 |
|
81.606 |
The poet's sabbath |
Sabbath! thou art my Ararat of life |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
Jan-17 |
|
81.992 |
The poet's welcome |
Welcome! Ye worshippers of that sweet power |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
347-348 |
|
5.153 |
The poet's welcome |
Welcome! Ye worshippers of that sweet power |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
9-Nov |
|
5.353 |
The poet's welcome |
Welcome! Ye worshippers of that sweet power |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
187-188 |
|
6.071 |
The poor man's appeal |
Look down upon the people, gracious God |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
206-208 |
|
81.666 |
The poor man's appeal |
Look down upon the people, gracious God |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
144-146 |
|
85.433 |
The Postman |
The Postman is the people's man |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
226-227 |
|
81.978 |
The power of pleasant memories |
Low drooping o'er my toil this afternoon |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
301-302 |
|
5.285 |
The power of pleasant memories |
Low drooping o'er my toil this afternoon |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
105-106 |
|
85.819 |
The power of pleasant memories |
Low drooping o'er my toil this afternoon |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
28-29 |
Wigan author |
81.960 |
The Press and The Cannon |
The canon and the press! How they ban, how they bless |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
238-240 |
|
5.231 |
The Press and The Cannon |
The canon and the press! How they ban, how they bless |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
Dec-15 |
|
5.983 |
The profligate awakened |
Away from my heart and my haunts, dissipation |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
124-125 |
|
81.634 |
The profligate awakened |
Away from my heart and my haunts, dissipation |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
85-86 |
|
81.964 |
The Queen's question or the rival flowers |
Ladies - who linger o'er this page |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
246-249 |
|
5.234 |
The Queen's question or the rival flowers |
Ladies - who linger o'er this page |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
21-25 |
|
84.710 |
The Rescue |
In a dim court, shut inward from a street |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
73-77 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
84.776 |
The return of peace |
Once mopre to visit a distracted world |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
158-159 |
|
85.436 |
The Return of Spring |
How calm and how beneficent is God |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
230-231 |
|
6.078 |
The robin |
The robin is an English bird, fond of his native sky |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
235-237 |
|
81.958 |
The robin |
The robin is an English bird, fond of his native sky |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
227-229 |
|
81.653 |
The rose and the nightingale |
The sun was away in the golden west |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
118-119 |
|
6.051 |
The rose and the nightingale |
The sun was away in the golden west |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
162-163 |
|
84.645 |
The Rose of Caypha |
In the sweet shades of Caypha there bloometh a flower |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
14-15 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
85.806 |
The Saving Angel |
How fair is England in her lofty state |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
3-Jul |
Wigan author |
85.442 |
The Saving Angel |
How far is England in her lofty state! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
238-241 |
|
81.968 |
The seaside sojourn |
My valued friend! as generous and true |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
264-270 |
|
5.275 |
The seaside sojourn |
My valued friend! as generous and true |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
59-66 |
|
84.704 |
The Shepard's Dog |
Brave dog was Steadfast, brave and strong |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
57-59 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
84.760 |
The Silver Chamber |
I had a dream, one sad and restless night |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
95-96 |
Subtitle A dream |
81.668 |
The slave |
Ye may tell of the gladness that wakes with the spring |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
153-155 |
|
6.073 |
The slave |
Yo may tell of the gladness that wakes with the spring |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
215-217 |
|
85.468 |
The soldier of progress |
What are my glorious watchwords now? |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
293-294 |
|
85.833 |
The Soldier of Progress |
What are my glorious watchwords now? |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
64-65 |
Wigan author |
555 |
The songs of the people |
Oh! The songs of the people are voices of power |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
132-133 |
Lancashire poetry |
82.520 |
The songs of the people |
Oh! The songs of the people are voices of power |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
420 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.430 |
The songs of the people |
Oh! The songs of the people are voices of power |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
142 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
85.438 |
The songs of the people |
Oh! The songs of the people are voices of power |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
232 |
|
85.472 |
The soul of the land is awake |
The soul of the land is awake |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
301-302 |
|
85.838 |
The Soul of the Land is awake |
The soul of the land is awake |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
71-72 |
Wigan author |
85.496 |
The spirit of charity |
When Messiah was born, and the Bethlehem star |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
360-362 |
|
85.488 |
The spirit of sound |
Mysterious spirirt of the tremulous air! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
339-340 |
|
82.499 |
The star of the household |
An angel in the house? Ah, yes! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
374-375 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.414 |
The star of the household |
An angel in the house? Ah, yes! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
114-115 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
5.746 |
The star of the household |
An angel in the house? Ah, yes! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
55-56 |
The wife: written Blackburn October 27th 1859 |
85.456 |
The star of the household |
An angel in the house? Ah, yes! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
263-264 |
|
85.821 |
The star of the household |
An angel in the house? Ah, yes! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
32-33 |
Wigan author |
84.650 |
The Stream and the vine |
JOY! Joy! said the jolly-voiced mountain Vine |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
27-28 |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
6.074 |
The student of nature |
Books are a blessed dower, when they enshrine |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
218-221 |
|
81.955 |
The Student of Nature |
Books are a blessed dower, when they enshrine |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
211-214 |
|
85.422 |
The Sunday School |
The people of our Christian land |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
203-205 |
|
85.483 |
The temple of nature |
Were there no temple reared by mortal hands |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
326-327 |
|
85.852 |
The Temple Of Nature |
Were there no temple reared by mortal hands |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
108-109 |
Wigan author |
5.354 |
The temptation and the expulsion |
Stranger! wouldst thou be charmed, here stand thee still |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
189-191 |
|
81.993 |
The temptation' and 'The expulsion' |
Stranger! Wouldst thou be charmed, here stand thee still |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
349-350 |
|
6.079 |
The three angels |
In the shadow of slumber as dreaming I lay |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
238-241 |
|
81.957 |
The Three Angels |
In the shadow of slumber as dreaming I lay |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
223-226 |
|
6.067 |
The voice of the primrose |
The sun's last glances through the clear air trembled |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
196-198 |
|
81.663 |
The voice of the primrose |
The sun's last glances through the clear air trembled |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
139-141 |
|
5.278 |
The wanderer |
In a lonely valley yonder |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
73-78 |
|
81.971 |
The wanderer |
In a lonely valley yonder |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
276-280 |
|
85.420 |
The waste of war |
Give me the gold that War has cost |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
201-202 |
|
84.643 |
The weary year is no more |
The weary, the wailing Old Year is no more! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
7-Sep |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
6.070 |
The widower's lament |
Thou traveller in desert lands |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
204-205 |
|
84.651 |
The Winter's walk |
How beautiful is Nature! and how kind |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
29-36 |
Sub Heading Influence of Nature. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
81.981 |
The woodland well |
I shall ever remember that morning in May |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
306-3008 |
|
5.288 |
The woodland well |
I shall ever remember that morning of May |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
122-125 |
|
85.439 |
The Workman To His Wife |
Dear wife, we struggle in a time |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
228-229 |
|
84.705 |
The Workmen's evening song |
I'm glad to see yon springtide sun |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
60-62 |
contributed to 'Eliza Cook's Journal' August 24, 1850.Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
85.462 |
The young mariner |
Young cheerwell, inspired with true love at eighteen |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
280-281 |
|
85.827 |
The young mariner |
Young cheerwell, inspired with true love at eighteen |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
46-47 |
Wigan author |
81.637 |
There is Beauty |
There is beauty o'er all this delectable world |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
89 |
|
5.985 |
There is beauty |
There is beauty o'er all this delectable world |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
128 |
|
6.083 |
There is beauty on earth |
There is beauty on earth, wherever our eyes |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
247-248 |
|
81.673 |
There is beauty on earth |
There is beauty on earth, wherever our eyes |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
167-168 |
|
81.651 |
There's Falsehood |
There's falsehood in those eyes of light |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
116 |
|
6.049 |
There's falsehood |
There's falsehood in those eyes of light |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
160 |
|
5.958 |
Thou art wooed and won |
Thou art wooed - thou art won - thou art wed |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
64 |
|
81.613 |
Thou art wooed and won |
Thou art wooed - thou art won - thou art wed |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
32 |
|
84.991 |
To a blind poet |
Judge me not harshly, aged man and blind |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
175-76 |
|
81.656 |
To a brother poet |
Successful suitor at the muse's feet |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
128 |
|
6.058 |
To a brother poet |
Successful suitor at the muse's feet |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
180 |
|
5.287 |
To a young poetess |
I know thou hast within thee, child of dreams |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
110 |
|
5.955 |
To an early primrose |
Young herald of the spring, pale primrose flower |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
58-60 |
|
81.942 |
To An Early Primrose |
Young herald of the spring, pale Primrose flower |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
186-188 |
|
81.647 |
To B.S.' (Benjamin Stott) |
While yet my harp retains its youthful tone |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
112 |
|
5.957 |
To France |
When shall I tread thy fertile shores again |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
63 |
|
81.611 |
To France |
When shall I tread thy fertile shores again |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
29 |
|
81.660 |
To G. R |
Oh George! It is a cheering thing to know |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
132 |
G. R refers to George Richardson |
6.062 |
To G. R. |
Oh George! It is a cheering thing to know |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
184 |
|
5.976 |
To Hypatia |
I know thee not yet, gentle child of the lyre |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
100-101 |
|
81.629 |
To Hypatia |
I know thee not yet, gentle child of the lyre |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
63-64 |
|
5.965 |
To J B Rogerson |
Thou who hast roamed with reverie and song |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
79 |
|
81.619 |
To J. B. Rogerson |
Thou who hast roamed with reverie and song |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
45 |
|
6.072 |
To J. P Westhead, Esq |
Before I lay my lowly harp aside |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
209-214 |
|
81.667 |
To J. P. Westhead Esq |
Before I lay my lowly harp aside |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
147-152 |
|
6.048 |
To Julius |
Oh, Julius! Friend of the forsaken poor |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
159 |
|
81.649 |
To Julius ( To John Minter Morgan) |
Oh Julius! friend of the forsaken poor |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
115 |
|
5.984 |
To Lilla, weeping |
Yes, thou hast cause to weep, lone maiden |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
126-127 |
|
81.636 |
To Lilla, weeping |
Yes, thou hast cause to weep, lone maiden |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
87-88 |
|
81.659 |
To my friend, John Dickinson |
True-hearted Dickinson! Can I forget |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
131 |
|
6.061 |
To my friend, John Dickinson |
True-hearted Dickinson! Can I forget |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
183 |
|
81.615 |
To Poesy |
Best solace of my lonely hours! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
36-38 |
|
5.960 |
To Posey |
Best solace of my lonely hours |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
68-70 |
|
5.979 |
To Quintus Hortensius |
Quintus, my earliest intellectual friend |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
109 |
|
81.630 |
To Quintus Hortensius |
Quintus, my earliest intellectual friend |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
65 |
|
81.633 |
To Sylvan |
Bard of the woods, thy tributary lay |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
84 |
|
5.981 |
To Sylvon |
Bard of the woods, thy tributary lay |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
122 |
|
81.657 |
To the cricket |
Thou merry minstrel of my cottage hearth |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
129 |
|
6.059 |
To the cricket |
Thou merry minstrel of my cottage hearth |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
181 |
|
5.982 |
To the fall of the swallow |
Fall of the swallow, whose impetuous stream |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
123 |
|
81.946 |
To The Fall Of The Swallow |
Fall of the swallow, whose impetuous stream |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
194 |
|
81.994 |
To the memory of a deceased friend |
Mid the harsh Babel of the busy crowd |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
351-353 |
|
5.355 |
To the memory of a deceased friend |
Mid the harsh bable of the busy crowd |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
192-194 |
|
85.487 |
To the muse |
In my forlorn and visionary youth |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
335-338 |
|
6.042 |
To the Poles after their subjugation |
Devoted people! Are ye fallen at last |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
143 |
|
81.641 |
To The Poles, After Their Subjugation |
Devoted people! are ye fallen at last |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
97 |
|
81.980 |
Tp a young poetess |
I know thou hast within thee, child of dreams |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
305 |
|
5.990 |
Verses |
Thou splendid thing of beauty and of power |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
1138-140 |
|
81.949 |
Verses (suggested by the rhaidr Mawr) |
Thou splendid thing of beauty and power |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
196-197 |
|
5.350 |
Vindicatory stanzas |
Whate'er I am, whatever sign I wear upon my sleeve |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
158-161 |
|
85.878 |
Vindicatory Stanzas |
Whate'er I am, whatever sign I wear upon my sleeve |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
114-116 |
Wigan author |
81.989 |
Vindictory stanzas |
Whate'er I am, whatever sign I wear upon my sleeve |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
337-340 |
|
81.972 |
War |
Scourge of the nations, and the bane of freedom, hope and life |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
281-284 |
|
5.279 |
War |
Scourge of the nations, and the bane of freedom, hope and life |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
79-82 |
|
85.455 |
Weeds and flowers |
Well spake the ancient gardener |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
263-264 |
|
85.820 |
Weeds and flowers |
Well spake the ancient gardener |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
30-31 |
Wigan author |
84.641 |
Welcome to spring |
Hail jubilant spring! thou bringer of bright hours! |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
1-Apr |
Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2. |
81.662 |
What is glory? What is fame? |
In the full strenght of youthful prime |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
135-138 |
|
6.066 |
What is glory? What is fame? |
In the full strength of youthful prime |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
192-195 |
|
85.425 |
Whittle Springs |
It was a Summer's gorgeous eventide |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
210-213 |
|
5.951 |
Who are the free? |
Who are the free? |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
47-49 |
|
81.607 |
Who are the free? |
Who are the free? |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
18-20 |
|
144 |
Who are the great |
They who have boldly ventured to explore |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
117 |
|
81.973 |
Winter musings |
Stern winter time! thy shrouded skies oppress me |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
285-288 |
|
5.280 |
Winter musings |
Stern winter time! thy shrouded skies oppress me |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
83-88 |
|
85.847 |
Winter Thoughts |
Stern Winter! stormy, sullen, aolc and dun |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Miscellaneous Poems |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067281LC |
281.840 |
0 |
88-92 |
Wigan author |
81.644 |
Written In Affliction |
Softly careering on the wintry breeze |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 1 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000520LC |
1.255 |
0 |
101 |
|
6.044 |
Written in affliction |
Softly careering on the wintry breeze |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
Hours with the muses |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067278LC |
281.837 |
1.857 |
151 |
|
84.763 |
Zoana |
Sir Gilbert was a brave and gentle knight |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
The poetical works of John Critchley Prince. Edited by R.A. Douglas Lithgow. Vol. 2 |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0000519LC |
1.253 |
1.880 |
115-133 |
Poem is identical as Zora which Prince had projected as a a separate work |
82.843 |
Wrestling poem |
We all know that it is fixed |
PROBERT, Andrew |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
85 |
|
1.403 |
Early haunts visited |
When childhood fairy boon from fate |
PROCTER, R. W. |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
101-102 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.487 |
Early haunts visited |
When childhood fairy boon from fate |
PROCTER, R. W. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
356-357 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and T T Wilkinson |
82.636 |
The snowdrop's melody |
The voice of old Christmas had pass'd into air |
PROCTER, R. W. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
540-542 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.257 |
The snowdrop's melody |
The voice of old Christmas had passed into air |
PROCTER, R. W. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, (part 2, modern). Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
715811827 |
79.254 |
1.976 |
540-542 |
Reprinted from 3rd edition, first published 1882. Revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.409 |
The woodman's ballad |
One morn, the first of beaming May |
PROCTER, R. W. |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
108-109 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.494 |
The woodman's ballad |
One morn, the first of beaming May |
PROCTER, R. W. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
365 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.273 |
The woodman's ballad |
One morn, the first of beaming May |
PROCTER, R. W. |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
157 |
|
82.638 |
When I return from sea |
Young Gideon left the verdant plain |
PROCTER, R. W. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
545-546 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.338 |
When I return from sea |
Young Gideon left the verdant plain |
PROCTER, R. W. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, (part 2, modern). Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
715811827 |
79.254 |
1.976 |
545-549 |
Reprinted from 3rd edition, first published 1882. Revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.166 |
Early haunts visited |
When childhood fairy boon from fate |
PROCTER, Richard Wright |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
42-43 |
|
81.346 |
Show jumping |
The first horse in the ring |
PROCTOR, Mandie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
29 |
|
82.815 |
But I don't like it |
Ice cream is cool |
PULFORD, Danny |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
68 |
|
2.536 |
Influence of trifles |
Speak not of trifles light as air |
PUNSHON, Rev. Wm. Morley |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
285-286 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.535 |
Permanence of character |
By trifles in our common ways |
PUNSHON, Rev. Wm. Morley |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
284-285 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.537 |
Sabbath evening |
Another Sabbath sun is down |
PUNSHON, Rev. Wm. Morley |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
287-288 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
81.371 |
Space |
Dark, deep motion |
PURDY, Rhiannon |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
43 |
|
5.247 |
Gooin' wom |
Ah've just bin back to me Wom-Teawn |
PURSELL, Iris |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
55 |
Home coming |
4.349 |
Mi Dad |
I mind mi Dad oft tellin' me |
PURSELL, Iris |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
35 |
|
82.718 |
The tiger |
The tiger races on the plain |
RAINFORD, Daniel |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
13 |
|
82.856 |
My dad |
My dad is the coolest dad in town |
RAITH, Demi |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
94 |
|
82.847 |
My dog |
Cat killer |
RAITH, Luke |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
88 |
|
4.103 |
Clogs |
Willie Smith wer' owt' but pleased |
RALPHS, Edith |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
19 |
|
5.342 |
A letther o' thanks |
Good Lady - yo mun kindly be |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
Phases of distress: Lancashire rhymes, edited by "A Lancashire lad" |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
M0017708LC |
77.659 |
1.864 |
70-76 |
|
5.337 |
After thowt |
Aw'm getten neaw to sich a state |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
Phases of distress: Lancashire rhymes, edited by "A Lancashire lad" |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
M0017708LC |
77.659 |
1.864 |
33-39 |
|
4.834 |
Coaxin' |
Hi thi, Jenny, lyev thi loom |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
51-52 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
1.058 |
Coaxin' |
Hi thi, Jenny, lyev thi loom |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
243-244 |
|
5.344 |
Comfortin' |
Neaw, Jim, why wilto pine an' fret? |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
Phases of distress: Lancashire rhymes, edited by "A Lancashire lad" |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
M0017708LC |
77.659 |
1.864 |
82-86 |
|
1.202 |
Eawt o' wark |
Brether Jim |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
285-286 |
|
82.614 |
Eawt o' wark |
Brother Jim |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
493-496 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Unemployment |
5.334 |
Eawt o' wark |
Brother Jim, it's bo sad news aw send |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
Phases of distress: Lancashire rhymes, edited by "A Lancashire lad" |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
M0017708LC |
77.659 |
1.864 |
15-22 |
|
5.346 |
Feighrside chat |
Eh, Missis Baker, is that yo? |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
Phases of distress: Lancashire rhymes, edited by "A Lancashire lad" |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
M0017708LC |
77.659 |
1.864 |
92-96 |
|
4.865 |
Frettin' |
Fro heawrs to days - a dhreary length |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
105-107 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
5.343 |
Frettin' |
Fro heawrs to days - a dhreary length |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
Phases of distress: Lancashire rhymes, edited by "A Lancashire lad" |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
M0017708LC |
77.659 |
1.864 |
77-81 |
|
1.474 |
Frettin' |
Fro' heawrs to days - a dhreary length |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
192 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.619 |
Frettin' |
Fro' heawrs to days - a dhreary length |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
505-506 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Sadness; depression |
5.336 |
Good news |
Neaw, Matty, lass, come dhreigh thi e'm |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
Phases of distress: Lancashire rhymes, edited by "A Lancashire lad" |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
M0017708LC |
77.659 |
1.864 |
28-32 |
|
1.476 |
Gooin' t' schoo' |
Heaw slow these weary weeks drag on |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
195-196 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
4.869 |
Gooin' t' schoo' |
Heaw slow these weary weeks drag on |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
110-112 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
5.345 |
Gooin' t' schoo' |
Heaw slow these weary weeks drag on |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
Phases of distress: Lancashire rhymes, edited by "A Lancashire lad" |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
M0017708LC |
77.659 |
1.864 |
87-91 |
|
82.621 |
Gooin' t' schoo' |
Heaw slow these weary weeks drag on |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
508-510 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Cotton weavers; unemployment; education |
5.347 |
Lancashire emigrants 1 (Farewell) |
Well, Will, aw've come to say farewell |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
Phases of distress: Lancashire rhymes, edited by "A Lancashire lad" |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
M0017708LC |
77.659 |
1.864 |
97-102 |
|
5.348 |
Lancashire emigrants 2 (the mother's dhrem) |
Come, John, dhraw up an' get thi tay |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
Phases of distress: Lancashire rhymes, edited by "A Lancashire lad" |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
M0017708LC |
77.659 |
1.864 |
102-105 |
|
2.097 |
Philip Clough's tale |
Eh! dear, what weary toimes are these |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
293-294 |
|
5.335 |
Philip Clough's tale |
Eh! dear, what weary toimes are these |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
Phases of distress: Lancashire rhymes, edited by "A Lancashire lad" |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
M0017708LC |
77.659 |
1.864 |
23-27 |
|
4.862 |
Philip Clough's tale |
Eh! dear, what weary toimes are these |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
100-102 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
82.617 |
Philip Clough's tale |
Eh! dear, what weary toimes are these |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
501-502 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.341 |
Preawd Tum's prayer |
Theaw God above, alone to-day |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
Phases of distress: Lancashire rhymes, edited by "A Lancashire lad" |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
M0017708LC |
77.659 |
1.864 |
59-69 |
|
5.331 |
Proem |
Let o' thoose sing o' queens an' kings |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
Phases of distress: Lancashire rhymes, edited by "A Lancashire lad" |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
M0017708LC |
77.659 |
1.864 |
1-Mar |
|
1.060 |
Spiteful Nelly |
Mi mother wur sittin' one neet wi' her knittin' |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
245-246 |
|
4.835 |
Stop wi' thi mother |
Yo'n throuble wi' childher fro' cayther to th' grave |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
53 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
5.339 |
Takin' stock |
Neaw th' wife's i' bed, an' th' childer too |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
Phases of distress: Lancashire rhymes, edited by "A Lancashire lad" |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
M0017708LC |
77.659 |
1.864 |
45-53 |
|
5.340 |
Th' owd pedlar |
Well, want up pins or neelds to-day |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
Phases of distress: Lancashire rhymes, edited by "A Lancashire lad" |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
M0017708LC |
77.659 |
1.864 |
54-58 |
|
82.612 |
The factory lass |
O lady, lady, stop awhile |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
491-492 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.332 |
The factory lass |
O lady, lady, stop awhile |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
Phases of distress: Lancashire rhymes, edited by "A Lancashire lad" |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
M0017708LC |
77.659 |
1.864 |
4-Oct |
|
1.469 |
The factory lass |
O lady, lady, stop awhile |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
185-186 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
5.333 |
The pleasures o' whoam |
This faggin' on, this wastin' sthrife |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
Phases of distress: Lancashire rhymes, edited by "A Lancashire lad" |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
M0017708LC |
77.659 |
1.864 |
Nov-14 |
|
1.401 |
The pleasures o' whoam |
This faggin' on, this wastin' sthrife |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
98-99 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.484 |
The pleasures o' whoam |
This faggin' on, this wastin' sthrife |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
351-352 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.059 |
The pleasures o' whoam |
This faggin' on, this wastin' sthrife |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
244-245 |
|
4.509 |
The pleasures of whoam |
This faggin' on, this wastin' sthrife |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
109 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
5.338 |
The wife's advice |
Why, Tom, heaw pale thea looks to-day |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
Phases of distress: Lancashire rhymes, edited by "A Lancashire lad" |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
M0017708LC |
77.659 |
1.864 |
40-44 |
|
4.863 |
Th'owd pedlar |
Well, want yo pins or neelds today |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
102-103 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
4.508 |
What weary toimes |
Eh! dear, what weary toimes are these |
RAMSBOTTOM, Joseph |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
108 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
6.631 |
A cliff |
That ancient watcher by the rolling tide |
RAMSKILL, Clara Eveline |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
453 |
|
6.650 |
Commencement: recited at the Commencement Exercises of the John Marshall High School of Chicago, Class of 1900 |
Here meeting in the pale twilight of June |
RAMSKILL, Clara Eveline |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
455-456 |
|
6.633 |
Lilies of the valley |
Like the first gleam of the spear heads |
RAMSKILL, Clara Eveline |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
454 |
|
6.634 |
Recollection |
O quiet spot and limpid stream |
RAMSKILL, Clara Eveline |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
454-455 |
|
6.632 |
To H L T |
Lassie with the earnest eyes |
RAMSKILL, Clara Eveline |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
453 |
|
81.299 |
Guy Fawkes |
I stand alone on the bonfire |
RANDALL, Daniel |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
8 |
|
86.653 |
A cock chickens thoughts |
Now I'm a cock chicken, on that you'll agree |
RANICAR, Albert Ashton |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
1 |
|
538 |
Life's like a Fair |
Life's like a Fair; a vast of work afore |
RATCLIFFE, Dorothy Una |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
108 |
Yorkshire poetry |
536 |
Wensleydale lullaby |
Settle doon, my Poppet joy |
RATCLIFFE, Dorothy Una |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
107 |
Yorkshire poetry |
537 |
Yorkshire's five Aire, Wharfe, Nidd, Ure and Swale |
When I'se been by Tiber an' when I'se been by Seine |
RATCLIFFE, Dorothy Una |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
107-108 |
Yorkshire poetry |
61 |
A farmer's lad |
Tha' wants to be a farmer's lad - nay durned be sich a fool |
RATCLIFFE, Florence M. |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
214-215 |
|
81.523 |
Sharks |
Sharks are quick |
RATCLIFFE, Martyn |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
123 |
|
82.772 |
It's so unfair |
It's so unfair |
RATHBONE, Stephanie |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
44 |
|
81.351 |
My paintbox |
Green is the grass |
RATTAN, Puru |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
32 |
|
82.099 |
A cat's tale |
Attend to mi mews, an aw'll rhyme yo' mi wail |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
77-78 |
Blackburn authors |
82.092 |
A flittin' |
A rollin' stooan, it's awlos sed |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
63-65 |
Blackburn authors |
82.109 |
A greeting |
Old Year! Thou'lt soon be gone forever |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
95 |
Blackburn authors |
82.093 |
A sweet little spot |
Such a sweet little spot |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
66-67 |
Blackburn authors |
6.343 |
A sweet little spot: extract |
Such a sweet little spot, it can ne'er be forgot |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
259 |
Extract only |
6.339 |
An apostrophe: to my books |
Mi books, befoor to-morn's breet sun shall shine |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
255-256 |
Extract only |
82.074 |
An apostrophe: To my books |
Mi books, befoor to-morn's breet sun shall shine |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
29-32 |
Blackburn authors |
82.104 |
An epistle from Douglas |
Neaw th' fost thing aw'll explain mi case |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
85-88 |
Blackburn authors |
82.094 |
An espistle |
Aw write this dark November day |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
67-69 |
Blackburn authors |
82.078 |
An espistle |
It's thi birthday to-morn |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
36-37 |
Blackburn authors. To a cousin suffering from cancer |
82.079 |
Aw wish hoo'd cum to-neet |
My wife hoo's bin away o' week |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
38-39 |
Blackburn authors |
82.108 |
Cum next Sunday mornin' |
When owd Sol's climbed up eawt o' th' east |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
93-94 |
Blackburn authors |
82.097 |
Dick! |
Aw connod sing o'er heroes bowd |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
73-76 |
Blackburn authors |
6.401 |
Dick! |
Aw connod sing o'er heroes bowd, 'at feyt i' forran parts |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
261-262 |
|
82.089 |
Eawr little Nell |
Aw'm fairly upset abeawt thee, Nell! |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
58-59 |
Blackburn authors |
82.096 |
Faces in the fire |
The outside world is hushed and still |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
71-73 |
Blackburn authors |
82.107 |
Farwell to May |
We shall awlus mek thee welcome |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
91-92 |
Blackburn authors |
82.111 |
Gloomy June |
Aw wonder will id ever give o'er rainin' |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
97-99 |
Blackburn authors |
82.086 |
He sed he would |
Neaw whether aw succeed or fail |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
53-55 |
Blackburn authors |
82.095 |
Hoo's set off a walkin' to-day |
Aw've bin watchin' eawr Nelly o' day |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
69-71 |
Blackburn authors |
82.082 |
Hoo's two year old to-morn |
Aw've bin eawr Nelly's slave so long |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
45-46 |
Blackburn authors |
82.090 |
In Blackburn Park |
When spring puts on her gaudy cap |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
59-61 |
Blackburn authors |
82.087 |
In memoriam |
Loud wails of lamentation o'er the land |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
55-56 |
Father Stephen Perry S.J died January 3rd 1890. Blackburn authors |
82.106 |
In memoriam |
She is not dead - though millions are in grief |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
90-91 |
Blackburn authors. Eliza Cook died 24th September 1889 |
82.077 |
In memoriam |
So full of life - now dead - in one short week |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
35-36 |
Blackburn authors. Ellenor Shorrock died March 2nd 1889 |
82.098 |
In memoriam |
The words 'He's dead' refuse to leave the tongue |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
76-77 |
Blackburn authors. Edwin Waugh died April 30th 1890 |
82.110 |
Let's booath poo one way |
Aw think ther's summat ails tha Jack |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
95-97 |
Blackburn authors |
82.083 |
May |
Though every month for me's a charm |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
47-48 |
Blackburn authors |
6.400 |
May |
Though every month for me's a charm |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
260-261 |
|
82.084 |
Musings |
The fluttering of my window blind |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
48-50 |
Blackburn authors |
6.342 |
Musings |
The fluttering of my window blind |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
257-259 |
|
82.101 |
November |
Aw'm cheer'd wi t' blue i' th' sky aboon |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
80-81 |
Blackburn authors |
82.091 |
Pavin' th' branch |
Aw've noss'd my papper, pen, an' ink |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
61-63 |
Blackburn authors |
82.081 |
Phrenology |
Aw'm beawn to learn phrenology |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
42-44 |
Blackburn authors |
82.112 |
Ribchester club walk |
A chap is a slave when he's lazy |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
99-100 |
Blackburn authors |
82.080 |
Shy little miss |
She's a shy little miss |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
39-42 |
Blackburn authors |
82.085 |
T' clock as stan's on th' cornish |
Neaw, clock, let's learn fro' tuneful Spring |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
50-52 |
Blackburn authors |
82.088 |
Thad heawse into th' fowd |
Aw'd thrown deawn mi book |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
56-57 |
Blackburn authors |
1.062 |
The festive season |
Tha's com - tha grand owd festive season |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
249-250 |
|
82.103 |
The Moorland stream |
I saw it in my ramble |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
84-85 |
Blackburn authors |
82.105 |
There's nooan like yon o' mine |
There's nowt i' th' world aw like so weel |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
88-90 |
Blackburn authors |
82.100 |
To Autumn |
Eh! Me, booath Spring an' Summer's gone |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
78-79 |
Blackburn authors |
6.344 |
To the memory of John Walker |
My heart is sad, bewildered is my brian |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
259 |
|
1.061 |
When everybody geds their own |
Aw dreamt last neet aw'd th' magic wand |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
248-249 |
|
82.075 |
When everybody geds their own |
Aw dreamt last neet aw'd th' magic wand |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
33-35 |
Blackburn authors |
6.340 |
When everybody geds their own |
Aw dreamt last neet aw'd th' magic wand |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
256-257 |
Six stanzas only |
6.402 |
Yon lad as aw'm t' gronfayther to |
Yo' should just see yon lad as aw'm gronfayther to |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
263 |
Grandchild |
82.102 |
Young Ninety-One |
Jack, poo thi cheer a bit tort mine |
RAWCLIFFE, John |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
82-83 |
Blackburn authors |
82.068 |
Cherley shepsterd |
Yo' see yon heawse a-top o' th' hill |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
19-21 |
Blackburn authors |
553 |
Cum next Sunday morning |
When owd Sol's climbed up eawt o' th' east |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
129-131 |
Lancashire poetry |
6.011 |
Heroes |
Let poets sing of battles fought |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
197 |
Written Blackburn, March 11th, 1863 |
82.061 |
How peaceful Pat was mistaken for a fenian |
The morning was cold, for the frost it was keen |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
11-Dec |
Blackburn authors |
82.056 |
Idylls by the hearth |
Another weary day had fled |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
1-Mar |
Blackburn authors |
84.794 |
Idylls by the hearth |
Another weary day had fled |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
194-196 |
|
82.067 |
In Blackburn Park - to Flora |
Fair Flora! Lovely goddess of the flowers |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
18-19 |
Blackburn authors |
82.073 |
In memoriam |
A tribute to a father from a son |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
26-28 |
Blackburn authors |
82.069 |
In memoriam |
One of the tuneful tribe has gone to rest |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
21-22 |
Blackburn authors. Samuel Perrings, died January 9th 1877 |
6.471 |
In memoriam' stanzas |
One of the tuneful tribe has gone to rest |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
346 |
Written in memory of Samuel Perring |
82.065 |
Lines on the death of Councillor Beads, JP |
One more of the majority hath gone |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
16-17 |
Blackburn authors |
82.058 |
Lines to a poet friend |
The music of thy song rings in mine ear |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
5-Jun |
Blackburn authors |
82.070 |
Lines to the robin |
Fly from thy shed, thou robin red |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
22-24 |
Blackburn authors |
939 |
May song |
The storm is hushed today |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
186-187 |
|
6.014 |
May song |
The storm is hushed today |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
200-201 |
|
82.066 |
May song |
The storm is hushed today |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
17-18 |
Blackburn authors |
82.063 |
Money makes the Mare to go |
If you are wealthy, you are great |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
13-15 |
Blackburn authors |
81.571 |
Ode to th' Canary |
Good lad, thee, Dick, thy pratty wings |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
231-232 |
|
82.072 |
Ode to th' canary |
Good lad, thee, Dick, thy pratty wings |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
25-26 |
Blackburn authors |
6.013 |
Ode to th' canary |
Good lad, thee, Dick, thy pratty wings |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
199-200 |
|
82.059 |
Owd blackin' Bill |
Id wur th' middle o' December an' th' northern wind dud blow |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
7-Sep |
Blackburn authors |
82.060 |
Summer - a lyric |
Leave the city's gloom and care |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
9-Oct |
Blackburn authors |
6.012 |
The birds are singing |
The birds are singing in the woods |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
198 |
Death |
82.064 |
The birds are singing |
The birds are singing in the woods |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
15-16 |
Blackburn authors |
82.071 |
The motherless child |
A little one, laid by its mothr's side |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
24-25 |
Blackburn authors |
6.015 |
To my youngest son |
Dear Richard, how I long to hear |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
201-202 |
Written November 1886 |
82.057 |
To my youngest son |
Dear Richard, how I long to hear |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
4-May |
Blackburn authors |
82.062 |
To the robin |
Of all the birds that sing and fly |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
Pebbles fro' Ribbleside, by Richard and John Rawcliffe, Part 1, Richard Rawcliffe's poems; Part 2: John Rawcliffe's poems |
RAWCLIFFE, Richard |
M0017652LC |
77.271 |
1.891 |
Dec-13 |
Blackburn authors |
87.730 |
A Heavenly Greeting |
Close your beautiful eyes |
RAWLINGS, Andrew |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
15 |
|
82.964 |
The sun |
The sun explodes like a red firework |
RAY, Emma |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
153 |
|
86.697 |
King of the jungle |
I'm the King of the jungle |
READ, Geoffrey |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
45 |
|
86.784 |
The Townies at play |
Striding through the countryside |
READ, Mark |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
116 |
|
82.786 |
Cheerleaders |
Go, go, go |
READE, Abigail |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
52 |
|
82.976 |
A swan riddle |
A graceful king of lake and river |
REDFERN, Rosie |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
158 |
|
81.488 |
Goosebumps |
Goosebumps are exciting, scary |
REED, Wayne |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
107 |
|
82.985 |
Glittering caves |
The small waterfalls were like falling blue glass |
REEVES, Olivia and FOSTER, Rachael |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
164 |
|
87.753 |
For the bereaved |
Lay me gently down to rest |
REID, Alan |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
38 |
|
6.316 |
Arduus ad solem |
O life! O Mystery! Sunshine and rain |
REID, T. Wemyss |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
213 |
|
6.226 |
Francis Thompson |
In older times men wove a crown of bay |
REID, T. Wemyss |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
114-117 |
|
6.314 |
Lines to J- |
A fairy kissed your eyes, dear |
REID, T. Wemyss |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
211 |
|
6.312 |
On night as these! |
On nights as these I cannot sleep for thinking |
REID, T. Wemyss |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
209 |
|
6.313 |
Song |
I am waiting in the forest where the leaves are turning golden |
REID, T. Wemyss |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
210 |
|
6.315 |
The conqueror |
He comes, though the thunders would rout him |
REID, T. Wemyss |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
212 |
|
87.718 |
You and I |
Once we were together, joined as one |
REIDY, Alison |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
4 |
|
82.912 |
Elf and Santa |
The snow is falling hard, Santa |
RENAGHAN, Ryan |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
124 |
|
82.988 |
The prisoners' world |
There was some place far away, long ago |
REYNOLDS, Kate |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
165 |
|
6.233 |
Suggestions |
Now up, ye bards, and string the tuneful lyre |
REYNOLDS, Stephen |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
126-128 |
Moonraker - nom de plume |
5.154 |
A poetical replication |
I duly received your kind notice to dine |
RICHARDSON, George |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
Dec-16 |
|
1.190 |
Festive strains |
Festive strains like friendly meeting |
RICHARDSON, George |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
213 |
|
82.521 |
Festive strains |
Festive strains like friendly meeting |
RICHARDSON, George |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
421 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.391 |
Nuptial lines |
Hark, the merry bells are ringing! |
RICHARDSON, George |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
85 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.460 |
Nuptial lines |
Hark, the merry bells are ringing! |
RICHARDSON, George |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
326-327 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
81.572 |
Sam Bamford's Grave |
I stood beside Sam Bamford's grave |
RICHARDSON, George |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
235-236 |
|
1.172 |
The maid of Diss |
Fair maid of Diss! With dark brown hair |
RICHARDSON, George |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
105-106 |
|
82.450 |
The maid of Diss |
Fair maid of Diss! with dark brown hair |
RICHARDSON, George |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
313-314 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.415 |
Tis sweet to meet the friend we love |
Tis sweet to meet the friend we love |
RICHARDSON, George |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
116 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.500 |
Tis sweet to meet the friend we love |
Tis sweet to meet the friend we love |
RICHARDSON, George |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
376 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and T T Wilkinson |
712 |
Cheap advice |
It's passin' strange, an' yet its trew |
RICHARDSON, John |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
276-278 |
Cumberland |
2.416 |
It's nobbut me |
Ya winter neet, I mind it weel |
RICHARDSON, John |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
102-103 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
711 |
It's nobbut me |
Ya winter neet, I mind it weel |
RICHARDSON, John |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
275-276 |
Cumberland |
707 |
Laal Isaac |
When cworn wi' thack an' reapp was hap't |
RICHARDSON, John |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
268-269 |
Cumberland |
2.414 |
T'auld farmer's midneet soliloquy |
Is't thee 'at's cum heamm sa leatt, Zarah? |
RICHARDSON, John |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
99-100 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.415 |
What use to be lang sen |
I's grou'en feckless, auld, an' leamm |
RICHARDSON, John |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
100-101 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.781 |
Broken toys; or the mother's soliloquy |
Tis eventide, and twilight adds |
RICHARDSON, John Duncan |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
67 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.780 |
England |
Isle of the fair and the brave |
RICHARDSON, John Duncan |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
66-67 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
82.811 |
Friends |
My friends can keep my secrets hidden in their mind |
RICHARDSON, Louise |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
66 |
|
709 |
Auld Gwordie an' his coo |
Auld Gwordie was a tailyer |
RICHMONDSON, John |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
271-273 |
Cumberland |
82.737 |
Merlin |
Hair and beard very long |
RIDDICK, Catherine |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
23 |
|
5.242 |
Mi garden |
It's nobbut a bit o' God's wondrous earth |
RIDGEON, Anne |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
52 |
|
81.574 |
Ale versus physic |
Aw'r gooin by a docthur's shop |
RIDINGS, Elijah |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
239-240 |
|
1.063 |
Ale versus physic |
Aw're gooin' by a docther's shop |
RIDINGS, Elijah |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
252 |
|
4.510 |
Ale versus physic |
Aw're gooin' by a docther's shop |
RIDINGS, Elijah |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
110 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
145 |
Ale versus physic |
Aw's gooin by a docthur's shop |
RIDINGS, Elijah |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
124 |
|
5.639 |
Clayton Hall |
The bell doth call, in Clayton Hall |
RIDINGS, Elijah |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
242-244 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
1.355 |
Clayton Hall |
The bell doth call, in Clayton Hall |
RIDINGS, Elijah |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
32-33 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
5.162 |
Stanzas |
Since mortal life to me was given |
RIDINGS, Elijah |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
30-32 |
|
4.511 |
Th' ballies |
Aw'r stondin' bi Dick Bumpkin's heawse |
RIDINGS, Elijah |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
110-112 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
81.575 |
The Village Festival |
In that sweet season of the year |
RIDINGS, Elijah |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
241-244 |
|
694 |
Blaydon Races |
Aw went to Blaydon Races, 'twas on the ninth of Joon |
RIDLEY, George |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
207-208 |
Tyneside |
81.336 |
Colours |
l like colours |
RIGBY, Laura |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
25 |
|
82.818 |
I'm Ashleigh |
I'm just a little girl though people often forget |
RILEY, Ashleigh |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
70 |
|
66 |
Untitled |
Well, Moses, old friend, your letter to hand |
RILEY, James |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
73 |
Sent to Moses Heap local diarist |
82.175 |
The inner spirit |
The child I was when loving hands caressed my brow |
RILEY, Madeleine |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
96 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
87.842 |
The night before my daughter was born |
Wasted, worrying time |
RILEY, Ron |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
130 |
|
81.510 |
My Milo |
I have a puppy called Milo |
RIMMER, Ashley |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
117 |
|
4.113 |
Blow it again Sam |
O come we salute thee, our own village band |
RIMMER, Pat |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
30-31 |
|
82.178 |
Wintry wind |
Woefully the wild wind |
RIPLEY, Frances |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
100 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
82.828 |
The forest's story |
I remember when life was good |
ROACH, Thomas |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
74 |
|
81.445 |
My dad |
My dad says |
ROBERTS, Andrew |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
84-85 |
|
806 |
Black Moss reservoir |
There lies the water, cool and deep |
ROBERTS, Doreen |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
21 |
|
87.747 |
My Prayer |
Hold thou mine hand and let it remain |
ROBERTS, Gladys |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
3 |
|
81.387 |
The red planet |
I was fast asleep in my bed |
ROBERTS, Kayleigh |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
53 |
|
80.848 |
This Wigan Pier joke |
For many years Wigan Pier has been a joke |
ROBERTS, Samuel |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
125-126 |
|
81.526 |
Sun |
Rising in the morning |
ROBERTSON, Stephanie Ann |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
125 |
|
84.300 |
A poet's epitaph |
Beneath this stone, though few men know it |
ROBIN O'Bob's |
When the robin sings, and other verses |
ROBIN O'BOB'S |
M0063782LC |
273.707 |
1.924 |
22 |
Robert Atherton wrote under the pseudonyms Robin Hesketh Banks and Robin O'Bob's |
84.295 |
April |
April, the haloed month of merry measure |
ROBIN O'Bob's |
When the robin sings, and other verses |
ROBIN O'BOB'S |
M0063782LC |
273.707 |
1.924 |
16 |
Robert Atherton wrote under the pseudonyms Robin Hesketh Banks and Robin O'Bob's |
84.290 |
For me. Child's song or recitation |
There is a little laddie |
ROBIN O'Bob's |
When the robin sings, and other verses |
ROBIN O'BOB'S |
M0063782LC |
273.707 |
1.924 |
10-Dec |
Robert Atherton wrote under the pseudonyms Robin Hesketh Banks and Robin O'Bob's |
84.292 |
Liverpool |
I will sing you the song of a city |
ROBIN O'Bob's |
When the robin sings, and other verses |
ROBIN O'BOB'S |
M0063782LC |
273.707 |
1.924 |
13-14 |
Robert Atherton wrote under the pseudonyms Robin Hesketh Banks and Robin O'Bob's |
84.298 |
My ship |
My ship is coming sailing in |
ROBIN O'Bob's |
When the robin sings, and other verses |
ROBIN O'BOB'S |
M0063782LC |
273.707 |
1.924 |
19 |
Robert Atherton wrote under the pseudonyms Robin Hesketh Banks and Robin O'Bob's |
84.237 |
Old England |
We`'ll march to the front, lads |
ROBIN O'Bob's |
When the robin sings, and other verses |
ROBIN O'BOB'S |
M0063782LC |
273.707 |
1.924 |
7-Aug |
Robert Atherton wrote under the pseudonyms Robin Hesketh Banks and Robin O'Bob's |
84.235 |
Robin redbreast |
Cheep! Cheep!' says Robin when Winter is cold |
ROBIN O'Bob's |
When the robin sings, and other verses |
ROBIN O'BOB'S |
M0063782LC |
273.707 |
1.924 |
5 |
Robert Atherton wrote under the pseudonyms Robin Hesketh Banks and Robin O'Bob's |
84.291 |
Second sonnet to Bob: no. 8 |
The world's a busy place! We oft hob-nob |
ROBIN O'Bob's |
When the robin sings, and other verses |
ROBIN O'BOB'S |
M0063782LC |
273.707 |
1.924 |
12 |
Robert Atherton wrote under the pseudonyms Robin Hesketh Banks and Robin O'Bob's |
84.288 |
Second sonnet to Burns. No. 30 |
Made countless thousands' glad! That was thy lot |
ROBIN O'Bob's |
When the robin sings, and other verses |
ROBIN O'BOB'S |
M0063782LC |
273.707 |
1.924 |
8 |
Robert Atherton wrote under the pseudonyms Robin Hesketh Banks and Robin O'Bob's |
84.297 |
Sonnet to a child: no.19 |
Sleep, little being! There are suns to set |
ROBIN O'Bob's |
When the robin sings, and other verses |
ROBIN O'BOB'S |
M0063782LC |
273.707 |
1.924 |
18 |
Robert Atherton wrote under the pseudonyms Robin Hesketh Banks and Robin O'Bob's |
84.293 |
Sonnet to a star: no.18 |
When, as a lad, I used to lift mine eyes |
ROBIN O'Bob's |
When the robin sings, and other verses |
ROBIN O'BOB'S |
M0063782LC |
273.707 |
1.924 |
14 |
Robert Atherton wrote under the pseudonyms Robin Hesketh Banks and Robin O'Bob's |
84.236 |
Sons of Britain |
March ye forward, sons of Britain |
ROBIN O'Bob's |
When the robin sings, and other verses |
ROBIN O'BOB'S |
M0063782LC |
273.707 |
1.924 |
6 |
Robert Atherton wrote under the pseudonyms Robin Hesketh Banks and Robin O'Bob's |
84.299 |
Ten little bow-wows of Sligo |
Cato was a bow-wow in Sligo |
ROBIN O'Bob's |
When the robin sings, and other verses |
ROBIN O'BOB'S |
M0063782LC |
273.707 |
1.924 |
20-21 |
Robert Atherton wrote under the pseudonyms Robin Hesketh Banks and Robin O'Bob's |
84.294 |
The ship and the iceberg. Titanic no. 3 |
There sailed to the West with the noblest and best |
ROBIN O'Bob's |
When the robin sings, and other verses |
ROBIN O'BOB'S |
M0063782LC |
273.707 |
1.924 |
15-16 |
Robert Atherton wrote under the pseudonyms Robin Hesketh Banks and Robin O'Bob's |
84.301 |
The swell that was mean |
A Swell there is in the North Countrie |
ROBIN O'Bob's |
When the robin sings, and other verses |
ROBIN O'BOB'S |
M0063782LC |
273.707 |
1.924 |
23-24 |
Robert Atherton wrote under the pseudonyms Robin Hesketh Banks and Robin O'Bob's |
84.289 |
Ticky-Tick. Child's recitation |
Tick-ticky-tick!' 'Tick-ticky-tick |
ROBIN O'Bob's |
When the robin sings, and other verses |
ROBIN O'BOB'S |
M0063782LC |
273.707 |
1.924 |
9 |
Robert Atherton wrote under the pseudonyms Robin Hesketh Banks and Robin O'Bob's |
84.296 |
To the author |
Oh, Singer of sweet ballad songs! Oh, Bard of sprightly lays |
ROBIN O'Bob's |
When the robin sings, and other verses |
ROBIN O'BOB'S |
M0063782LC |
273.707 |
1.924 |
17-18 |
Robert Atherton wrote under the pseudonyms Robin Hesketh Banks and Robin O'Bob's |
82.035 |
Good owd Lankisher |
Heear's to the ceawnty o' wihich we're so preawd |
ROBINSON, Fulcher |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.926 |
120 |
|
4.287 |
Good owd Lankisher |
Heear's to the ceawnty o' wihich we're so preawd |
ROBINSON, Fulcher |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
6 |
|
62 |
Good owd Lankisher |
Heear's to the ceawnty o' wihich we're so preawd |
ROBINSON, Fulcher |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
216 |
|
940 |
Good owd Lankisher |
Heear's to the ceawnty o' wihich we're so preawd |
ROBINSON, Fulcher |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
188-189 |
|
941 |
The Silver Badge |
Remember the men of the Silver Badge |
ROBINSON, Fulcher |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
189-190 |
|
87.720 |
The Ram |
That ram caught in the bush, and not my son? |
ROBINSON, Kathleen |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
6 |
|
86.679 |
From Colne |
From the top of the hill |
ROBINSON, Michael |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
27 |
|
81.542 |
Space |
One day I went to space |
ROBINSON, Natalie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
133 |
|
83.564 |
The missing guest |
Oh, richly adorned was my lady fair |
ROBINSON, Sarah A. |
SKETCHES and poems by local writers, edited by John U. Smith |
|
M0129272LC |
491.715 |
18 |
5-Jun |
Editor was member of the Burnley Literary and Philosophical Society |
83.567 |
The weaver's lament |
Forgive me, readers please if I |
ROBINSON, Sarah A. |
SKETCHES and poems by local writers, edited by John U. Smith |
|
M0129272LC |
491.715 |
18 |
9-Oct |
Editor was member of the Burnley Literary and Philosophical Society |
81.497 |
In my garden |
In my garden straight away |
ROBINSON, Tierny Rochelle |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
111 |
|
83.193 |
A Christmas song |
Hark seraphic hosts in heaven |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
6 |
|
83.401 |
Elegy |
Aweary now, and from the common way |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
39-40 |
|
83.445 |
Every day poems IV |
Hope on, there's a sky o'er the darkest cloud |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
43 |
|
83.403 |
Every day psalms I |
Be not weary ever |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
40-41 |
|
83.404 |
Every day psalms I: part II |
There are tools, for those who use them |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
41-42 |
This is part II of Every day psalms I! |
83.405 |
Every day psalms II |
Be cheerful, through the toil of day |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
42 |
|
83.444 |
Every day psalms III |
Be steady my boy, if you want to succeed |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
42-43 |
|
83.455 |
Hospital hymn |
Bless Thou, Thy servants' handwork |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
53 |
Sunday November 22nd 1885 |
83.446 |
Lines: night thoughts |
What are a thousand strifes to me |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
44 |
|
83.202 |
Night thoughts I |
Ye come, as the twilight shadows |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
15 |
Note at top of poem: The following were written before the age of twenty-one |
83.203 |
Night thoughts II |
Sweet Eve of Rest, how pure are thy delights |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
16 |
|
83.204 |
Night thoughts III; ode |
The sun sinks fast, within the distant west |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
17 |
|
83.205 |
Night thoughts IV |
Thou, art gone, to that blest shore |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
17-18 |
|
84.238 |
Night thoughts V |
What shall mine angel write down to-day |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
18-19 |
|
83.194 |
Night thoughts: ode |
Dear Mother! thou would'st speak |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
6-Aug |
|
83.449 |
Ode |
Oh! do not go to Sea, my son! |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
46-47 |
|
83.197 |
Ode |
Oh! Solitude, thy solemn presence here |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
10-Nov |
|
83.454 |
Ode |
Only, a fond mother's darling |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
51-52 |
September 28th 1885 |
83.196 |
Ode |
Sinking the golden sun |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
9-Oct |
|
83.458 |
Ode |
The fire burns brightly on the hearth |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
56 |
Thursday September 25th 1884 |
83.453 |
Ode |
They tell me she's an angel now |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
49-50 |
September 21st 1885 |
83.192 |
Ode |
When life's day is ending |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
5 |
|
83.402 |
Ode |
You're to have a better home, Mother, ere summer comes again |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
40 |
|
83.388 |
Ode I |
Hush'd in the solemn midnight hour |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
29-30 |
|
83.389 |
Ode II |
Weary in sorrow, the Old Year is dying |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
30-31 |
|
83.390 |
Ode III |
Clasp me, oh Death! To thy breast |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
31 |
|
83.391 |
Ode IV |
It was the time of reaping |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
31-32 |
|
83.397 |
Ode IX |
In Bethley's Holy City |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
36 |
|
83.392 |
Ode V |
Twas in a dream,I saw her face |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
32-33 |
|
83.393 |
Ode VI |
Hark the bells of St. Peter's |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
33-34 |
|
83.394 |
Ode VII |
Aged autumn sickening lies |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
34 |
|
83.395 |
Ode VIII |
It is God's acre, where she sleeps |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
34-35 |
|
83.398 |
Ode X |
The song of a garret |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
37 |
|
83.399 |
Ode XI |
And he, is gone, whose days were strewn with toil and care |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
38 |
Subject was Dr. Spencer Hall, died 1885 |
83.400 |
Ode XII |
Britannia, shall the tyrant power |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
38 |
|
83.457 |
Ode: a young person of the author's acquaintance related that when about to be married, his sweetheart died |
I'm sitting by the glowing fire, and thinking of the past |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
55 |
|
83.195 |
Ode: The dying year |
Swift the year is fleeting |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
8-Sep |
|
83.452 |
Ode; a sentimental soliloquy |
Methinks I never loved a walk, as now |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
48-49 |
Monday May 4th 1884 |
83.451 |
Song |
Oh! she's a very fairy |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
48 |
Saturday June 21st 1884 |
83.201 |
Songs |
Oh! gently breathe fond heart again |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
13-14 |
|
83.206 |
Songs I |
Gather round me, I am dying |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
19-20 |
|
83.207 |
Songs II |
I mind thee gentle lassie |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
20 |
|
83.375 |
Songs IV |
When the golden light, was deep'ning |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
21 |
|
83.380 |
Songs IX |
I'm alone on the raging deep, alone; and left to die |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
24 |
|
83.376 |
Songs V |
Fair Queen of my heart, sweet Maggie Moray |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
22 |
|
83.377 |
Songs VI |
She was a maid, with nut-brown hair |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
22-23 |
|
83.378 |
Songs VII |
Thou art gone, and perhaps for ever |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
23 |
|
83.379 |
Songs VIII |
Sweet dreams be thine, my maiden fair |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
23-24 |
|
83.381 |
Songs X |
The sombre twilight deepens |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
25 |
|
83.382 |
Songs XI |
Dreaming of thee, when the daylight is breaking |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
25-26 |
|
83.383 |
Songs XII |
Jenny, the clouds are breaking |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
26 |
|
83.384 |
Songs XIII |
She gave the old man flowers |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
26-27 |
|
83.385 |
Songs XIV |
At the wicket gate she lingered |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
27-28 |
|
83.386 |
Songs XV |
The flick'ring firelight shadows dance upon the window pane |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
28-29 |
|
83.387 |
Songs XVI |
Will you go wi' me, my Mary |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
29 |
|
83.208 |
Songs: III |
Do you remember, darling |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
20-21 |
|
83.199 |
Songs: night thoughts I |
I have been wild and wayward |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
11-Dec |
|
83.200 |
Songs: night thoughts II |
The Angels whisper softly, Mother |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
Dec-13 |
|
83.198 |
Sonnet |
Peace, wondrous peace! from heaven's high altar falls |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
11 |
|
83.447 |
Sonnet |
She is a maiden fair to see |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
45 |
|
83.396 |
Sonnet |
This, is thine house, a simple vault |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
35-36 |
|
83.450 |
Sonnet: on the fall of Khartoum, Feb 18th 1885 |
The wild Arabs swept on through the Gates of Khartoum |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
47 |
|
83.456 |
Thoughts on the death of the bishop of Manchester |
The crowned monarch on his throne |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
54 |
|
83.448 |
Thoughts: October 5th 1885 |
I had a son, a little son |
ROBINSON, William P. |
Poems |
ROBINSON, William P. |
M0063832LC |
273.798 |
1.885 |
45-46 |
Suggested by the late tram accident in Colne Road, Monday September 28th 1885 |
81.439 |
Dad and the deep fryer |
Dad is cooking chips |
ROBSON, Matthew |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
80 |
|
636 |
An evening hymn |
Faint falls the twilight dim |
ROBY, John |
The legendary and poetical remains of John Roby, with a sketch of his literary life and character, by his widow, Ann Roby |
ROBY, John |
M0016072LC |
70.300 |
1.854 |
151 |
|
635 |
Lines to a lady |
What though thy form I ne'er beheld |
ROBY, John |
The legendary and poetical remains of John Roby, with a sketch of his literary life and character, by his widow, Ann Roby |
ROBY, John |
M0016072LC |
70.300 |
1.854 |
145-146 |
|
624 |
Lines written on the departure of friends from England |
Swiftly go, thou bounding bark |
ROBY, John |
The legendary and poetical remains of John Roby, with a sketch of his literary life and character, by his widow, Ann Roby |
ROBY, John |
M0016072LC |
70.300 |
1.854 |
127-128 |
|
625 |
Preface to a lady's album |
An album? - 'Tis a pretty book i wis |
ROBY, John |
The legendary and poetical remains of John Roby, with a sketch of his literary life and character, by his widow, Ann Roby |
ROBY, John |
M0016072LC |
70.300 |
1.854 |
129-131 |
|
633 |
Song |
On, say not, lady |
ROBY, John |
The legendary and poetical remains of John Roby, with a sketch of his literary life and character, by his widow, Ann Roby |
ROBY, John |
M0016072LC |
70.300 |
1.854 |
141-142 |
Written to an air from Mendelssohn's 'Songs without words' |
627 |
Stanzas |
Lightly o'er the moon-lit sea |
ROBY, John |
The legendary and poetical remains of John Roby, with a sketch of his literary life and character, by his widow, Ann Roby |
ROBY, John |
M0016072LC |
70.300 |
1.854 |
133 |
|
632 |
Stanzas |
Say, what is Love? - a bubble |
ROBY, John |
The legendary and poetical remains of John Roby, with a sketch of his literary life and character, by his widow, Ann Roby |
ROBY, John |
M0016072LC |
70.300 |
1.854 |
140 |
|
629 |
Stanzas for music |
Fare, thee well! The dream is o'er |
ROBY, John |
The legendary and poetical remains of John Roby, with a sketch of his literary life and character, by his widow, Ann Roby |
ROBY, John |
M0016072LC |
70.300 |
1.854 |
137 |
Set to music by T Ashworth |
1.157 |
Stanzas for music |
Forgotten so soon |
ROBY, John |
The legendary and poetical remains of John Roby, with a sketch of his literary life and character, by his widow, Ann Roby |
ROBY, John |
M0016072LC |
70.300 |
1.854 |
134-135 |
Set to music by Charles Smith |
631 |
Stanzas for music |
I've seen the smile on woman's cheek |
ROBY, John |
The legendary and poetical remains of John Roby, with a sketch of his literary life and character, by his widow, Ann Roby |
ROBY, John |
M0016072LC |
70.300 |
1.854 |
139 |
|
630 |
Stanzas for music |
On yon dark bosom'd mountain |
ROBY, John |
The legendary and poetical remains of John Roby, with a sketch of his literary life and character, by his widow, Ann Roby |
ROBY, John |
M0016072LC |
70.300 |
1.854 |
138 |
|
628 |
The fairies' song |
Merry, merry elves we be |
ROBY, John |
The legendary and poetical remains of John Roby, with a sketch of his literary life and character, by his widow, Ann Roby |
ROBY, John |
M0016072LC |
70.300 |
1.854 |
136 |
Set to music by Charles Smith |
634 |
The friend |
There is a friend, whose love |
ROBY, John |
The legendary and poetical remains of John Roby, with a sketch of his literary life and character, by his widow, Ann Roby |
ROBY, John |
M0016072LC |
70.300 |
1.854 |
143-144 |
|
626 |
To- |
We have met and we have parted |
ROBY, John |
The legendary and poetical remains of John Roby, with a sketch of his literary life and character, by his widow, Ann Roby |
ROBY, John |
M0016072LC |
70.300 |
1.854 |
132 |
|
1.398 |
The dominie's courtship |
He woo'd her in the wisest way |
ROCKLIFF, Robert |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
95-96 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.474 |
The dominie's courtship |
He woo'd her in the wisest way |
ROCKLIFF, Robert |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
346-348 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and T T Wilkinson |
1.181 |
The love-draught |
As, for my favourite fair, I twined |
ROCKLIFF, Robert |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
138 |
|
82.473 |
The love-draught |
As, for my favourite fair, I twined |
ROCKLIFF, Robert |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
346 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.452 |
The song of other days |
Oh! Sing it not, that simple air |
ROCKLIFF, Robert |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
166 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.590 |
The songs of other days |
Oh! sing it not, that simple air |
ROCKLIFF, Robert |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
466 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.278 |
The young Cid |
Diego Laynez sate at home |
ROCKLIFF, Robert |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
49-52 |
|
5.651 |
The young Cid |
Diego Laynez sate at home |
ROCKLIFF, Robert |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
257-260 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
86.673 |
Do blind people have dream vision? |
Do blind people have dream vision? |
RODDEN, John |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
21 |
|
81.304 |
Water |
I hear the waterfalls |
ROGERS, Katie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
10 |
|
5.637 |
A ballad |
Cast the gay robes from off thy form |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
240-241 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.353 |
A ballad |
Cast the gay robes from off thy form |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
30 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.163 |
A ballad |
Cast the gay robes from off thy form |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
32-33 |
|
6.387 |
A ballad |
She cast the gay robes from her form |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
188 |
|
6.356 |
A father's prayer |
A child is born! another claims my care |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.942 |
105-106 |
written on the morning of the birth of my youngest child |
6.371 |
A friendly tribute |
Thou who hast wander'd from a land |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
146-148 |
|
6.373 |
A haunt of childhood |
There was a meadow where, in days of old |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
153 |
|
6.375 |
A legend of the heart |
The lights have vanish'd one by one |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
156-159 |
|
82.425 |
A legend of the heart |
The lights have vanish'd one by one |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
229-231 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.631 |
A legend of the heart |
The lights have vanish'd one by one |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
229-231 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.349 |
A legend of the heart |
The lights have vanish'd one by one |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
22-24 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
6.338 |
A voice from the town |
I have not liv'd a pamper'd, toilless life |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
13-31 |
|
6.345 |
A voice from the town (Part II) |
I stand within a wide and lofty room |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
37-55 |
|
6.346 |
A voice from the town (Part III) |
What would the world be were it not for books |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
61-77 |
|
6.348 |
An address |
To-night no veterans, skilful in the art |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
87-88 |
|
1.376 |
Canzonette |
There is a place where forest boughs |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
70 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
5.667 |
Canzonette |
There is a place where the forest boughs |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
291-292 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
1.381 |
Come, love, and sing |
Come, love, and sing, in thy tones sweet and low |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
75 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.442 |
Come, love, and sing |
Come, love, and sing, in thy tones sweet and low |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
298-299 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised T T Wilkinson |
6.379 |
Early Love |
Tis many years, sweet Margaret |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
168-71 |
|
6.358 |
England and Cambria |
How chang'd is all since that rude time |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
113-116 |
recited at the Manchester Cambrian Institution dinner, in celebration of St. David's Day, March 1st 1841 |
6.385 |
I Saw Thee and Blessed Thee |
I saw thee and bless'd thee, thou beautiful one |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
182-83 |
|
1.384 |
I'll tell my mother |
Timid little Marian |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
78 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.451 |
I'll tell my mother |
Timid little Marian |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
314-315 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.374 |
Lines on a portrait |
Fair boy! thy painted lineaments I scan |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
154-155 |
|
6.363 |
Love rhymes |
I need not say I think of thee |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
126-127 |
|
6.364 |
May |
Beautiful May! thou comest once again |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
128-131 |
|
6.376 |
My Lady's chamber |
My Lady's chamber-there at night she sleepeth |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
160-161 |
|
942 |
Nothing more |
In a fair valley I wander'd |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
191-192 |
|
1.390 |
Nothing more |
In a valley fair I wander'd |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
84 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.459 |
Nothing more |
In a valley fair I wander'd |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
324-325 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.386 |
Oh am I not thy bride? |
He gaz'd upon the maid |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
184-187 |
|
5.665 |
Oh, well I love my gentle maid |
Oh, well I love my gentle maid |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
287-289 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC). |
1.373 |
Oh, well I love my gentle maid |
Oh, well I love my gentle maid |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
65-66 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
6.352 |
Sleepless Fancies |
I hear no sound - mine eyes are veil'd by night |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
93 |
|
6.360 |
Song |
As thr fragrant wind that floateth |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
118-119 |
|
6.369 |
Sonnet |
Dear friend, no purer gift could'st thou bestow |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
142 |
Inscribed to T.A. Tidmarsh, Esq.,on his presenting me with a copy of Shelley's works |
6.359 |
Sonnet to T.A.Tidmarsh Esq |
Though fortune hath not smil'd upon my lot |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
117 |
|
6.381 |
The Arab's Lament |
Maisuna, thou art lost to me |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
174-75 |
|
6.361 |
The broken spell |
I love thee not as once I lov'd, and yet I know not why |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
120-121 |
|
6.384 |
The Dying Boy |
There was one feeble light |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
179-81 |
|
6.354 |
The Festival of Charity |
Whilst every brow with joy's bright wreath is bound |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
100-102 |
|
82.527 |
The garland of life |
In youth we weave a garland of the brightest, fairest flowers |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
427-429 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.434 |
The garland of life |
In youth we weave a garland of the brightest, fairest flowers |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
146-147 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
6.355 |
The Lover's lay |
Around the flowers the night-winds sigh |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
103-104 |
|
2.226 |
The maiden's fate |
It was Sir Hugh, the baron bold |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
26-27 |
|
5.634 |
The maiden's fate |
It was Sir Hugh, the baron bold |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
234-235 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.357 |
The maiden's grave |
Over the waste of dim departed years |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
107-112 |
|
6.367 |
The meeting and parting |
We met but once, and parted then for ever |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
137-139 |
|
6.362 |
The Minstrel's lot |
What is the Minstrel's lot upon the earth? |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
122-125 |
|
5.156 |
The Minstrel's lot |
What is the Minstrel's lot upon the earth? |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
18-22 |
|
6.368 |
The Offering |
Hard is his lot who cannot bring |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.942 |
140-141 |
|
6.377 |
The people's prayer |
God of the universe! oh, hear our cries |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
162-164 |
|
6.383 |
The Pledge |
Now fill ye up your goblets high |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
178 |
|
6.347 |
The poet's home |
Partner belov'd, my true and constant wife |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
81-86 |
|
6.349 |
The Princess and the poet |
Twas in a proud and lofty palace-hall |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
89-92 |
|
6.389 |
The Request |
Maiden with the star-bright eye |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
192-193 |
|
6.372 |
The songs of England |
The Songs of England! who their might shall tell |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
149-152 |
|
6.353 |
The Troubadour |
Visions are floating past mine eyes |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
94-99 |
|
6.388 |
The warrior's death |
The young knight fell while on the foe |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
189-191 |
|
6.382 |
Thoughts in Absence |
Where thou residest I may not reside |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
176-77 |
|
6.365 |
To John Critchley Prince |
When first I saw thy sweet and polish'd lines |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
132-134 |
|
6.378 |
To my infant sister |
Artless little cherub fair |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
165-167 |
|
5.229 |
Tributary stanzas to J C Prince |
When I first saw thy sweet and polished lines |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
Dreams and realities, in verse and prose |
PRINCE, John Critchley |
M0067339LC |
281.916 |
1.847 |
1-Feb |
|
6.380 |
We Have Met |
We have met-thou art gone! |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
172-73 |
|
6.370 |
Youth's return |
I awoke in the depth of a starless night |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
143-145 |
|
6.366 |
Zaidee |
Timid and most gentle Zaidee |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
A voice from the town, and other poems |
ROGERSON, John Bolton |
M0067356LC |
281.940 |
1.842 |
135-136 |
|
82.747 |
Similie poem |
Sometimes |
ROMANS, Kyle |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
29 |
|
82.931 |
Victorian schoolroom |
Two boys playing noughts and crosses |
ROONEY, Leona |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
134 |
|
81.502 |
About the weather |
Weather, weather is so nice |
ROPER, Lisa |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
113 |
|
1.006 |
Liverpool in 1777 |
How numerous now her thronging buildings rise! |
ROSCOE, William |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
57-58 |
|
5.172 |
Fame, freedom and friendship |
Thou hast in kindness breath'd a strain to me |
ROSE, Robert |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
57-58 |
|
5.160 |
Sonnet - The Poets |
Revere the poets, for 'tis they who breath |
ROSE, Robert |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
27 |
|
320 |
Sam's trombone |
A wonderful lad was Sam Simcock |
ROSS ENDALE |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
135-137 |
Pseudonym of Harry Craven |
81.412 |
Green |
Green is the colour of frogs and trees |
ROTHWELL, Lucy |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
67 |
|
86.683 |
Grandad |
They laid him out upon the bed |
ROUNDTREE, Kath |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
31 |
|
82.955 |
My magical box |
My box is made of |
ROWLANDS, Charlotte |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
148 |
|
82.966 |
The sun |
The sun dazzles like a light being turned on |
ROWLANDS, Hannah |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
154 |
|
1.368 |
Margaret |
Artist's chisel could not trace |
ROWLINSON, William |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
60 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
5.659 |
Margaret |
Artist's chisel could not trace |
ROWLINSON, William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
280-281 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
1.369 |
Remember me |
Remember me! Remember me, when in the sapphire heaven |
ROWLINSON, William |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
61 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
5.660 |
Remember me |
Remember me! Remember me, when in the sapphire heaven |
ROWLINSON, William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
281-282 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
5.716 |
Sir Gualtor |
Now ferry me o'er, thou good boatman |
ROWLINSON, William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
196-198 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
5.608 |
Sir Gualtor |
Now ferry me o'er, thou good boatman |
ROWLINSON, William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
140-142 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.780 |
Sir Gualtor |
Now ferry me o'er, thou good boatman |
ROWLINSON, William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
140-142 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
1.370 |
The invitation |
Oh, come when the stars of heaven |
ROWLINSON, William |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
62 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
5.661 |
The invitation |
Oh, come when the stars of heaven |
ROWLINSON, William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
282-283 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
1.367 |
The moon is bright |
The moon is bright, the soft starlight |
ROWLINSON, William |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
59 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
5.658 |
The moon is bright |
The moon is bright, the soft starlight |
ROWLINSON, William |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
279-280 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
373 |
Trinity House pilot |
The word centurion brings to most men's minds |
ROWNTREE, Margaret E. |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
27 |
|
82.742 |
What mum says |
Don't lounge on the chair |
ROYCE, Victoria |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
26 |
|
6.309 |
Light in darkness |
The day has shone golden, the country is comely and fair |
ROYLE, Dora, K. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
204-206 |
|
6.308 |
Nearing Mecca |
I come now at length, full of years, at the end of my days |
ROYLE, Dora, K. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
203-204 |
|
6.310 |
To a woman |
Leave me alone that I may die unmoved |
ROYLE, Dora, K. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
206-207 |
|
82.938 |
Dragons |
Flame-throwing monsters |
RUDGE, Mark |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
137 |
|
2.939 |
Homelessness |
I'm sad tonight. You ask me why I sing |
RUDKIN, O. D. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
122-123 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.940 |
One Michaelmas |
St Michael saw an angel weeping in despair |
RUDKIN, O. D. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
124-125 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
82.627 |
Absence |
When through the wild unfathom'd deep |
RUSHTON, Edward |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
522-523 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.479 |
Absence |
When through the wild unfathom'd deep |
RUSHTON, Edward |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
202 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
944 |
Jack o' Ann's Commemoration |
The voice is hushed, the pen is laid aside |
RUSHTON, Edward |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
195-196 |
|
82.469 |
The ardent lover |
Ah, Mary! by that feeling mind |
RUSHTON, Edward |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
339-341 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
943 |
The ardent lover |
Ah, Mary! By that feeling mind |
RUSHTON, Edward |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
193-194 |
|
1.395 |
The ardent lover |
Oh, Mary! by that feeling mind |
RUSHTON, Edward |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
91 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.483 |
The farewell |
The shivering topsails home are sheeted |
RUSHTON, Edward |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
208-209 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.626 |
The farewell |
The shivering topsails home are sheeted |
RUSHTON, Edward |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
520-521 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
146 |
The lass of Liverpool |
Where cocoas lift their tufted heads |
RUSHTON, Edward |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
131 |
|
1.481 |
The lass of Liverpool |
Where cocoas lift their tufted heads |
RUSHTON, Edward |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
205 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.629 |
The lass of Liverpool |
Where cocoas lift their tufted heads |
RUSHTON, Edward |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
525-526 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.480 |
The neglected tar |
T' ocean's sons, I lift the strain |
RUSHTON, Edward |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
203-204 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.628 |
The neglected tar |
To ocean's sons I lift the strain |
RUSHTON, Edward |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
523-525 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.482 |
When the broad arch of heaven |
When the broad arch of heaven is blue and serene |
RUSHTON, Edward |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
206-207 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.630 |
When the broad arch of heaven: song written for the anniversary of the Lancaster Marine Society |
When the broad arch of heaven is blue and serene |
RUSHTON, Edward |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
527-528 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.625 |
Will Clewline: a tale of the pressgang |
From Jamaica's hot clime and her pestilent dews |
RUSHTON, Edward |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
517-519 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and T T Wilkinson |
1.478 |
Will clewtime, a tale of the pressgang |
From Jamaica's hot clime and her pestilential dews |
RUSHTON, Edward |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
199-201 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
6.460 |
A new year's song for boys |
Boldly start afresh, boys, with the glad new year |
RUSHTON, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
327 |
|
6.458 |
A sigh for peaceful times |
With saddened heart I think of all the past |
RUSHTON, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
325-326 |
|
6.459 |
Looking backward |
An aged couple sit alone; their locks are scant and grey |
RUSHTON, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
326-327 |
|
6.461 |
Springtime |
All replete with choicest blessings, health and beauty in thy train |
RUSHTON, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
327-328 |
|
5.873 |
Pendle Hill: on reading Mr W Billington's poem |
Some time ago I sought the heavenly nine |
RUSHTON, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
133-134 |
|
5.872 |
To the founder of the Blackburn Infirmary |
Oft have Old England's lovely valleys rung |
RUSHTON, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
132-133 |
|
81.471 |
My mum |
My mum is love |
RUSHTON, Rachel |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
97 |
|
82.765 |
Daft teachers |
I've met lots of teachers from all different schools |
RUSSETT, Kerri-Ann |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
40 |
|
5.302 |
The rose and the bramble |
Deep in a sweet secluded vale |
RUSTIC |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
10 |
An early fugitive poem written Blackburn 28 January 1823 |
81.298 |
The snow |
Beautiful snowflake |
RUTHERFORD, Aimee |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
7 |
|
87.848 |
Thank You O Lord |
O Lord I had a dream last night |
RUTTER, B. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
136-137 |
|
82.831 |
The forest's story |
I remember when life was good |
RYLANCE, Olivia Kathryn |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
77 |
|
84.058 |
An epitaph |
My life is finished which was all delight |
SACKVILLE, Lady Margaret |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
14 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.060 |
Pride |
Exiled am I, yet still with unbowed head |
SACKVILLE, Lady Margaret |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
14 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.059 |
The bankrupt |
That still unpunished cheat |
SACKVILLE, Lady Margaret |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
14 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.061 |
Triumph |
My day has dawned, and loud within my ears |
SACKVILLE, Lady Margaret |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
14 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
87.805 |
Lonely Ennerdale |
I wandered in enchantment |
SADLER, Margaret |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
92 |
|
82.709 |
The boy who couldn't control his ball |
Once a boy tried to control his ball |
SAJID, Iqra |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
9 |
|
5.893 |
Acrostic on the Blackburn poet |
When Poesy beheld this humble place |
SALISBURY, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
163 |
|
5.891 |
Death |
When the canker-worm of grief |
SALISBURY, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
161 |
|
5.890 |
Stars: a fragment |
Oh, puny disbeliever! canst thou glance |
SALISBURY, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
160 |
|
5.892 |
Sunshine |
Oh! for Summer weather, bright and sunny skies |
SALISBURY, George |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
162 |
|
6.212 |
A correspondence |
With scents of honeysuckle, lily fumes |
SALOMON, Sidney |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
60-62 |
|
6.262 |
Looking towards Cyprus |
O thou who comest in the evening-tide |
SALOMON, Sidney |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
154 |
|
87.813 |
Our World |
The earth with its gown of such colour untold |
SALTHOUSE, Mattie |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
101 |
|
81.381 |
The alien tale |
One day I went up to space |
SAMUELS, Sophie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
49 |
|
87.295 |
A Breath of Spring |
The last snow, lingering n the hills |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
33 |
|
87.284 |
A Garden of Dreams |
The wind played over my face |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
22 |
|
87.282 |
A Glimpse of Spring |
Spring peeped over the hill |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
20 |
|
87.289 |
A Glimpse of Sunshine |
Looking up, I saw her standing there |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
27 |
|
87.283 |
A Path of Gold |
A path of gold, the buttercups appear |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
21 |
|
87.286 |
A Storm at Sea |
A night of storm, of mighty, roaring wind |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
24 |
|
87.288 |
Across the Years |
I saw the sunlight on the distant hills |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
26 |
|
87.275 |
Another Spring |
Another Spring |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
13 |
|
87.308 |
Apart |
You wished me Luck, I held your small white hand |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
46 |
|
87.294 |
Dawn |
How slowly Dawn awakes the Earth from sleep |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
32 |
|
87.268 |
Dreams |
Down the green isles of Memory |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
6 |
|
87.305 |
Easter Daffodils |
Daffodils |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
43 |
|
87.306 |
Easter Day |
Easter Lilies and Daffodils |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
44 |
|
87.311 |
Eventide |
God walk with those who walk at Eventide |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
49 |
|
87.299 |
From Dawn to Dusk |
How short the hours from dawn to dusk |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
37 |
|
87.276 |
Holly and Mistletoe |
Holly for laughter, mistletoe for tears |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
14 |
|
87.274 |
If I had Known |
Over the hills I watched for her coming |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
12 |
|
87.312 |
In Joy and Sorrow |
Forgive us, Lord, that through the sunlit days |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
50 |
|
87.290 |
In the Rain |
Why does she stand in the rain |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
28 |
|
87.287 |
Leaves of Gold |
Drift, drift across my path |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
25 |
|
87.301 |
Life |
Oh to be a leaf, to drift on the stream |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
39 |
|
87.270 |
Loch Etive |
On the shores of Loch Etive I wandered |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
8 |
|
87.277 |
Memories |
Autumn leaves strewed on the woodland path |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
15 |
|
87.314 |
My Diary |
Each time I close the book, I seem to fold |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
52 |
|
87.269 |
My Little Dream |
The morning comes, and with the dawning light |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
7 |
|
87.292 |
Old Age |
Oh Time, that takes away my youth and strength |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
30 |
|
87.280 |
Old and Grey |
Patches of daisies like drifts of snow |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
18 |
|
87.291 |
Seagulls |
Like flecks of foam in the sunlight |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
29 |
|
87.303 |
Sir Walter Scott |
A day of wind and rain |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
41 |
|
87.298 |
Sitting in the Sun |
He wanders, dreaming, down the paths of Youth |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
36 |
|
87.281 |
Spring |
Little Spring comes laughing |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
19 |
|
87.272 |
Spring in England |
Here in a distant country |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
10 |
|
87.302 |
The Changing Year |
Young is the year-the laughing tarn is caught |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
40 |
|
87.310 |
The Clouds |
Night - a dark and lowering sky |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
48 |
|
87.309 |
The Dyke |
I built a dyke to hold my memories back |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
47 |
|
87.300 |
The Ebbing Tide |
Out of the body, they say, a soul will float |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
38 |
|
87.279 |
The Exile |
Take me back to the Highlands, once before I die |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
17 |
|
87.296 |
The Four-leaved Clover |
High on the cliffs was a field of clover |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
34 |
|
87.313 |
The Hills of Skye |
I watch the shadows lengthen |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
51 |
|
87.273 |
The Land of Night |
You stood in the Land of Night |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
11 |
|
87.278 |
The Little Byways |
I never tread the Highways |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
16 |
|
87.293 |
The Old Home |
Why did I return |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
31 |
|
87.307 |
The Silent Lake |
The silent lake looked up and saw the stars |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
45 |
|
87.271 |
The Stars |
Dark was the night |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
9 |
|
87.304 |
The Tides of To-Day |
I will drift awhile on the tides of To-Day |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
42 |
|
87.285 |
The Valley Between |
Majestic, grand, a lonely mountain height |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
23 |
|
87.297 |
Your Books |
How dear to me the books you wrote |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
The Green Isles |
SAN GARDE, Evelina |
M0116278LC |
450.442 |
1.948 |
35 |
|
81.358 |
My uncle |
My uncle has black hair |
SANDS, Emma |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
36 |
|
82.037 |
Two little vagabonds |
Ah're peilin' off whoam for' mi work, t' other neet |
SAUNDERS, Longford |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
127-128 |
|
945 |
Ode to th' village parson |
Thy yure's gone gray; th'art fadin' fast |
SAUNDERS, Peter L. B. |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
197-198 |
|
80.794 |
You gave me |
I wish you'd seen me in the play |
SAUNDERSON, Maria |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
14 |
|
83.520 |
Bank Hall |
Where some drab little streets run down to the sea |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
56-57 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.513 |
Blackburne Place |
When at my desk I used to sit |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
48 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.530 |
Boat House Tavern: New Quay |
After fighting and sailing the seven seas o'er |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
79 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.497 |
Bold Street |
The moon is sailing high and bright |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
22 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.488 |
Castle Street |
Full many a year the old Town Hall |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
11 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.490 |
Chapel Street |
John Smith is pacing the Old Churchyard |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
13 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.493 |
Church Street |
In days when Peter's Church was new |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
17 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.499 |
Clayton Square |
Here Madame Clayton once resided |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
24 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.507 |
Cleveland Square |
Thurot's sailed from out Dunkirk |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
38-39 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.511 |
Down Myrtle Street |
Down Myrtle Street I walked one day |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
45 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.506 |
Duke Street |
The whole town's astir with excited commotion |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
36-37 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.524 |
Everton |
Think not these creeping narrow streets |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
66-67 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.514 |
Fenwick Street |
On some spot here to trade devoted |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
49 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.525 |
Fitzclarence Street |
I wish this street were made of glass |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
68-69 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.487 |
Foreword to 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
Some time ago I let my fancy roam |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
7 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.527 |
Goree Piazzas |
Mr. France was out walking one sunny September |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
72-73 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.501 |
Great George Square |
Mr. Septimus Jones must be rich I declare |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
26-27 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.502 |
Hanover Street |
Julia's quite the belle of the town |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
28 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.509 |
Hope Street |
Gently turn the windmill sails |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
42-43 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.504 |
Kent Square |
As in some paltry broker's store |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
30-33 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.515 |
Ladies' Walk |
In by-gone days fine ladies walked |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
50 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.494 |
Lime Street |
On a sunshiny day in a fine month of May |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
18-19 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.495 |
London Road |
There's a golden sun in the bright blue sky |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
20 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.492 |
Lord Street |
Far back in Nelson's famous day |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
16 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.516 |
Love Lane |
When merry Spring came nigh |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
51 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.503 |
Lydia Ann Street |
Her father was Philip Lacroix, so I hear |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
29 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.517 |
Maiden's Green |
How fair and innocent a scene |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
52-53 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.526 |
Mason Street |
People blessed with too much money |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
70-71 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.521 |
Old Hall Street |
Hey-day! Well-a-day! |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
58 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.512 |
Olive Street |
Olive trees and chestnut trees |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
46-47 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.491 |
Poole Lane |
Up from the street where the Old Dock lies |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
14-15 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.498 |
Ranelagh Street |
The hapless earth that lies entombed |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
23 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.508 |
Rodney Street |
They gave the street its honoured name |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
40-41 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.496 |
School Lane |
Little Bobby Barton, with his little white cravat |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
21 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.523 |
Shaw's Brow |
Should you stroll through the town with a curious eye |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
64-65 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.529 |
Ship Launch Tavern: Key Street |
There's a rousing cheer as the boat slides down |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
76-77 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.519 |
Vauxhall Road |
Past days I sing in this refrain |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
54-55 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.489 |
Water Street |
Jack's on leave from his privateer |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
12 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.510 |
Wellington Rooms |
All over the town there's a flutter and stir |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
44-45 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.531 |
Wheatsheaf Inn: Preston Street |
Early in September morn |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
80-81 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.528 |
White Lion Inn: Dale Street |
If a time should come on a distant day |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
74-75 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.500 |
Williamson Square |
Do actors' shades, I wonder, come |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
25 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.505 |
Wolstenholme Square |
I wish I could have known this Walk |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
34-35 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
83.522 |
Zoological Gardens |
Come, Sylvia, see, the evening's fine |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
Rhymes of old Liverpool |
SAXTON, Eveline B. |
M0016420LC |
72.213 |
1.948 |
59-63 |
Includes explanations of how many Liverpool streets acquired their names. Enlarged edition, including most of the rhymes in 'More rhymes of old Liverpool' |
80.860 |
Ode to the TV Planners 'Channel chasing' |
I settle down to watch T.V. |
SCALES, Florence |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
138-139 |
|
81.317 |
Tick-tock |
The moon has a face like the clock in the hall |
SCHINDLER, Leanne |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
17 |
|
87.841 |
Compassion |
Comfort every stranger who may ask your help this day |
SCHOFIELD, D. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
129 |
|
82.900 |
My cat Colin |
Dashing |
SCHOLES, Amy |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
117 |
|
86.694 |
Just another guy |
I'm a really good looking guy! |
SCHOLES, Elizabeth A. |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
42 |
|
1.188 |
Aw connut dry mi leen, Robin |
Come, woipe thi leen; iv throuble's eawrs |
SCHOLES, John |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
196-200 |
|
82.515 |
Aw connut dry mi leen, Robin |
Come, woipe thi leen; iv throuble's eawrs |
SCHOLES, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
404-408 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.170 |
Gwynant, or the Vale of Waters |
Sweet Gwynant! Thy fair waters are to me |
SCHOLES, John |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
52-55 |
|
180 |
The Lancashire witch |
An owd maid aw shall be, for aw'm eighteen to-morn |
SCHOLES, John |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
111-112 |
|
81.576 |
The Lancashire witch |
An owd maid aw shall be, for aw'm eighteen to-morn |
SCHOLES, John |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
247-248 |
|
147 |
The Lancashire witch |
An owd maid aw shall be, for aw'm eighteen to-morn |
SCHOLES, John |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
135-136 |
|
4.830 |
The Lancashire witch |
An owd maid aw shall be, for aw'm eighteen to-morn |
SCHOLES, John |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
47 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
1.064 |
The Lancashire witch |
An owd maid aw shall be, for aw'm eighteen to-morn |
SCHOLES, John |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
253-254 |
|
82.470 |
The Lancashire witch |
An owd maid aw shall be, for aw'm eighteen to-morn |
SCHOLES, John |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
341-342 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
4.512 |
The Lancashire witch |
An owd maid aw shall be, for aw'm eighteen to-morn |
SCHOLES, John |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
113-114 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
1.396 |
The Lancashire witch |
An owd maid aw shall be, for aw'm eighteen to-morn |
SCHOLES, John |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
92-93 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
512 |
Cellophane wraps |
Bless those scientist chaps for the cellophane wraps |
SCOTT, Dorothy |
Preston Writers '72 |
PRESTON WRITERS |
M0017962LC |
78.606 |
1.972 |
52 |
|
82.775 |
Haunted house |
You live in a haunted house |
SCOTT, Mark |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
45 |
|
82.690 |
Sir Walter Scott's version of the Cleveland lyke-wark dirge |
This ae nighte, this ae nighte |
SCOTT, Sir Walter |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
133-134 |
2nd ed rev |
5.250 |
Bury black puddings |
They're black and they're round and they're shiny |
SCOWCROFT, Keith |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
58 |
|
82.698 |
Paradise |
Fly over the sea |
SEDDON, Alex |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
3 |
|
81.322 |
Cosmic |
One day I was floating around Mars |
SEDDON, Daniel |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
19 |
|
81.327 |
A cosmic poem |
I imagined myself being in space |
SEDDON, Naomi |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
21 |
|
86.134 |
A circular out of date |
From a circular that's out of date |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
29 |
|
86.121 |
Acrostic to Annie C |
A mother's love thine eye bespeak |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
23 |
|
86.123 |
Acrostic to Charlotte |
Cares and sorrows oft are wont |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
24 |
|
86.130 |
Acrostic to Edith |
Ever be careful to watch and to pray |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
28 |
|
86.128 |
Acrostic to Hannah |
Hearts oft in union doth combine |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
27 |
|
86.120 |
Acrostic to Henry Hall, Esquire |
How happy the man that is honest and kind |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
22 |
|
86.126 |
Acrostic to James S |
Jarring discord rise within |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
25 |
|
86.124 |
Acrostic to Jane S |
Jocund be thy fervent cause |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
24 |
|
86.127 |
Acrostic to Margaret |
May all thy days be full of love |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
26 |
|
86.122 |
Acrostic to Maud Mary |
May thou in youth thy pastimes love |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
23 |
|
86.125 |
Acrostic to Sarah Ann S |
Sacred be thy pensive hours |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
25 |
|
86.118 |
Affection Sincere |
There is a cheek whose damask bloom |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
20 |
|
86.105 |
Art and Nature |
Oh, wondrous art, to what extent |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
8-Oct |
|
86.107 |
Companionship |
Dear are the days when comrades meet |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
11 |
|
86.113 |
Enemies, interference |
Cursed be the hand that will oppose |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
16 |
|
86.129 |
Ever think of thee |
I ask no other sympathy |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
27 |
|
86.109 |
Humility |
What gentleness thy virtues give |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
13-14 |
|
86.117 |
Lines on Death |
I ask the question, What is death? |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
18-20 |
|
86.111 |
Ode to Spring |
The withering blast of winter's gone |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
15 |
|
86.114 |
On friendship |
I ask what friendship's value is |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
16 |
|
86.106 |
On the Creation |
Creation vast, thy boundless theme |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
10-Nov |
|
86.119 |
Rejected Lover |
Deprived of my love, I mourn like a dove |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
21 |
|
86.133 |
The devil |
Who the devil is, and what he can be |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
29 |
|
86.112 |
The Lobers Meeting |
With modest blush each other meet |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
15 |
|
86.110 |
The Sabbath |
What love Thy wisdom doth demand |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
14 |
|
86.132 |
To Mary |
May thou in wisdom's pleasant ways |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
28 |
|
86.131 |
To my niece Hannah L |
How happy the heart that is merry and gay |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
28 |
|
86.116 |
Wedlock |
Caressed by wedlock's sacred ties |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
17 |
|
86.115 |
Written in December |
The rose that lately bloomed so gay |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
17 |
|
86.108 |
Youthful Remembrance |
The days of our childhood we ne'er can forget |
SEED, Thomas |
Poems |
SEED, Thomas |
M0067359LC |
281.944 |
1.906 |
Dec-13 |
|
243 |
Modern Bacup poets |
Ah daresay yo'll ha noaticed i' reading Bacup Times |
SEIBER, J. F. C. |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
127 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
427 |
Empty tenement |
They're going to pull it down |
SELLERS, Malcolm |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
8 |
|
4.143 |
T' seawnd o' t' sea |
Th'owd Ship's a pub reet close to t' shore |
SEPHTON, John |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
63-65 |
|
81.522 |
The wind and the sun |
When I look at the sky |
SEPHTON, Lisa |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
123 |
|
950 |
Carry on! |
It's easy to fight when everything's right |
SERVICE, Robert William |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
209-211 |
|
5.094 |
Shakspere |
In fame's great temple, all the people stand |
SHAKSPERE |
Poetic zephyrs |
HOLDEN, James |
M0067337LC |
281.914 |
1.866 |
88-92 |
Poems by Rochdale author |
699 |
Sair fail'd hinney |
I was young and lusty |
SHARP, Sir C. |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
212-213 |
Tyneside |
82.139 |
England |
The country-side is calling |
SHARPLES, Irene |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
31 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
82.179 |
White world |
Ice, blue, ice, no black or grey |
SHARPLES, Irene |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
101 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
81.379 |
Dreaming about space |
I leap off my bed and I fly up high |
SHARPLES, Zara |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
48 |
|
83.553 |
A poem about babies |
I showed you a poem about babies |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
46-47 |
|
83.550 |
About the arguments we had last year |
It would have been so easily ended |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
40-41 |
|
83.562 |
Bird |
Years ago, when I was young enough |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
62-63 |
|
83.557 |
For you |
I would consider killing |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
54 |
|
83.536 |
Foreign tastes |
Claudine and you pretended a crush |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
15 |
|
83.560 |
Gratitude |
is what, at the end of it |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
58-59 |
|
83.556 |
Hope |
It's not good for me, this hope |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
52-53 |
|
83.538 |
How to demolish a house |
Start with the swing and the slide |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
18-19 |
|
83.539 |
I'll give you something to cry about |
Slap |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
20-21 |
|
83.547 |
In Bedfordshire, the rivers rise |
In Bedfordshire, the rivers rise |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
36-37 |
|
83.555 |
In Halifax |
In Halifax, a mother, two boys and a daughter get on |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
50-51 |
|
83.559 |
In the end |
most of us still stuck to the rules, the left side of the road |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
56-57 |
|
83.554 |
Killing it |
It didn't want to die. When we starved it |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
48-49 |
|
83.548 |
London - Todmorden |
This journey started in London |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
38 |
|
83.545 |
Love poem |
As it got later, you got drunker |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
32-33 |
|
83.549 |
Maybe somewhere |
You wake with each lover you left |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
39 |
|
83.537 |
Mrs O'Hara |
Read the same two books each year |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
16-17 |
|
83.532 |
Not as simple |
It's not as simple as growing up |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
9 |
|
83.540 |
Nothing personal |
you just had something he wanted |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
22 |
|
83.552 |
Plucked |
It did offend. It held |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
44-45 |
|
83.543 |
Poem about Dee Dee |
Dee Dee is out on the hospital roof |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
27-29 |
|
83.533 |
Poem for a bus shelter |
This is not a life, but if it were |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
10-Nov |
|
83.558 |
Some questions |
Why is fire, why is fire? |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
55 |
|
83.551 |
Straight ahead |
is the back of the seat |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
42-43 |
|
83.541 |
Summer holiday |
The green-gold summers ended |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
23- 25 |
|
83.561 |
The soap opera inside me |
is in big trouble |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
60-61 |
|
83.535 |
The year Dad left |
Was summer, the year that the ladybird plague |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
14 |
|
83.534 |
This baby |
This baby is a hurricane |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
Dec-13 |
|
83.544 |
This is a true story |
It was just before one when she rang |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
30-31 |
|
83.546 |
War poem |
I'm half absent, putting |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
34-35 |
|
83.542 |
Ya-uuk |
Place of rain and light and the sky full of life |
SHAW, Clare |
Straight ahead |
SHAW, Clare |
1852247509 |
1.111.404 |
2.006 |
26 |
|
86.730 |
Searching |
When there's something missing |
SHAW, Diana |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
78 |
|
561 |
Me |
Aw'm as good a man as t'best but aw'm no better |
SHAW, Herbert |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
141 |
Lancashire poetry |
81.499 |
There's a monster in my wardrobe |
There is a monster in my wardrobe |
SHAW, James |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
112 |
|
82.738 |
My monster |
My monster has |
SHAW, Jordan |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
24 |
|
81.503 |
The monster |
There's a monster under my bed |
SHAW, Josh |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
114 |
|
83.468 |
Affectation |
To Celia bounteous nature gave |
SHAW, L. O. |
Poems and dramatic pieces. Vol. I |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0129933LC |
493.481 |
1.814 |
89-91 |
Burnley author |
306 |
Ah late poem |
Bacup, farewell! My tedious task is o'er |
SHAW, L. O. |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
197 |
|
83.481 |
Bacup, a satire |
Oh! for the spirit of satiric Brown |
SHAW, L. O. |
The duel, the battle of Waterloo and other poems |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0067298LC |
281.858 |
1.836 |
185-193 |
Handwritten title page reads 'The duel, the batil of Waterloo and other poems'; 2nd edition enlarged |
83.462 |
Battles of Borodino and Salamanca |
Drunk with success, with mad ambition fir'd |
SHAW, L. O. |
Poems and dramatic pieces. Vol. I |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0129933LC |
493.481 |
1.814 |
26-38 |
Burnley author |
83.464 |
Conference between Buonaparte and his Senate |
Dread Sire, your Senate, prostrate at your feet |
SHAW, L. O. |
Poems and dramatic pieces. Vol. I |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0129933LC |
493.481 |
1.814 |
64-73 |
Burnley author |
83.459 |
Death of Cadogan |
Brave but ill-fated chief! whilst latest fame |
SHAW, L. O. |
Poems and dramatic pieces. Vol. I |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0129933LC |
493.481 |
1.814 |
4-Oct |
Burnley author |
83.463 |
French honour |
Here's precious news! |
SHAW, L. O. |
Poems and dramatic pieces. Vol. I |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0129933LC |
493.481 |
1.814 |
39-64 |
Burnley author |
83.476 |
Harold, a romance in four parts: part I |
The raven wing of night its gloom had spread |
SHAW, L. O. |
The duel, the battle of Waterloo and other poems |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0067298LC |
281.858 |
1.836 |
94-107 |
Handwritten title page reads 'The duel, the batil of Waterloo and other poems'; 2nd edition enlarged |
83.477 |
Harold, a romance in four parts: part II |
Hushed was the tempest, and the first grey gleam |
SHAW, L. O. |
The duel, the battle of Waterloo and other poems |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0067298LC |
281.858 |
1.836 |
109-118 |
Handwritten title page reads 'The duel, the batil of Waterloo and other poems'; 2nd edition enlarged |
83.478 |
Harold, a romance in four parts: part III |
But now the time was come, when Adeline |
SHAW, L. O. |
The duel, the battle of Waterloo and other poems |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0067298LC |
281.858 |
1.836 |
119-144 |
Handwritten title page reads 'The duel, the batil of Waterloo and other poems'; 2nd edition enlarged |
83.479 |
Harold, a romance in four parts: part IV |
High throned beneath a crimson canopy |
SHAW, L. O. |
The duel, the battle of Waterloo and other poems |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0067298LC |
281.858 |
1.836 |
145-171 |
Handwritten title page reads 'The duel, the batil of Waterloo and other poems'; 2nd edition enlarged |
83.486 |
H---den jars |
In that same town, which, once, in verse, I tried |
SHAW, L. O. |
The duel, the battle of Waterloo and other poems |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0067298LC |
281.858 |
1.836 |
199-209 |
Handwritten title page reads 'The duel, the batil of Waterloo and other poems'; 2nd edition enlarged |
83.466 |
Love letter from a rake to his mistress |
The fumes of wine inspire the verses |
SHAW, L. O. |
Poems and dramatic pieces. Vol. I |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0129933LC |
493.481 |
1.814 |
77-80 |
Burnley author |
83.483 |
Reply to an attack in verse, on the author, by two young men |
If Critic's censure must my portion be |
SHAW, L. O. |
The duel, the battle of Waterloo and other poems |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0067298LC |
281.858 |
1.836 |
195 |
Handwritten title page reads 'The duel, the batil of Waterloo and other poems'; 2nd edition enlarged |
83.470 |
Sleeping beauty |
Beneath a hawthorn's flowery shade |
SHAW, L. O. |
Poems and dramatic pieces. Vol. I |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0129933LC |
493.481 |
1.814 |
94-98 |
Burnley author |
83.484 |
Summons for shooting a crow, issued by a certain magistrate, to John Hobs |
We summon you, Sir, to appear |
SHAW, L. O. |
The duel, the battle of Waterloo and other poems |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0067298LC |
281.858 |
1.836 |
196 |
Handwritten title page reads 'The duel, the batil of Waterloo and other poems'; 2nd edition enlarged |
83.460 |
The bridge of Lindenau: Napoleon to Maria Luisa |
Once more victorious, though in full retreat |
SHAW, L. O. |
Poems and dramatic pieces. Vol. I |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0129933LC |
493.481 |
1.814 |
Nov-22 |
Burnley author |
83.471 |
The duel: canto I:The playhouse |
In Haslingden, a country village |
SHAW, L. O. |
The duel, the battle of Waterloo and other poems |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0067298LC |
281.858 |
1.836 |
Sep-15 |
Handwritten title page reads 'The duel, the batil of Waterloo and other poems'; 2nd edition enlarged |
83.472 |
The duel: canto II: The tavern |
In the mean time, quite out of breath |
SHAW, L. O. |
The duel, the battle of Waterloo and other poems |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0067298LC |
281.858 |
1.836 |
17-23 |
Handwritten title page reads 'The duel, the batil of Waterloo and other poems'; 2nd edition enlarged |
83.473 |
The duel: canto III:The lodgings |
The morning sun, with rising beams |
SHAW, L. O. |
The duel, the battle of Waterloo and other poems |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0067298LC |
281.858 |
1.836 |
26-34 |
Handwritten title page reads 'The duel, the batil of Waterloo and other poems'; 2nd edition enlarged |
83.474 |
The duel: canto IV: The field |
Fair honour! to whose blood-stained throne |
SHAW, L. O. |
The duel, the battle of Waterloo and other poems |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0067298LC |
281.858 |
1.836 |
35-48 |
Handwritten title page reads 'The duel, the batil of Waterloo and other poems'; 2nd edition enlarged |
83.465 |
The jilt; Henry to Sophia |
Why will you doom your faithful swain |
SHAW, L. O. |
Poems and dramatic pieces. Vol. I |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0129933LC |
493.481 |
1.814 |
73-76 |
Burnley author |
83.467 |
The surprise |
All ye who love to go astray |
SHAW, L. O. |
Poems and dramatic pieces. Vol. I |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0129933LC |
493.481 |
1.814 |
81-88 |
Burnley author |
83.480 |
The Thespiad; or village threatricals |
In a dark lane, were trulls and colliers dwell |
SHAW, L. O. |
The duel, the battle of Waterloo and other poems |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0067298LC |
281.858 |
1.836 |
173-184 |
Handwritten title page reads 'The duel, the batil of Waterloo and other poems'; 2nd edition enlarged |
83.461 |
The witches' feast |
Far in the deep recesses of a cave |
SHAW, L. O. |
Poems and dramatic pieces. Vol. I |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0129933LC |
493.481 |
1.814 |
22-26 |
Burnley author |
83.482 |
To Miss - |
I will not say that Cupid's lurk |
SHAW, L. O. |
The duel, the battle of Waterloo and other poems |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0067298LC |
281.858 |
1.836 |
193-194 |
Handwritten title page reads 'The duel, the batil of Waterloo and other poems'; 2nd edition enlarged |
83.485 |
True love. Lines found after the writer's death. To Miss- |
By those dove's eyes, where loves immortal dwell |
SHAW, L. O. |
The duel, the battle of Waterloo and other poems |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0067298LC |
281.858 |
1.836 |
197-198 |
Handwritten title page reads 'The duel, the batil of Waterloo and other poems'; 2nd edition enlarged |
83.469 |
Woman |
When Adam amidst Eden's beauties sigh'd |
SHAW, L. O. |
Poems and dramatic pieces. Vol. I |
SHAW, L. O. |
M0129933LC |
493.481 |
1.814 |
92-94 |
Burnley author |
847 |
A Yorkshire road |
To find the Roman highway's track |
SHAW-SMITH, R. |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
118 |
|
837 |
On going smokeless |
My atlas has a weather map |
SHAW-SMITH, R. |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
61 |
|
5.577 |
A love song |
My Kebbell sweet, in whom I trust |
SHEALE, Richard |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
29-30 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.686 |
A love song |
My Kebbell sweet, in whom I trust |
SHEALE, Richard |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
40-41 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland. 'Kebbell' may be an error for Rebel |
6.749 |
A love song |
My Rebbell sweet, in whom I trust |
SHEALE, Richard |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
29-30 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
2.977 |
A love song |
My Rebell sweet, in whom I trust |
SHEALE, Richard |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
29-30 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
80.872 |
Beauty |
Be kind, stately lady |
SHEILA |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
151 |
no surname |
6.757 |
Jemmy Dawson |
Come listen to my mournful tale |
SHENSTONE |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
66-69 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
5.694 |
Jemmy Dawson |
Come listen to my mournful tale |
SHENSTONE |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
90-94 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
5.585 |
Jemmy Dawson |
Come listen to my mournful tale |
SHENSTONE |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
66-69 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
81.504 |
Water |
Water is clean |
SHENTON, Sharon |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
114 |
|
503 |
Aerial (death) slide |
Go on son, it'll be fun |
SHEPHERD, D. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
54 |
|
464 |
Ordeal |
Grey haired |
SHEPHERD, D. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
11 |
|
473 |
The gift |
Calmness |
SHEPHERD, J. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
21 |
|
505 |
The simile poem |
Tall, scrawny, a stick insect |
SHEPHERD, J. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
55 |
|
340 |
A view fro' Derplay Hill |
Who's ever bin on these here hills |
SHEPSTER |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
53-56 |
Pseudonym of Walter Hargreaves |
82.817 |
The world |
The world is sometimes nasty |
SHERIDAN, Joy |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
69 |
|
459 |
Burnley sky |
Why does it have to be grey? |
SHERIDAN, L. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
3 |
|
486 |
Prophecy |
A day out to Blackpool |
SHERIDAN, M. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
37 |
|
81.465 |
The bees |
The bees are buzzing here and there |
SHIELDS, Vikki |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
94 |
|
82.928 |
Stars |
Bright lights far away |
SHIMMIN, Zoe |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
133 |
|
6.332 |
A plea for the horses |
Hold! hold! with that whip, my dear fellow |
SHORROCK, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
248-249 |
|
84.929 |
A word for the waifs |
O speak a kind word to the lost one |
SHORROCK, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
247 |
|
6.337 |
Autumn |
Tis Autumn, the winds are beginning to murmur |
SHORROCK, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
252-253 |
|
6.336 |
Golden August |
Again the golden harvest is bending in the breeze |
SHORROCK, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
252 |
|
6.335 |
The daffodils |
When the fever-heat of hurry, in the serried scenes of life |
SHORROCK, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
251 |
|
6.333 |
The trooper to his charger |
Aye, bring to me the Trooper bold, with sword and helmet bright |
SHORROCK, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
249-250 |
|
6.334 |
To Jack o' Ann's |
Well done, my worthy singing brid; tha'rt first amung us o |
SHORROCK, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
250-251 |
|
81.555 |
At the beach |
Hooray summer is here |
SIDDELL, Heather |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
141 |
|
87.738 |
Trinity Praise |
Holy Father earth's creator |
SIMONS, Nancy |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
23 |
|
81.295 |
Fireworks! Fireworks |
Fireworks, fireworks |
SIMPSON, Caroline |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
6 |
|
81.544 |
Mars |
Mars is the bubbling lava planet |
SIMPSON, Hayley |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
134 |
|
81.548 |
Tour of the Milky Way |
When you are flying past the planets |
SIMPSON, Kayleigh |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
137 |
|
81.482 |
Rain |
Rain rain I love the rain |
SIMPSON, Tina |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
104 |
|
82.978 |
My new year's resolutions |
I'll try not to snip my sister's hair when she's asleep |
SINGH, Neena |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
160 |
|
82.729 |
My monster |
My monster has |
SINGLETON, Joe |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
19 |
|
87.379 |
Adolf |
Who would not rather sail the treacherous seas |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
47 |
|
87.391 |
An April Stroll |
Down twisty country lanes we walk |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
67 - 68 |
|
87.380 |
Another Milestone |
Old Father Time still slowly marches on |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
48 |
|
87.377 |
Arnhem |
Eight thousand men. Eight thousand, staunch and true |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
45 |
|
87.388 |
Autumn in Lakeland |
The landscape stretches out both far and wide |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
61 |
|
87.381 |
Beside the Ribble |
When cares of life surround me |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
51 |
|
87.392 |
December |
The snowflakes softly falling |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
71 - 72 |
|
87.374 |
Drunk Again? |
My wife and I fell victims to |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
36 - 37 |
|
87.378 |
How Soon? |
The wintry sun sinks slowly o'er the hill |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
46 |
|
86.650 |
Introduction |
Should you pick up this book at the end of the day |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
ix |
|
87.365 |
Just A Football Pitch, Sergeant |
Trucker Joe in his lorry was speeding along |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
19 |
|
87.357 |
Left Or Right? |
Old Paddy found himself a job |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
7 |
|
87.394 |
March |
Comes in a lion, out a lamb |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
75 - 77 |
|
87.361 |
My Brief Stay In Heaven |
I had lived in a town since the day I was three |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
13-14 |
|
87.362 |
My Friend And His Son |
Out of season I called at a small country town |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
15 |
|
87.383 |
O Wind of Winter - Blow Your Horn! |
O wind of winter - blow your horn! |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
54 - 55 |
|
86.651 |
Old Captain Reillys justice |
Old Reilly was a captain, who |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
3-Jun |
|
87.371 |
Old Pat and His Mule |
One day old Pat he bought a mule |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
30 -31 |
|
87.358 |
One Girl, Seven Enemies |
We were a close-knit group of girls |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
8-Sep |
|
87.360 |
One Step Ahead |
Joe knew that ghosts and leprechauns |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
11-Dec |
|
87.366 |
Professional Advice |
The skylark singing high above |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
20 - 21 |
|
87.369 |
Promise Not to Tell Your Dad |
Young Tom was sent outside to play |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
25 |
|
87.367 |
Putting Things Right |
The night closed in and darkness fell |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
22 - 23 |
|
87.368 |
Seeing's Believing |
The lazy sun lay down to sleep |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
24 |
|
87.389 |
Spring Is Coming |
Spring is coming! Spring is coming! |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
62 - 64 |
|
87.373 |
The Echo |
With his ears badly blistered and practic'ly drunk |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
35 |
|
87.386 |
The End of the Day |
Lo! The summer sun is sinking |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
58 - 59 |
|
87.370 |
The Exact Spot |
When Pat and Michael hired a boat |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
28 -29 |
|
87.382 |
The First Day of Spring |
Springtime greetings. From this wintry |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
52 - 53 |
|
87.359 |
The Irish Bridge Problem |
Around a quaint old Irish town |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
10 |
|
87.384 |
The Little Old Shed in Our Orchard |
In our orchard of apple trees, leafless and bare |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
56 |
|
87.375 |
The Tale of Mad Dan |
To our village once came a rough hulk of a man |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
38 - 40 |
|
87.376 |
The Unfaithful Husband? |
Far away in the land of the bracken and ling |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
41 - 42 |
|
87.372 |
The Weddings of Beautiful Rose |
The town's own beauty queen passed by |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
32 -33 |
|
87.387 |
The Wild Sweet Violet |
The daisies grow beneath our feet |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
60 |
|
87.390 |
To a Lonely Crocus |
What ails you, little flower of spring? |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
65 - 66 |
|
87.393 |
To the Snowdrop |
Welcome! pretty little snowdrop |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
73 - 74 |
|
87.363 |
Turnips And Rape |
Embarking on a drunken spree |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
16 |
|
87.385 |
Wake Up! Wake Up! The Snow Has Gone! |
It's eight o'clock, Betty |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
56 |
|
87.364 |
When We Got Lost |
The wind was light. The sun was bright |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
Tales with a sting in their tails |
SINGLETON, Thomas |
533103142 |
455.947 |
1.993 |
17-18 |
|
844 |
Railway town |
Many the men who trod this road |
SINKINSON, Walter Nugent |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
100 |
|
846 |
The lost train |
This is the way the train went |
SINKINSON, Walter Nugent |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
113 |
|
6.235 |
The mathematician's infinity |
There's a mystical place in the mighty without |
SINNATT, O. S. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
129-130 |
Sintan - nom de plume |
82.694 |
Do they have feelings? |
She stands there all alone |
SINTON, Rebekah |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
2 |
|
82.894 |
At the seaside |
Splashing in rivers |
SKELHORN, Kara |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
113 |
|
81.487 |
Food |
I'm in dreamland with plenty of food |
SKELTON, Gareth |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
106 |
|
87.786 |
Praise the King |
Praise Him, praise Him, praise the King |
SKELTON, Vera |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
72 |
|
6.295 |
A lament |
Sigh, sad air, showering soft caresses |
SKEMP, A. R. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
190-191 |
R - nom de plume |
6.293 |
In autumn |
Summer's gone. Where the golden sun down beaming |
SKEMP, A. R. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
189 |
R - nom de plume |
6.294 |
In sleep |
Sleep led me to a silent land |
SKEMP, A. R. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
189-190 |
R - nom de plume |
6.234 |
The explanation |
What is the end of mirth |
SKEMP, A. R. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
128-129 |
|
81.507 |
Soccer |
Soccer is my favourite sport |
SKINNER, Christopher |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
116 |
|
1.777 |
Mother wept |
Mother wept, and father sighed |
SKIPSEY, Joseph |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
63 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.779 |
The reign of gold |
It sounded in castle and palace |
SKIPSEY, Joseph |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
64-65 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.778 |
The violet and the rose |
The Violet invited my kiss |
SKIPSEY, Joseph |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
63 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
81.429 |
The night |
The night is sweet in the sky black |
SLATER, Cheryl |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
75 |
|
83.028 |
A gleam of autumn sun |
A chill and misty day - as yet, no sun |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
30 |
|
83.026 |
A labour of love (around 1935) |
Call in first, at the flower shop. (Mr Fleming's a busy man) |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
27-28 |
|
83.019 |
A Pennine heritage |
How clear earth's colours, in the sweet, spring air |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
16 |
|
83.008 |
A white New Year |
A coverlet, soft and glistening |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
4 |
|
83.030 |
An autumn rose |
Deep, dusky pink, she glows among her tired leaves |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
33 |
|
83.015 |
Anyone for cricket? |
The pitch is green, and newly-mown; the scent of summer is here |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
10 |
|
83.009 |
As the day lengthens |
These lighter, lengthening days of Lent |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
5 |
|
83.029 |
Bible lands revisited |
Lord, walk these ways - where once you came to dwell |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
31-32 |
|
83.035 |
Christmas reflections |
The low December sun has climbed |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
40 |
|
83.033 |
Dusk on the heights |
Watching the winter twilight fall |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
37-38 |
|
83.021 |
Get ready - we'll go for a walk |
Hopping along like a sparrow, (and just as comfortably dressed) |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
19-20 |
|
83.010 |
Hosanna! |
The shady olive groves, that clothe the hill |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
6 |
|
83.007 |
In a quiet hour |
I've just been thinking, in a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
3 |
|
83.024 |
In an old garden |
All this was once a garden. So I see |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
24 |
|
83.013 |
Jack Moore's monkey (around 1933) |
Good Friday - cool and overcast - and Pendle lures in vain |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
9 |
|
83.023 |
Let's go to Hurstwood (around 1933) |
In childhood,days seemed brighter |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
22-23 |
|
83.012 |
Looking at Pendle |
Pendle - under a summer sky |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
8 |
|
83.027 |
Michaelmas daisies |
It feels like greeting old friends, when I see |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
29 |
|
83.036 |
No room |
No room was there, at the crowded inn |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
41 |
|
83.014 |
Snow in spring |
Snowflakes sit uneasily on every flower head |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
9 |
|
83.037 |
Standing at the gate |
Old year lingered beside the gate, and waited silently |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
42 |
|
83.025 |
The old Burnley Fair |
On the old Cattle Market's cobbled square |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
25-26 |
|
83.032 |
The poppy |
Poppy that blooms in November |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
36 |
|
83.016 |
The 'Sermons' ( Mount Zion Church, Cliviger, around 1966) |
With 'All in the April evening', choir voices set the scene |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
11 |
|
83.031 |
The shopping trip (around 1937) |
The drizzle grows more persistent, and turns to steady rain |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
34-35 |
|
83.011 |
The third day |
Through the groves, by shadowy olive trees |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
7 |
|
83.034 |
The unseen ways |
White clouds, sailing a changeful sky |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
39 |
|
83.018 |
The walking day (Holy Trinity, Burnley around 1933) |
With 'Onward! Christian soldiers' |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
13-15 |
|
83.017 |
Thoughts by the Brun (at Brownside) |
Where spiky grasses grow tall and lank |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
12 |
|
83.020 |
Tommy the coal-horse (around 1931) |
When Uncle Dck said 'Giddup!' Tommy best-foot-forward went |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
17-18 |
|
83.022 |
Trees at Townley |
The summer's leafy banners bright |
SLATER, Connie |
In a quiet hour |
SLATER, Connie |
M0106565LC |
407.087 |
19 |
20-21 |
|
4.514 |
Cum to thi tay |
Mi mother wants to see thi Joe |
SLATER, Horace |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
116-117 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.513 |
In t' park |
An yo ever bin in Owdham Park |
SLATER, Horace |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
115 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
86.719 |
Patricia my sister and friend |
As children we played happily |
SLATER, Shirley Ann |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
67 |
|
86.731 |
Seasons |
I first laid eyes upon your face |
SLOAN, Helen |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
79 |
|
86.657 |
A summer garden |
How beautiful my garden's been |
SLYNE, Joan |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
5 |
|
86.671 |
Creation |
God created the world |
SMALL, David B. |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
19 |
|
83.654 |
A child's question |
I'm always thinking, thinking |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
52 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.650 |
A cold |
I've a cold in my head |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
49 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.600 |
A failure |
You're a brave little fool, a fine little fool |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
24 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.582 |
A friend |
A friend |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
11 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.671 |
A heart's cry |
Oh my beloved, now waiting in the hollow |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
61-62 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.589 |
A lullaby |
Lulla, lullo, Sonny mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
16 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.639 |
A March night |
Hear, oh hear the wild wind howling |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
45 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.623 |
A night song |
Baby Loo |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
41 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.580 |
A prayer |
Oh, God of Love, Thou know'st of all I'm thinking |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
10 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
84.110 |
Absence - some say it is forgetting |
Absence - some say it is forgetting |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
53 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.667 |
After |
When, I'm dead to you, beloved |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
58 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.674 |
All in an hour |
You are weeping, you are crying |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
64 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.595 |
An Irish idyll |
Achushla dear |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
20-21 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.598 |
Angels of sleep |
Wee Wonder Baby, 'ere you go sleeping |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
23 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.590 |
Another year |
The Old Year creeps, life being o'er |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
17 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.612 |
Answered |
Tired, dear heart |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
33 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.681 |
Aren't you coming |
Aren't you coming where the waters lie a-dreaming |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
69 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.665 |
Bubbles |
Bubbles, bubbles |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
57-58 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.675 |
Childhood |
Seeming |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
64-65 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.683 |
Christmas 1915 |
We don't much care for Christmas joy, this year |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
70-71 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.662 |
Come and dance |
The birds are a-singing |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
56 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.630 |
Conjecture |
If we could read the story of each heart |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
43 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.691 |
Content |
Ah well for the day that has fled,' she said |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
76-77 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
84.111 |
Daydawn - and I wanted you |
Daydawn - and I wanted you |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
57 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.658 |
Depression |
Heart-ache and dreary days |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
54 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.627 |
Desolation |
See! the waves are gleaming |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
42 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.677 |
Despair |
Life is short |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
66 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.605 |
Don't |
Don't be a-grievin' 'cause you're lonely |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
28 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.656 |
Dream of the long ago |
I dreamt a dream in the Summer's glow |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
53 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.609 |
Dream-man |
Dream-man,dream-man, bring your treasure |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
31 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.653 |
Earth and soul |
I'm not afraid tho' you've left me for her |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
51-52 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.579 |
Edward, the peacemaker |
Britain, bow your head today |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
10 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.644 |
Eyes of wonder |
Eyes of wonder, softly gleaming |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
46-47 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.649 |
Fate and man |
I am master of my fate,' he thundered |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
48 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.604 |
Futility |
I am dreaming, I am dreaming |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
27 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.679 |
Goddess made of clay |
Oh, Goddess mine, oh Goddess made of clay |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
67-68 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.578 |
Heigho |
Heigho |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
9 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.692 |
His gift |
When God gave you your ideals, little one |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
77 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.618 |
I am so small |
You are so tall, oh dearling, my dear |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
36 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
84.109 |
I saw the sun, a red-gold ball |
I saw the sun, a red-gold ball |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
19 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.657 |
If I could |
If I could be a star while you were sleeping |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
54 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.682 |
Lack-a-day |
If I loved you as you love me |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
70 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.594 |
Life's phases |
I spoke |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
19-20 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.652 |
Little friend |
Good-day, little friend, I'm so pleased we've met |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
50-51 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.660 |
London, January 1913 |
London is sleeping, sleeping by starlight |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
55 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.659 |
Love and the world |
Where the waters quiver, quiver |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
55 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.668 |
Love and time |
Long in the days now forgotten |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
59 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.593 |
Love's way |
If I could steal away all the heaven's deepest blue |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
18-19 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.607 |
Madelon |
Madelon, oh Madelon, sweet Madelon of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
29 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.620 |
Make-believe |
Let's play at make-belive |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
38 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.615 |
Marjorie May |
Marjorie, my Marjorie May |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
35 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.596 |
Maytime,1915 |
Have you felt the joy of Maytime |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
21-22 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.622 |
My land of dreaming |
Red and green and blue and golden |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
40 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.684 |
New Year, 1916 |
Hope! - ah sure, 'twill come again |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
71 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.610 |
Our June |
By and bye, some day soon |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
33 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.693 |
Our might have been |
You called me, you called me |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
78-79 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.588 |
Queen of sorrows |
Queen of all sorrows |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
15-16 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.621 |
Replies |
Dear, I need you |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
39 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.646 |
Requiem |
Dear little dream of the Might Have Been |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
47 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.586 |
Rose of the Wilderness |
Rose of the Wilderness, far we are sundered |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
14 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.606 |
Slumber song |
Come along, come along, who'll come with me |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
28-29 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.670 |
So are you |
I am tired of it and so are you |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
61 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.585 |
Some-day town |
Past the bend of the road, and over the hill |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
13 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.664 |
Soul of my Dreaming |
Soul of my Dreaming, hear and behold me |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
56-57 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.581 |
Spirit of storm at night |
Murm'ring, growling, roaring |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
11 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.672 |
Sprit-soul |
Aren't you tired of playing with star-dust |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
62-63 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.676 |
Sunset pathway |
One evening when the great sea slept |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
65-66 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.688 |
Sunset. (August 1915) |
Cessation - a pause while the War Fiends breathe |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
74 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.687 |
Supplication |
God,when the morning dawns on one more lapse of time |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
73 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.624 |
Susette |
Susette, Susette, you have stolen your eyes |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
42 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.633 |
Temptation |
There's a something in the shadows, in the darkness, in the trees |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
43 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.592 |
The answer |
If God were standing here and now, just here beside us two |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
18 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.685 |
The call . Autumn, 1914 |
There's a call that's ringing thro' the world |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
72 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.641 |
The call of the light |
Do you feel, little heart, do you feel the call of the mystic Light |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
45-46 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.694 |
The dove and the rosebud |
Is this the World?' the rosebud sighed |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
79 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.587 |
The egoist |
I am I, the world beyond is nought |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
15 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.686 |
The kingdom of dreams |
If the world say 'Dreamer!' and point in scorn |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
72-73 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.614 |
The light |
Hover round the light |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
34 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.577 |
The little house where love lived |
O little House where Love lived, I'm wanting you to-night |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
8 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.651 |
The long ago land |
Come, won't you come to the Long Ago Land |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
49-50 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.608 |
The long time |
There's a long time coming soon, dear |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
30 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.680 |
The message |
You must stop crying at once, oh my dear |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
68 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.576 |
The moonbeam |
Down from the sky, when heavens were gleaming |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
7-Aug |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.602 |
The Moon-Queen |
Saw you Lady Moon |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
26 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.690 |
The mothers' part |
God gave him me in some mysterious way |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
75-76 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.673 |
The offering |
I gave you my heart |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
63 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.619 |
The old woman smiled |
I know not of love,' she laughingly said |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
37 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.617 |
The sacrifice |
I have given all up for thee |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
36 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.613 |
The short road |
I have seen the short, short road |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
33 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.599 |
To a V.C |
They laughed at you - ah, you remember |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
23-24 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.601 |
To the West |
To the West |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
25 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.603 |
Trust |
Hold my hand, ah hold it tight |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
26-27 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.584 |
Twas but |
Twas but a roguish smile, a word - 'good-day |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
13 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.669 |
Twilight hour |
Creep within the hollow of my arm |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
60 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.678 |
Two thoughts |
One thought |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
67 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.637 |
What would you be |
Let us,' said Harry, one warm July day |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
44 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.689 |
When hope came |
One day an angel small and white |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
75 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
84.108 |
When I was calling |
When I was calling |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
41 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.616 |
When shadows deepen |
Little one, little one, darkness is falling |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
35 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.591 |
When we are young |
When we are young, and all the world is glowing |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
17 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.583 |
When you forget |
When you live where the sun will never cease to shine always |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
12 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.597 |
Which |
Think of the night, and its shade is around you |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
22 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
83.611 |
Why do I love you |
Why do I love you |
SMALLEY, Marie |
Thoughts of mine |
SMALLEY, Marie |
M0117197LC |
454.692 |
1.916 |
32 |
A book of verse printed in Blackburn |
80.869 |
One-eyed Jack |
One-eyed Jack is in my head |
SMART, Helen |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
149 |
|
80.870 |
The fight |
It started with a kick and a push |
SMART, John |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
149 |
|
80.871 |
Observations at sunset - West Kirby |
Sailing dinghies, surfboards, water-wings, flippers and rings |
SMART, Pat |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
150 |
|
439 |
Resting |
At the top of the hill |
SMITH, Alec |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
24 |
|
87.775 |
The Crucifixion |
Beside the lonely hill |
SMITH, Alexandra B. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
60 |
|
82.863 |
Owls |
Owls fly around at night |
SMITH, Amy |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
97 |
|
83.565 |
Walverden: a lament |
Oh Walverden! vale once so fair |
SMITH, Arthur |
SKETCHES and poems by local writers, edited by John U. Smith |
|
M0129272LC |
491.715 |
18 |
7-Aug |
Editor was member of the Burnley Literary and Philosophical Society |
80.849 |
The man I loved |
To know him was to love him, and all his many ways |
SMITH, Barbara Jackson |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
126 |
|
81.441 |
Magic powers |
If I had magic powers |
SMITH, Becky |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
82 |
|
82.855 |
Darren's dog |
Tail wagger |
SMITH, Darren |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
93 |
|
87.734 |
What Is Going On? |
What is going on? |
SMITH, E. A |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
19 |
|
5.698 |
The miller and the king's daughter |
There were two sisters, they went playing |
SMITH, James |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire: chiefly older than the 19th century, collected, compiled, and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0005964LC |
13.084 |
1.865 |
113-115 |
1st edition. Collected by John Harland |
5.589 |
The miller and the king's daughter |
There were two sisters, they went playing |
SMITH, James |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
83-84 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.761 |
The miller and the king's daughter |
There were two sisters, they went playing |
SMITH, James |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
83-84 |
2nd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Poem also in 1882 edition (Control Number M0018149LC) |
87.754 |
Tastes |
Taste the Lord, for he is good |
SMITH, Joan |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
39 |
|
82.879 |
It was so peaceful |
It was so quiet that I heard |
SMITH, Kimberley |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
105 |
|
87.762 |
Where To Find A Friend |
If you're looking for someone to help you |
SMITH, Letitia |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
47 |
|
82.970 |
Things found in a witch's pocket |
A big bad book that flies away |
SMITH, Lisa |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
156 |
|
4.376 |
A day in Preston |
Hev onny on yo ever bin to buy a corslet |
SMITH, Mary |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
49 |
|
4.116 |
A reet good do |
Ah never dud like cleynin up Ah'd allus raather bake |
SMITH, Mary |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
33 |
|
4.374 |
A special day at't seaside |
Ah couldn't a bin aboon five year owd when mi brother Jem an' me |
SMITH, Mary |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
48 |
|
4.101 |
Clogs |
It's several hundred year sin clogs cum to Lancasheer |
SMITH, Mary |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
16-17 |
|
4.375 |
Eaur John |
One day eaur John went out to play |
SMITH, Mary |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
49 |
|
407 |
Th' owd fettler |
My owd mon's a rare un fer fettling brokken things |
SMITH, Mary |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
107 |
|
4.109 |
In excelsis |
Now, aw his life Owd Henry hed played in a brass band |
SMITH, Mary and BRAITHWAITE, Beryl |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
26-27 |
|
4.135 |
The day we went to t' seaside |
Ah couldn't a bin aboon five year owd when mi brother Jem an' me |
SMITH, Mary and BRAITHWAITE, Beryl |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
47-48 |
|
87.737 |
Galilee |
I had a dream so long ago |
SMITH, Mary H. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
22 |
|
81.350 |
Nature |
One day I saw a fox, the next I saw a box |
SMITH, Michael |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
31 |
|
86.705 |
My Dad's garden |
I remember as a child we had a garden |
SMITH, Olive |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
53 |
|
87.791 |
New Life |
Years ago Jesus realised |
SMITH, Paul |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
78 |
|
82.877 |
Cartoons |
Who is he |
SMITH, Rebekah |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
104 |
|
87.743 |
How Precious |
How precious Lord you truly are |
SMITH, Roger |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
28 |
|
86.789 |
To a graffiti artist |
Why did you visit the church today |
SMITH, Ruth |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
121 |
|
82.963 |
The burger-eating monster |
I'm demanding that you read this because |
SMITH, Stephen |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
153 |
|
82.820 |
Rainbow |
Rain will come and rainbows will fly by |
SMITH, Tayla |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
71 |
|
87.735 |
Thank You |
I thank you Lord for my life with you |
SMITH, Valerie Linstead |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
20 |
|
87.794 |
Wars |
How can we stop all |
SMITH, Violet |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
81 |
|
6.229 |
Conjugal affection |
Clorinda closed her eyes in death |
SMITH, W. Taylor |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
122-123 |
|
6.277 |
Kassandra |
Thou shalt know the future, maiden! As though hast desired |
SMITH, W. Taylor |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
173-174 |
|
6.274 |
Selene |
Queen of the starry night |
SMITH, W. Taylor |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
167-169 |
|
6.230 |
The soliloquy of an atom |
I have tumbled about for millions of years |
SMITH, W. Taylor |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
123-124 |
|
6.275 |
Thoughts |
Great thoughts oft rise |
SMITH, W. Taylor |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
169-170 |
|
6.276 |
What is love |
I asked the lily's pure white bell |
SMITH, W. Taylor |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
170-172 |
|
87.792 |
Until |
And so, dear Aunt, the time has come |
SMITHAM, John R. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
79 |
|
86.668 |
Childhood memory |
I don't remember what day it was |
SMITHSON, Eileen D. |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
16 |
|
82.144 |
Ada Ducket an' Dr Flynn |
Eawr docthur wor a gradely mon, 'is name wor Michael Flynn |
SNAPE, Doris |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
40-41 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
81.543 |
Star poem |
Stars shooting in the sky |
SNIBSON, Jamie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
134 |
|
4.381 |
Weyver's Triangle, Burnley |
T' main mills are all shut, wit great gates locked n' barred |
SOUTH, Jackie Hindle |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
54 |
|
509 |
Cats' eyes |
Twin shining stars in endless line |
SOUTHWELL, Deane |
Preston Writers '72 |
PRESTON WRITERS |
M0017962LC |
78.606 |
1.972 |
31 |
|
87.829 |
Jesus Christ |
Jesus Christ |
SOWERBUTTS, Claire |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
117 |
|
814 |
A lad in court |
Yo' tell me ah'm as full o' pride |
SPARTH, John |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
53 |
|
63 |
Accrington Market |
Ah stands eawt rooad, an watches fooak passby |
SPARTH, John |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
217 |
|
13 |
Dunkenhalgh |
A mon wi' a wiser heyd nor me |
SPARTH, John |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
110 |
|
6 |
Hameldon |
Fra my front door ah look at hill |
SPARTH, John |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
102 |
|
14 |
Martholme |
Deawn t' gloomy lane, pas t'deain' pit |
SPARTH, John |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
111 |
|
817 |
Pendle village |
This sullen dug is bare to t'neet |
SPARTH, John |
Nowt so queer: new Lancashire verse and prose |
POMFRET, Joan |
900397004 |
155.971 |
1.969 |
70 |
|
15 |
Whalley Abbey |
I'God's peace neaw, these sleepin' stooans |
SPARTH, John |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
112 |
|
81.478 |
Winter |
I hate winter |
SPEAKMAN, Megan |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
101 |
|
83.566 |
Suppose |
Had I a love and he loved me |
SPENCER, Annie |
SKETCHES and poems by local writers, edited by John U. Smith |
|
M0129272LC |
491.715 |
18 |
8-Sep |
Editor was member of the Burnley Literary and Philosophical Society |
495 |
Copper beech leaves |
Splashes of bronze fire shimmer |
SPENCER, J |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
46 |
|
497 |
Valentine's day |
Draped elegantly across the chaise longue |
SPENCER, J |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
48 |
|
83.851 |
A dream of another world |
Some day the world will laugh again, and I shall feel |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
107 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.836 |
A fragment |
On such a day as this I walked |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
92 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.807 |
A little ditty composed in bed |
Once I loved a maiden |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
72 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.844 |
A New Year toast - to Death |
A toast from the fateful glass to Death I drink |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
101 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.732 |
A paradise on earth |
Round about the garden |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
13 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.819 |
A poem |
My boats are lost, my little boats that sailed |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
83 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.834 |
An allegory of a rose tree |
There were roses on this tree |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
90 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.746 |
Apologia |
Since for months I had not seen you |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
27- 28 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.766 |
Blind Lane |
Oh no, I never saw it, it came before my day |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
47 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.830 |
Despondency |
Men are going into town |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
86 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.771 |
Dream boats. Section 1. Boating |
To the Realms of Fancy floating |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
51 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.772 |
Dream boats. Section 2. The recollections |
Sometimes in a gloomy cavern |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
51 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.773 |
Dream boats. Section 3. Dream-boats |
Dancing through the sylvan sunlight |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
51 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
84.874 |
Epigrams |
Lancashire - County of England. Thy hand unseen |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
9 |
The author was killed in 1943. Burnley poet |
83.728 |
Epigrams |
Love Nature and Nature will love you |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
9 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
84.875 |
Epigrams |
Spring - Mother Nature seems to awaken from a |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
9 |
The author was killed in 1943. Burnley poet |
83.854 |
Epitaph on a mouse |
The mourner speaks - out of your cage into a wider world |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
110-111 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.735 |
Evening - suggested by a sunset at Hoylake |
A picture of the gods revealed to man |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
16 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.853 |
Fairwell, fieldfares |
When I came here before, a company |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
109 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.859 |
First leave |
I heard a skylark singing |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
116 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.804 |
Fragment |
Life is a sleep and death the dream which wakes |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
69 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.809 |
Fragment |
Why must I leave my Burnley in the buds of spring |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
74 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.845 |
Fragment. On himself |
Oh what a little child in Time! You ought |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
102 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.855 |
Fragments |
When May is painting meadows |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
112 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.759 |
Freedom |
Away and away on the wings of the morning |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
42 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.835 |
From a window |
This was a little world enclosed by trees |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
91 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.839 |
Frost and snow |
Walking and walking through the frost of the morning |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
96 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.741 |
Funeral dirge |
O valiant Tate, who prey to Friary came |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
22 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.695 |
God's work |
Give me the moorlands, give me the skies |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
5 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.734 |
Grange over sands. Sunset |
Silken shadows shimmer in the fast-fading rays of the sinking sun |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
15 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.814 |
Harmony. The wind in the trees |
There is a sweet rhythm which quickens the trees |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
79 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.791 |
Heaven before me, and paradise behind |
O cruel miles, that riding on |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
53 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.790 |
If winter comes |
England, my lovely land, thy hallowed name |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
52 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.749 |
Immortality in nature |
Now when the evening dies across the East |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
31- 32 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.761 |
Invocation |
O where shall we meet |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
44 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.792 |
Invocation to music |
Wail for me passionate violins, and strains |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
54 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.697 |
Just a poem |
Goal,Goal' the people yelled |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
7 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.801 |
Lai - to Christmas |
Flakes of gentle snow |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
66 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.763 |
Lines |
I have triumphed - the victory is mine |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
46 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.810 |
Lines |
O Spirit of the woods and hills and plains |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
75 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.818 |
Lines |
When Love is born, the outer world stands still |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
82 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.838 |
Lines after the Restoration poets |
Did you ever call me heartless |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
95 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.812 |
Lines I have just rescued from oblivion |
Why do I wander, lonely, all alone |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
77 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.764 |
Love |
Two bright spirits in the freshness of youth |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
46 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.744 |
Lyric |
Those tender memories of that night of bliss |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
25 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.806 |
March madness |
Hurrah for the spring |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
71 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.802 |
Memory translation of Catullus's Minister Vetuli |
Come, young serving boy of Vetulus the old |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
67 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.767 |
Ode to Christmas |
A light is dawning in the East afar |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
48 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.760 |
On being appointed schoool-captain |
O news whose burden weighs me down |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
43 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.813 |
On hearing that Grange had been damaged by bombs |
Bombs shall not touch you, Grange, nor war-machines destroy |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
78 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.803 |
On the morning of my birthday, March 1st, 1940 |
Forgotten am I now, when I in earlier years |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
68 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.815 |
Oxoniam amans |
Away from Oxford |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
80 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.738 |
Pendle |
Home of the curlew and home of the lark |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
19 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.837 |
Preface to autobiography. (A fragment). 1941-1942 |
I have seen old years die regretfully |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
93-94 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.821 |
Series of lines to a lovely friend |
I was happy when I was with you |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
85 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.758 |
Shelley |
Spirit of Nature and Immortality |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
41 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.748 |
Silver |
Beyond the farthest western bay |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
30 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.755 |
Sonnet |
Gone are those days when simple objects pleased |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
38 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.745 |
Sonnet |
Oh how can words express my love for you |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
26 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.747 |
Sonnet to Joan |
The sun may shine but only for a day |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
29 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.743 |
Sonnet to M |
Hair radiant as the gleam of summer dawn |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
24 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.754 |
Sonnet. Sweet memories |
The happiest hours of all my life have been |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
37 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.727 |
Spring returns |
Spring returns to our cold, cold land |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
8 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.737 |
Spring song |
The music of the water's sound |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
18 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.753 |
Stanzas - written in dejection |
Outcast of people, Fate's plaything for an hour |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
36 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.842 |
Step upwards |
There are blank things that crawl |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
99 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.841 |
Stepping stones |
The moon |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
98 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.808 |
Sunlight |
Have you seen the diamonds on a fairy's chain |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
73 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.736 |
Sunrise |
Scarce has the pale-faced sun but left his bed |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
17 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.850 |
Sweet birds |
Sweet birds that sing |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
106 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.856 |
Tell me |
Tell me, does Pendle Hill, like an old hoary king |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
113 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.740 |
Term end |
The term is nearly over |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
21 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.795 |
The allegory of the seasons. First part - the song of the Summer Fairy |
When fragrant scents of night are fleeing |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
57-58 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.796 |
The allegory of the seasons. Second part - the lament of the Autumn Fairy |
Lament, ye pines and weep ye myrtle groves |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
58-59 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.798 |
The allegory of the seasons. The fourth part - the triumph of Spring |
Awake anemone, unfold your petals pale |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
61-63 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.797 |
The allegory of the seasons. Third part - the dirge of Winter |
The winds are loosed, each charged with frosty death |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
60-61 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.852 |
The deceiver |
Hasten, dark night, bring with you long-sought sleep |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
108 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.857 |
The golden age |
Sometimes when I am idle and my thoughts |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
114 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.730 |
The jay |
The dear saucy fellow is seen all the year |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
11 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.811 |
The mad way |
I dreamed of home and clouds on Pendle Hill |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
76 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.847 |
The penitent |
A sinner walked to beauty |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
103 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.696 |
The robin |
No sweeter song could e'er be heard |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
6 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.733 |
The rookery |
Through a Yorkshire village flows a stream |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
14 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.831 |
The wanderer |
I wander as a phantom shadow |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
87 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.731 |
The world is never-ceasing |
Spring died long ago |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
12 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.729 |
Though the world |
Though the world seems at an end |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
10 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.805 |
Thoughts on seeing only myself in a mirror |
Eyes, you are sad, lips you are lonely now |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
70 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.849 |
To a bee and beetle |
I walked onto Hambledon moors |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
105 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.861 |
To a wood-tiger moth |
Now you are free |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
119 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.833 |
To buttertflies carousing together |
Play my little butterflies, enjoy your frolicking |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
89 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.800 |
To Christmas |
The old year is dying |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
65 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.843 |
To comrades |
Farewell, dear hearts, today you stand |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
100 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.765 |
To Elsie |
O Valiant heart, who faithful to the last |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
47 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.820 |
To Jimmy sitting alone in his cage |
Jimmy's old and growing tired |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
84 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.840 |
To Mary |
Can you tell me, Mary, where there are liquid wells |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
97 |
Mary Whitehead of Coal Clough Lane. See Who was who.Vol. 9. T51DUG |
83.752 |
To my darling |
Darling, sweetest, hold me, kiss me |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
35 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.742 |
To the Lancashire witches |
I did not know that so much charm |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
23 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.794 |
To the moon |
O Moon, thou full and golden world of light |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
56 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.739 |
To the robin |
No sweeter song was ever heard |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
20 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.750 |
To the spirit of a girl |
I shall find You, I shall meet You |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
33-34 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.770 |
To the spirit of God |
O Heavenly Palace that my eyes have lived to see |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
50 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.762 |
To the spirit of Shelley |
Oh Shelley, you are not dead; your voice I see |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
45 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.816 |
Towards Grange |
Beyond those hills, behind the summer mist |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
81 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.757 |
Untitled |
Away and away on the wings of the wind |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
40 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.832 |
Untitled |
I have not found a love |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
88 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.799 |
Untitled |
I wonder what I shall dream to-night |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
64 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.769 |
Valentine hymn |
Hear this, children of the world |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
49 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.860 |
Valete atque ave |
The invocation: O Heavenly Love, Urania, Goddess fair |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
117-118 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.756 |
Valte |
No love-song is this |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
39 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.848 |
Wagtail ditty |
Wagtails, wagtails, bobtails all |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
104 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.858 |
Written in dejection, at Richmond, Surrey |
It is no untruth when I say |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
115 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
83.793 |
Written in the pine woods at Ilkley |
Pines, you are lonely, or why else should you mourn |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
The first hundred (1933 - June 1942) |
SPENCER, Philip S-G. |
M0300740LC |
746.638 |
194 |
55 |
The author was killed in 1943 |
155 |
An Eclogue |
Lo Colin, here the place, whose pleasant syte |
SPENSER, Edmund |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
Oct-13 |
|
85.014 |
Envoy |
Goe, little book! thy selfe present |
SPENSER, Edmund |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
47 |
Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. Envoi ( a postscript to the collection) A printing error has the title as Nvoy |
389 |
John Masefield, O M In Memoriam |
There is a stillness in the air |
SPURR, Rita |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
36 |
|
87.750 |
Here I Stand |
Here I stand on mystic ground |
SQUIRE, Ian |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
35 |
|
84.055 |
Late snow |
The heavy train through the dim country went rolling, rolling |
SQUIRE, J. C. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
11 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
86.704 |
Mucky but lucky |
Laura's school coat pockets |
SQUIRES, Ivy |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
52 |
|
87.767 |
Spark-flame-glory |
Two thousand years ago He came, a babe on earth to dwell |
SQUIRES, Ivy |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
52 |
|
4.848 |
Wimmen's wark es niver done |
Aw dunnot reckon aw con preytch |
STANDING, James |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
75-78 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
779 |
Wimmen's work es niver done |
Aw dunnot reckon aw con preytch |
STANDING, James |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
263-266 |
|
81.511 |
A zoo party |
I'd like to give a party |
STANLEY, Sean |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
118 |
|
84.097 |
A bleeding heart |
I loved a little maiden well |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
124-126 |
|
84.019 |
A blind shot |
In poet's page, far back, when I would read |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
59 |
|
84.511 |
A blind shot |
In poet's page, far back, when I would read |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
111 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.037 |
A Country Rose |
I found the other day, a country rose |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
75 |
|
84.200 |
A dream picture (after Heine) |
What storm is raging in my blood? |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
191-192 |
|
84.262 |
A grey hair (after Emma von Nindorf) |
A shining hair - ah, can I see aright |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
223 |
|
84.326 |
A handful of 'ground flowers' |
Deign to accept a handful of 'ground flowers' |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
285-289 |
|
84.091 |
A legend of Marple Hall |
On a sunny day of the early fall |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
111-114 |
|
84.099 |
A little late |
Tell me not that I am 'old' |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
129-130 |
|
84.529 |
A mode of barter |
Gold have you got, and wit and learning I |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
130 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.471 |
A moorland flower |
A moorland farm, upon a steep hillside |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
69 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.992 |
A moorland flower |
A moorland flower, upon a steep hillside |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
31 |
|
84.001 |
A mountain landscape |
I know a vale, far up among the hills |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
40 |
|
84.460 |
A mountain landscape |
I know a vale, far up among the hills |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
58 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.536 |
A sonnet on sonneteering |
Had I the leisure of the indolent Friend |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
137 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.114 |
A summer call to the mountains |
Away to the mountains away! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
151-152 |
|
84.271 |
A wintry sonnet (after Alfred de Musset) |
A love the early frost upon a winter morn |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
237 |
|
84.022 |
A yearning |
When I am dead, O lay me in the shade |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
62 |
|
84.523 |
A yearning |
When I am dead, O lay me in the shade |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
123 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.520 |
After long years |
After long waiting, love is very sweet |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
120 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.521 |
After long years II |
Memory remains; and here amid the scene |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
121 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.026 |
After long years! |
After long waiting, love is very sweet |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
66 |
|
946 |
Amor redivivus |
Air made sweeter by her breath |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
199-200 |
|
84.016 |
Amor redivivus |
Ere March arrive must roll another moon |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
56 |
|
84.476 |
Amor redivivus |
Ere March arrive must roll another moon |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
74 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.995 |
An eminent writer and honoured friend |
To win the homage of such a pen as thine |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
33 |
|
84.117 |
An invitation |
Oh Annie! the spring hath come and hath gone |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
157 |
|
84.267 |
As it often happens 9after Emmanuel Geibel) |
Oh, barely-lying tongues! Oh slanderous tongues |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
227-228 |
|
85.982 |
At Wordsworth's grave |
The summer day was dying when we came |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
28 |
(By Night) In the year 1854 the Writer first visited the Grave, under the circumstances described below. Author born in Todmorden |
83.883 |
At Wordsworth's grave |
The summer day was dying when we came |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
22 |
|
84.426 |
At Wordsworth's grave (by night) |
The summer day was dying when we came |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
28 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.013 |
Birds of the high moorlands |
Bird of the misty moor! the peewit's cry |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
51 |
|
84.472 |
Birds of the high moorlands. The curlew and the plover |
Bird of the misty moor! the peewit's cry |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
70 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.009 |
Breezy Kersal |
They call thee 'breezy Kersal' and I know |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
48 |
|
84.461 |
Breezy Kersal |
They call thee 'breezy Kersal' and I know |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
59 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.462 |
Breezy Kersall II |
I love thee breezy Kersall; I would go |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
60 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.999 |
By the Brun: after many years |
Stream of the Brun - child of the heathery moor |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
38 |
|
84.459 |
By the Brun: after many years |
Stream of the Brun - child of the heathery moor |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
57 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.104 |
By the church in the valley |
By this church, all ivy-grown |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
137-139 |
|
84.250 |
By-gones (after Joseph Freihem von Eichendorf) |
Oh! where is now the dear old tree |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
209-210 |
|
84.438 |
Caliban converted |
With his full rights restored, the Duke returns |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
40 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.033 |
Caliban converted |
With his full rights restored, the Duke returns |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
71 |
|
84.439 |
Caliban converted II |
The Duke hath entered Milan, with his train |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
41 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.425 |
Charles Lamb |
The gentlest of all gentle creatures known |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
27 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.881 |
Charles Lamb |
The gentlest of all gentle creatures known |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
21 |
|
84.261 |
Consolations of the blind (after Emma von Nindorf) |
Mine eyes are dark, and yet I am not blind! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
222 |
|
83.825 |
Coronation of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra |
Norman and Saxon mingle here |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
5-Aug |
|
84.258 |
Dark in the sunshine (after Wilhelm Wackernagel) |
The sun is shining warm and bright |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
219 |
|
84.241 |
Death and the Doctor (after G E Lessing) |
Would you credit, brothers mine! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
197-198 |
|
84.417 |
Death of Wallenstein |
Night must it be ere Friedland's star shall shine |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
19 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.875 |
Death of Wallenstein |
Night must it be ere Friedland's star shall shine |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
16 |
|
84.256 |
Despair (after August Graf von Platen) |
Whose life means 'suffering', whose long nights of pain |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
218 |
|
84.106 |
Disillusioned |
How I have loved thee, woman! never man on earth |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
142 |
|
84.339 |
Do your best! |
One aim, through life, I'll keep in view |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
324-326 |
|
84.086 |
Donald Gorm |
The wind roureth loud by Dunvegan tonight! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
97-101 |
|
84.119 |
Dulcamara |
Air made sweet by her breath |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
160 |
|
84.418 |
Edmund Spenser |
Four English names shed sweetness o'er this earth |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
20 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.876 |
Edmund Spenser |
Four English names shed sweetness o'er this earth |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
17 |
Written on the tercentenary of his death |
85.974 |
Edmund Spenser |
Four English names shed sweetness o'er this earth |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
20-21 |
Written on the Tercentenary of his death. Author born in Todmorden |
83.877 |
Edmund Spenser |
Spenser I sing, star of that middle time |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
18 |
Written on the anniversary of his birth |
84.419 |
Edmund Spenser II |
Melodius Spencer! Master-Sprite of all |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
21 |
Author born in Todmorden |
947 |
Ere March arrive |
Ere March arrive, must roll another moon |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
200 |
|
84.534 |
Farewell to Kersal |
Farewell! sweet Kersal, with thy breezy Moor |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
135 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.041 |
Farewell to Kersal |
Farewell! sweet Kersal, with thy breezy moor |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
78 |
|
84.535 |
Farewell to Kersal. II |
Farewell, the rustic Cottage, at whose door |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
136 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.008 |
Farewell to S- |
Farewell! green valley, hid among the hills |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
47 |
|
84.458 |
Farewell to S - . East Lancashire |
Farewell! green valley, hid among the hills |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
56 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.269 |
Flower-piece the first from Siebenkas by Jean Paul F Richter |
Once, on a summer afternoon, I lay |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
230-236 |
translated into English blank verse |
83.996 |
France and England: A peaceful invasion |
Two mighty nations, here, have shaken hands! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
37 |
|
83.871 |
Francois Rabelais 1483 - 1553 |
Master of Mimics, yet a Master-mind! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
13 |
|
84.027 |
Friendship |
You say a friend, O Friend! there is no friend |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
67 |
|
84.500 |
Friendship and the compensation of life |
You say a friend, O Friend! there is no friend |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
100 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.501 |
Friendship and the compensation of life II |
And none that's rich, or great, hath power to test |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
101 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.273 |
Genius in obscurity (after de Lamartine) |
The breath divine that fans into a flame |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
239-240 |
|
83.827 |
Heinrich Heine |
Spirit of storm and stress! the sea-mew's cry |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
11 |
|
84.407 |
Heinrich Heine |
Spirit of storm and stress! the sea-mew's cry |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
9 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.095 |
Heraclitus and Democritus |
Heraclitus, Democritus |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
120-122 |
|
84.006 |
Holme |
Sweet, rural Holme! thy sylvan beauty lies |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
45 |
|
84.455 |
Holme, East Lancashire |
Sweet, rural Holme! thy sylvan beauty lies |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
54 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.456 |
Holme, East Lancashire II |
Romantic Holme! that sleep'st among the hills |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
55 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.265 |
Hopeless grief (after F Braun) |
The glorious sun beams forth again |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
225 |
|
84.020 |
Human littleness |
As in the summer-air an insect cloud |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
60 |
|
84.515 |
Human littleness |
As in the summer-air an insect cloud |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
115 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.516 |
Human littleness. II |
In such a mood of thought, upon a day |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
116 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.005 |
Hurstwood |
A grey stone hamlet of Eliza's age |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
44 |
|
84.452 |
Hurstwood, East Lancshire |
A grey stone hamlet of Eliza's age |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
52 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.454 |
Hurstwood, East Lancshire II |
And this is Hurstwood ? Hither, upon a time |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
53 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.186 |
In memoriam |
Transcendent soul! Ah whither dost thou fare |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
167 |
|
84.338 |
In praise of Horace |
O Horace rare, I do declare |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
323-324 |
|
84.499 |
In search of the first wild rose |
Through many a bush and brake we took our way |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
99 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.195 |
In the spring (after Ludwif Uhland) |
The south winds are blowing so soft and light |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
185 |
|
84.244 |
Into the still night, come! (after TRobert Reinick) |
Into the still night, come! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
201-202 |
|
84.252 |
Invitation to travel (after Gottfried Kinkel) |
I've lived, and sung, both bold and free |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
212 |
|
84.335 |
It's only a trifle |
It is but a trifle; don't mind it I pray! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
318-320 |
|
84.410 |
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |
As in the forest-bounds the oak tree tall |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
12 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.870 |
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |
As in the forest-bounds the oak tree tall |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
12 |
|
84.193 |
Journey by night (after Ludwig Uhland) |
Into the gloomy land I ride |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.953 |
1903 |
|
84.325 |
Lines |
Our peaceful heros have I always loved |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
278-281 |
|
84.240 |
Lines addressed to a beautiful young lady (after Nicolaus Lenau) |
Like the red rose in thy hair |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
196-197 |
|
84.277 |
Lines addressed to a poet (after Edouard Pailleron) |
O heed not him who idly nails |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
243-244 |
|
84.324 |
Lines addressed to the Right Rev the Lord Bishop of - |
He that doth seek, in this our world below |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
276-278 |
|
84.286 |
Lines of Jean Paul Friedrich Richter |
Richter we do not call thee, but 'Jean Paul'! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
268-273 |
|
84.285 |
Lines on Charles Lamb |
A thousand times, O Lamb! Have I turned o'er |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
262-267 |
|
84.280 |
Lines on Cowper |
O mild forerunner of a mighty bard |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
251-253 |
|
84.283 |
Lines on Keats |
When fell diseased had struck the poet low |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
257-259 |
|
84.281 |
Lines on reading Professor Masson's 'Story of Chatterton's life' |
I read of Chatterton, 'the marvellous boy' |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
253-254 |
|
84.284 |
Lines on reperusing Tennyson's 'In Memoriam' |
Nay, mighty Master of all Melody! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
260-261 |
|
84.090 |
Lines on revisiting Holme and Hurstwood |
twas when the summer and autumn meet |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
106-110 |
|
84.102 |
Lines on the funeral of J N |
The day was bright, yet cold - an autumn day |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
134-135 |
|
84.188 |
Lines on visiting the churchyard of Stoke Pogis |
Upon the stately brow we late had stood |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
169-173 |
|
84.282 |
Lines on Wordsworth |
Poet of Lakeland! Poet of all time! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
255-257 |
|
84.187 |
Lines written on the round tower of Windsor Castle |
The time of falling leaves was stealing on |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
168-169 |
|
83.985 |
Lord Roberts |
World-shaking wars have thundered o'er the main |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
26 |
|
84.239 |
Love and spring (after Hoffman von Fallersleben) |
While love slept in a rosebush, came |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
196 |
|
84.036 |
Love of quiet |
Tis soothing sweet at times to step aside |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
74 |
|
83.828 |
Ludwig Uhland |
O sweet-voiced singer in the glorious quire |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
11 |
|
84.408 |
Ludwig Uhland |
O sweet-voiced singer in the glorious quire |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
10 |
Author born in Todmorden |
85.968 |
Ludwig Uhland |
O sweet-voiced singer in the glorious quire |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
10-Nov |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.829 |
Ludwig Uhland II |
Thine is the voice of soothing that we need |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
12 |
|
84.409 |
Ludwig Uhland II |
Thine is the voice of soothing that we need |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
11 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.103 |
Mammonville |
We read, in histories old, of 'Golden Calves' |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
136-137 |
|
84.021 |
Manchester asleep in the moonlight |
I journeyed through the city in the night |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
61-62 |
|
84.512 |
Manchester asleep in the moonlight |
I journeyed through the city in the night |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
112 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.513 |
Manchester asleep in the moonlight. II |
Strange sight is that - a 'busy town' asleep |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
113 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.514 |
Manchester asleep in the moonlight. III |
A giant City, wrapped in slumber sound |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
114 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.199 |
Mary the reaper (after Ludwig Uhland) |
Poor Mary, the reaper, loved dearly the son of the Father |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
187-190 |
|
84.411 |
Michel de Montaigne |
Dear, grand old Gascon! what a wondrous mine |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
13 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.872 |
Michel de Montaigne |
Dear, grand old Gascon! what a wondrous mine |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
13 |
|
84.412 |
Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra |
Our Great Men are the hills that storm the skies |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
14 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.873 |
Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra |
Our Great Men are the hills that storm the skies |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
14-15 |
|
85.971 |
Miguel De Cervantes Saavedra |
Our Great Men are the hills that storm the skies |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
14-16 |
or The Power of the Sun. Author born in Todmorden |
84.413 |
Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra II |
Nations decline: alas, for martial pride |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
15 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.414 |
Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra III |
One power remains, nor wanes, but doth increase |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
16 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.004 |
Mother nature |
Who says that life, with swift-flowing years |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
43 |
|
84.470 |
Mother nature |
Who says that life, with swift-flowing years |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
68 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.435 |
Mr John Mortimer |
Who loves not Mortimer? our gentle John |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
37 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.989 |
Mr John Mortimer |
Who loves not Mortimer? our gentle John |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
29 |
|
84.263 |
My native vale (after Emma von Nindorf) |
Ah! once again I greet my native vale |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
224 |
|
84.012 |
Nature's pity |
Tis pitying nature leaves a record here |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
51 |
|
84.473 |
Nature's pity |
Tis pitying nature leaves a record here |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
71 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.333 |
Old Bob of Kersal |
Uncle Bob is a bachelor, hearty and old |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
313-314 |
|
83.878 |
Oliver Cromwell |
One of the greatest of the English Great |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
18 |
|
85.975 |
Oliver Cromwell |
One of the greatest of the English Great |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
22 |
Written on the Tercentenary of his birth. Author born in Todmorden |
83.879 |
Oliver Goldsmith |
One tribute only! A few simple flowers |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
19 |
|
85.976 |
Oliver Goldsmith |
One tribute only! A few simple flowers |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
23 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.039 |
On a pet sparrow |
The winged world, how grand a life, how free |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
77 |
|
83.886 |
On the burial of John Ruskin |
A splendid star hath fallen from the skies |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
23 |
|
84.430 |
On the burial of John Ruskin at Coniston |
A splendid Star hath fallen from the skies |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
32 |
Author born in Todmorden |
85.980 |
On the Burial of Mr Gladstone |
Silent the eloquent voice |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
31 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.885 |
On the burial of Mr Gladstone |
Silent the eloquent voice, the magic tongue |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
23 |
|
84.429 |
On the burial of Mr. Gladstone in Westminster Abbey |
Silent the eloquent voice, the magic tongue |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
31 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.987 |
On the death of Cuthbert Evan Tyrer |
He died at Rimini, in the full prime |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
28 |
|
84.427 |
On the morrow |
By Rotha's murmurs lulled, he lieth there |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
29 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.884 |
On the morrow |
By Rotha's murmurs lulled, he lieth there |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
22 |
|
84.444 |
On the recent discovery of seven prehistoric urns |
Thousands of years, and thousands more, have sped |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
46 |
Discovered at Blackheath, Stansfield, Yorkshire. Author born in Todmorden |
83.998 |
On the recent discovery of seven prehistoric urns |
Thousands of years, and thousands more, have sped |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.953 |
38 |
|
84.007 |
Ormerod (near Burnley) |
Dear, grey old Mansion I have loved for long |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
46-47 |
|
84.465 |
Ormerod, near Burnley |
Dear, grey old Mansion I have loved for long |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
63 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.466 |
Ormerod, near Burnley II |
Once more a boy, I pluck the primrose pale |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
64 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.467 |
Ormerod, near Burnley III |
Thy woods, old Ormerod, are today as green |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
65 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.014 |
Out of doors: On the moors - a yearning |
O for the swelling hills and the wild moors |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
52 |
|
84.474 |
Out-of-doors _ on the moors; a yearning |
O for the swelling hills and the wild moors |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
72 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.475 |
Out-of-doors _ on the moors; a yearning II |
In the low vale I languish, let me breathe |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
73 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.259 |
Patience brings the roses (after Wilhelm Wackernagel) |
There is a tree that prickly grows |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
220 |
|
84.098 |
Payment in kind |
O blue-eyed beauty with flaxen curls |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
127-129 |
|
84.088 |
Peace In South Africa |
The brave have shaken hands |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
104 |
|
84.264 |
Perhaps (after Emma von Nindorf) |
Doubt her - O the bitter smart |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
224 |
|
84.011 |
Pleasant is England |
Pleasant is England in the month of May |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
50 |
|
84.468 |
Pleasant is England |
Pleasant is England in the month of May |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
66 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.469 |
Pleasant is England II |
Content to ramble through her pleasant fields |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
67 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.248 |
Poesy (after Ludwig Tieck) |
Mid the rough tossing of life's boisterous sea |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
207 |
|
84.112 |
Poor or wealthy - which? |
I loved a maiden, beautiful and rich |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
144-145 |
|
83.986 |
President McKinley |
Roll order back; let chaos come again |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
27 |
|
84.522 |
Prestwich church in autumn |
Full fifty years have passed, O ancient pile |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
122 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.010 |
Prestwich Clough |
Nigh fifty years have sped since, looking down |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
49 |
|
84.463 |
Prestwich Clough |
Nigh fifty years have sped since, looking down |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
61 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.464 |
Prestwich Clough II |
A magic name! for still, on holidays |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
62 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.415 |
Quintus Horatius Flaccus |
Why is the Roman Horace ever young |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
17 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.874 |
Quintus Horatius Flaccus |
Why is the Roman Horace ever young |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
15-16 |
|
85.972 |
Quintus Horatius Flaccus |
Why is the Roman Horace ever young |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
17-18 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.416 |
Quintus Horatius Flaccus II |
Virgil and Varius, Pollio, I and thou |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
18 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.247 |
Remorseful moments (after Moritz Graf Strachwitz) |
Thy kiss is burning hot, my love |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
205-206 |
|
84.422 |
Robert Burns |
Three British Bards, high on the roll of Fame |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
24 |
Author born in Todmorden |
85.977 |
Robert Burns |
Three British Bards, high on the roll of Fame |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
24-26 |
Written on the Centenary of his Death. Author born in Todmorden |
83.880 |
Robert Burns |
Three British Bards, high on the roll of Fame |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
19-20 |
|
84.423 |
Robert Burns II |
The ancient fame of Scotland had grown dim |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
25 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.424 |
Robert Burns III |
Sweet sang that Horace, in the olden days |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
26 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.887 |
Robert Fergusson |
Master of satire, in the Donic lay |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
24 |
|
84.340 |
Sandy Morrison |
Three times ten years have come and gone |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
327 |
|
84.024 |
Self sacrifice |
Self is not all with all men, after all |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
64 |
Addressed to a philanthropic woman |
84.484 |
Seven portraits from the life |
A Sprightly maiden, with a sprightly name |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
82 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.485 |
Seven portraits from the life II |
I see a face with deeply-graven lines |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
83 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.486 |
Seven portraits from the life III |
A youthful figure, tall, and very lithe |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
84 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.487 |
Seven portraits from the life IV |
Celt of the Celts! with all the storm and fire |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
85 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.488 |
Seven portraits from the life V |
A sympathetic nature, loved of all |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
86 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.489 |
Seven portraits from the life VI |
A man of middle size and middle age |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
87 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.490 |
Seven portraits from the life VII |
Out of a hundred faces of fair girls |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
88 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.528 |
Shallow criticism |
Nor gods, nor men, nor columns,' Horace cried |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
129 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.275 |
She is all (after Jean Reboul) |
Why is thy bosom torn by doubts and fears |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
242 |
|
84.089 |
Sie Hector MacDonald |
Bald as that 'Hector' of the far off days |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
105 |
|
84.042 |
Six portraits from the life |
A sprightly maiden, with a sprightly name |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
79-81 |
|
84.085 |
Sketch of a poem on the death of Sir Philip Sydney |
The Spaniards they held Zutphen, that lies in Guelderlund |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
91-97 |
|
84.185 |
Snatched away |
I pass by the church where the ivy clings |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
166 |
|
84.242 |
Spring morning (after Wilhelm Muller) |
Who's tapping at my window pane |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
199-200 |
|
84.018 |
Spring yearnings |
Ah me! Why doth fair Flora make delay? |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
57-59 |
|
84.506 |
Spring yearnings. Spring belated - or somebody |
Ah me! Why doth fair Flora make delay? |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
106 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.507 |
Spring yearnings. Spring belated - or somebody. II |
The days go by, and yet Spring cometh not |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
107 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.508 |
Spring yearnings. Spring belated - or somebody. III |
Oh, that the May would blossom forth again |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
108 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.509 |
Spring yearnings. Spring belated - or somebody. IV. Arrival of the belated |
The warm south wind comes laden with the rain |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
109 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.510 |
Spring yearnings. Spring belated - or somebody. V |
The dear, dear Spring! what freshness of the green |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
110 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.028 |
Success |
He that succeeds is he who makes a pile |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
68 |
|
84.524 |
Success |
He that succeeds is he who makes a pile |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
124 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.525 |
Success. II |
Not all the Rothschild's wealth, one moment, weighs |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
125 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.533 |
The auricula |
Proud Sister of the Primrose, yet as sweet |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
134 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.084 |
The auricula |
Proud Sister of the Primrose, yet as sweet |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
88 |
|
84.532 |
The blind from birth |
O eyes fast closed to the earth's loveliness |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
133 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.032 |
The blind from birth |
O eyes fast closed to the earth's loveliness |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
70 |
|
83.823 |
The colonial tour of the Prince and Princess of Wales |
Heir to the throne of England! Bear him on |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
2 |
|
84.497 |
The common primrose |
The firstling of the year, the rathe prim-rose |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
96 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.081 |
The common primrose |
The firstling of the year, the rathe prim-rose |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
87 |
|
84.276 |
The cracked bell (after Baudelaire) |
Oh, bitter, yet sweet, in the winter-time |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
242-243 |
|
84.440 |
The Danube |
Great Donau! Many mouthed stream, whose shores |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
42 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.997 |
The Danube |
Great Donau! Many mouthed stream, whose shores |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
37 |
|
84.121 |
The dead bride |
Maidens, robed in white, they bear her |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
163-164 |
|
83.822 |
The death of Queen Victoria |
The glorious sunset of a glorious reign |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
1 |
|
84.192 |
The dying heros (after Ludwig Uhland) |
The Danes smote hard, and drove the Swedish host |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
181-183 |
|
84.087 |
The fall of Nicsics |
It was flashed along the wire to Cettinje's palace-wall |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
101-103 |
|
84.251 |
The flower's complaint (after Friedrich Forster) |
By the side of a brook, in a wood so fresh and green |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
211 |
|
84.255 |
The flower's revenge (after F Freiligrath) |
On her couch as white as down |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
215-217 |
|
84.432 |
The gentle botanist |
In the sweet world of flowers he spends his days |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
34 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.889 |
The gentle botanist |
In the sweet world of flowers he spent his days |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
25 |
|
84.433 |
The gentle botanist II |
He loved the fields, and woods, and the blue dome |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
35 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.101 |
The gloomy valley |
From yonder vale, on summer's longest day |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
132-133 |
|
84.336 |
The good and the bad neighbour |
The good neighbour passes, and bids you 'Good-day!' |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
320-321 |
|
84.025 |
The great famine in India |
Mother of nations! Mistress of the seas! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
65 |
|
84.502 |
The great famine in India |
Mother of nations! Mistress of the seas! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
102 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.503 |
The great famine in India II |
And that is much; one luxury the less |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
103 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.246 |
The half-open rose (after Adolf Stober) |
Of all the roses in the hedge that blossom |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
204 |
|
84.493 |
The harebell |
The floral children of this land how fair |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
92 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.044 |
The harebell |
The floral children of this land how fair |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
85 |
|
84.268 |
The healing (after H von Kleist) |
I was sitting with fair Dona |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
228-229 |
|
84.113 |
The hills and vales of T- |
Oh, dear to me the hills of T |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
146-150 |
|
84.120 |
The hills of Bonnie Scotland |
D- doth love a country that doth level lie |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
161-163 |
|
84.080 |
The home of the rowan |
I know the rowan's home among the hills |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
86 |
|
84.496 |
The home of the rowan (mountain ash) |
I know the rowan's home among the hills |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
95 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.498 |
The Lady Fern |
List to the tale, and from tradition learn |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
97 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.082 |
The lady fern |
List to the tale, and from tradition learn |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
87 |
|
84.341 |
The lass that combed my silver hair |
A farmer's daughter, blithe and fair |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
328 |
|
84.201 |
The last string (after Gustav Hartwig) |
O cheerily, cheerily, fiddler mine! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
192-195 |
|
84.035 |
The life we live |
You ask is I am lonely? No, indeed! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
73-74 |
|
84.093 |
The Lily Maid |
Within a cottage, sheltered by a wood |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
116-118 |
|
84.328 |
The lily of the valley |
O chastest follower in fair Flora's train |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
291-293 |
|
84.017 |
The little church in the wood |
A tiny church within a wooded dell |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
56 |
|
84.330 |
The little sylvan loosestrife |
I know a very lovely flower |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
298-303 |
|
84.266 |
The lovesick maiden (in imitation of Adelbert von Chamisso) |
Well, now I've seen young Charlie |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
226 |
|
84.190 |
The magic robe (after Ludwig Uhland) |
To battle I go, dear daughter mine |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
177-180 |
|
84.287 |
The Mariners of England |
I'll tell thee friend, whence England's greatness sprang |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
274-275 |
|
84.327 |
The moss campion |
Who climbs the mountain will have often found |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
290-291 |
|
84.495 |
The mountain daisy or gowan |
No, my beloved Friend! there is but One |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
94 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.046 |
The mountain daisy or 'Gowan'! |
No, my beloved friend! There is but one |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
86 |
|
84.494 |
The mountain forget-me-not |
Upon Breadalbane heights there blooms a flower |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
93 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.045 |
The mountain forget-me-not |
Upon Breadalbane heights there blooms a flower |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
85 |
|
84.198 |
The natural (after Ludwig Uhland) |
As duly as the night comes in |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
187 |
|
84.431 |
The naturalist |
We always meet him in the open air |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
33 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.888 |
The naturalist |
We always meet him in the open air |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
24 |
|
84.274 |
The negro to his dead master (after Marceline Desbondes-Valmore) |
The sun of night doth shine upon the hills |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
241 |
|
84.492 |
The nosegay |
If trees, and shrubs, and flower a meaning have |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
91 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.189 |
The nosegay (after Ludwig Uhland) |
If trees, and shrubs, and flower a meaning have |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
177 |
In " A bouquet of floral sonnets presented to my sister |
84.249 |
The old linden tree (after Louis von Arentschildt) |
Oh, how I love the rare, old linden tree |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
208-209 |
|
84.434 |
The old shepherd |
Old highland Shepherd - Hermit of the Hills |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
36 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.988 |
The old shepherd |
Old highland shepherd-hermit of the hills! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
29 |
|
84.245 |
The poet's world (after Adolf Stober) |
The monarch raised a loft his hand |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
203 |
|
84.331 |
The purple lilac |
O gracious flower! that comest from the bright East |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
303-304 |
|
84.253 |
The river (after Georg Herwegh) |
I stand here for hours by the river's brim |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
213 |
|
84.196 |
The serenade (after Ludwig Uhland) |
O hush! a sweet voice sings to me |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
185 |
|
84.191 |
The shepherd (after Ludwig Uhland) |
The youthful shepherd, tall and fair |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
180-181 |
|
84.260 |
The soldier's funeral (after Emma von Nindorf) |
I hear the beat of muffled drum |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
220-221 |
|
84.107 |
The songs of Scotland |
The toweirng Hills of Scotland |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
142-143 |
|
84.034 |
The soul's yearning after immortality |
Were it not better, in reality |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
72 |
|
84.329 |
The strawberry-leaved cinquefoil |
There is a little flower that grows |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
294-298 |
|
84.278 |
The swallow (after Edouard Pailleron) |
Yes, Lady May, your face is very fair |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
244 |
|
85.979 |
The three sisters Bronte |
Three lovely sisters by a lonely moor |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
30 |
Author born in Todmorden |
83.882 |
The three sisters Bronte |
Three lovely sisters by a lonely moor |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
21 |
|
84.194 |
The three songs (after Ludwig Uhland) |
Cries Sifrid, the King. to his scalds in the hall |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
184 |
|
84.094 |
The two doors - life and death |
In at this door went the newly-married |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
119-120 |
|
84.254 |
The undertaker's apprentice (after F Freiligrath) |
O a dreary task for such as I |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
213-214 |
|
84.096 |
The unremembered |
I thought upon the unremembered brave |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
123-124 |
|
84.527 |
The Victorian age |
Dear Mother of thy People! Widowed Queen |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
127-128 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.092 |
The village tree |
A brave old beech by the village stands |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
114-115 |
|
84.040 |
The warp and the woof of life |
Life's warp is prose, of wool or cotton made |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
77 |
|
84.517 |
The warp and woof of life |
Life's warp is prose, of wool or cotton made |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
117 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.083 |
The wild rose |
Thorough many a bush and brake we took our way |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
88 |
|
84.197 |
The winter song of the herd boy (after Ludwig Uhland) |
O winter, cruel winter |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
186 |
|
84.477 |
The withered leaf |
A maiden aunt have I whose hair is grey |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
75 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.257 |
The withered leaf (in immitation of Anastasius Grun) |
A maiden aunt have I whose hair is grey |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
218 |
|
84.332 |
The woodbine or honeysuckle |
Who does not love the woodbine! Who can go |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
305-309 |
|
84.441 |
Then and now - a contrast |
By Kersal's hoary Cell I wander oft |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
43 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.000 |
Then and now - a contrast |
By Kersal's hoary cell I wander oft |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
39-40 |
|
84.442 |
Then and now - a contrast II |
Born in this later age, I feel, indeed |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
44 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.443 |
Then and now - a contrast III |
Science, red-handed, her own offspring kills |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
45 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.031 |
Three sonnets |
But not for aye, O God! for ever? No! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
70 |
|
84.030 |
Three sonnets |
Strange sounding phrase, strange words: 'Must still go on' |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
70 |
|
84.029 |
Three sonnets |
Who's he that dreameth? Do I hear one say |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
69 |
|
84.447 |
Thursden Vale revisited |
Twas in the season when the woods are bare |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
49 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.003 |
Thursden Vale revisited |
Twas in the season when the woods are bare |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
42-43 |
|
84.448 |
Thursden Vale revisited II |
Tis Spring at last! and all the woodland wide |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
50 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.449 |
Thursden Vale revisited III |
I called thee 'wild', but, Thursden, nevermore |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
51 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.002 |
Thursden valley |
Full many a sweet nook, in this land of ours |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
41 |
|
84.445 |
Thursden Valley, East Lancashire |
Full many a sweet nook, in this land of ours |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
47 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.446 |
Thursden Valley, East Lancashire II |
Forward! old Shepherd, but I prithee speak |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
48 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.526 |
To a dear friend on his wedding day |
Dear, ardent Soul! my conscience' self would chide |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
126 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.518 |
To an eminent writer and honoured friend |
To win the homage of such a pen as thine |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
118 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.116 |
To Annie (an invalid) |
Oh, Annie! the sweet spring is coming again |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
155-156 |
|
83.994 |
To H W |
Thou know'st o friend! how deep my sympathy |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
32 |
|
84.334 |
To 'Henry the Minstrel' |
Hale be your heart, braw car - or callan! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
315-317 |
|
83.990 |
To Mr Geo Milner |
Where were the muses? And apollo where |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
30 |
|
83.993 |
To Mr Joel Wainwright |
Memories of Marple - what a pleasant sound |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
31 |
|
84.436 |
To Mr. Geo. Milner |
Where were the muses? And Apollo where |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
38 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.519 |
To Mr. Joel Wainwright |
Memories of Marple - what a pleasant sound |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
119 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.491 |
To my sister |
Faithful amid the faithless, and steel-true |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
90 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.043 |
To my sister |
Faithful amid the faithless, and steel-true |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
84 |
|
83.826 |
To my trusty friend, the good knight, Sir William H Bailey of Salford |
Knight of the generous heart, and open mind |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
10 |
|
84.272 |
To sister Marcelline (after Alfred de Musset) |
Poor maid, thou art no longer fair |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
238 |
|
84.270 |
To the jungfrau mountain (after Alfred de Musset) |
When one hath clomb, with toil, thy loftiest height |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
237 |
|
83.991 |
To the same |
Milner! Though twenty years our friendly hands |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
30 |
|
84.437 |
To the same |
Milner! through twenty years our friendly hands |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
39 |
Dedicated to George Milner. Author born in Todmorden |
84.530 |
Toby's grave |
We called him 'Toby', from a tiny pup |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
131 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.038 |
Toby's grave |
We called him 'Toby', from a tiny pup |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
76 |
|
84.531 |
Toby's grave. II |
Twas but a dog - a tiny dog - 'tis true |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
132 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.115 |
Town and country |
C- loves the town, and singeth in its praise |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
153-154 |
|
84.023 |
Two moods of feeling |
Oh, blissful quiet! oh, the luxury |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
63 |
|
84.504 |
Two moods of feeling |
Oh, blissful quiet! oh, the luxury |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
104 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.505 |
Two moods of feeling II |
Yet other times there are when solitude |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
105 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.337 |
Under the lime |
Under the lime, in summer-time |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
322 |
|
84.015 |
Under the linden tree |
A speading linden makes an arbour fine |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
53-55 |
|
84.478 |
Under the linden tree |
A spreading Linden makes an arbour fine |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
76 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.479 |
Under the linden tree II |
Had she responded, that harmonius bird |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
77 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.480 |
Under the linden tree III |
Thousands must bear their cross all silently |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
78 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.481 |
Under the linden tree IV |
Beneath the Linden-tree we sit once more |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
79 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.482 |
Under the linden tree V |
Leafless the Lime beneath whose shadow wide |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
80 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.483 |
Under the linden tree VI |
The Spring shall come, and from the leafy Lime |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Sonnets written impromptu |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0067286LC |
281.845 |
1.900 |
81 |
Author born in Todmorden |
84.105 |
Unrepeoted |
I tell the story of a girl of shame |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
140-141 |
|
84.279 |
We shall see - by and by (imitation of Chateaubriand) |
The past is nothing |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
245-247 |
|
83.824 |
Welcome back to England! |
Ring out the bells, and let the cannons roar |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
3 |
|
84.118 |
When roses are passing away |
Rope midsummer-time, O Annie! hath come |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
158-159 |
|
84.100 |
Where the sunshine has been |
How vain this little life, beneath the sun! |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
130-131 |
|
84.122 |
White flowers |
Here, in my garden, even where I stand |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
164-165 |
|
84.243 |
Withered flowers (after Wilhelm Muller) |
These withered flowers |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
Poems, sonnets and translations |
STANSFIELD, Abraham |
M0015289LC |
67.674 |
1.903 |
200-201 |
|
82.783 |
Liverpool FC |
My favourite team is Liverpool |
STARK, Christopher |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
50 |
|
81.577 |
The Song of Solomon |
Aw'm th'rose of Shayron, un th'lily oth valley |
STATON, James Taylor |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
251-253 |
|
81.578 |
The Song of Solomon (Dialect) |
Aw'm th'rose of Shayron, un th'lily oth valley |
STATON, James Taylor |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
251-253 |
|
81 |
The Bells of Rossendale |
Hark to the Bells of Old St Nicholas |
STEPHENS, Patrick |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
92 |
|
87.779 |
Easter |
My faith is very simple, I don't need to dance and shout |
STEPHENS, Vera |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
64 |
|
82.176 |
Mi dowter's left whom |
Wen the wer born, mi bonny lass |
STEPHENSON, Jack |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
98 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
82.837 |
The forest's story |
I remember when life was good |
STEWART, Grace |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
81 |
|
82.830 |
The forest's story |
I remember when life was good |
STEWART, Lauren |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
76 |
|
419 |
It cost nowt t' smile |
Ah saw an owd woman, walking deawn eawr street |
STIRZAKER, Edna |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
115 |
|
4.151 |
T' seawnd o' t' sea |
Evritime thad Ah 'ears seawnd o' t' sea |
STIRZAKER, Edna |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
72-73 |
|
84.079 |
On St. Crispin's day |
I'd love to be a shoemaker on this St. Crispin's Day |
STITCH, Wilhelmina |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
37 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club. (This item is not, strictly speaking, a poem) |
84.123 |
The caravan sets forth |
Motor cars and one-horsed carts |
STITCH, Wilhelmina |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
38 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club. (This item is not, strictly speaking, a poem) |
80.874 |
Write on (Group work by Stockbridge writers) |
Write on and let your pen flow |
STOCKBRIDGE WRITERS |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
152 |
|
84.540 |
A sprig of hemlock |
One evening, as the silv'ry rain descended |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
7 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.544 |
Amongst the Pennines |
There - are a thousand sparkling rills |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
11 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.563 |
An appreciation |
I have seen in my long travels |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
36-37 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.562 |
Blinded |
On the crest of a breezy hill |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
34-35 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.555 |
Boyhood's scenes |
Hills there are that tower high |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
25 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.546 |
Bridgenorth |
I know a town that rests 'tween hills |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
13-14 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.553 |
Coventry |
I dream of your old houses |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
22-23 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.558 |
Dejected |
How can one cut adrift from friends one loves |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
29 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.549 |
Each summer morn |
The lark now leaves his mossy bed |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
17 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.539 |
Eheu fugaces labuntur anni |
Eheu fugaces labuntur anni |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
6 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.564 |
Evening strains |
The strains of Apollo, with cadence delightful |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
38 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.561 |
Eventide |
My thoughts have strayed to those far realms |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
33 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.721 |
Friendships |
The ships that pass upon the rolling deep |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
5 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.542 |
Hail, cuckoo |
Hark, the glad sound, the cuckoo o'er the field |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
9 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.552 |
In Nature's cathedral worshipping |
Large towering trees, stretch upward overhead |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
21 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.557 |
Knowledge is not power |
Knowledge is not power |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
28 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.548 |
Lullaby |
Hush thee, my baby, sleep thee and rest |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
16 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.543 |
Machinery |
Clattering, clanging, chattering, jarring |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
10 |
See Herbert Stoneley - Hurrying seasons. P35 |
84.545 |
Memory |
If I should sin against thee |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
12 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.556 |
My window |
There's pleasure to be found in watching people pass outside |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
26-27 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.541 |
Over the hills to Sandbed |
Over the hills to Sandbed |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
8 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.550 |
Revolt |
Tomorrow, with the waning murk |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
18-19 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.537 |
Song |
Hurrah far the forest free |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
3 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.559 |
Song |
O how hard it is to find |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
30 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.538 |
The advent of rain |
The shades of even softly fall across gold Heaven's breast |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
4 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.547 |
The Middleton brasses |
Within an olden church I know |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
15 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.560 |
The star of liberty |
Diana's face was lost 'neath vale of cloud |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
31-32 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.565 |
The unknown musician |
When night's purple shades are falling |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
39-40 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.554 |
To the nightingale |
When evening shades throw velvet cloaks around |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
24 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
84.551 |
Winter |
Where are the Summer birds that wheeled on high |
STONE, Hubert |
From northern shires |
STONE, Hubert |
M0129276LC |
491.721 |
0 |
20 |
Poems previously published in several Lancashire journals |
2.946 |
Counsel |
Oh, make thy spirit like unto a tree |
STONE, Suzanne |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
131 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.947 |
Reveille |
All the world is wrapt in gray |
STONE, Suzanne |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
132 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
84.616 |
A July day |
Now, barley ears stand high |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
61 |
|
84.600 |
A May morn |
Oh! listen how the merry lark |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
42 |
|
84.588 |
A spider's web |
Today I saw a web |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
31 |
|
84.590 |
Among Northern hills |
Among our Northern hills |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
33 |
|
84.584 |
An April scene |
Birds, slow wedging through heaven in flight |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
27 |
|
84.582 |
Bird song |
I heard him first in the mid of March |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
25 |
|
84.570 |
Building days |
The rooks are building nests again |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
13 |
|
84.609 |
Daffodil time |
There's a balm in the breeze |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
51 |
|
84.628 |
December |
That was a robin I heard in the thicket |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
53 |
|
84.606 |
Earth's awakening |
There steals a movement through the woods |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
48 |
|
84.583 |
Easter song |
I, sing |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
26 |
|
84.596 |
English scene |
Old walls, green fields |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
38 |
|
84.587 |
Eternity |
Seed time and harvest |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
30 |
|
84.569 |
For a war memorial |
For such brave souls let none in sorrow weep |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
12 |
|
84.585 |
Fra Rocca's prayer |
In sonorous tones Fra Rocca preached |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
28 |
|
84.578 |
Ghosts |
I cannot rest within the house |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
21 |
|
84.597 |
God walks the woods |
God walks the woods in autumn |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
39 |
|
84.607 |
God's artistry |
If I could paint as God paints |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
49 |
|
84.577 |
History's progression |
Broad rolling moorlands |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
20 |
|
84.576 |
Hurrying seasons |
Daybreak, noontide, setting of the sun |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
19 |
|
84.598 |
In Northern markets |
Now the dark nights draw swiftly in |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
40 |
|
84.566 |
In the valley |
There are lambs in the meadow |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
9 |
|
84.591 |
Innocence |
A sweet child's love |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
34 |
|
84.611 |
Lord of the common things |
A common byre He shared |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
55 |
|
84.592 |
Machinery |
Clattering, clanging, chattering, jarring |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
35 |
See Hubert Stone - From Northern shires. P10 |
84.601 |
May blossom |
In May |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
43 |
|
84.586 |
Migrants |
Where the trees with gloomy shadow |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
29 |
|
84.574 |
Mytholmroyd |
Sombre mountains, like mute sentinels, guard Mytholmroyd |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
17 |
|
84.567 |
New Year's Eve |
Swift through the frosty night |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
10 |
|
84.573 |
Old things are best |
Old things are best |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
16 |
|
84.581 |
Our ancient dales |
How fair those ancient dales |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
24 |
|
84.594 |
Pendle Hill |
The steep side of Pendle is black as the night |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
36 |
|
84.608 |
Perspective |
When, as a child |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
50 |
|
84.617 |
Primrose days |
Lo, now, the happy primrose comes |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
62 |
|
84.602 |
Summer days |
High on the topmost hill |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
44 |
|
84.589 |
The architect |
The mind which planned the woodland flower |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
32 |
|
84.612 |
The child's carol |
To the holy cradle |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
56 |
|
84.568 |
The Crab Inn - Shanklin I.O.W |
As our thatch so cool, and stout |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
11 |
|
84.605 |
The difference |
The coward fears |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
47 |
|
84.580 |
The first skylark |
I saw him soaring, up and high |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
23 |
|
84.604 |
The folly of force |
Might can make ten million men |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.975 |
46 |
|
84.572 |
The holy night |
The cattle knelt in homage |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
15 |
|
84.627 |
The honoured dead |
They gently rest, who fell to sleep |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
52 |
|
84.575 |
The moorland signpost |
From year to year, as speed the days |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
18 |
|
84.636 |
The open gate |
Is life's journey hard and arduous |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
59 |
|
84.599 |
The return |
Home she came when the winds blow warm |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
41 |
|
84.615 |
The rowan's fire |
The rowan tree is now on fire |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
60 |
|
84.603 |
The scarecrow |
Our tattered rags of boastful pride |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
45 |
|
84.595 |
The songs our acres sing |
The misty, whirling raindrops |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
37 |
|
84.614 |
The Virgin's colours |
Oh! spring is a maiden in white |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
58 |
|
84.571 |
The windy moor |
Oh! Come away from the city's roar |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
14 |
|
84.613 |
Twilight |
Soft twilight fills the valley |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
57 |
|
84.618 |
Twilight clouds |
It's the hush of the twilight hour |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
63 |
|
84.610 |
What time comes to-morrow |
What time will to-morrow start |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
54 |
|
84.579 |
Winter scene |
A flight of birds on a winter's day |
STONELEY, Herbert |
Hurrying seasons |
STONELEY, Herbert |
M0015211LC |
67.307 |
1.953 |
22 |
|
5.158 |
O faded leaf |
O faded leaf! O faded leaf! |
STORY, Robert |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
23 |
|
5.159 |
A dirge |
Mourn, gentlemen, with sympathy sincere |
STOTT, Benjamin |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
24-26 |
To the memory of William Grant Esq |
6.587 |
May-day |
Welcome, Queen of bright spring-tide |
STOTT, Charles F. J. N. |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
409-411 |
|
6.593 |
Messengers from Eden |
Messengers from Eden - came with silent feet |
STOTT, Charles F. J. N. |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
411 |
|
6.594 |
The death of the border eagle: suggested by the opening chapters of 'Idalia' by 'Ouida' |
In the wild moorland of the Scottish Plain |
STOTT, Charles F. J. N. |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
411-413 |
|
81.492 |
Pets |
Cats can be fluffy |
STRINGFELLOW, Claire |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
108 |
|
81.491 |
The big one |
Scaray, high |
STRINGFELLOW, Paul |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
108 |
|
2.955 |
An inscription |
To give him breath, Scotland with England mated |
STUART-YOUNG, J. M. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
143 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.948 |
For this hour |
Perchance you know, in rain-swept Manchester |
STUART-YOUNG, J. M. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
133 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.949 |
From your window |
Look down at me, dear, from your window |
STUART-YOUNG, J. M. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
134 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.950 |
My bonny, bonny lass |
I know a little, little town |
STUART-YOUNG, J. M. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
135 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.952 |
One thing thou lackest |
Better bestow your all, and penniless die |
STUART-YOUNG, J. M. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
138 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.951 |
Reminiscence |
A room near Ardwick Green, one time I rented |
STUART-YOUNG, J. M. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
136-137 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.954 |
Son of Shem |
Christ was once a little child, credulous as you |
STUART-YOUNG, J. M. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
141-142 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.953 |
Uncle Jim |
When last we met, a year ago |
STUART-YOUNG, J. M. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
139-140 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
82.711 |
What is a car? |
A car is a steel ostrich |
SULEMAN, Mahad |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
10 |
|
81.451 |
My idiotic brother |
My idiotic brother |
SULLIVAN, Shannon |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
88 |
|
82.945 |
The hidden chest |
One day I went into the woods |
SUMNER, David |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
142 |
|
84.658 |
A moderate climb |
Reaching Stickle Tarn, we lay easy awhile |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
Moor and tower |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
M0129245LC |
491.670 |
1.983 |
13 |
Rossendale poet |
84.622 |
A town. I |
Beneath the sun's leaden iris |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
Moor and tower |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
M0129245LC |
491.670 |
1.983 |
4 |
Rossendale poet |
84.623 |
A town. II |
A Town's wrinkled, stone-muscled limbs |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
Moor and tower |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
M0129245LC |
491.670 |
1.983 |
4 |
Rossendale poet |
84.660 |
Bird-study by Heptonstall Cemetary |
A telephone is ringing in the museum |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
Moor and tower |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
M0129245LC |
491.670 |
1.983 |
15-16 |
Rossendale poet |
84.653 |
Clocktower |
Clocktower, your redundancy is locked with your stones |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
Moor and tower |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
M0129245LC |
491.670 |
1.983 |
8 |
Rossendale poet |
84.620 |
Here |
Enter this place. Let its air creep into you |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
Moor and tower |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
M0129245LC |
491.670 |
1.983 |
2 |
Rossendale poet |
84.656 |
Journey home |
On the moortops was a night of all nights |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
Moor and tower |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
M0129245LC |
491.670 |
1.983 |
11 |
Rossendale poet |
84.659 |
Lake District |
Fragments gather to this poem's assembly |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
Moor and tower |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
M0129245LC |
491.670 |
1.983 |
14 |
Rossendale poet |
84.619 |
Legend |
Earth and Heaven slumber falsely |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
Moor and tower |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
M0129245LC |
491.670 |
1.983 |
1 |
Rossendale poet |
84.657 |
Microcosm - with a difference |
To study Summer's bowlers on the green |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
Moor and tower |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
M0129245LC |
491.670 |
1.983 |
12 |
Rossendale poet |
84.621 |
Sheep |
Tight-roping the sky-line, confident |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
Moor and tower |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
M0129245LC |
491.670 |
1.983 |
3 |
Rossendale poet |
84.624 |
Song |
The looms did not stop |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
Moor and tower |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
M0129245LC |
491.670 |
1.983 |
5 |
Rossendale poet |
84.742 |
The shed |
I wrongly reckoned the sum of our backyard shed |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
Moor and tower |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
M0129245LC |
491.670 |
1.983 |
7 |
Rossendale poet |
84.655 |
Towneley Hall |
Sustaining grim self-will into a new age and century |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
Moor and tower |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
M0129245LC |
491.670 |
1.983 |
10 |
Rossendale poet |
84.654 |
Up by the canal |
Up by the canal we sat |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
Moor and tower |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
M0129245LC |
491.670 |
1.983 |
9 |
Rossendale poet |
84.625 |
Widdop |
Crossing Widdop beneath high-walled cloud-battlements |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
Moor and tower |
SUNDERLAND, Stephen |
M0129245LC |
491.670 |
1.983 |
6 |
Rossendale poet |
82.797 |
How strange |
How strange to think that someone else |
SUTCLIFFE, Claire |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
57 |
|
841 |
In an old farm kitchen |
In an old farm kitchen, I remember well |
SUTCLIFFE, Pavella D. |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
82 |
|
82.127 |
A reight gud dae |
It rained, pelted and thundered |
SUTTON, Bridie |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
9 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
86.698 |
Lion's turn tu grumble |
Ids perfec'ly clear t' Ramsbottoms sed |
SUTTON, Bridie |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
46 |
|
5.633 |
Ballad |
Why leave you thus your father's hall |
SWAIN, Charles |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
233 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.350 |
Ballad |
Why leave you thus your father's hall |
SWAIN, Charles |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
25 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.455 |
Be kind to each other! |
Be kind to each other! |
SWAIN, Charles |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
171 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.595 |
Be kind to each other! |
Be kind to each other! |
SWAIN, Charles |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
473 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.389 |
Better than beauty |
My love is not a beauty |
SWAIN, Charles |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
83 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.458 |
Better than beauty |
My love is not a beauty |
SWAIN, Charles |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
323-324 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
949 |
Do a good turn when you can |
It needs not great wealth a kind heart to display |
SWAIN, Charles |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
204-205 |
|
1.450 |
Do a good turn when you can |
It needs not great wealth a kind heart to display |
SWAIN, Charles |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
164 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.538 |
Do a good turn when you can |
It needs not great wealth a kind heart to display |
SWAIN, Charles |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
443 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.467 |
Finis |
Life's not our own - 'tis but a loan |
SWAIN, Charles |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
183 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.610 |
Finis |
Life's not our own - 'tis but a loan |
SWAIN, Charles |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
488 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.649 |
Gypsy ballad |
What care we for earth's renown |
SWAIN, Charles |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
252 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
1.359 |
Gypsy ballad |
What care we for earth's renown |
SWAIN, Charles |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
41 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.404 |
Home |
Home's not merely four square walls |
SWAIN, Charles |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
102 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
948 |
Home |
Home's not merely four square walls |
SWAIN, Charles |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
204 |
|
82.486 |
Home |
Home's not merely four square walls |
SWAIN, Charles |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
355 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.492 |
Home and friends |
Oh, there's a power to make each hour |
SWAIN, Charles |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
363-364 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.407 |
Home and friends |
Oh, there's a power to make each hour |
SWAIN, Charles |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
107 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.400 |
It is but a cottage |
It is but a cottage, but where is the heart |
SWAIN, Charles |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
97 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.475 |
It is but a cottage |
It is but a cottage, but where is the heart |
SWAIN, Charles |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
350-351 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.638 |
King Frost |
King Frost gallop'd hard from his Palace of Snow |
SWAIN, Charles |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
241-242 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.354 |
King Frost |
King Frost gallop'd hard from his Palace of Snow |
SWAIN, Charles |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
31 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.999 |
King Frost |
King Frost gallop'd hard from his Palace of Snow |
SWAIN, Charles |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
33-34 |
|
82.523 |
Life |
Love's a song and life's the singer |
SWAIN, Charles |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
422-423 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.004 |
Life |
Love's a song and life's the singer |
SWAIN, Charles |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
214-215 |
|
82.448 |
Love's history |
By sylvan waves that westward flow |
SWAIN, Charles |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
311-312 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.018 |
Love's history |
By sylvan waves that westward flow |
SWAIN, Charles |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
103-104 |
|
5.669 |
She's not so fair |
She's not so fair as many there |
SWAIN, Charles |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
293-294 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC) |
1.377 |
Sue's not so fair |
Sue's not so fair as many there |
SWAIN, Charles |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
71 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
5.629 |
The eve of St John |
She waiteth by the forest stream |
SWAIN, Charles |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
217-220 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.457 |
The eve of St John |
She waiteth by the forest stream |
SWAIN, Charles |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
Nov-13 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.356 |
The wanderer |
Three dreary rears in peril tost |
SWAIN, Charles |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
34-36 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
5.646 |
The wanderer |
Three dreary years in peril tost |
SWAIN, Charles |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
244-247 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson. Also in 2nd ed 1875 (Control number M0018155LC). |
1.460 |
There are moments in life |
There are moments in life - though alas for their fleetness |
SWAIN, Charles |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
174-175 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.601 |
There are moments in life |
There are moments in life - though alas for their fleetness |
SWAIN, Charles |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
481-482 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.279 |
There are moments in life |
There are moments in life - though alas for their fleetness |
SWAIN, Charles |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
273-274 |
|
81.306 |
Matthew |
My baby cousin Matthew |
SWARBRICK, Claire |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
11 |
|
365 |
Life is grass |
Grasses of the fields, when first spring was born |
SWARBRICK, Evelyn |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
21 |
|
4.114 |
Procession |
Big Band contest's on today |
SWARBRICK, Evelyn |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
31 |
|
69 |
Top o'Greens |
I was out of breath |
SWIFT, M. Helen |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
76 |
|
649 |
A tasty treat |
Black luscious greasy slimy devil |
SWIFT, T. J. |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
43 |
|
653 |
In the shadows |
The crimson splendour of the saxifrage |
SWIFT, T. J. |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
57 |
|
637 |
Jessica Lucy |
You came through winter's icy chills |
SWIFT, T. J. |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
3 |
|
81.411 |
Wishes |
I wish I could go to the USA and meet the President |
SWYZEN, Sander |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
67 |
|
414 |
Lev loase |
Th'owd Book sez Adam's face were picked fro God's own photoproof |
SYDALL, T. |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
112 |
|
6.228 |
Tant pis et tant mieux |
Two friends one day met on the Bourse |
SYMONDS, A. G. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
121-122 |
|
5.300 |
The soldier at night |
Come, sweet sleep, come; my members crave repose |
T |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
8 |
An early fugitive poem written Blackburn 7 February 1809 |
6.278 |
A seaside reverie |
Why do I love the sea |
T. L. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
174-175 |
|
82.713 |
Autumn |
Autumn is when the leaves fall down |
TABASSUM, Uzma |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
11 |
|
81.494 |
My sister |
My sister runs from cats and dogs |
TALBOT, James |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
109 |
|
82.776 |
The fruit that went for a walk |
An apple and a pear went for walk |
TALBOT, Kane |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
46 |
|
83.954 |
A branch of olive |
We pass each other daily in the street |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
193-194 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.975 |
A broken melody |
It is long since I sang to the tune of Mirth |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
231-233 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.984 |
A case of felo-de-se |
One day before God's Mercy Seat |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
247 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.907 |
A heart cry |
Can there be nothing in this world of ours |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
93 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.974 |
A jewel of remembrance |
Somewhere, dear heart, you too are growing old |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
230 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.891 |
A moocher's story |
I am a poor old moocher at the age of eighty-three |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
60-65 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.952 |
A nocturne |
Night- and the City's cry, a waning croon |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
187-189 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.924 |
A slum dweller to the sea |
I heard thee softly calling in the night |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
132-133 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.966 |
A song of reckoning |
Heart, for a little space forget |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
218-219 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.892 |
A welcome home |
I stood in a stately city |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
66-68 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.894 |
A woman's wrong |
I would that I could all forget |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
69-70 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.911 |
After life's fitful fever |
Tread softly, let no footfall on the floor |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
98-99 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.931 |
After the ball |
Her carriage waits, and a new love's hand |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
143 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.980 |
Afterglow |
Do you recall them, dear, those golden hours |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
241-242 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.901 |
Alone |
I have been sitting alone |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
79 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.927 |
An episode |
Underneath a stranger's window |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
137-138 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.890 |
An evening storm |
Against my window-pane the shower is beating |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
58-59 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.898 |
An invitation |
Come to me now my days are drear |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
75 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.933 |
At peace with God |
At peace with God! The shadow of His rest |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
146-147 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.936 |
At the end of the lane |
Only 'Good night' at the end of the lane |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
152 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.955 |
At the window |
Grey streets, grim faces, and skies |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
195 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.953 |
Banjo dreams |
Nimble fingers on the banjo pluck the veil of Long-ago down |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
190-192 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.922 |
Because we dreamed a dream |
Because we dreamed a dream in bygone days |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
129 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.913 |
Bedfellows |
Great ones, grasping the reins of Earth |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
103-104 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.957 |
Beloved eyes |
Heart-healing dwells in those beloved eyes |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
199 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.902 |
Ben |
A wee little white-faced fellow |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
80-82 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.963 |
Christmas in exile |
Wind of the West, winging out through the luminous dark of the South |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
213-214 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.932 |
Curtain |
At last it is over and ended |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
144-145 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.910 |
De profundis |
Oh, Father! from these depths I call |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
96-97 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.973 |
Deliver me from evil |
Starring the evil dusk of jungles deep |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
229 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.964 |
Dream violets |
Grey street in the glimmering, ghastly town |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
215-216 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.945 |
Even-song |
Dearest, the day was a wearisome guest to me |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
171-172 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.925 |
For a dream's sake |
Oh! dear,dead woman, love of sweeter years |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
134-135 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.896 |
Good night! - a song |
Good night! Good night! My weary head |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
73 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.928 |
Idolatry |
I built for Love a temple fair |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
139-140 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.944 |
In a twilight garden |
Sitting here again to serenade your wonderful White Rose |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
168-170 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.918 |
In Babylon |
Are you seeking a stranger story, or a sadder song perchance |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
115-119 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.979 |
In memoriam |
Peace! - it is well with him - yea - passing well |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
239-240 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.903 |
In pace |
When you are dead some day my, dear |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
83-85 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.920 |
In paradise |
After Time's long endeavour |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
123-125 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.906 |
In the valley of the shadow |
Fold your hands in mine, dear |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
91-92 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.976 |
Last light or shade |
Sweet, in my loneliest reverie of all |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
234 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.864 |
Left behind in the old, old year |
My ways are ancient and out of date |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
47-48 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.939 |
Let us forget |
Some things are best forgotten; we may take |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
159-160 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.959 |
Life's limbo-land |
To Love, that seemed to my desirous eyes |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
202-204 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.946 |
Lines in imitation of Richard Le Gallienne's 'Woman of Dreams |
Yes, you are the woman of dreams and the vision of old come true |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
173-174 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.908 |
Lines to my wife, on her birthday, December 19th,1887 |
Yours are such patient hands |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
94 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.981 |
Living dead in the twilight land |
Wraiths are we who roam a strand |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
243-244 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.917 |
Locking the door |
The long, sad day was over |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
113-114 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.935 |
Lost Bohemia |
We lived in our loved Bohemia |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
151-152 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.971 |
Love's lullaby |
Hush, dear, and go to sleep |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
226 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.968 |
Miserere |
Lo! it is evening: in the day far spent |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
222 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.948 |
Mors optima vitae |
Labour and blame and praise |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
177 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.915 |
My birthday |
Fleeting strangely into distance |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
108-110 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.958 |
My Christmas garden |
It burgeons best at Yule when from the eye |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
200-201 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.862 |
My songs |
Poor children of a childless heart |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
45-46 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.914 |
My treasure |
My treasure, my treasure |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
105-107 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.905 |
Never again |
Never in any day |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
89-90 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.865 |
Not lost, but gone before |
When Death, as one day, love, he must |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
49-50 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.899 |
Offering at my brother's tomb. From Catullus |
Through many a nation and o'er many a sea |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
76 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.960 |
On reading the book entitled 'De profundis |
From dungeon deeps, a soul that Guilt had slain |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
205 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.941 |
On the headland |
How still, dear heart, and wonderful the night seemed |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
163-164 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.942 |
One day |
Somewhere, dear heart, you, too, grow old |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
165 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.909 |
Our friends of the long ago |
Like the cool air laden with meadow scent |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
95 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.937 |
Passion-flowers |
Love sleeps', I said.'When night is past |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
154-155 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.926 |
Queen of Love's kingdom |
Of all the kingdom of Love and Beauty |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
135 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.938 |
Question and answer |
What shall we prove God's simple Truth in |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
156-158 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.983 |
Sea symbols |
Sun-spell and wonder of the wheeling tide |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
246 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.977 |
Senesco |
Never more the rush and rattle |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
235-236 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.868 |
She gave me a rose |
She gave me a rose, with the dew fresh upon it |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
54-55 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.929 |
She might not understand |
She passed me by on the road of Time |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
141 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.897 |
Sonnet. June 14th, 1882 |
Oh! wind of summer, on this golden morn |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
74 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.921 |
Soon |
Yes, in a little while we shall be weary |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
126-128 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.961 |
Soul's treasure-house |
I sigh for no proud pleasure- house |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
206-207 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.982 |
Still after storm |
Still after storm, the star-rise down the West |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
245 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.916 |
Summer yearnings |
Fierce on the stones of the dusty street |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
111-112 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.867 |
Suspiria |
Through the long weary days |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
53 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.866 |
Taedium vitae |
My years are in the yellow leaf |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
51-52 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.919 |
The Accident Ward |
It was only a poor beggar woman that, crossing an English street |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
120-122 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.965 |
The age of Beauty |
Dear one, the land and sea are wondrous old |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
217 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.972 |
The children of the dream |
Where berg and floe flash back the Boreal beam |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
227-228 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.950 |
The cowboy's song in England |
There's a dreary sky above me, and the blast is like a blade |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
181-183 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.962 |
The end of the trail |
Oh, the Run beside the river Colorado |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
208-212 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.869 |
The invalid |
The summer days go one after another |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
56-57 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.923 |
The journey home |
Home thro' the twilight land |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
130-131 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.970 |
The land of 'Manana |
When the drab noon sobs and whimpers, and the year is blind with weeping |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
223-225 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.949 |
The night-watch |
That live-long night the rain |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
178-180 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.951 |
The oaken chest |
What an ark of all confusion is this oaken chest of mine |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
184-186 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.900 |
The poet's lot |
I would be a poet,' the gay youth said |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
77-78 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.912 |
The reason why |
It's not that I find your face less fair |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
100-102 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.940 |
Through the silent years |
Love, are you listening thro' the silent years |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
161-162 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.967 |
To arms |
There's a ruler in the Kingdom who is mighty as the King |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
220-221 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.943 |
Too late |
To weary ears Life's music peals, at last |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
166-167 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.930 |
Translation from a French song. Quoted in Du Maurier's 'Martian' |
I am gathering dewy violets |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
142 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.956 |
Two worlds |
Fair friend, you live upon Time's sunniest slope |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
196-198 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.978 |
Unto this last |
Lo! your lips and mine |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
237-238 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.904 |
Watching with the moon |
As the moon stole solemnly up the sky |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
86-88 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.895 |
When the burden's laid away |
Bear the load a little longer |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
71-72 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.934 |
When the smoke-rings rise |
When the long sad day is over, and I'm done with toil and gloom |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
148-150 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
83.947 |
Your heaven and mine |
Your Heaven beyond the skies |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
The poems of Luke Hamilton Talbot, selected and arranged by Arthur Bennett |
TALBOT, Luke Hamilton |
M0311651LC |
868.118 |
1.911 |
175-176 |
The author was Chief Constable of Warrington |
84.661 |
Little Ben, the creeler lad |
Twas early morning and darkness scarce |
TANNER, W. H. |
Little Ben, the creeler lad |
TANNER, W. H. |
M0129246LC |
491.671 |
189 |
5-Nov |
Title in catalogue is - Little Ben, the greater lad. Poem was based on an incident connected with a fire at Finsley Gate, Burnley, when a young boy was burned to death |
81.321 |
Cosmic May |
Went to space one day |
TASKER, Daniela |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
19 |
|
81.506 |
Dancing |
I have a hobby, that hobby is dance |
TATE-POTTS, James |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
115 |
|
84.681 |
A legend of Abram |
The Patriarch Abram, as old legends say |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
55-57 |
Burnley author |
84.680 |
A legend of Christ |
Tis said that once upon the Master's way |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
54 |
Burnley author |
84.878 |
A legend of St. Cadoc |
Saint Cadoc, sailing many a weary mile |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
120-129 |
Burnley author |
84.673 |
A legend of the moon |
Far back in uncounted ages |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
30-33 |
Burnley author |
84.672 |
A legend of Wales |
In vain we give our pity words |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
28-29 |
Burnley author |
84.715 |
A tale of the ships of Tyre |
Hark to a tale of the sea, a tale of the times of old |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
91-95 |
Burnley author |
85.010 |
Albi, ne doleas |
Grieve not, my friend, if by cold maid |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
40-41 |
Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 33 (i e poem) dedicated to _____ |
84.717 |
Alcione |
They stood upon the calm sea's shore |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
97-99 |
Burnley author |
84.716 |
At a Roman villa |
Here once a rich patrician Roman dwelt |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
96 |
Burnley author |
84.713 |
Birds of passage |
What's this you tell me of the wrens? That these |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
75-82 |
Burnley author |
84.663 |
By the sea |
The long low cliffs of sand |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
4-Jul |
Burnley author |
84.667 |
Circumstance |
The fleet of Gaiseric the Vandal lay |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
13-14 |
Burnley author |
84.670 |
Consider the lilies |
Not with the rich in houses cool and pleasant |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
22-23 |
Burnley author |
84.720 |
Darwin at Down |
Not in the crowded city, where men squander |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
111 |
Burnley author |
84.718 |
Death |
As one who stands upon an unknown shore |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
100 |
Burnley author |
84.679 |
Dying at Spring-tide |
Open the lancet window that looks upon the vale |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
50-53 |
Burnley author |
84.941 |
Eheu fugaces |
Ah! My Augustus, how the years |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
16-17 |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm II 14 (i e poem) dedicated to A I. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
85.011 |
Et thure et fidibus |
Dear Sage, this is a day for mirth |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
42-43 |
Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 37 (i e poem) dedicated to T W |
84.687 |
Giordano Bruno |
Alone, while around him, like foul birds of prey |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
73-74 |
Burnley author |
84.877 |
Hestmandsoe, or Horseman's Island, on the Arctic Circle |
Upon the frontier of the Arctic flood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
119 |
Burnley author |
84.664 |
In the City |
In the City |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
8-Sep |
Burnley author |
84.946 |
Integer vitae |
The man whose pen is just and pure |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
26-27 |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 22 (i e poem) dedicated to H N. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
84.938 |
Laudabunt alii |
Far greater bards in future days |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
Dec-13 |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 7 (i e poem) dedicated to T W. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
84.882 |
Maecenas atavis |
O Sage! born of an ancient strain |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
1-Feb |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 1 (i e poem) dedicated to T W. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
84.950 |
Musis amicus |
The Muse's friend, I'll banish care |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
33 |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 26 (i e poem) dedicated to J W K. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
85.006 |
Natis in usum |
What! wrangling when drinking |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
34-36 |
Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 27 (i e poem) dedicated to his comrades |
84.944 |
Nullam, Vare |
M--------N, you can drink nought better than the good gift of the grape |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
23-24 |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 18 (i e poem) dedicated to H M. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
84.883 |
Nullus argento |
Friend, you know well that gold is not |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
3-Apr |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm II 2 (i e poem) is dedicated to J B. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
84.676 |
On a fine day in February |
But yesterday the fields |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
41-43 |
Burnley author |
84.879 |
On first hearing the cuckoo in April |
In the rough past, when the fierce Viking first |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
130-132 |
Burnley author |
84.942 |
Otium Divos |
He who upon the tempest falls |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
18-20 |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm II 16 (i e poem) dedicated to W R. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
84.668 |
Ovin |
Ovin, steward great in favour |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
15-19 |
Burnley author |
84.949 |
Parcius junctas |
Ah, madam! there once was a season |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
31-32 |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 25 (i e poem) dedicated to ____. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
85.012 |
Persicos odi |
Friend, I detest a pompous show |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
44 |
Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 38 (i e poem) dedicated to T W |
85.008 |
Poscimur |
They ask us for an ode, my lyre |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
39 |
Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 32 (i e poem) dedicated to his lyre |
85.007 |
Quid dedicatum |
What the poet's supplication, kneeling at Apollo's shrine |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
37-38 |
Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 31 (i e poem) dedicated to H H |
84.948 |
Quis desiderio |
What! do they say, in words they count impressive |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
29-30 |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 24 (i e poem) dedicated to J A. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
84.936 |
Quis multa gracilis |
What silly youth, false maid, is caught |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
9 |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 5 (i e poem) dedicated to A D. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
84.683 |
Rabbi Hillel |
The Rabbi Hillel one hot summer's day |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
60-61 |
Burnley author |
84.677 |
Reqiescat |
Lay him anywhere in earth's embraces |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
44-45 |
Burnley author |
84.937 |
Scriberis Vario fortis |
Some stronger pen than mine must write your praise |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
10-Nov |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 6 (i e poem) dedicated to J T. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
85.013 |
Septimi, Gades |
O Friend, who would my comrades be |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
45-46 |
Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. Horace is a Latin author. Carm II 6 (i e poem) dedicated to T W |
84.934 |
Sic te Diva |
Dear Sage, this was my constant prayer |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
5-Jun |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 3 (i e poem) is dedicated to T W. An atternative title is 'On the sage's visit to Italy. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
84.935 |
Solvitur acris hiem |
The bitter Winter's chased by cheerful Spring |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
7-Aug |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 4 (i e poem) is dedicated to G H. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
84.669 |
St. Ermenfried |
Histories of the saints and martyrs |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
20-21 |
Burnley author |
84.682 |
The Arab's faith |
Once, in the distant East, a learned man |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
58-59 |
Burnley author |
84.686 |
The Arab's gift |
Three travellers under a palm |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
64-72 |
Burnley author |
84.662 |
The baptism of the Viking |
Up the broad aisle in long defile |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
1-Mar |
Burnley author |
84.876 |
The bells of Sens |
I have read somewhere in a grey romance |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
112-118 |
Burnley author |
84.880 |
The death of Rustum |
So Rustum from the Tartar war returned |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
133-150 |
Burnley author |
84.685 |
The divine humility |
Rabbi Gamaliel bade three learned men |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
62-63 |
Burnley author |
84.666 |
The legend of St. Carpus |
On yestermorn my Carpus died |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
10-Dec |
Burnley author |
84.719 |
The monk of Rievaux |
Dead, brother, at the hour of prime. Hark! how the bell doth toll |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
101-110 |
Burnley author |
84.675 |
The old shepherd at the grave of his favourite dog |
Friend, full of change has been my lot |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
37-40 |
Burnley author |
84.714 |
The Rabbi and the Prophet |
A learned Rabbi of great renown |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
83-90 |
Burnley author |
84.674 |
The Sultan and the poet |
Before a Sultan's throne one day |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
34-36 |
Burnley author |
84.671 |
The voyage of the Wulfstan |
Wulfstan, the old sea-rover |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
24-27 |
Burnley author |
84.678 |
To a nightingale singing in June |
Day at length is done |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
46-49 |
Burnley author |
85.743 |
To Tattersall Wilkinson |
Since you have often told me that my rhyme |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
v-vi |
Dedicatory poem. Burnley author |
84.881 |
To the reader |
Reader, if lack of wit or want of skill |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
The baptism of the Viking and other verses |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129257LC |
491.695 |
1.890 |
151 |
Envoi ( a postscript to the collection). Burnley author |
84.940 |
Tu ne quaesieris |
Ask not, my dear |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
15 |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 11 (i e poem) dedicated to M N. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
84.939 |
Vides, ut ultra |
You see how Pendle's white with snow |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
14 |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 9 (i e poem) dedicated to T W. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
84.945 |
Vile potabis |
Dear poet, if you ever deign |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
25 |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 20 (i e poem) dedicated to J F T. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
84.947 |
Vitas hinnuelo |
Why, Mary, do you fear to wed |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
28 |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 23 (i e poem) dedicated to M N. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
84.943 |
Volex, amaenum |
The cit, tired of the dusty street |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
Horace in Hurstwood |
TATTERSALL, J. F. |
M0129277LC |
491.722 |
1.893 |
21-22 |
Horace is a Latin author. Carm I 17 (i e poem) dedicated to W S. Author believed to be J. F. Tattersall of Hurstwood, Burnley. |
86.751 |
The evil dead |
In the dead of night when the moon is full |
TATTERSALL, Pauline |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
99 |
|
82.982 |
The cave of showers |
The water was sparkling like a rippling blue curtain |
TATTERSALL, Rebecca and INGHAM, Chloe |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
162 |
|
81.486 |
My friends |
Friends, friends, I just adore friends |
TAYLOR, Tiffany |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
106 |
|
86.678 |
From a Park Bench |
In this sanctuary of shadows |
TAYLOR, Denis |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
26 |
|
82.177 |
Slow walkin' an' currant cake |
Thur wur a gradely crowd at th' graveyard |
TAYLOR, Denis |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
99 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
86.701 |
Memories |
I remember the first time |
TAYLOR, Eileen |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
49 |
|
82.150 |
Memories are |
Memories are but moments |
TAYLOR, Eileen M. |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
55 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
2.958 |
Autumn |
Cowardly as the cold and rain |
TAYLOR, Emily Howson |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
146-147 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
6.289 |
Boat song of the Bois-Brules |
At Nantes, in the prisons there |
TAYLOR, Emily Howson |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
185-186 |
|
6.288 |
On the road together |
Now into mist and remoteness fade the far lights of the village |
TAYLOR, Emily Howson |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
184-185 |
|
2.956 |
Russia and England, 1917 |
Behold a people risen as from the grave |
TAYLOR, Emily Howson |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
144 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
6.287 |
The lady of kingdoms |
Lady of kingdoms' is no more her name |
TAYLOR, Emily Howson |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
183-184 |
|
6.286 |
The passing of Shelley |
Beside the crooning waves we built his pyre |
TAYLOR, Emily Howson |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
183 |
|
2.957 |
The visitor |
My quiet house which I could lock at will |
TAYLOR, Emily Howson |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
145 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
6.290 |
Words for music |
O virgin rose, yesterday but a bud to my caress |
TAYLOR, Emily Howson |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
186 |
|
87.717 |
Ambulance Ride |
Lucky to be alive, they say, with reassuring eyes |
TAYLOR, Frederick |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
3 |
|
4.520 |
Chimneys tall |
We've chimneys tall |
TAYLOR, J. T. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
129 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.516 |
Eawr Johnny |
Eawr Johnny has begun to paint |
TAYLOR, J. T. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
122-123 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.517 |
Owd Sarah |
Owd Sarah wur a good un |
TAYLOR, J. T. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
123-124 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.519 |
Owdham wakes |
To stop awhoam this Owdham Wakes |
TAYLOR, J. T. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
127-129 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.518 |
Sam Tulip's will |
Sam Tulip said he'd mak' a will |
TAYLOR, J. T. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
124-126 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.515 |
On my native village |
Ah, lovely Royton! my sweet native place |
TAYLOR, James |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
118-121 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
157 |
Hospitality |
I must tell |
TAYLOR, John |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
25-27 |
|
82.773 |
Things I like |
I like happy things |
TAYLOR, Lewis |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
44 |
|
82.888 |
Hidden vest |
Deep down under the sea |
TAYLOR, Louise |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
110 |
|
81.342 |
Tennis |
The Wimbledon championships are really good |
TAYLOR, Malcolm |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
27 |
|
87.716 |
Thoughts In A Churchyard |
Soft rain falls now upon the heavy soil |
TAYLOR, Mary A. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
2 |
|
2.959 |
The Devil's Bridge |
Oh, I am the Devil's Bridge |
TAYLOR, Owen |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
148 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
82.959 |
Small black thunder |
There's something on the landing |
TAYLOR, Paul |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
151 |
|
86.708 |
My pestle and my mortar |
When I was first apprenticed in nineteen fifty-four |
TAYLOR, Rex |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
56 |
|
81.557 |
Animals |
A is for alligator crawling all around |
TAYLOR, Robert |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
142 |
|
2.960 |
A summer thought |
Sweet, sweet, sweet |
TAYLOR, Ruth |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
149 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.963 |
My darling sleeps |
My darling sleeps |
TAYLOR, Ruth |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
157 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.961 |
Six beautiful things |
There's beauty in the tree-tops as they stand against the sky |
TAYLOR, Ruth |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
150 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.962 |
To Sicily |
Oh! Come with me to Sicily |
TAYLOR, Ruth |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
155-156 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.516 |
Aretina sings |
I'm a bird that's free |
TAYLOR, Sir Henry |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
241-242 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.513 |
Battle of Senlac |
Long was the day, and terrible. The cries |
TAYLOR, Sir Henry |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
240-241 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.520 |
Character |
Be open, courteous, bland |
TAYLOR, Sir Henry |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
244 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.514 |
Company in banqueting rooms in palace of the Duke of Orleans: De Vierzon |
To see grim John |
TAYLOR, Sir Henry |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
241 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.515 |
Company in the banqueting room in palace of the Duke of Orleans: De Cassinel |
Ever and anon |
TAYLOR, Sir Henry |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
241 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.518 |
Dawn of heart-joy: Silisco |
Then shall this glorious Now be crowned the Queen |
TAYLOR, Sir Henry |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
242-243 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.517 |
Hope |
Across the vale of life |
TAYLOR, Sir Henry |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
242 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.510 |
John of Launoy |
I never looked that he should live so long |
TAYLOR, Sir Henry |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
239 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.512 |
Master minds |
Such souls |
TAYLOR, Sir Henry |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
240 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.521 |
Music and light |
With that, she sang a low, sweet melody |
TAYLOR, Sir Henry |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
244 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.509 |
Portrait of a revolutionist |
There is no game so desperate which wise men |
TAYLOR, Sir Henry |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
238-239 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.511 |
Sorrow's uses |
He that lacks time to mourn, lacks time to mind |
TAYLOR, Sir Henry |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
240 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.519 |
The Hon Edward Ernest Villiers |
His life was private; safely led, aloof |
TAYLOR, Sir Henry |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
243 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
5.168 |
Enigma |
Whence com'st thou, fairest visitant |
TAYLOR, William |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
48-50 |
|
82.637 |
O'er again |
Owd Tummus had bin eawt one neet |
TEBAY, Septimus |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
542-545 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.077 |
O'er again |
Owd Tummus had bin eawt one neet |
TEBAY, Septimus |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, (part 2, modern). Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
715811827 |
79.254 |
1.976 |
542-545 |
Reprinted from 3rd edition, first published 1882. Revised by T T Wilkinson |
6.241 |
The 'Varsity journalist (as imagined by a recent victim) |
He sits and stews in a reeking den, in a mess of scissors and paste |
The VARSITY Undergrad |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
136-137 |
|
87.837 |
On My Own |
Are you on your own? said a friendly voice |
THERESA |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
125 |
|
952 |
England in adversity |
England, I love thee in adversity |
THICKNESSE, Ralph |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
220 |
|
82.010 |
Owd Peggy |
Ah gloories in it, but Ah canna stond it |
THICKNESSE, Ralph |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
36-37 |
|
5.770 |
Gilmartin's bonnie dochter |
O Gilmartin's bonnie dochter! O the winsome, witchin' queen |
THOM, Robert William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
78-79 |
|
5.769 |
Moods |
Drinking long, sweet draughts of beauty |
THOM, Robert William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
78 |
One of a series of short poems which had the general title of Moods |
5.763 |
Moods |
Once I saw within a season |
THOM, Robert William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
77 |
One of a series of short poems which had the general title of Moods |
5.764 |
Moods |
The sun has set, and one lone star |
THOM, Robert William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
77-78 |
One of a series of short poems which had the general title of Moods |
5.761 |
The epochs |
Speak of the first effect |
THOM, Robert William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
75-76 |
Short extracts from the second canto |
5.760 |
The epochs |
The True, who of man's life had fought |
THOM, Robert William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
73-74 |
Extract of eight verses from the opening canto |
5.772 |
The hero bard |
I sing of a Hero, while yet again |
THOM, Robert William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
83-84 |
|
5.762 |
Thought |
As the flower puts on a richer |
THOM, Robert William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
77 |
|
5.771 |
Verses written for a young lady's album |
Of eyes that flash, and locks that float |
THOM, Robert William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
80-82 |
|
81.452 |
I'd rather |
I'd rather eat up all my greens |
THOMAS, Emma |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
89 |
|
85.867 |
A tay party |
Heigh! weren't there a lot o' folks theer |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
15 |
|
85.862 |
A wish |
I wish not wealth nor talents great |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
8 |
|
85.859 |
Coal Pit Lane |
Up the lane and down the lane |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
5 |
|
85.860 |
Dangerous corner |
More than a hundred years ago |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
6-Jul |
|
85.856 |
God |
Alone we never are |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
2 |
|
85.872 |
Lancashire, dear Lancashire |
Lancashire, dear Lancashire |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
22 |
|
85.861 |
Land of our birth |
Where doth the lark rise highest |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
8 |
|
85.875 |
Lilford's dingle |
When memory's panorama brings |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
9-Oct |
|
85.858 |
Love |
Love is the choicest blessing |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
4 |
|
85.866 |
My brave collier laddie |
My Jim works in the coal-mine |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
14 |
|
85.868 |
My Joe |
At cotton-weaving, dainty miss |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
17 |
|
85.873 |
Over the way |
As I was a-walking adown a long street |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
23 |
|
85.865 |
Put deawn that book |
Come, neaw Jane! Do put deawn that book |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
13-14 |
|
4.858 |
Strike song |
Come, Mary, put mi pit clogs by |
THOMASON, Mary |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
94-95 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
85.863 |
Strike song |
Come, Mary, put mi pit clogs by |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
10 |
|
85.870 |
Sunday morning |
Come Martha and Mary be sharp |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
20-21 |
|
85.871 |
The cure |
Aye John, I fear I'm leaving thee |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
21-22 |
|
85.857 |
The Lancashire dialect |
Thy dialect, O Lancashire |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
3-Apr |
|
85.854 |
The old handloom |
The old handloom is still |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
1 |
|
85.864 |
The richest spots on earth |
The richest spots on earth are not |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
12 |
|
86.100 |
Washin' day |
Jane, I shall have t' keep thee fro' th' skoo' |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
11-Dec |
|
85.869 |
Wigan Pier |
In Wiggin town Joe Platt does live |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
18 |
|
85.855 |
Work |
Though thou be of the lowliest born |
THOMASON, Mary |
The poetry of Mary Thomason |
THOMASON, Mary |
M0067321LC |
281.892 |
0 |
2 |
|
86.685 |
Growing up |
Did you ever live in Heaven |
THOMPSON, Anne |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
33 |
|
82.911 |
Fox and the rabbit |
The forest is nice and green, Rabbit |
THOMPSON, Bethany |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
123 |
|
5.916 |
A Captain Of Song |
Look on him. This is he whose works ye know |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
123-125 |
(on a portrait of Coventry Patmore by J S Sargent, RA) |
86.527 |
A carrier song |
Since you have waned from us |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
37-39 |
|
87.890 |
A Carrier-Song |
Since you have waned from us |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
Nov-14 |
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
86.518 |
A childs kiss |
Where its umbrage was enrooted |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
16-20 |
|
86.535 |
A corymbus for autumn |
Hearken my chant, - 'tis |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
64-68 |
|
87.898 |
A Corymbus for Autumn |
Hearken my chant, 'tis |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
p42-47 |
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
86.546 |
A counsel of moderation |
On him the unpetitioned heavens descend |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
101 |
|
5.930 |
A Dead Astronomer |
Starry amorist, starward gone |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
183 |
|
86.534 |
A dead astronomer |
Starry amorist, starward gone |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
63 |
|
87.896 |
A fallen view |
It seemed corrival of the world's great prime |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
p37-40 |
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
86.531 |
A fallen yew |
It seemed corrival of the world's great prime |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
48-50 |
|
86.524 |
A foretelling of the childs husband |
But on a day wherof I think |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
31-32 |
|
5.908 |
A girl's sin |
Cross child! red, and frowning so? |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
85-93 |
|
5.941 |
A holocaust |
When I presage the time shall come - yea now |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
209-210 |
|
87.900 |
A judgement in heaven |
Athwart the sod which is treading for God the poet |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
p55 |
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
86.541 |
A judgement in heaven |
Virtue may unlock hell, or even |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
86-87 |
|
5.929 |
A May Burden |
Through meadow-ways as I did tread |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
181-182 |
|
5.920 |
A Question |
O Bird with heart of wassail |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
154-156 |
|
5.938 |
A sunset |
I love the evenings, passionless and fair, I love the evens |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
193-196 |
|
5.943 |
After her going |
The after-even! Ah, did I walk |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
212-213 |
|
86.530 |
After her going |
The after-even! Ah, did I walk |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
47 |
|
5.917 |
Against Urania |
Lo I, Song's most true lover, plain me sore |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
126-128 |
|
5.918 |
An Anthem Of Earth |
Immeasurable Earth! |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
129-147 |
|
5.903 |
Any saint |
His shoulder did I hold |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
58-66 |
|
86.554 |
Any saint |
His shoulder did I hold |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
118-124 |
|
86.560 |
Arab love song |
The hunched camels of the night |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
|
|
5.904 |
Assumpta Maria |
Mortals that behold a woman |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
67-73 |
|
87.887 |
Before Her Portrait In Youth |
As lovers, banished from their lady's face |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
3-Apr |
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
86.525 |
Before her portrait in youth |
As lovers, banished from their lady's face |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
33-34 |
|
5.911 |
Beginning Of End |
She was aweary of the hovering |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
98-99 |
|
5.942 |
Beneath a photograph |
Phoebus, who taught me art divine |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
211 |
|
86.559 |
Buona notte |
Ariel to Miranda:- hear |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
130-131 |
|
5.898 |
By reason of the law |
Here I make oath |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
18-20 |
|
5.931 |
Chose vue |
Up she rose, fair daughter - well she was graced |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
184 |
|
5.858 |
Contemplation |
This morning saw I, fled the shower |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
14-17 |
|
86.551 |
Contemplation |
This morning saw I, fled the shower |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
112-114 |
|
86.552 |
Correlated greatness |
O nothing, in this corporal earth of man |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
114-115 |
|
86.512 |
Daisy |
Where the thistle lifts a purple crown |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
1-Mar |
|
87.901 |
Daisy |
Where the thistle lifts a purple crown |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
p65-67 |
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
5.855 |
Dedication |
Lo, my book thinks to look Time's leaguer down |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
vii |
|
87.886 |
Dedication (To Wilfrid and Alice Meynell) |
If the rose in meek duty |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
|
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
86.510 |
Dedication of new poems to Coventry Patmore |
Lo, my book thinks to look Time's leaguer down |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
xx |
|
86.509 |
Dedication of Poems to Wilfred and Alice Maynell |
If the rose in meek duty |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
xix |
|
86.511 |
Dedication of Poems to Wilfrid and Alice Meynell |
If the rose in meek duty |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
xix |
|
87.897 |
Dream-Tryst |
The breaths of kissing night and day |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
p41 |
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
86.558 |
Dream-tryst |
The breaths of kissing night and day |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
129-130 |
|
5.947 |
Envoy |
Go, songs, for ended is our brief, sweet play |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
224 |
|
86.562 |
Envoy |
Go, songs, for ended is our brief, sweet play |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
134 |
|
87.894 |
Epilogue |
Alas! now wilt thou chide, and say (I deem) |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
24-26 |
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
5.914 |
Epilogue |
If I had studied here in part |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
103-104 |
|
86.529 |
Epilogue to the poets sitter |
Alas! now wilt thou chide, and say (I deem) |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
45-46 |
|
86.517 |
Ex ore infantium |
Little Jesus, wast thou shy |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
14-15 |
|
5.919 |
Ex Ore Infantium' |
Little Jesus, wast Thou shy |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
151-153 |
|
5.921 |
Field-Flower |
God took a fit of Paradise-wind |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
157-158 |
|
86.550 |
From An anthem of earth |
In nescientness, in nescientness |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
105-111 |
|
86.547 |
From Assumpta Maria |
Mortals that behold a woman |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
102-105 |
|
5.902 |
From the night of forebearing |
Cast wide the folding doorways of the East |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
40-57 |
|
86.545 |
From the night of forebearing |
Cast wide the folding doorways of the East |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
96-101 |
|
86.555 |
From The Victorian ode |
Lo, in this day we keep the yesterdays |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
124-126 |
|
87.892 |
Gilded gold |
Thou dost to rich attire a grace |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
16 |
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
5.906 |
Grace of the way |
My brother! spake she to the sun |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
77-79 |
|
86.542 |
Grace of the way |
The windy trammel of her dressf |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
87 |
|
5.924 |
Grief's Harmonics |
At evening, when the lank and rigid trees |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
169-170 |
|
5.939 |
Heard on the mountain |
Have you sometimes, calm, silent, let your tread aspirant rise |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
197-203 |
|
5.933 |
Heaven and hell |
Tis said there were no thought of hell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
186 |
|
86.528 |
Her portrait |
Oh, but the heavenly grammar did I hold |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
39-45 |
|
87.893 |
Her Portrait |
Oh, but the heavenly grammar did I hold |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
18-24 |
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
5.935 |
Hermes |
Soothsay. Behold, with rod twy-serpented |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
188 |
|
149 |
Hound of Heaven |
I fled Him, down the nights and down the days |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
145 |
Only opening stanza quoted |
5.936 |
House of bondage |
When I perceive love's heavenly reaping still |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
189-190 |
|
953 |
In no strange land |
O world invisible, we view thee |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
224 |
|
87.225 |
Inscription |
When the last stir of bubbling melodies |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Sister Songs: an offering to two sisters |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067260LC |
281.767 |
1.908 |
63 |
|
5.926 |
July fugitives |
Can you tell me where has hid her |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
173-176 |
|
86.553 |
July fugitives |
Can you tell me where has hid her |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
115-117 |
|
86.538 |
Lines (To W M) |
O tree of many branches! One thou hast |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
74 |
|
5.909 |
Love declared |
I looked, she drooped, and neither spake, and cold |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
94-95 |
|
5.940 |
Love's almsman plaineth his fare |
O you, love's mendicancy who never tried |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
207-208 |
|
87.889 |
Manus Animam Pinxit |
Lady who hold'st on me dominion! |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
8-Oct |
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
5.925 |
Memorat Memoria |
Come you living or dead to me, out of the silt of the Past |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
171-172 |
|
5.944 |
My lady the tyranness |
Me since your fair ambition bows |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
214-217 |
|
5.901 |
New Year's chimes |
What is the song the stars sing? |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
36-39 |
|
5.928 |
Nocturn |
I walk, I only |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
179-180 |
|
5.915 |
Ode to the setting sun |
The wailful sweetness of the violin |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
107-122 |
|
86.540 |
Ode to the setting sun |
The wailful sweetness of the violin |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
76-85 |
|
5.900 |
Orient ode |
Lo, in the sanctuaried East |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
26-35 |
|
86.544 |
Orient ode |
Lo, in the sanctuaried East |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
89-95 |
|
87.223 |
Part the First |
The leaves dance, the leaves sing |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Sister Songs: an offering to two sisters |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067260LC |
281.767 |
1.908 |
5 |
|
87.224 |
Part the Second |
And now, thou elder nursling of the nest |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Sister Songs: an offering to two sisters |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067260LC |
281.767 |
1.908 |
24 |
|
5.912 |
Penelope |
Love, like a wind, shook wide your blosmy eyes |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
100-101 |
|
86.519 |
Poet and anchorite |
Love and love's beauty only hold their revels |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
20-21 |
|
5.907 |
Retrospect |
Alas, and I have sung |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
80-82 |
|
87.891 |
Scala Jacobi Portaque Eburnea |
Her soul from earth to Heaven lies |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
15 |
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
86.556 |
St Monica |
At the cross thy station keeping |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
127 |
|
5.905 |
The after woman |
Daughter of the ancient Eve |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
74-76 |
|
86.537 |
The after woman |
Daughter of the ancient eve |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
72-74 |
|
86.522 |
The child-woman |
O thou most dear! |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
26-28 |
|
5.922 |
The Cloud's Swan- Song |
There is a parable in the pathless cloud |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
159-165 |
|
5.899 |
The dread of height |
Not the Circean wine |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
21-25 |
|
5.913 |
The End Of It |
She did not love to love; but hated him |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
102 |
|
5.937 |
The heart |
The heart you hold too small and local thing |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
191-192 |
|
87.899 |
The hound of heaven |
I fled him, down the nights and down the days |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
p48-54 |
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
86.532 |
The hound of heaven |
I fled him, down the nights and down the days |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
51-56 |
|
86.561 |
The kingdom of god |
O world invisible, we view thee |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
132-133 |
|
86.515 |
The making of Viola |
Spin, daughter Mary, spin |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
9-Nov |
|
87.902 |
The making of Viola |
The Father of Heaven. Spin, daughter Mary, spin |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
p68-71 |
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
86.521 |
The mirage |
As an Arab journeyeth |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
24-25 |
|
86.536 |
The mistress of vision |
On Ararat there grew a vine |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
69-72 |
|
5.857 |
The mistress of vision |
Secret was the garden |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
Mar-13 |
|
5.856 |
The mistress of vision |
Secret was the garden |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
Mar-15 |
|
86.520 |
The omen |
Yet is there more, whereat none guesseth, love! |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
22-23 |
|
86.513 |
The Poppy |
Summer set lip to earth's bosom bare |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
3-Jun |
|
87.904 |
The Poppy. To Monica |
Summer set lip to earth's bosom bare |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
p75-78 |
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
87.222 |
The Proem |
Shrewd winds and shrill - were these the speech of |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Sister Songs: an offering to two sisters |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067260LC |
281.767 |
1.908 |
1 |
|
5.910 |
The way of a maid |
The lover, whose soul shaken is |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
96-97 |
|
86.539 |
The way of a maid |
The lover, whose soul shaken is |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
75 |
|
5.934 |
To a child |
Whenas my life shall timewith funeral tread |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
187 |
|
86.523 |
To a child heard repeating her mothers verses |
As a nymph's carven head sweet water drips |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
28-30 |
|
86.526 |
To a poet breaking silence |
Too wearily had we and song |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
35-36 |
|
87.888 |
To A Poet Breaking Silence |
Too wearily had we and song |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
5-Jul |
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
5.927 |
To A Snow-Flake |
What heart could have thought you? |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
177-178 |
|
86.543 |
To a snow-flake |
What heart could have thought you? |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
88 |
|
86.514 |
To Monica thpought dying |
You, o the piteous you! |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
6-Aug |
|
86.516 |
To my godchild |
This labouring, vast, Tellurian galleon |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
Dec-14 |
|
87.903 |
To my Godchild, Francis M. W. M. |
This labouring, vast, Tellurian galleon |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
p72-74 |
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
86.533 |
To the dead cardinal of Westminster |
I will not perturbate |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
57-63 |
|
87.895 |
To the Dead Cardinal of Westminster |
I will not perturbate |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0080656LC |
316.387 |
1.893 |
p29-36 |
Shelved at LA041 Francis Thompson Collection |
5.923 |
To The Sinking Sun |
How graciously thou wear'st the yoke |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
166-168 |
|
86.557 |
To the sinking sun |
How graciously thou wear'st the yoke |
THOMPSON, Francis |
Selected poems of Francis Thompson, with a biographical note by Wilfred Meynell |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067253LC |
281.759 |
0 |
128-129 |
|
5.946 |
Ultimum |
Now in these last spent drops, slow, slower shed |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
221-223 |
|
5.945 |
Unto this last |
A boy's young fancy taketh love |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
218-220 |
|
5.932 |
Whereto art thous come |
Friend, whereto art thou come? Thus Verity |
THOMPSON, Francis |
New poems |
THOMPSON, Francis |
M0067254LC |
281.761 |
1.907 |
185 |
|
449 |
I caught a fly |
I caught a fly |
THOMPSON, N. S. |
MIDPEN: an anthology of poetry and prose from the mid-pennine area, 1973-4, selected by Adrian Mitchell and Ian Watson; edited by Kenneth Nightingale and Jennifer Wilson |
|
M0039559LC |
149.084 |
1.974 |
36-37 |
|
82.892 |
Down in the magical world |
Walking along the seafront |
THOMPSON, Rachael |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
112 |
|
81.343 |
My motor bike |
Rallying is smart |
THOMPSON, Russell |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
28 |
|
80.861 |
Boredom created death |
God was bored |
THORNLEY, Lorraine |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
139 |
|
4.142 |
T'day we went to t' seaside |
Wi decided t'goo dahwn t' t' seaside |
THORNLEY, Peter |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
62-63 |
|
82.861 |
Super Mum |
Super Mum |
THORNLEY, Tara |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
96 |
|
86.768 |
The retirement party |
How many parties in fifty one years? |
THORPE, Hilary |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
112 |
|
6.218 |
The rime of the dinnerless student |
It is a hungry undergrad |
THORPE, T. E. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
97-98 |
|
84.173 |
A une belle inconstante |
Rosette, since far from you my feet have strayed |
THOUAILLE, Albert |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
96 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.172 |
Renouveau |
Time has doffed his wintry coat |
THOUAILLE, Albert |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
95 |
A roundel translated from th French of Charles D'Orleans |
338 |
Th'owd dialect i' Rossendale |
Aw've yerd foak tell a gradely tale |
TH'OWD RAKE |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
104 |
Pseudonym of Harold Weldon |
82.026 |
My kingdom |
My kingdom lies on a far-off plain |
TICKLE, Barbara H. |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
85 |
|
82.030 |
Reflections |
Upon the tables of my memory |
TICKLE, Barbara M. |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
96 |
|
5.169 |
To Mary sleeping |
Sleep on, my sweet one, sleep awhile |
TIDMARSH, Thomas Arkell |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
51-52 |
|
82.936 |
Sun |
Boiling hot, shining |
TIERNEY, Thomas |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
136 |
|
87.835 |
Together |
The tide has turned and my future is clear |
TIMPERLEY, Pamela |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
123 |
|
2.431 |
The blessing |
Oh bless her! bless her! bless the child! |
TIREBUCK, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
121 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.622 |
The taunt |
What agony is ours when anger drives |
TIREBUCK, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
118 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.623 |
The wooing of the poppy |
A bee was seen |
TIREBUCK, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
119 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.430 |
To Margaret |
Rare Margaret! your influence thrills |
TIREBUCK, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
120 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
82 |
Rossendale Thrutch |
Rossendale Thrutch was once a lake |
TODD, Arthur |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
93-94 |
|
81.419 |
Wishes |
I wish I could go to Chocolate Land to eat all the chocolate |
TOMLINSON, Lewis |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
70 |
|
2.450 |
The ballad of the fridstol |
Why luik ye sae, my ain true love? |
TOMLINSON, William Weaver |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
153-158 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
954 |
Mutation |
Purple red! Purple red! |
TONKIN, S. E. |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
225-226 |
|
119 |
Betsy Jane |
Ah allus liked to sit i' t' Sparra' Park |
TOOTELL, Arthur |
A BACUP miscellany: prose and verse by local writers past and present / compiled by Harry Craven and Roanld Y. Digby |
|
M0018516LC |
80.280 |
1.972 |
217 |
|
648 |
Autumn glory |
Autumn leaves are falling on the grass so green |
TOPPER, Ernest F. |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
39 |
|
86.875 |
Visions of beauty |
The silhouettes of mountains, against a moonlit sky |
TOWNSEND, Faye |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
127 |
|
511 |
Alchemists |
As I add nitric acid |
TOWNSEND, Timothy |
Preston Writers '72 |
PRESTON WRITERS |
M0017962LC |
78.606 |
1.972 |
45 |
|
507 |
Homesmiths |
At the corner, by the ginnel |
TOWNSEND, Timothy |
Preston Writers '72 |
PRESTON WRITERS |
M0017962LC |
78.606 |
1.972 |
10 |
|
4.840 |
An old toast |
Meight when we're hungry |
TRADITIONAL |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
64 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
772 |
Droylsden wakes song |
It's Dreighlsdin wakes, un' wey're comin' to teawn |
TRADITIONAL |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
4-Jun |
|
178 |
Droylsden wakes song |
It's Dreighlsdin wakes, un' wey're comin' to teawn |
TRADITIONAL |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
92-94 |
|
4.820 |
Droylsden wakes song |
It's Dreighlsdin wakes, un' wey're comin' to teawn |
TRADITIONAL |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
30-31 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
714 |
Ellan Vannin |
When the summer day is over |
TRADITIONAL |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
282 |
Isle of Man |
4.811 |
Friends are few when folks are poor |
When I had wark, and brass to spend |
TRADITIONAL |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
14-15 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
169 |
Hornby Park mistress and Margaret Brackin |
In days that 'oud folk tell on still |
TRADITIONAL |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
59-61 |
|
4.823 |
Jack, goo peawn thi fiddle |
Jack, goo peawn thi fiddle, and boy thi woife a geawn |
TRADITIONAL |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
35 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
4.808 |
Jone o' Grinfilt |
Says Jone to his woife on a whot summer's day |
TRADITIONAL |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
10-Nov |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
163 |
Owd Squire Parker o' Extwistle Hall |
Come all ye jolly sportsmen, give ear to me all |
TRADITIONAL |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
35-36 |
|
4.850 |
Rambles in Owdham, and peep into the workshops |
When I'd finished off my work |
TRADITIONAL |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
83-85 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
773 |
Th' mon o' Meastur Grundy's |
Good law, heaw things are awter'd neaw |
TRADITIONAL |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
6-Jul |
|
774 |
Th' Owdham recruit |
When I're a young lad, sixteen years ago |
TRADITIONAL |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
7-Aug |
|
704 |
The Cullercoats fish-lass |
Aa's a Cullercoats fish-lass se cozy an' free |
TRADITIONAL |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
217-218 |
Tyneside |
4.851 |
The factory worker's song |
Come carders an' spinners an' wayvers as weel |
TRADITIONAL |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
86 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
179 |
The Owdham recruit |
When I're a young lad, sixteen years ago |
TRADITIONAL |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
94-95 |
|
713 |
The sailing song |
A soul! A soul! A soul-cake! |
TRADITIONAL |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
281-282 |
Cumberland |
4.810 |
Th'Mon at Mester Grundy's |
Good law, how things are alter'd now |
TRADITIONAL |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
Dec-13 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
4.809 |
Th'Owdham weyver |
I'm a poor cotton weaver, as many a one knows |
TRADITIONAL |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
11-Dec |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
4.819 |
Warikin Fair |
Now, aw me gud gentles, an yau won tarry |
TRADITIONAL |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
29-30 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
771 |
Warrikin Fair |
Now, au yo good gentlefoak, an yo won tarry |
TRADITIONAL |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
3-Apr |
|
643 |
A Scottish terrier |
This little black terrier was named Sal |
TREWEEK, S. M. |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
25 |
|
651 |
How the wind can blow |
When you hear the wind blowing especially at night |
TREWEEK, S. M. |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
55-56 |
|
2.220 |
The last wolf: a legend of Humphrey Head |
The sun hath set on Wraysholme's Tower |
TRISTRAM |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
3-Sep |
|
5.628 |
The last wolf: a legend of Humphrey Head |
The sun hath set on Wraysholme's Tower |
TRISTRAM |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern. Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
M0018149LC |
79.232 |
1.882 |
210-217 |
3rd edition. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
81.361 |
My dad |
My dad is ace at football |
TSANG, Ling Ling |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
37 |
|
82.641 |
Play cricket |
Whatever task you tackle, lads |
TURNER, Ben |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
81-82 |
2nd ed rev |
80.873 |
The kitten and the Christmas tree |
Miaow! What a lovely sight |
TURNER, Elizabeth |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
151 |
|
84.212 |
A dead leaf |
What if some night you dreamed that I was dead |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
110 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.181 |
Airs from a Japanese fantasia: At home |
Here in each little house one sees |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
105 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.209 |
Airs from a Japanese fantasia: Farewell |
Land of the pine-tree's twisted bough |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
108 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.180 |
Airs from a Japanese fantasia: Flowers and trees |
Land where the cherry-blossoms blow |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
104 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.208 |
Airs from a Japanese fantasia: Hail Nippon |
Nation that budded slow, to bloom at length |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
108 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.203 |
Airs from a Japanese fantasia: Iizo |
There's Iizo, dispenser of every delight |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
106 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.204 |
Airs from a Japanese fantasia: Jap child's prayer |
Iizo here we stand before thee |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
107 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.183 |
Airs from a Japanese fantasia: Landscape |
And now on to Nikko |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
105-106 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.207 |
Airs from a Japanese fantasia: Mazy |
We'd much rather visit a happier scene |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
108 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.179 |
Airs from a Japanese fantasia: Off to Nippon |
Now far from Old England, away from cold England |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
104 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.206 |
Airs from a Japanese fantasia: Shokuza |
But the children fear |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
107-108 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.202 |
Airs from a Japanese fantasia: The gods |
On the banks of the Dayagama |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
106 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.184 |
Airs from a Japanese fantasia: The Shoguns |
They were proud old Shoguns |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
106 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.205 |
Airs from a Japanese fantasia: Well-spoken |
The Japanese are not like us |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
107 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.177 |
Fulc Nerra, the Angevin |
Fulc Nerra, the ruthless Angevin |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
101 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.176 |
Hike-along Rataplan Blue |
Now of all the colours that shimmer or shine |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
99-100 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.178 |
His eyes were stars |
His eyes were stars, - I saw him sink |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
102-103 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.210 |
Hymn to Japan |
O land of ever cherished flowers |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
109 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.175 |
Requiescat |
Blow quietly o'er her grave, O breeze |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
98 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.143 |
So is it |
A poet's life may swiftly pass |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
63 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.211 |
Summer green |
O summer green! colour that blesses so |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
110 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.174 |
The poet's autumn song |
When autumn comes and summer's heat |
TURNER, F. T. H. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
97 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
87.774 |
My Secret |
A few years before my loved one |
TURNER, Florence |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
59 |
|
86.745 |
The angel of Brownhill |
Just past the Brownhill roundabout |
TURNER, Florence |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
92 |
|
6.259 |
Sleep I |
When the cool midnight holds the waiting land |
TURNER, H. P. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
152-153 |
|
6.260 |
Sleep II |
The ivory portals of the land of dreams |
TURNER, H. P. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
153 |
|
6.258 |
The halls of silence |
No dreams are there, but deep perpetual year |
TURNER, H. P. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
152 |
|
6.257 |
To my lady |
I do not count the hours when thou art gone |
TURNER, H. P. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
151 |
|
4.393 |
Down bi t' cut |
Sunday Summers morning's grand |
TURNER, Hayes |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
60 |
|
87.778 |
Trust the Lord |
If you have troubles, cares and worries |
TURNER, M. P. L. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
63 |
|
82.569 |
Coom, stop at yam to-neet, Bob |
Coom, stop at yam to-neet, Bob |
TWEDDELL, Florence |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
45-46 |
2nd ed rev |
82.568 |
Dean't mak gam o' me |
I went last week to Stowslay Fair |
TWEDDELL, Florence |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
43-45 |
2nd ed rev |
84.134 |
I would that you depart |
I would that you depart |
TWEEDALE, Judith Brundrett |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
52 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.133 |
My thoughts of Sicily |
My thoughgts of Sicily have painted wings |
TWEEDALE, Judith Brundrett |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
50-51 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.135 |
When I go hence |
When I go hence |
TWEEDALE, Judith Brundrett |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
53 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
82.812 |
My gran |
My gran is mad |
TWEEDALE, Paul |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
66-67 |
|
4.521 |
Tommy Stroo's ghost |
Th'moon wur sheignin' rare, an' breet |
TWIST, John Charles |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
130 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
82.575 |
The Christmas party |
When cowd December's sturdy breeze |
TWISTLETON, Tom |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
56-62 |
2nd ed rev |
644 |
The barn cat |
I've always been a barn cat |
TYLOR, Alma |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
27 |
|
951 |
Orme's (Kirke) Church |
There once lived i' th' teawn, two maids o' reneawn |
TYRER, John |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
218-219 |
|
780 |
Ormes' (Kirke) Church |
There once lived i' th' teawn, two maids o' reneawn |
TYRER, John |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
271-272 |
|
86.707 |
My little angel |
She was too good for this world |
UNWIN, April |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
55 |
|
82.721 |
Sam |
I have a new brother called Sam |
UNWIN, Nicholle McGhee |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
15 |
|
84.231 |
Manchester rain |
The traveller circling round the globe |
V H - F T |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
131-132 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
5.155 |
Love's faith |
They say that thou art faithless, love |
VARLEY, Isabella |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
17-18 |
|
86.674 |
Dream lover |
You touched my hand as you kissed my face |
VARLEY, Sharon A |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
22 |
|
64 |
Soliloquy over my new dustbin |
By gum! |
VEEVERS, Fred |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
218 |
|
7 |
The Street |
The long street |
VEEVERS, Fred |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
103 |
|
374 |
Familiar streets |
In once-familiar streets, successive changes |
VENABLES, Roger |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
28 |
|
379 |
The smoke will pass |
The smoke will pass |
VENABLES, Roger |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
31 |
|
6.236 |
Feline sapphics |
When the sunset fades, and the gloaming deepens |
VERNON, Maud V. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
130-131 |
|
6.237 |
The poet's mission |
Ho! Ye who wend your weary way |
VERNON, Maud V. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
131-132 |
|
6.297 |
Two partings |
Parted - and living yet |
VERNON, Maud V. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
192-194 |
|
1.468 |
The mill-hands' petition |
We have come to ask for assistance |
W. C. |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
184 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
6.311 |
Dante's wife to Dante |
I know thou lovest me - and yet |
W. P. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
207-208 |
|
83.563 |
In the valley |
In the valley of Love and Laughter |
W. P. R. |
SKETCHES and poems by local writers, edited by John U. Smith |
|
M0129272LC |
491.715 |
18 |
2 |
Editor was member of the Burnley Literary and Philosophical Society |
86.749 |
The conker |
I climbed high into the tree |
WADDICOR, Daniel James |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
97 |
|
2.366 |
Dort |
So quiet yet so quaint! Shall curfew toll |
WADDINGTON, Samuel |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
94 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.365 |
Morning |
Now o'er the topmost pine |
WADDINGTON, Samuel |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
94 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.367 |
Mors et vita |
We know not yet what life shall be |
WADDINGTON, Samuel |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
95 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.368 |
The inn of care |
At Nebra, by the Unstrut |
WADDINGTON, Samuel |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
95-96 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.369 |
The neophyte |
His spirit is in apogee! To-night |
WADDINGTON, Samuel |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
96 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
833 |
Rugby League field |
The rugby field in summer grew buttercups like suns |
WADDINGTON-FEATHER, John |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
43-44 |
|
527 |
Blossom |
Owd Blossom wor a gallowa' |
WADE, Gwen |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
97-98 |
Yorkshire poetry |
838 |
T'Dale wor mi creddle bed |
T'Dale wor mi creddle bed |
WADE, Gwen |
'TWIXT thee and me: an anthology of Yorkshire and Lancashire verse and prose, selected and edited by Joan Pomfret |
|
M0017873LC |
78.305 |
1.974 |
66 |
|
81.366 |
Katie |
Katie has got big blue eyes |
WADESON, Zowie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
40 |
|
472 |
Mill, demolished |
The smell of bacon in my nostrils |
WALING, S. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
20 |
|
481 |
The great wall of Todmorden |
Overrun Saturdays by barbarous hordes |
WALING, S. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
33 |
|
5.783 |
A fragment |
Oh! when this earthly pilgrimage is o'er |
WALKDEN, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
102 |
Death; five stanzas only |
5.786 |
From a 'Farewell to the old year' |
Farewell, old year! Farewell to all thy gladness |
WALKDEN, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
107-108 |
Four stanzas only |
5.784 |
I love thee, sweet maiden |
I love thee, sweet maiden! I swear |
WALKDEN, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
103 |
|
5.860 |
Lines: written in a book presented to my daughter |
When girlhood's gladsome days are o'er |
WALKDEN, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
110 |
|
5.861 |
No rest for me |
I am not mad - I am not mad |
WALKDEN, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
111-112 |
|
5.782 |
Oh, when wilt thou return |
Oh, when wilt thou return, my love |
WALKDEN, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
101-102 |
|
5.785 |
The lost child |
In an unguarded hour he wandered from his father's home |
WALKDEN, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
106 |
Death |
5.859 |
To my valentine |
The other day by chance I strayed the busy crowd among |
WALKDEN, James |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
108 |
Written Blackburn February 27th, 1860 |
782 |
Ben Dizzy |
Ben Dizzy wer a clever lad |
WALKER, John |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
275-276 |
|
81.579 |
Ben Dizzy |
Ben Dizzy wer a clever lad |
WALKER, John |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
257-258 |
|
6.408 |
Descent from Scawfell Pike to Sprinkling Tarn: an episode in a day's ramble |
And now with careful tread we crept along |
WALKER, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
274-275 |
|
6.414 |
Epistle to the editor: of Ben Brierley's Journal |
Eh, Ben, wod are ta doin', lad |
WALKER, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
282-284 |
|
4.322 |
Mi grandad |
Aw allus wur fond o' mi grandad |
WALKER, John |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
15 |
|
4.522 |
Mi grandad |
Aw allus wur fond o' mi grandad |
WALKER, John |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
131-132 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
148 |
Mi grandad |
Aw allus wur fond o' mi grandad |
WALKER, John |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
150 |
Only selected verses quoted |
1.010 |
Mi granny |
Hoo're farrantly lookin' were granny |
WALKER, John |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
151 |
|
6.410 |
My books: a Sabbath reverie |
In theold arm chair I'm sitting, where the brightly beaming sun |
WALKER, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
277-278 |
Written Blackburn February 16th, 1868 |
6.412 |
My grandad |
Aw allus wur fond o' mi grandad |
WALKER, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
279-280 |
|
564 |
My grandad |
Aw allus wur fond o' mi grandad |
WALKER, John |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
143-144 |
Lancashire poetry |
81.580 |
My grandad |
Aw allus wur fond o' mi grandad |
WALKER, John |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
259-260 |
|
781 |
My grandad |
Aw allus wur fond o' mi grandad |
WALKER, John |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
274-275 |
|
955 |
My granny |
Hoo're a gradely good sort wer my granny |
WALKER, John |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
227-229 |
|
6.413 |
My granny |
Hoo're a gradely good sort wer my granny |
WALKER, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
281-282 |
|
552 |
My granny |
Hoo're a gradely good sort wer my granny |
WALKER, John |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
128-129 |
Lancashire poetry |
81.581 |
My granny |
Hoo're a gradely good sort wer my granny |
WALKER, John |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
260-262 |
|
6.416 |
Ode: on the death of William Billington |
Dead, dead! and in the world's dull ear |
WALKER, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
285-287 |
|
6.415 |
Ralph Waldo Emerson: born May 26th, 1803 died April 27th, 1882 |
O wind, blest wind, wind of the western sea |
WALKER, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
284-285 |
|
6.417 |
Reply |
We twa hae paddl't in the burn |
WALKER, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
287 |
|
6.411 |
Sonnet: written in Chorley Cemetery |
Home of the dead, the resting place of man |
WALKER, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
278-279 |
|
6.409 |
The factory lad |
Aw s' bi just fifteen next Micklemas-day |
WALKER, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
275-277 |
|
82.003 |
Love and life |
From youth to manhood as I slowly grew |
WALLACE, George |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
19 |
|
82.033 |
To- |
Come sing me sangs o' auld lang syne |
WALLACE, George |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
113 |
|
82.011 |
X |
The future will remain a mystery |
WALLACE, George |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
37 |
|
82.023 |
My mother's grave |
Tell me where thou sleepest |
WALLACE, P. |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
75-76 |
|
82.787 |
Teachers |
Teaching us may be tricky |
WALLBANK, Sarah |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
52 |
|
2.445 |
Northumbrian lanes |
Oh! green lanes of Northumberland |
WALLER, John Rowell |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
142-144 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.443 |
The little grave under the snow |
There's a neat little grave in our snug churchyard |
WALLER, John Rowell |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
140-141 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.444 |
The organist |
A hush of other realms it seemed |
WALLER, John Rowell |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
141-142 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
87.759 |
Conception |
In the softness of a whisper |
WALMSLEY, Colin |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
44 |
|
6.330 |
(no title) |
At base of weathered, moss-tinged wall I spied |
WALMSLEY, Luke Slater |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
243-244 |
Extract from untitled poem |
6.040 |
David Geddes |
But t' other day I spied him in the street |
WALMSLEY, Luke Slater |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
239 |
|
6.041 |
John Walker |
Our harps upon the willows hang: how shall |
WALMSLEY, Luke Slater |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
239-240 |
|
6.039 |
Richard Shackleton |
A good man gone, a Patriarch indeed |
WALMSLEY, Luke Slater |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
238 |
|
6.329 |
Silver how: extract |
Who's been to Silver How? Sweet Silver How? |
WALMSLEY, Luke Slater |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
241-243 |
Extract only |
81.329 |
The lonely star |
Twinkle, twinkle little star |
WALSH, Amy |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
22 |
|
6.447 |
A village teacher |
Not half a league from yon old tow'r |
WALSH, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
310-311 |
|
6.446 |
Don't disturb them: children gathering flowers in a graveyard |
Don't disturb them, let 'em play |
WALSH, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
309-310 |
|
6.448 |
Eawr garden: or a peep at the park |
If ever yo' go to Pinchem |
WALSH, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
311-313 |
|
6.442 |
Mi grandmother's cap |
Yo' fooak 'at are fond ov a yead-dress |
WALSH, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
304-305 |
|
783 |
Mi skoomates |
Aw're thinkin' to misel' one neet, while sittin' i' mi cheer |
WALSH, John |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
278-279 |
|
6.443 |
Mi skoomates |
Aw're thinkin' to misel' one neet, while sittin' i' mi cheer |
WALSH, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
305-306 |
School friends |
6.445 |
On the death of a sister |
The muffled peal rings in the old church tower |
WALSH, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
308-309 |
|
6.449 |
Queen May |
She comes! She comes - the young May Queen |
WALSH, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
313-314 |
|
6.444 |
To the memory of George Ellis |
Take down the harp, and swell the solemn theme |
WALSH, John |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
307-308 |
|
82.948 |
Don't tell me nonsense! |
Why were you late for school, Sammy |
WALSH, Melissa |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
144 |
|
1.828 |
A woodland sonnet |
If thou art weary and beset |
WALTON, Dyson |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
80 |
|
1.901 |
Dallas and Jane |
Why seek a hero in some far-off clime |
WALTON, Dyson |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
83-87 |
|
1.929 |
Fancy |
Sweet angel Fancy! Let me sing thy praise |
WALTON, Dyson |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
87-89 |
|
2.150 |
St James's minstrels |
O, when I was a nice young man |
WALTON, Dyson |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
93 |
|
2.227 |
The march of philosophy |
When Ptolemy declared the world was flat |
WALTON, Dyson |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
81-83 |
|
2.351 |
Woman's mutability |
Emblem of change is fickle woman still |
WALTON, Dyson |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
80 |
|
87.559 |
A Conductor's Plea |
It's awfully frustratin' |
WARBURTON, J. |
MARY'S miscellany: prose and verse by Lancashire writers, compiled by Mary Carter Clark |
|
M0040456LC |
151.580 |
1.966 |
22-23 |
|
6.216 |
The contencyoun betwene lettrys and science |
O ye soverens that sytt, and ye brethern that stande right uppe |
WARD, A. W. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
77-87 |
|
81.428 |
Solar system |
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 |
WARD, Steven |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
74 |
|
82.008 |
To a friend fallen in battle |
Bluff, kindly soldier, where thou dwellest now |
WARDLE, John |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
31 |
|
82.021 |
Villanelle of compassion |
When kiss the lips that love no more |
WARDLE, John |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
71 |
|
86.763 |
The Pickling line |
You two; leave off! go down there! |
WAREING, Margaret |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
109 |
|
81.365 |
In the dark |
Scary, noisy, flying bats |
WARING, Emma |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
39 |
|
87.731 |
Herod Still Rules |
Though the centuries pass, and the time, it dances on and over us |
WARNES, Stephen |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
16 |
|
81.370 |
Space |
As the Earth orbits the sun |
WARRINGTON, Alex |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
42 |
|
87.780 |
God's Hugs |
Although it is a comfort |
WARWICK, Hilda |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
65 |
|
86.709 |
My Rita |
So dear to my heart |
WATERS, Blake |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
57 |
|
85.117 |
The Sunday School. Book the fifth |
I stop not now Hibernia's weal to tell |
WATMOUGH, Abraham |
The Sunday School: a poem in six books |
WATMOUGH, Abraham |
M0129243LC |
491.666 |
1.821 |
139-172 |
Rochdale author |
85.113 |
The Sunday School. Book the first |
Schools, and a brightening day, all children taught |
WATMOUGH, Abraham |
The Sunday School: a poem in six books |
WATMOUGH, Abraham |
M0129243LC |
491.666 |
1.821 |
Mar-18 |
Rochdale author |
85.116 |
The Sunday School. Book the fourth |
Again we meet - scarce had we left this shade |
WATMOUGH, Abraham |
The Sunday School: a poem in six books |
WATMOUGH, Abraham |
M0129243LC |
491.666 |
1.821 |
111-136 |
Rochdale author |
85.114 |
The Sunday School. Book the second |
O could we sit, Artemas, in this shade |
WATMOUGH, Abraham |
The Sunday School: a poem in six books |
WATMOUGH, Abraham |
M0129243LC |
491.666 |
1.821 |
21-62 |
Rochdale author |
85.118 |
The Sunday School. Book the sixth |
He smil'd and said. Then turning from the east |
WATMOUGH, Abraham |
The Sunday School: a poem in six books |
WATMOUGH, Abraham |
M0129243LC |
491.666 |
1.821 |
176-209 |
Rochdale author |
85.115 |
The Sunday School. Book the third |
Hours seemed to have linger'd, and the sluggish days |
WATMOUGH, Abraham |
The Sunday School: a poem in six books |
WATMOUGH, Abraham |
M0129243LC |
491.666 |
1.821 |
65-108 |
Rochdale author |
87.744 |
There Is No Death |
We never really ever die |
WATSON, Brian |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
29 |
|
82.646 |
Heame, sweet heame |
When oft at neet I wanders heame |
WATSON, A. C. |
YORKSHIRE dialect poems (1673-1915), and, traditional poems, compiled with an historical introduction by F.W. Moorman |
|
M0011134LC |
42.002 |
1.917 |
89-90 |
2nd ed rev |
2.534 |
A parting |
Here is the place at which we must part |
WATSON, Aaron |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
280-281 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.531 |
By the northern sea: a conversation |
We strolled beside the margin of the sea |
WATSON, Aaron |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
273-277 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.533 |
In a garret bred |
You see that little chap on crutches there |
WATSON, Aaron |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
278-280 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.532 |
Pictures |
Night on the Thames, and yonder flush of light |
WATSON, Aaron |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
277-278 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
81.311 |
Animals |
Seals flop |
WATSON, Amy |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
14 |
|
86.787 |
The wonder of nature |
It's wonderful how trees live for ages |
WATSON, BRIAN |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
119 |
|
690 |
Dance ti' thy daddy |
Come here, maw little Jacky |
WATSON, J. |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
201-202 |
Tyneside |
81.454 |
Tiger, tiger |
Oh tiger what do you mean |
WATSON, Jacqueline |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
90 |
|
1.439 |
The sun and the flowers a song for life |
The Sun the early morn, doth meet |
WATSON, James |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
152 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
82.532 |
The sun and the flowers: a song of life |
The Sun the early morn, doth meet |
WATSON, James |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
434-435 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.475 |
A song of three singers |
Wave and wind and willow-trees |
WATSON, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
198 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.477 |
Epigrams |
I close your Marlowe's page, my Shakespeare's ope |
WATSON, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
199 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.628 |
Epigrams |
I pluck'd this flower, O brighter flower, for thee |
WATSON, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
200 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.626 |
Epigrams |
Love, like a bird, hath perch'd upon a spray |
WATSON, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
200 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.627 |
Epigrams |
Onward the chariot of the Untarrying moves |
WATSON, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
200 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.625 |
Epigrams |
Think not thy wisdowm can illume away |
WATSON, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
199 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.624 |
Epigrams |
To keep in sight Perfection, and adore |
WATSON, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
199 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.479 |
Sonnets from 'Ver Tenebrosum': the English dead |
Give honour to our heroes fall'n, how ill |
WATSON, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
201 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.478 |
Sonnets from 'Ver Tenebrosum': the Soudanese |
They wrong'd not us, nor sought 'gainst us to wage |
WATSON, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
200 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
2.476 |
The questioner |
I asked of heaven and earth and sea |
WATSON, William |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
198-199 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
83.238 |
A bit of a sing |
Bill o' Sheepsheawter's |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
125-126 |
|
4.617 |
A bit of a sing |
Bill o' Sheepsheawter's |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
28-29 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
85.266 |
A bit of a sing |
Bill o' Sheepsheawter's |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
146-147 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.395 |
A lift on the way |
Come, what's th' use o' fratchin', lads, this life's noan so long |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
58-62 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
85.275 |
A lift on the way |
Come, what's th' use o' fratchin', lads, this life's noan so long |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
177-179 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
4.634 |
A lift on the way |
Come, what's th' use o' fratchin', lads, this life's noan so lung |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
59-61 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.247 |
A lift on the way |
Come, what's th' use o' fratchin', lads, this life's noan so lung |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
147-148 |
|
3.578 |
A little Brief Authority |
Not every one who readeth Lamb |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
63-66 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
83.217 |
Alas! How hard is it to smile |
Alas! how hard it is to smile |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
87 |
|
5.063 |
Alas! how hard it is to smile |
Alas! how hard it is to smile |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
238-239 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
85.245 |
Alas! how hard it is to smile |
Alas! how hard it is to smile |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
95-96 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.327 |
Alas! how hard it is to smile |
Alas! how hard it is to smile |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
72-73 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
83.225 |
All on a rosy morn of June |
All on a rosy morn of June |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
96-97 |
|
85.253 |
All on a rosy morn of June |
All on a rosy morn of June |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
107-108 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.325 |
All on a rosy morn of June |
All on a rosy morn of June |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
67-69 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
5.066 |
Alone, upon the flowery plain |
Alone, upon the flowery plain |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
244 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.220 |
Alone, upon the flowery plain |
Alone, upon the flowery plain |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
91 |
|
85.248 |
Alone, upon the flowery plain |
Alone, upon the flowery plain |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
101 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.346 |
Alone, upon the flowery plain |
Alone, upon the flowery plain |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
118-119 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
3.563 |
As I went crooning on my way |
As I went crooning on my way |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
41-42 |
'My bridheen bawn masthore' |
5.191 |
Aw've worn my bits o' shoon away |
Aw've worn my bits o' shoon away |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
75-77 |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
85.141 |
Bide on |
When thy heart 'neath its trouble sinks down |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
46-47 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.319 |
Bide on |
When thy heart 'neath its trouble sinks down |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
48-50 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
83.252 |
Bonny Nan |
Heigh, Ned, owd man, I feel as fain |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
159-160 |
|
4.639 |
Bonny Nan |
Heigh, Ned, owd mon, I feel as fain |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
76-78 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
85.280 |
Bonny Nan |
Heigh, Ned, owd mon, I feel as fain |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
194-196 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.397 |
Bonny Nan |
Heigh, Ned, owd mon, I feel as fain |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
68-71 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
83.245 |
Buckle to |
Good lorjus days, what change there is |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
142-143 |
|
85.393 |
Buckle to |
Good lorjus days, what change there is |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
49-52 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
85.273 |
Buckle to |
Good lorjus days, what change there is |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
170-172 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
4.632 |
BuckleTo |
Good lorjus days, what change there is |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
52-54 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
5.177 |
Chirrup |
Young Chirrup wur a mettled cowt |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
17-20 |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
83.235 |
Chirrup |
Young Chirrup wur a mettled cowt |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
119-120 |
|
1.885 |
Chirrup |
Young Chirrup wur a mettled cowt |
WAUGH, Edwin |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
120-121 |
|
82.462 |
Chirrup |
Young Chirrup wur a mettled cowt |
WAUGH, Edwin |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
328-329 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
4.614 |
Chirrup |
Young Chirrup wur a mettled cowt |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
20-22 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
4.527 |
Chirrup |
Young Chirrup wur a mettled cowt |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
137-138 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
85.263 |
Chirrup |
Young Chirrup wur a mettled cowt |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
138-140 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.354 |
Chirrup |
Young Chirrup wur a mettled cowt |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
148-151 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
5.038 |
Christmas carol |
Long time ago in Palestine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
183-185 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
82.434 |
Christmas carol |
Long time ago in Palestine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
35-36 |
|
85.134 |
Christmas carol |
Long time ago in Palestine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
29-31 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
5.052 |
Christmas Morning |
Come all you weary wanderers |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
216-218 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.179 |
Christmas morning |
Come all you weary wanderers |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
64-65 |
|
1.761 |
Christmas morning |
Come all you weary wanderers |
WAUGH, Edwin |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
30-31 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
85.150 |
Christmas morning |
Come all you weary wanderers |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
68-70 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.348 |
Christmas morning |
Come all you weary wanderers |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
123-125 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
5.048 |
Christmas song |
In the dark-clouded sky no star shews a gleam |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
206-207 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.173 |
Christmas song |
In the dark-clouded sky no star shews a gleam |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
53-54 |
|
85.144 |
Christmas song |
In the dark-clouded sky no star shews a gleam |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
52-53 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.323 |
Christmas song |
In the dark-clouded sky no star shews a gleam |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
59-61 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
5.025 |
Cock Robin |
Cock Robin coom o' daicent folk |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
138-140 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
3.655 |
Cock Robin |
Cock Robin coom o' daicent folk |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
141-143 |
'With Wellington we'll go' |
4.668 |
Come Limber Lads |
Come, limber lads, so leet an' gay |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
110-111 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
5.176 |
Come Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
Come Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
Dec-16 |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
81.590 |
Come Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
Come Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
279-281 |
|
4.523 |
Come Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
Come Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
133-134 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
5.028 |
Come to your porritch |
Come lads, an' sit down to yor porritch |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
148-150 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
3.661 |
Come to your porritch |
Come lads, an' sit down to yor porritch |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
165-167 |
'One Bumper at Parting' |
81.585 |
Come Whoam To Thi Childer An Me |
Aw've just mended th' fire wi' a cob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
270-272 |
|
556 |
Come whoam to thi childer an' me |
Aw've just mended th' fire wi' a cob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
133-134 |
Lancashire poetry |
83.230 |
Come whoam to thi childer an' me |
Aw've just mended th' fire wi' a cob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
106-108 |
|
4.841 |
Come whoam to thi childer an' me |
Aw've just mended th' fire wi' a cob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
64-65 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
5.173 |
Come whoam to thi childer an' me |
Aw've just mended th' fire wi' a cob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
1-Apr |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
82.498 |
Come whoam to thi childer an' me |
Aw've just mended th' fire wi' a cob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
372-374 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.758 |
Come whoam to thi childer an' me |
Aw've just mended th' fire wi' a cob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
26-27 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.894 |
Come whoam to thi childer an' me |
Aw've just mended th' fire wi' a cob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
164-166 |
|
4.609 |
Come whoam to thi childer an' me |
Aw've just mended th' fire wi' a cob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
3-Jun |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
184 |
Come whoam to thi childer an' me |
Aw've just mended th' fire wi' a cob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
131-133 |
|
785 |
Come whoam to thi childer an' me |
Aw've just mended th' fire wi' a cob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
289-290 |
|
4.524 |
Come whoam to thi childer an' me |
Aw've just mended th' fire wi' a cob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
134-135 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
85.258 |
Come whoam to thi childer an' me |
Aw've just mended th' fire wi' a cob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
121-124 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.349 |
Come whoam to thi childer an' me |
Aw've just mended th' fire wi' a cob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
129-132 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
85.405 |
Come whoam to thi childer an' me |
Aw've just mended th' fire wi' a cob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0128032LC |
487.794 |
0 |
3-Jun |
These poems and songs have been selected from 'Poems and songs' published in 1883 and 'Poems and songs - Second Series', published in 1889 |
4.644 |
Come, Jamie, let's undo thi shoon |
Come, Jamie, let's undo thi shoon |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
93-94 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
5.182 |
Come, Jamie, let's undo thi shoon |
Come, Jamie, let's undo thi shoon |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
37-39 |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
83.257 |
Come, Jamie, let's undo thi shoon |
Come, Jamie, let's undo thi shoon |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
171-172 |
|
85.360 |
Come, Jamie, let's undo thi shoon |
Come, Jamie, let's undo thi shoon |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
176-179 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
85.285 |
Come, Jamie, let's undo thi shoon |
Come, Jamie, let's undo thi shoon |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
211-212 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
83.262 |
Come, limber lads |
Come, limber lads, so leet an' gay |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
183-184 |
|
85.402 |
Come, limber lads |
Come, limber lads, so leet an' gay |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
90-93 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
85.290 |
Come, limber lads |
Come, limber lads, so leet an' gay |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
228-229 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
4.833 |
Come, Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
Come, Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
50-51 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
83.234 |
Come, Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
Come, Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
116-118 |
|
4.613 |
Come, Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
Come, Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
16-19 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
185 |
Come, Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
Come, Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
133-135 |
|
85.262 |
Come, Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
Come, Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
134-137 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.353 |
Come, Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
Come, Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
142-147 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
85.409 |
Come, Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
Come, Mary, link thi arm i' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0128032LC |
487.794 |
0 |
16-19 |
These poems and songs have been selected from 'Poems and songs' published in 1883 and 'Poems and songs - Second Series', published in 1889 |
4.674 |
Cradle song |
Th'child cries i' th' cradle |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
126-128 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
3.588 |
Cradle song |
Th'child cries i' th' cradle |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
100-102 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
576 |
Cradle song |
Th'child cries i' th' cradle |
WAUGH, Edwin |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
165-166 |
Lancashire poetry |
5.043 |
Cultivate your men |
Till as ye ought your barren lands |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
196-197 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
82.439 |
Cultivate your men |
Till as ye ought your barren lands |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
46-47 |
|
85.139 |
Cultivate your men |
Till as ye ought your barren lands |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
42-43 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.317 |
Cultivate your men |
Till as ye ought your barren lands |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
42-44 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
4.844 |
Dinner time |
Heigh, Mary; run for the fryin'-pon |
WAUGH, Edwin |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
68-70 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
3.647 |
Dinner time |
Heigh, Mary; run for the fryin'-pon |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
111-114 |
The wife comes running into the house. |
4.845 |
Down again |
Twur on a bitter winter neet |
WAUGH, Edwin |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
70-72 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
3.658 |
Down again |
Twur on a bitter winter neet |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
151-155 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
558 |
Eawr folk |
Er Johnny gi's his mind to books |
WAUGH, Edwin |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
135-137 |
Lancashire poetry |
5.187 |
Eawr folk |
Er Johnny gi's his mind to books |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
58-62 |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
4.812 |
Eawr folk |
Er Johnny gi's his mind to books |
WAUGH, Edwin |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
15-16 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
83.243 |
Eawr folk |
Er Johnny gi's his mind to books |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
137-139 |
|
4.622 |
Eawr folk |
Er Johnny gi's his mind to books |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
45-48 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
82.516 |
Eawr folk |
Er Johnny gi's his mind to books |
WAUGH, Edwin |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
408-410 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.189 |
Eawr folk |
Er Johnny gi's his mind to books |
WAUGH, Edwin |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
200-202 |
|
81.584 |
Eawr folk |
Er Johnny gi's his mind to books |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
268-270 |
|
85.271 |
Eawr folk |
Er Johnny gi's his mind to books |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
163-166 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.391 |
Eawr folk |
Er Johnny gi's his mind to books |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
39-44 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
3.663 |
Eh, dear, what a Bother! |
Eh, dear, what a bother |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
171-173 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
3.572 |
Farewell! |
The light of day is dying |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
48-49 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
3.560 |
Fishwoman's song |
As I wander slow, through the frost and snow |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
34-35 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
4.631 |
Forgive one another |
Come here, my bold cronies, I'll not keep yo' lung |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
49-51 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.244 |
Forgive one another |
Come here, my bold cronies, I'll not keep yo' lung |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
140-141 |
|
85.272 |
Forgive one another |
Come here, my bold cronies, I'll not keep yo' lung |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
167-169 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.392 |
Forgive one another |
Come here, my bold cronies, I'll not keep yo' lung |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
45-48 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
3.674 |
Fylde fisherman's song |
Said Dick unto Tom, one Friday at noon |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
198-201 |
to an old country tune |
83.250 |
Gentle Jane |
I see'd a thowtful chap one day |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
154-156 |
|
4.637 |
Gentle Jone |
I see'd a thowtful chap one day |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
|
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
5.189 |
Gentle Jone |
I see'd a thowtful chap one day |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
66-69 |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
85.278 |
Gentle Jone |
I see'd a thowtful chap one day |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
187-190 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.399 |
Gentle Jone |
I see'd a thowtful chap one day |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
76-80 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
83.226 |
Glad welcome to morn's dewy hours |
Glad welcome to morn's dewy hours |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
98 |
|
85.254 |
Glad welcome to morn's dewy hours |
Glad welcome to morn's dewy hours |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
109-110 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.326 |
Glad welcome to morn's dewy hours |
Glad welcome to morn's dewy hours |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
70-71 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
3.665 |
God bless thee, Nan! |
God bless thee, Nan, it does one good |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
177-180 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
83.210 |
God bless thee, old England |
God bless thee, old England, the home of the free |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
76 |
|
5.057 |
God bless thee, old England |
God bless thee, old England, the home of the free |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
227 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
85.156 |
God bless thee, old England |
God bless thee, old England, the home of the free |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
82 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.322 |
God bless thee, old England |
God bless thee, old England, the home of the free |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
57-58 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
83.233 |
God bless these poor folk |
God bless these poor folk that are strivin' |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
114-115 |
|
5.175 |
God bless these poor folk |
God bless these poor folk that are strivin' |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
8-Nov |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
956 |
God bless these poor folk |
God bless these poor folk that are strivin' |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
231-233 |
|
4.612 |
God bless these poor folk |
God bless these poor folk that are strivin' |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
13-15 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
85.261 |
God bless these poor folk |
God bless these poor folk that are strivin' |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
131-133 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.352 |
God bless these poor folk |
God bless these poor folk that are strivin' |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
137-141 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
85.408 |
God bless these poor folk |
God bless these poor folk that are strivin' |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0128032LC |
487.794 |
0 |
13-15 |
These poems and songs have been selected from 'Poems and songs' published in 1883 and 'Poems and songs - Second Series', published in 1889 |
5.185 |
God bless thi silver yure |
Jone, lad, though thi hond's |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
48-52 |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
4.646 |
God bless thi silver yure |
Jone, lad, though thi hond's |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
98-101 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.259 |
God bless thi silver yure |
Jone, lad, though thi hond's |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
175-177 |
|
85.382 |
God bless thi silver yure |
Jone, lad, though thi hond's |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
184-188 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
85.287 |
God bless thi silver yure |
Jone, lad, though thi hond's |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
216-219 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
4.824 |
Going to the fair |
Eh, Nan, Lord bless an' save us o |
WAUGH, Edwin |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
36-37 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
3.672 |
Going to the fair |
Eh, Nan, Lord bless an' save us o |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
188-191 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
3.553 |
Good night |
The sun has dipped his golden rim |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
15 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
4.667 |
Hard Weather |
Good lorjus days, what times are these |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
107-109 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.261 |
Hard weather |
Good lorjus days, what times are these |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
181-182 |
|
85.289 |
Hard weather |
Good lorjus days, what times are these |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
225-227 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
4.853 |
Hard weather: winter 1878-79 |
Good lorjus days, what times are these |
WAUGH, Edwin |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
87-88 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
5.029 |
Heigh Jone owd brid |
Heigh Jone owd brid, bring in some ale |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
151-152 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
3.662 |
Heigh, Jone, owd Brid! |
Heigh, Jone, owd brid, bring in some ale |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
168-170 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
4.676 |
Heigh, Lads, Heigh! |
Oh, I're fidgin' fain to drop my wark |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
132-134 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
3.652 |
Heigh, Lads, Heigh! |
Oh, I're fidgin' fain to drop my wark |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
131-133 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
5.051 |
Heigho for cobblers |
Of all the craftsmen in this world |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
213-215 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.178 |
Heigho for cobblers |
Of all the craftsmen in this world |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
62-63 |
|
316 |
Heigho for cobblers |
Of all the craftsmen in this world |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
154-155 |
|
85.149 |
Heigho for cobblers |
Of all the craftsmen in this world |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
65-67 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
5.053 |
Here's to my native land |
Here's to my native land |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
219-220 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.180 |
Here's to my native land |
Here's to my native land |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
66-67 |
|
85.151 |
Here's to my native land |
Here's to my native land |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
69-73 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.329 |
Here's to my native land |
Here's to my native land |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
77-79 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
3.648 |
Howd Thi Tung! |
Here, mother, tak this choilt a bit |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
115-120 |
Married Daughter |
3.573 |
I can't tell how to woo |
These women all, both short and tall |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
50-51 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
3.584 |
I Know what I Know |
I once heard a priest |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
81-84 |
Founded on an ancient rhyme. |
3.574 |
I met with a doleful wight |
Oh, I met with a doleful wight |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
52-54 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
3.576 |
I Pray Thee, Love, Let me in |
It rains, it hails, it snows, it blows |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
57-59 |
To an old tune |
3.559 |
I wish, my love, it was so with you |
Oh, I dream all day, and I muse all night |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
32-33 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
4.873 |
Ill life - ill luck |
As I coom trailin' whoam fro th'town |
WAUGH, Edwin |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
118-119 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
3.656 |
Ill life - ill luck |
As I coom trailin' whoam fro th'town |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
144-147 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
3.575 |
In a May morning early |
As I crossed the fields with my milking pail |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
55-56 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
3.669 |
It's hard to tell which gate to goo |
It's hard to tell which gate to goo |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
185-187 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
4.672 |
It's time to be jogging away |
When pitchers are empty an' pouches are bare |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
121-122 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
3.571 |
It's time to be jogging away |
When pitchers are empty an' pouches are bare |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
45-47 |
Granna Waile |
4.636 |
I've worn my bits o' shoon away |
I've worn my bits o' shoon away |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
66-68 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
4.648 |
I've worn my bits o' shoon away |
I've worn my bits o' shoon away |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
140 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
83.249 |
I've worn my bits o' shoon away |
I've worn my bits o' shoon away |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
152-153 |
|
85.277 |
I've worn my bits o' shoon away |
I've worn my bits o' shoon away |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
184-186 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.398 |
I've worn my bits o' shoon away |
I've worn my bits o' shoon away |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
72-75 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
3.673 |
Jack Swaddle |
Jack Swaddle wur a lurcher |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
195-197 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
3.653 |
Jamie Raddle's Dog |
Oh, Jamie Raddle lost his dog |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
131-133 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
4.641 |
Jamie's frolic |
One neet aw crope whoam when my weighvin' were o'er |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
82-85 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
5.180 |
Jamie's frolic |
One neet aw crope whoam when my weighvin' were o'er |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
28-33 |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
83.254 |
Jamie's frolic |
One neet aw crope whoam when my weighvin' were o'er |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
163-165 |
|
85.282 |
Jamie's frolic |
One neet aw crope whoam when my weighvin' were o'er |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
200-203 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.357 |
Jamie's frolic |
One neet aw crope whoam when my weighvin' were o'er |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
160-166 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
5.032 |
Keen blows the north wind |
Keen blows the north wind; the woodlands are bare |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
161-162 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
82.428 |
Keen blows the north wind |
Keen blows the north wind; the woodlands are bare |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
15-16 |
|
85.128 |
Keen blows the north wind |
Keen blows the north wind; the woodlands are bare |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
7-Aug |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.312 |
Keen blows the north wind |
Keen blows the north wind; the woodlands are bare |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
23-25 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
3.582 |
Lapstone Song |
I am a lad of wax |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
75-77 |
To and old Tune. |
5.055 |
Life's twilight |
Now silver threads begin to shine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
223-224 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.182 |
Life's twilight |
Now silver threads begin to shine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
70-71 |
|
85.153 |
Life's twilight |
Now silver threads begin to shine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
76-77 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.347 |
Life's twilight |
Now silver threads begin to shine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
120-122 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
3.586 |
Lilter |
When Lilter comes to th' end o'th fowd |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
93-96 |
Robin Tamson's Smiddy |
85.343 |
Lines |
Oh! whatever betide thee |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
111-112 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
4.673 |
Little cattle, little care |
Laddie, good dog, the day-wark's done |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
123-125 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
3.579 |
Little cattle, little care |
Laddie, good dog, the day-wark's done |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
67-69 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
234 |
Little cattle, little care |
Laddie, good dog, the day-wark's done |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A Rossendale anthology |
DIGBY, Ronald |
M0082527LC |
428.081 |
1.967 |
110-111 |
M0017029LC and M0110775LC are the numbers for A Rossendale anthology. M0082527LC is for Rossendale writers |
83.174 |
Love and gold |
We were but poor young people |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
55-57 |
|
85.145 |
Love and gold |
We were but poor young people |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
54-56 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.324 |
Love and gold |
We were but poor young people |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
62-66 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
5.186 |
Margit's comin' |
Eh! Sam, whatever doesto meeon |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
53-57 |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
4.843 |
Margit's comin' |
Eh! Sam, whatever doesto meeon |
WAUGH, Edwin |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
67-68 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
4.647 |
Margit's comin' |
Eh! Sam, whatever doesto meeon |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
102-106 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.260 |
Margit's comin' |
Eh! Sam, whatever doesto meeon |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
178-180 |
|
85.383 |
Margit's comin' |
Eh! Sam, whatever doesto meeon |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
189-194 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
85.288 |
Margit's comin' |
Eh! Sam, whatever doesto meeon |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
220-224 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.333 |
Mary |
My Mary is the queen of girls |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
84-85 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
3.664 |
Maut-worm |
Last neet I went swaggerin' down |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
174-176 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
5.054 |
Minnie |
My Minnie's as shy as a little wild rose |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
221-222 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.181 |
Minnie |
My Minnie's as shy as a little wild rose |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
68-69 |
|
85.152 |
Minnie |
My Minnie's as shy as a little wild rose |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
74-75 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.387 |
Minnie |
My Minnie's as shy as a little wild rose |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
16-18 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
3.657 |
Moorland Nell |
Oh, Jenny's lithe an leet |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
148-150 |
'The Cruiskeen Lan' |
5.049 |
Mountaineer's Song |
Come, all you lads that wander free |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
208-210 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.175 |
Mountaineer's song |
Come, all you lads that wander free |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
57-58 |
|
85.146 |
Mountaineer's song |
Come, all you lads that wander free |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
57-59 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
3.562 |
My croodling dove |
Oh, have you seen my bosom's queen? |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
38-40 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
3.660 |
My gronfaither, Willie |
My gronfaither, Willie |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
160-164 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
4.633 |
Neet-fo |
Th'wynt blows keen through th' shiverin' thorns |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
55-58 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
5.190 |
Neet-fo |
Th'wynt blows keen through th' shiverin' thorns |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
70-74 |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
4.842 |
Neet-fo |
Th'wynt blows keen through th' shiverin' thorns |
WAUGH, Edwin |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
65-66 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
81.586 |
Neet-fo |
Th'wynt blows keen through th' shiverin' thorns |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
272-274 |
|
83.246 |
Neet-fo |
Th'wynt blows keen through th' shiverin' thorns |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
144-146 |
|
85.274 |
Neet-fo |
Th'wynt blows keen through th' shiverin' thorns |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
173-176 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.394 |
Neet-fo' |
Th'wynt blows keen through th' shiverin' thorns |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
53-57 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
83.183 |
Nightfall |
The green leaves answer to the night-wind's sigh |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
72-73 |
|
5.056 |
Nightfall |
The green leaves answer to the night-wind's sigh |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
225-226 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
85.154 |
Nightfall |
The green leaves answer to the night-wind's sigh |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
78-79 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.339 |
Nightfall |
The green leaves answer to the night-wind's sigh |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
98-100 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
3.646 |
Noather Cobs nor Sleck |
Good mornin', folk! What's o' this din? |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
108-110 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
5.039 |
Now summer's sunlight glowing |
Now, summer's sunlight, glowing |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
186-188 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
82.435 |
Now summer's sunlight glowing |
Now, summer's sunlight, glowing |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
37-39 |
|
85.135 |
Now summer's sunlight glowing |
Now, summer's sunlight, glowing |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
32-34 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.314 |
Now summer's sunlight glowing |
Now, summer's sunlight, glowing |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
31-34 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
3.564 |
Now's the time to remember the poor |
From my warm ingle-cheek, on a keen winter's day |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
43-44 |
To an old English melody |
83.209 |
Oh! come across the fields |
Now, from dreary winter's dream awaking |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
74-75 |
|
85.155 |
Oh! come across the fields |
Now, from dreary winter's dream awaking |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
80-81 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.336 |
Oh! come across the fields |
Now, from dreary winter's dream awaking |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
91-93 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
83.224 |
Oh! had she been a lowly maid |
Oh! had she been a lowly maid |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
95 |
|
85.252 |
Oh! had she been a lowly maid |
Oh! had she been a lowly maid |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
106 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.334 |
Oh! had she been a lowly maid |
Oh! had she been a lowly maid |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
86-87 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
83.222 |
Oh! weave a garland for my brow |
Oh! weave a garland for my brow |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
93 |
|
85.250 |
Oh! weave a garland for my brow |
Oh! weave a garland for my brow |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
104 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.337 |
Oh! weave a garland for my brow |
Oh! weave a garland for my brow |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
94-95 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
3.555 |
Oh, my Clothing's thin |
Oh, my clothing's thin, and the wind is cold |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
20-22 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
3.577 |
Oh, the Summer's Sweet |
Oh, the summer's sweet when lovers meet |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
60-62 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
3.561 |
Oh. the wild, wild moors |
My heart's away in the lonely hills |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
36-37 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
3.580 |
Old Ireland shall blossom Again! |
Through Wicklow's green glens and wild mountains |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
70-72 |
The valley lay smiling before me. |
5.044 |
Old Man's Song |
Oh! sweetly the morning of childhood |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
198-199 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
82.441 |
Old man's song |
Oh! sweetly the morning of childhood |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
48 |
|
85.140 |
Old man's song |
Oh! sweetly the morning of childhood |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
44-45 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.318 |
Old man's song |
Oh! sweetly the morning of childhood |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
45-47 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
3.668 |
Our Jem an' Me |
What, Matty, lass,its never thee! |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
181-184 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
3.651 |
Ow'd Bumper's Courtship |
Owd Bumper's frame wur seldom reet |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
127-130 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
4.872 |
Owd Enoch |
Owd Enoch o' Dan's laid his pipe deawn o'th'hob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
117-118 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
83.242 |
Owd Enoch |
Owd Enoch o' Dan's laid his pipe deawn o'th'hob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
133-136 |
|
4.621 |
Owd Enoch |
Owd Enoch o' Dan's laid his pipe deawn o'th'hob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
39-44 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
81.589 |
Owd Enoch |
Owd Enoch o' Dan's laid his pipe deawn o'th'hob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
277-279 |
|
85.270 |
Owd Enoch |
Owd Enoch o' Dan's laid his pipe deawn o'th'hob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
157-162 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.390 |
Owd Enoch |
Owd Enoch o' Dan's laid his pipe deawn o'th'hob |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
29-38 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
4.642 |
Owd Pinder |
Owd Pinder were a rackless foo |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
86-88 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
5.181 |
Owd Pinder |
Owd Pinder were a rackless foo |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
34-36 |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
83.255 |
Owd Pinder |
Owd Pinder were a rackless foo |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
166-167 |
|
85.283 |
Owd Pinder |
Owd Pinder were a rackless foo |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
204-206 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.358 |
Owd Pinder |
Owd Pinder were a rackless foo |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
165-170 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
3.645 |
Owd Robin o' Quifter's |
Owd Robin o' Quifter's wur shaky an' thin |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
103-107 |
Come send round the wine. |
4.871 |
Owd Roddle |
Owd Roddle wur tattert an' torn |
WAUGH, Edwin |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
116-117 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
5.026 |
Owd Roddle |
Owd Roddle wur tattert an' torn |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
141-143 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
3.659 |
Owd Roddle |
Owd Roddle wur tattert an' torn |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
156-159 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
4.528 |
Owd Roddle |
Owd Roddle wur tattert an' torn |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
139-140 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
83.215 |
Poor travellers all |
Poor travellers all |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
84-85 |
|
5.061 |
Poor travellers all |
Poor travellers all |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
234-235 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
85.242 |
Poor travellers all |
Poor travellers all |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
91-92 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.341 |
Poor travellers all |
Poor travellers all |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
103-106 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
83.229 |
Prologue |
When first, from old Westminster's hoary pile |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
102-104 |
|
85.257 |
Prologue |
When first, from old Westminster's hoary pile |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
115-118 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.403 |
Prologue |
When first, from old Westminster's hoary pile |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
94-99 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
5.045 |
Ride on |
When thy heart 'neath its trouble sinks down |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
200-201 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.170 |
Ride on |
When thy heart 'neath its trouble sinks down |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
49-50 |
|
5.040 |
Sea weeds |
The land has its gardens of roses |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
189-190 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
82.436 |
Sea weeds |
The land has its gardens of roses |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
40-41 |
|
85.136 |
Sea weeds |
The land has its gardens of roses |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
35-36 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.385 |
Sea weeds |
The land has its gardens of roses |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
10-Dec |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
3.587 |
Th' factory Bell |
Come, Billy,come; dost yer yon bell? |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
97-99 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
5.183 |
Th' goblin parson |
Th'wynt wur still i'th shade o'th hill |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
40-44 |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
4.643 |
Th' goblin parson |
Th'wynt wur still i'th shade o'th hill |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
89-92 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.256 |
Th' goblin parson |
Th'wynt wur still i'th shade o'th hill |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
168-170 |
|
85.284 |
Th' goblin parson |
Th'wynt wur still i'th shade o'th hill |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
207-210 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.359 |
Th' goblin parson |
Th'wynt wur still i'th shade o'th hill |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
171-175 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
5.188 |
Th' sweetheart gate |
Oh, there's many a gate ov eawr teawn-end |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
63-65 |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
82.452 |
Th' sweetheart gate |
Oh, there's mony a gate eawt ov eawr teawn-end |
WAUGH, Edwin |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
316-317 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.385 |
Th' sweetheart gate |
Oh, there's mony a gate eawt ov eawr teawn-end |
WAUGH, Edwin |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
79 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
83.241 |
Th' sweetheart gate |
There's many a gate eawt of eawr teawn-end |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
131-132 |
|
4.620 |
Th' sweetheart gate |
There's mony a gate eawt of eawr teawn-end |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
36-38 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
81.583 |
Th' sweetheart gate |
There's mony a gate eawt of eawr teawn-end |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
267-268 |
|
85.269 |
Th' sweetheart gate |
There's mony a gate eawt of eawr teawn-end |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
154-156 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.389 |
Th' sweetheart gate |
There's mony a gate eawt of eawr teawn-end |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
25-28 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
86.096 |
Th' sweetheart gate |
There's mony a gate eawt of eawr teawn-end |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0128032LC |
487.794 |
0 |
36-38 |
These poems and songs have been selected from 'Poems and songs' published in 1883 and 'Poems and songs - Second Series', published in 1889 |
5.033 |
The captain's friends |
I wandered down by yonder park one quiet autumn day |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
163-165 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
82.429 |
The Captain's friends |
I wandered down by yonder park one quiet autumn day |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
17-19 |
|
85.129 |
The Captain's friends |
I wandered down by yonder park one quiet autumn day |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
9-Nov |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.313 |
The Captain's friends |
I wandered down by yonder park one quiet autumn day |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
26-30 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
85.321 |
The church clock |
Oh thou, who dost these pointers see |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
54-56 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
5.047 |
The church clock |
Oh, thou who dost these pointers see |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
204-205 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.172 |
The church clock |
Oh, thou who dost these pointers see |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
52-53 |
|
85.143 |
The church clock |
Oh, thou who dost these pointers see |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
50-51 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
4.831 |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
48 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
5.178 |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
21-23 |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
83.236 |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
121-122 |
|
1.759 |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
27-28 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
4.615 |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
23-24 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
81.582 |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
265-267 |
|
1.180 |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
135-136 |
|
82.471 |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
343-344 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
85.264 |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
141-142 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.355 |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
The dule's i' this bonnet o' mine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
152-155 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
85.342 |
The dying rose |
Brown Autumn sings his anthem drear |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
107-110 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
4.852 |
The factory bell |
Come Billy, come; dost yer yon bell |
WAUGH, Edwin |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
86-87 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
4.669 |
The garland |
Twas when the dawn of mornin' |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
112-114 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
4.526 |
The garland |
Twas when the dawn of mornin' |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
136-137 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
83.263 |
The garland |
Twas when the dawn of mornin' |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
185-186 |
|
85.291 |
The garland |
Twas when the dawn of mornin' |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
230-232 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
83.232 |
The grindlestone |
It wur Dody o' Joseph's, a joiner by trade |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
111-113 |
|
4.611 |
The grindlestone |
It wur Dody o' Joseph's, a joiner by trade |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
10-Dec |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
85.260 |
The grindlestone |
It wur Dody o' Joseph's, a joiner by trade |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
128-130 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.407 |
The grindlestone |
It wur Dody o' Joseph's, a joiner by trade |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0128032LC |
487.794 |
0 |
10-Dec |
These poems and songs have been selected from 'Poems and songs' published in 1883 and 'Poems and songs - Second Series', published in 1889 |
3.557 |
The hour of shade |
When stars begin to steal in sight |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
25-27 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
3.551 |
The kindly hearth |
Of all the joys on earth |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
7-Oct |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
4.814 |
The little doffer |
A merry little doffer |
WAUGH, Edwin |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
18 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
4.675 |
The little doffer |
A merry little doffer lad |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
129-131 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
3.649 |
The little doffer |
A merry little doffer lad |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
121-123 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
81.587 |
The little doffer |
A merry little doffer lad |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
274-275 |
|
3.549 |
The lost shepherd |
On the wild top of Pendle |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
1-Mar |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
5.064 |
The man of the time |
He is a sterling nobleman |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
240-241 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.218 |
The man of the time |
He is a sterling nobleman |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
88-89 |
|
85.246 |
The man of the time |
He is a sterling nobleman |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
97-98 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.344 |
The man of the time |
He is a sterling nobleman |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
113-115 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
3.550 |
The moorland breeze |
Of all the blithesome melody |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
4-Jun |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
1.760 |
The moorland breeze |
Of all the blithesome melody |
WAUGH, Edwin |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
29-30 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
5.030 |
The moorland flower |
Beneath a crag, whose forehead rude |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
155-157 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
82.426 |
The moorland flower |
Beneath a crag, whose forehead rude |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
11-Dec |
|
85.308 |
The moorland flower |
Beneath a crag, whose forehead rude |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
1-Apr |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
85.126 |
The moorland flower |
Beneath a crag, whose forehead rude |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
1-Mar |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
319 |
The moorland flower |
In the gloaming grey, at close of day |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
190 |
|
83.176 |
The moorland maid |
There's a limpid rindling fountain |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
59-60 |
|
85.147 |
The moorland maid |
There's a limpid rindling fountain |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
60-62 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.388 |
The moorland maid |
There's a limpid rindling fountain |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
19-22 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
5.046 |
The moorland witch |
There lives a lass on yonder moor |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
202-203 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.171 |
The moorland witch |
There lives a lass on yonder moor |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
50-51 |
|
85.142 |
The moorland witch |
There lives a lass on yonder moor |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
48-49 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.320 |
The moorland witch |
There lives a lass on yonder moor |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
51-53 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
5.036 |
The moorlands |
Sing, hey for the moorlands, wild, lovely and stern |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
174-175 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
82.432 |
The moorlands |
Sing, hey for the moorlands, wild, lovely and stern |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
27-28 |
|
183 |
The moorlands |
Sing, hey for the moorlands, wild, lovely and stern |
WAUGH, Edwin |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
130-131 |
|
85.132 |
The moorlands |
Sing, hey for the moorlands, wild, lovely and stern |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
20-21 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.310 |
The moorlands |
Sing, hey for the moorlands, wild, lovely and stern |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
8-Oct |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
3.650 |
The Mower's Song |
Th'layrocks i'th welkin |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
124-126 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
83.214 |
The old bard's welcome home |
Bring me a goblet of drink divine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
82-83 |
|
5.060 |
The old bard's welcome home |
Bring me a goblet of drink divine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
232-233 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
85.241 |
The old bard's welcome home |
Bring me a goblet of drink divine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
89-90 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.335 |
The old bard's welcome home |
Bring me a goblet of drink divine |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
88-90 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
82.433 |
The rose-tree on my window sill |
Dark is the lot of him with heart so dull |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
29-34 |
|
83.211 |
The victims of war |
Hark! from beyond the heaving main |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
77-78 |
|
85.157 |
The victims of war |
Hark! from beyond the heaving main |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
83-84 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
5.065 |
The wanderer's hymn |
Happy the heart that's simply pure |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
242-243 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.219 |
The wanderer's hymn |
Happy the heart that's simply pure |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
89-90 |
|
85.247 |
The wanderer's hymn |
Happy the heart that's simply pure |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
99-100 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.345 |
The wanderer's hymn |
Happy the heart that's simply pure |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
116-117 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
5.031 |
The world |
This foolish world doth wink |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
158-160 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
82.427 |
The world |
This foolish world doth wink |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
13-14 |
|
85.315 |
The world |
This foolish world doth wink |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
35-38 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
85.127 |
The world |
This foolish world doth wink |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
4-Jun |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
83.213 |
The wounded lark |
Lay low thine ear with kindly care |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
80-81 |
|
5.059 |
The wounded lark |
Lay low thine ear with kindly care |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
230-231 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
85.240 |
The wounded lark |
Lay low thine ear with kindly care |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
87-88 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
3.552 |
These bonny bits o' childer |
Never tell me that childer are tiresome |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
Nov-14 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
4.670 |
These bonny bits of childer |
Never tell me that childer are tiresome |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003366LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
115-117 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
85.401 |
These maund'rin e'en |
Oh, these maund'rin' e'en |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
85-89 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
5.041 |
Things gone by |
Twas evening; sad November's gale |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
191-193 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
82.437 |
Things gone by |
Twas evening; sad November's gale |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
42-43 |
|
85.137 |
Things gone by |
Twas evening; sad November's gale |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
37-39 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.386 |
Things gone by |
Twas evening; sad November's gale |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
13-15 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
784 |
Three jolly hunters |
It's of three jolly hunters, an' a-hunting they did go |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
285-286 |
|
3.585 |
Three Jovial Huntsmen |
It's of three jovial huntsmen, and a hunting they did go |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
85-89 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
4.640 |
Tickle times |
Here's Robin looks fearfully gloomy |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
79-81 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
5.179 |
Tickle times |
Here's Robin looks fearfully gloomy |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
24-27 |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
82.618 |
Tickle times |
Here's Robin looks fearfully gloomy |
WAUGH, Edwin |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
503-504 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.287 |
Tickle times |
Here's Robin looks fearfully gloomy |
WAUGH, Edwin |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
295-296 |
|
83.253 |
Tickle times |
Here's Robin looks fearfully gloomy |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
161-162 |
|
85.281 |
Tickle times |
Here's Robin looks fearfully gloomy |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
197-199 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.356 |
Tickle times |
Here's Robin looks fearfully gloomy |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
156-159 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
85.131 |
Time is flying |
Time is flying |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
18-19 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.309 |
Time is flying |
Time is flying |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
5-Jul |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
5.035 |
Time is flying |
Time is flying! |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
172-173 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
82.431 |
Time is flying |
Time is flying! |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
25-26 |
|
5.042 |
To a married lady |
Ah, this wild voyage o'er the sea of life |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
194-195 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
82.438 |
To a married lady |
Ah, this wild voyage o'er the sea of life |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
44-45 |
|
85.138 |
To a married lady |
Ah, this wild voyage o'er the sea of life |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
40-41 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.316 |
To a married lady |
Ah, this wild voyage o'er the sea of life |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
39-41 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
85.249 |
To a young lady |
This learned volume doth not tell |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
102-103 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.340 |
To a young lady |
This learned volume doth not tell |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
101-102 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
83.221 |
To a young lady (who lent me a book) |
This learned volume doth not tell |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
92 |
|
4.671 |
To my old fiddle |
Oh, David was a famous king |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
118-120 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
3.558 |
To my old fiddle |
Oh, David was a famous king |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
28-31 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
81.588 |
To My Owd Fiddle |
Oh, David was a famous king |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
275-277 |
|
3.556 |
To the River Roach |
The quiet Roch comes dancing down |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
23 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
5.037 |
To the rose-tree on my window sill |
Dark is the lot of him with heart so dull |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
176-182 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
85.133 |
To the rose-tree on my window sill |
Dark is the lot of him with heart so dull |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
22-28 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.311 |
To the rose-tree on my window sill |
Dark is the lot of him with heart so dull |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
Nov-22 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
83.223 |
To the spring wind |
Sweet minstrel of the scented spring |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
94 |
|
4.525 |
To the spring wind |
Sweet minstrel of the scented spring |
WAUGH, Edwin |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
136 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
85.251 |
To the spring wind |
Sweet minstrel of the scented spring |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
105 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.338 |
To the spring wind |
Sweet minstrel of the scented spring |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
96-97 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
551 |
Toddlin' whoam |
Toddlin' whoam fro th' market rant |
WAUGH, Edwin |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
127 |
Lancashire poetry |
83.240 |
Toddlin' whoam |
Toddlin' whoam fro th' market rant |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
130 |
|
4.619 |
Toddlin' whoam |
Toddlin' whoam fro th' market rant |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
34-35 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
85.268 |
Toddlin' whoam |
Toddlin' whoam fro th' market rant |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
152-153 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
86.097 |
Toddlin' whoam |
Toddlin' whoam fro th' market rant |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0128032LC |
487.794 |
0 |
34-35 |
These poems and songs have been selected from 'Poems and songs' published in 1883 and 'Poems and songs - Second Series', published in 1889 |
83.239 |
Tommy pobs |
Tommy pobs wur a good-natur't sort of a lad |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
127-129 |
|
4.618 |
Tommy Pobs |
Tommy Pobs wur a good-natur't sort of a lad |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
30-33 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
85.267 |
Tommy Pobs |
Tommy Pobs wur a good-natur't sort of a lad |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
148-151 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
3.654 |
Toothsome advice |
Eh, Nanny; thou'rt o' out o' gear |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
138-140 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
5.024 |
Toothsome Advice |
Oh Nanny thou'rt o' out o' gear |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
135-137 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
4.638 |
Tum Rindle |
Tum Rindle lope fro' the chimbley nook |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
73-75 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
4.813 |
Tum Rindle |
Tum Rindle lope fro' the chimbley nook |
WAUGH, Edwin |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
16-17 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
83.251 |
Tum Rindle |
Tum Rindle lope fro' the chimbley nook |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
157-158 |
|
85.279 |
Tum Rindle |
Tum Rindle lope fro' the chimbley nook |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
191-193 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.400 |
Tum Rindle |
Tum Rindle lope fro' the chimbley nook |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
81-84 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
83.212 |
Twilight carol |
At the close of day, her melting lay |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
79 |
|
5.058 |
Twilight carol |
At the close of day, her melting lay |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
228-229 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
85.239 |
Twilight carol |
At the close of day, her melting lay |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
85-86 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
3.583 |
Unfurl the Flag! |
Unfurl the grand old flag again |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
78-80 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
4.832 |
What ails thee, my son Robin? |
What ails thee, my son Robin? |
WAUGH, Edwin |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
49 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
83.231 |
What ails thee, my son Robin? |
What ails thee, my son Robin? |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
109-110 |
|
5.174 |
What ails thee, my son Robin? |
What ails thee, my son Robin? |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
5-Jul |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
4.610 |
What ails thee, my son Robin? |
What ails thee, my son Robin? |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
7-Sep |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
85.259 |
What ails thee, my son Robin? |
What ails thee, my son Robin? |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
125-127 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.351 |
What ails thee, my son Robin? |
What ails thee, my son Robin? |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
133-136 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
85.406 |
What ails thee, my son Robin? |
What ails thee, my son Robin? |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0128032LC |
487.794 |
0 |
7-Sep |
These poems and songs have been selected from 'Poems and songs' published in 1883 and 'Poems and songs - Second Series', published in 1889 |
5.062 |
What makes your leaves fall down? |
What makes your leaves fall down? |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
236-237 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.216 |
What makes your leaves fall down? |
What makes your leaves fall down? |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
86 |
|
85.244 |
What makes your leaves fall down? |
What makes your leaves fall down? |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
93-94 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.331 |
What makes your leaves fall down? |
What makes your leaves fall down? |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
80-81 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
83.227 |
When drowsy day light |
When drowsy daylight's drooping e'e |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
99 |
|
85.255 |
When drowsy daylight |
When drowsy daylight's drooping e'e |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
111-112 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.332 |
When drowsy daylight |
When drowsy daylight's drooping e'e |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
82-83 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
3.581 |
When the Ships come Sailing in |
God Prosper long the good old town |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
73-74 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
3.554 |
When the sun goes down |
When life's glad day is gone |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs. Second series |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0013028LC |
55.464 |
1.889 |
17-19 |
Includes poems in dialect. - Edwin Waugh was born in Rochdale |
5.184 |
While takin' a wift o' my pipe |
While takin' a wift o' my pipe, t'other neet |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
45-47 |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
4.645 |
While takin' a wift o' my pipe |
While takin' a wift o' my pipe, t'other neet |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
95-97 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
83.258 |
While takin' a wift o' my pipe |
While takin' a wift o' my pipe, t'other neet |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
173-174 |
|
85.361 |
While takin' a wift o' my pipe |
While takin' a wift o' my pipe, t'other neet |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
180-183 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
85.286 |
While takin' a wift o' my pipe |
While takin' a wift o' my pipe, t'other neet |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
213-215 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
83.177 |
Wild and free |
I wish I was on yonder moor |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
61 |
|
5.050 |
Wild and Free |
I wish I was on yonder moor |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
211-212 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
85.148 |
Wild and free |
I wish I was on yonder moor |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
63-64 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
83.237 |
Willy-Ground |
Come, Caleb, an' sattle thi shanks |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
123-124 |
|
4.616 |
Willy-Ground |
Come, Caleb, an' sattle thi shanks |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
25-27 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
85.265 |
Willy-ground |
Come, Caleb, an' sattle thi shanks |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
143-145 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
82.632 |
Willy's grave |
The frosty wind was wailing wild |
WAUGH, Edwin |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
529-533 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.346 |
Willy's grave |
The frosty wind was wailing wild |
WAUGH, Edwin |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, (part 2, modern). Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
715811827 |
79.254 |
1.976 |
529-533 |
Reprinted from 3rd edition, first published 1882. Revised by T T Wilkinson |
5.034 |
Willy's Grave |
The wintry wind was wailing wild |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
166-171 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
82.430 |
Willy's grave |
The wintry wind was wailing wild |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
20-24 |
|
85.130 |
Willy's grave |
The wintry wind was wailing wild |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
Dec-17 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.384 |
Willy's grave |
The wintry wind was wailing wild |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
1-Sep |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
83.228 |
Ye gallant men of England |
Ye gallant men of England |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
100-101 |
|
85.256 |
Ye gallant men of England |
Ye gallant men of England |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
113-114 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.328 |
Ye gallant men of England |
Ye gallant men of England |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
74-76 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P |
4.635 |
Yesterneet |
I geet up a-milkin' this mornin' |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
62-65 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
5.192 |
Yesterneet |
I geet up a-milkin' this mornin' |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0048432LC |
226.541 |
0 |
78-81 |
Waugh's Lancashire songs - cover title |
83.248 |
Yesterneet |
I geet up a-milkin' this mornin' |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and songs of old Lancashire |
WAUGH, Edwin |
1872226272 |
409.085 |
1.992 |
149-151 |
|
85.276 |
Yesterneet |
I geet up a-milkin' this mornin' |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0043498LC |
159.149 |
1.883 |
180-183 |
Vol. X in Waugh's Complete Works |
85.396 |
Yesterneet |
I geet up a-milkin' this mornin' |
WAUGH, Edwin |
Poems and Lancashire songs |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0008836LC |
27.817 |
1.870 |
63-67 |
Third edition, with additions. Dedicated to John Bright,M.P. Note new page sequence at back of book |
691 |
The neibors doon belaa |
Aa'll tell ye the dein's o'some o' the foaks that leeves i'wor neiborhood |
WEAMS, James |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
203 |
Tyneside |
84.078 |
The little fairy house |
When John came home from school today |
WEBB, Marion St. John |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
36 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
81.390 |
Cosmic |
I saw an alien in my back garden |
WEBB, Rachael |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
55 |
|
957 |
Milestones |
We are journeying on past the milestones |
WEBBER, Elizabeth |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
234 |
|
786 |
Owd Scrawmer |
Yo' o' know a mon co'ed owd Scrawmer |
WEBBER, Elizabeth |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
292-293 |
|
82.049 |
To an absent friend |
Whene'er I behold a lovely flower |
WEBBER, Elizabeth |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
188 |
|
958 |
To-day |
Live today |
WEBBER, Elizabeth |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
235 |
|
82.042 |
To-day |
Live To-day! |
WEBBER, Elizabeth |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
149 |
|
959 |
Nature |
Aw see theaw's rambler up an' deawn |
WEBSTER, Albert |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
236-237 |
|
81.515 |
Winter poem |
Walking in the silent wind |
WEBSTER, Siobhan |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
119 |
|
80.800 |
Cold drifter |
An elation, suiting any environment |
WELLS, Nev |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
24-25 |
|
82.760 |
All four seasons |
Spring |
WELLS, Sharnie |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
37 |
|
4.390 |
A 'gradely' mon |
I like a chap 'uts 'gradely', a mon whose word's his bond |
WELSBY, Thomas |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
58 |
|
6.320 |
Rapunzel |
Rapunzel, Rapunzel, let down your hair |
WEST, Michael |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
220-221 |
|
82.819 |
Guess who |
I'm nine years old |
WEST, Rebecca |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
70 |
|
6.440 |
(no title) |
Let Shakespeare, Milton, Moore and Walter Scott |
WHALLEY, Robert West |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
299-300 |
Extract only |
6.436 |
Good mornin' Peter |
Come, Peter, fling them Drafts away |
WHALLEY, Robert West |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
293-295 |
|
787 |
Good mornin' Peter |
Come, Peter, fling them Drafts away |
WHALLEY, Robert West |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
296-297 |
|
6.437 |
Mi nebbur |
Aw am a fool', aw must confess, an' hev bin o mi life |
WHALLEY, Robert West |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
295-296 |
Neighbours |
6.435 |
Michael Murphy |
My name is Michael Murphy, from the county of Tyrone |
WHALLEY, Robert West |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
292-293 |
|
788 |
Pendle Sally |
At Boggart Nook, at foot o' th' hill, up lonely Sabden valley |
WHALLEY, Robert West |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
298-299 |
|
6.434 |
Pendle Sally |
At Boggart Nook, at foot o' th' hill, up lonely Sabden valley |
WHALLEY, Robert West |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
291-292 |
|
6.438 |
The jolly parson |
One dismal night o'er Wilpshire moor as three men homeward went |
WHALLEY, Robert West |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
296-297 |
|
6.441 |
The power of music |
How wonderful is music's power |
WHALLEY, Robert West |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
300-302 |
|
6.439 |
The sporting overlooker |
There works a 'chap' at Blankfield Mill |
WHALLEY, Robert West |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
298-299 |
|
961 |
A song of gratitude |
Come, let our hearts and voices raise |
WHEELER, George H. B. |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
239 |
|
960 |
Mona's Isle |
Centred in the Irish sea |
WHEELER, George H. B. |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
238-239 |
|
81.496 |
Bonfire night |
Bonfires blazing, fireworks are amazing |
WHEELER, Richard |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
110 |
|
150 |
To Dora Wordsworth |
Daughter of that good man whose genuine strain |
WHEWELL, William |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
161 |
|
6.020 |
Peter Pedant, pedagogue: or words to that effect |
My first young love was Adaline |
WHITAKER, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
211-213 |
|
6.018 |
Rishton Moor and Norden Wood: extract |
It was one February night |
WHITAKER, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
205-208 |
|
6.019 |
Yon lad of eawrs |
Eawr Jim we' th' blithest lad i' th' teawn |
WHITAKER, William |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
208-210 |
|
42 |
A Breath of Spring |
There are those who say that after death |
WHITE, Bruce |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
191 |
|
41 |
Genesis |
Before all worlds existing |
WHITE, Bruce |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
190 |
|
81.349 |
My marvellous tiger |
I have a tiger, he is blue |
WHITE, Elizabeth |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
31 |
|
161 |
A charm |
Hallowed be thou, Vervein |
WHITE, John |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
32 |
|
81.535 |
Mars |
Mars the red planer |
WHITE, Michelle |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
129 |
|
82.842 |
My class |
Emma: She speaks weird, her motto's that's that |
WHITE, Rachel |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
85 |
|
5.325 |
A pastoral |
Allan is so kind to me |
WHITEHEAD, Alfred |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
39-40 |
Poem originally entitled 'A peasant girl's song' |
5.326 |
Stanzas |
Tell me, gentle spirit, tell |
WHITEHEAD, Alfred |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
40-41 |
Poem originally entitled 'To Adela' |
5.327 |
The confident lover |
Had I kingdoms they should be |
WHITEHEAD, Alfred |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
41 |
|
5.328 |
Woman's voice |
O there's no music like the sound |
WHITEHEAD, Alfred |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
42-43 |
|
790 |
A moorland coortin' song |
Ther's a cot i'th' owd lone, it's new papper't un o |
WHITEHEAD, H. B. |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
304-3-5 |
|
4.839 |
Eawr Joe |
Eawr Joe he's started coortin' neaw |
WHITEHEAD, H. B. |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
59-61 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
4.649 |
Eawr Joe |
Eawr Joe he's started coortin' neaw |
WHITEHEAD, H. B. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
142-143 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
789 |
Eawr Joe |
Eawr Joe he's started coortin' neaw |
WHITEHEAD, H. B. |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
302-304 |
|
4.656 |
Hard times |
Yoh munnut come agen hard times |
WHITEHEAD, H. B. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
150 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.859 |
Hard times |
Yoh munnut come agen hard times |
WHITEHEAD, H. B. |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
95 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
791 |
Henpeck't Sam |
Yoh mi weel stare un look at me |
WHITEHEAD, H. B. |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
305-308 |
|
4.650 |
Henpeck't Sam |
Yoh mi weel stare un look ut me |
WHITEHEAD, H. B. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
144-146 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.654 |
More heavens than one |
I know a little hamlet shy |
WHITEHEAD, H. B. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
148-149 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.653 |
Owd cot |
Ther's a little cot nestles i' th' hills |
WHITEHEAD, H. B. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
147-148 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.657 |
Song of the cenotaph |
I represent the sleeping dead |
WHITEHEAD, H. B. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
150-151 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.652 |
Sumb'dy's sunshine |
Ther's sumb'dy's bit o' sunshine |
WHITEHEAD, H. B. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
147 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.651 |
To henpeckt Sam |
Henpeckt Sam, is that thi name |
WHITEHEAD, H. B. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
146 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
4.655 |
Twothri weeshes |
A weesh or two just spun i' rhyme |
WHITEHEAD, H. B. |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
149 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
82.153 |
Harvest stone |
As I wander up to say 'Hello' |
WHITEHEAD, Ken |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
62-64 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
82.504 |
Loved and lost |
The grave hath won thee, and thy happy home |
WHITEHEAD, Mrs. Trafford |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
383-385 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
1.419 |
Loved and lost |
The grave hath won thee, and thy happy home |
WHITEHEAD, Mrs. Trafford |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
122-123 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
1.413 |
The first born |
Sleep, baby, sleep |
WHITEHEAD, Mrs. Trafford |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
113-114 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
2.199 |
The first-born |
Sleep, baby, sleep - and o'er thy infant dreams |
WHITEHEAD, Mrs. Trafford |
LANCASHIRE lyrics: modern songs and ballads of the County Palatine, edited by John Harland |
|
M0041626LC |
154.285 |
1.866 |
162-164 |
|
82.497 |
The first-born |
Sleep, baby, sleep - and o'er thy infant dreams |
WHITEHEAD, Mrs. Trafford |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
370-372 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
412 |
Cowd comfort |
On a windy neet wi' rain an' sleet |
WHITELEY, Carole |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
110-111 |
|
2.121 |
Robin's Victoria Cross |
There was not a robin redbreast |
WHITELEY, Phyllis |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
182-183 |
|
86.744 |
That bloody phone |
I don't like repetitive noises |
WHITSEY, Susan |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
91 |
|
5 |
Bash |
I heard my dad had written a poem |
WHITTAKER, Pamela |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
102 |
|
82.793 |
How strange |
How strange to think that |
WHITTAKER, Rachel |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
55 |
|
654 |
An everlasting spring |
Though my husband Bill is a real nice chap |
WHITTAKER, Ruth |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
61 |
|
10 |
Bonny Bash |
Neaw I were born and bred I' Bash, up yon wild and windy hill |
WHITTAKER, W. |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
101 |
|
568 |
Sit thi deawn |
There's a cosy little spot I know lies just inside o'Bowton |
WHITTLE, Ted |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
149-150 |
Lancashire poetry |
962 |
A sunny picture |
We stood amidst the golden corn |
WHITWORTH, Laura A. |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
242 |
|
963 |
Cradle song |
Sleep, baby, sleep |
WHITWORTH, Laura A. |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
242-243 |
|
87.769 |
Let Not Your Heart Be Troubled |
If your life seems full of trouble |
WHYTE, Marjorie |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
54 |
|
86.750 |
The downfalls of drink |
Have you ever stopped to think |
WIGGETT, Maureen |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
98 |
|
1.998 |
Kind hearts are more than coronets |
The band spoke truly. Yea, far more than all |
WIGGLESWORTH, John |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
118-119 |
|
2.235 |
The Passing of Victoria |
The blow has fallen; hardest blow of all |
WIGGLESWORTH, John |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
121-122 |
|
2.238 |
The pilgrim to his soul |
Cheer up, poor weary soul, cheer up |
WIGGLESWORTH, John |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
119-120 |
|
2.255 |
The sky in its beauties |
Now the sky is in its beauties |
WIGGLESWORTH, John |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
120-121 |
|
87.724 |
A Life Thats Saved |
I look around and see a world of pain |
WILD, Hilary |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
10 |
|
1.836 |
All that glitters is not gold |
She'd a silver spoon in her mouth when born |
WILD, Major |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
105-106 |
|
2.016 |
Love is blind |
Love is blind, yea and every tongue |
WILD, Major |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
98-100 |
|
2.128 |
Scatter seeds of kindness |
Scatter seeds of kindness and you'll reap them by and by |
WILD, Major |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
106-108 |
|
2.286 |
Three lovely vales |
Avoca to Moore might the sweetest vale be |
WILD, Major |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
100-104 |
|
357 |
For there are many truths |
I do not hold that stars can know my truths |
WILDE, Fred |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
15-16 |
|
87.814 |
Bathtime |
Do you watch |
WILDING, Sarah |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
102 |
|
5.133 |
Billy Guest |
Billy Guest ne'er did ameawnt to much |
WILDMAN, Joe |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
7 |
|
5.131 |
Fox Robin |
Fox Robin were as lively a cowt |
WILDMAN, Joe |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
6 |
|
5.134 |
Leyth's last chimbley |
Ther's but one solitary chimbley |
WILDMAN, Joe |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
7 |
|
4.384 |
Ode to a deein' pit: Hey! Parsonage! Th' art doomed, thi days're numbert |
Fer monny a yer tha's blighted t' teawn |
WILDMAN, Joe |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
55 |
|
4.383 |
T' last shift |
Bickershaw Colliery shut its gates today |
WILDMAN, Joe |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
55 |
|
4.153 |
T' seawnd o' t' sea |
Owd Billy sits on t'bollard |
WILDMAN, Joe |
WOVEN in Lancashire: some Lancashire dialect poems, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
950769223 |
85.689 |
1.983 |
74-75 |
|
86.390 |
A Kiss To The Cotswolds |
Two little words |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
32 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.405 |
A Maidens Prayer |
She knows of tracer and of flak |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
39 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.372 |
A Reminder |
Small yellow rose-leaf from Grandmamma's day |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
24 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.358 |
Advent |
Grey skies and a cold, sullen wind |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
19 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.340 |
All Change! |
Oh, which would you - Chester or Preston |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
10 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.379 |
April Shower |
What is an April shower? |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
27 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.370 |
Autumn Lawn |
I've cut my lawn. The new-mown turf is honey-sweet in scent and breath |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
24 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.386 |
Autumn Lights |
When the year grows old and lazy |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
30 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.355 |
Bathing Belle |
There's one little flower with courage divine |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
17 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.363 |
Belated Greetings |
Each year I sit, when Christmas comes |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
21 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.349 |
Birth of a Rose |
Heart of the moors on a clear Spring day |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
14 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.342 |
Black And Tans |
Why do we joke |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
11 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.371 |
Bluebells |
There is a mist among the springing grass |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
24 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.333 |
Breakfast In Bed |
Breakfast in bed is a dubious pleasure |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
7 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.414 |
By Candlelight |
The candle with its tiny flame |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
42 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.392 |
Canal Boats |
Canal boats do so little harm, though painted girls and brazen |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
33 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.434 |
Captains All |
Who are these lads in gay encrimson'd jackets |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
52 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.422 |
Cathedrals |
Hymn ye Christ Church on the Isis |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
46 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.388 |
Change |
Drought! |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
31 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.461 |
City Snow |
Softly you came on soft and slippered feet |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
66 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.409 |
Close Season |
Sweet peas are still arrayed in flowered cretonnes |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
41 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.418 |
Come to Church |
Come ye to Church! The notice board's appeal |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
44 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.438 |
Daffodils In Bowls |
Forget the snow, the sting of frozen rain |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
54 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.376 |
Dance Tune |
I have no soul for rock and roll |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
26 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.377 |
Daphne Mezereum |
Hail to thee flower, little Daphne Mezereum |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
27 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.447 |
Debs |
One little kiss,' said the almond |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
58 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.374 |
Donald the Duck |
I'm Donald |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
25 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.396 |
Earth Scent |
The warm, clean fragrance of the earth |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
34 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.432 |
Essence Of England |
A field of grass in high July |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
51 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.368 |
Evening Prayer |
A little village church |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
23 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.441 |
Farewell to Summer |
As Summer ends her little day |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
55 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.346 |
First on the list |
I am that chappie, with head bowed and bent |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
13 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.458 |
Flower of the harvest |
Whene'er I see your spikes and spires |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
64 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.375 |
Flower Show |
Who were these who were arrayed |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
26 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.366 |
Food for the Gods (A Plea To The Publican) |
What's the best "Good cheer" that should go with beer |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
22 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.448 |
Fox trot |
The tune of the dance was once, you know |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
59 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.451 |
Frost and fog |
Lace-curtained is Dawn's window to the day |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
60 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.417 |
Frustration |
I put this, sirs, for your approbation |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
44 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.466 |
Full Circle |
She came to us, small wonder |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
68 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.336 |
Greens |
The green of the grass and the green of the hedge |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
9 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.402 |
Holiday Junction |
The smell of fish. The spades and pails |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
37 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.381 |
Holiday Reflections |
The peace of God! Please keep our hearts and minds |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
28 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.413 |
Honeysuckle |
A breath of heaven pervades the darkened room |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
42 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.389 |
Inward Bound |
A little smudge of violet smoke |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
31 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.440 |
Jasmine |
Dainty little fingers, pointing t'wards the light |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
55 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.393 |
Just a Stray |
Brown-eyed creature, just a stray |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
33 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.404 |
Just The Job |
I don't want to be the chairman. He |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
38 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.450 |
Lady of the Lakes |
Derwentwater, lovely lady |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
60 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.431 |
Land O Ships |
The rustling wheat, with pallid finger tips |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
51 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.382 |
Little Summer |
These summers - St. Luke's and St. Martin's |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
28 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.350 |
Lorries |
Friendly giants of the road |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
15 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.337 |
Lost Dog |
Here's a lost dog, roaming the streets |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
9 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.426 |
Lovely Lavs |
I praise this good abode |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
48 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.362 |
Night Mail |
I run to the bridge with delight |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
20 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.356 |
Of the Western Approaches |
Great Church of the Western Approaches |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
18 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.452 |
On getting on |
Can anything hurt a man so much |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
61 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.351 |
Open Spaces |
Farewell, sweet meads! Though houses grow apace |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
15 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.401 |
Pennies For Heaven |
That Church collection! Just of late |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
37 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.443 |
Perpetual motion |
When I am thin |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
56 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.445 |
Prayer for animals |
God save the lost and homeless dog |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
57 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.424 |
Promise of Autumn |
Here is sweet Autumn once again |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
47 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.395 |
Pruning Time |
The blackened twigs, with Winter numb |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
34 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.369 |
Public Relations |
Please keep all your cafes and coffees |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
23 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.364 |
Public Transport |
O lady and gent of the 'bus |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
21 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.400 |
Reflection |
What the mirror says is true |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
36 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.365 |
Remember |
Remember the birds! Remember that crust |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
22 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.387 |
Rhapsody In Black |
Alas! Alack! He's in the black |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
30 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.449 |
Road hogs |
I am speeding down the highway at full forty miles per hour |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
59 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.339 |
Salute to the A. A |
Phyllis bids me write to-day |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
10 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.357 |
School Play |
The Play was good, the costumes neat |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
18 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.444 |
September day |
Now autumn's cool and cleansing hand |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
57 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.348 |
Sermon in Stone |
High in the sky thou dost preside |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
14 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.454 |
Shaggy dog story |
I'm looking at a shaggy dog |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
62 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.398 |
Six Day Week |
Bring your fees in, and your pay |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
35 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.427 |
Snnokered |
Yellow, green and brown! Blue-pink-black to "go to town" |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
49 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.411 |
So What? |
Last year, amid cusses |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
41 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.439 |
Sole Survivor |
The frost has laid his icy hand |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
54 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.408 |
Sound Advice |
It is better to sit |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
40 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.399 |
Spirits |
There's a spirit, grim and ghostly |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
36+ |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.435 |
Still Getting On |
They've called me "Old man" now for many a day |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
52 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.437 |
Sun Over England |
Sun from a high and a drying sky |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
53 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.380 |
Teachers Prize |
This is the time when hot and hard-clench'd hands |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
28 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.465 |
Testimonials |
Young Biggs is to go on inspection |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
67 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.455 |
Thaw |
The thaw has come, and blankets of white snow |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
62 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.341 |
The Bank Manager |
From the birth of a loan to its death |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
11 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.384 |
The Building Site |
A busy workman flutters to and fro |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
29 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.394 |
The Certain Remedy |
We'll be well towards prosperity set |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
34 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.407 |
The Chain |
High on the moors, where pours the rain |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
40 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.359 |
The Chambermaid |
She wakes one at the break of day |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
19 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.462 |
The Crocus |
Who is this who's been around |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
66 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.403 |
The Daisies |
Daisies! |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
38 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.347 |
The Daisy |
A little flower doth sweetly raise |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
13 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.344 |
The Dandelion |
His name should be "Dandy," when all's said and done |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
12 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.354 |
The Dunkirk Spirit |
The spirit now needed is that of Dunkirk |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
17 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.361 |
The Eternal Triangle |
One peaceful love of childhood was collecting foreign stamps |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
20 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.406 |
The Farmers Joy |
I plough and hoe and scatter |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
39 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.360 |
The Gift |
I want a camisole or a casserole |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
19 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.343 |
The Great Unwanted |
I sorrow (do you?) for the strays |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
12 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.335 |
The Herald |
Clear on the warmer evening air |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
8 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.378 |
The Hollyhock |
The hollyhock beside my wall |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
27 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.453 |
The honours board |
Whose is this name writ here in shining gold |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
61 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.428 |
The Phlox |
Candelabrum of the border |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
49 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.446 |
The primrose |
There is a flower now born anew |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
58 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.338 |
The Rain Flower |
The little hydrangea is looking more blue |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
9 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.410 |
The Silent House |
No eager nose to jerk my elbow high |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
41 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.436 |
The Snowdrop |
Who is this flower so frail and shy |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
53 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.353 |
The Tulip |
The tulip is the soldier of the border |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
17 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.425 |
The Way of all Flesh |
I've fallen into a rut |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
47 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.457 |
The Western |
I love the good old western |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
63 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.429 |
The Window Box |
A little box, but full of cheer |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
50 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.416 |
The Winners |
There are two little blooms of late Summer |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
43 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.433 |
The Worker |
A tiny form clings to a swaying string |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
51 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.419 |
Those Houses |
There was a young lady called Hilda |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
45 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.391 |
Those Little Men |
Those little men, both king and queen |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
32 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.334 |
Thoughts |
Walk, O my thoughts, down these green aisles |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
8 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.420 |
Threepence for Luck |
Whenever I'm wanting a threepenny stamp, and lacking |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
45 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.415 |
Tight Old! |
Tight 'old! they cry. Please do, or die |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
43 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.430 |
To a Cloud |
O white and woolly, dainty thing |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
50 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.464 |
To A Collar-Stud |
Accursed thing, and, though rotund, so small |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
67 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.421 |
To a Spring Lamb |
Little lamb, who made me |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
45 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.385 |
To A Wood |
Dear wood of childhood, thou art nearly gone |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
30 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.456 |
To my lawn mower |
O good companion of life's rougher ways |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
63 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.352 |
To My Very Oldest Friends |
Farewell, farewell my oldest friends! |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
16 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.373 |
Tramps |
Tramps! Tramps! Tramps! The boys are sailing |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
25 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.345 |
Troopships |
Make a signal, "T" for "Tommy" |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
13 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.459 |
Twelfth month |
The oldest month, and cold and drear |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
64 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.442 |
Two-fingered typist |
The best shorthand typist I know |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
56 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.460 |
Vintage |
Twinkle, twinkle little car |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
65 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.383 |
West Wind |
There is a mellowness of earth and sky |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
29 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.412 |
Wet Earth |
Wet earth after rain! A day dawning fine |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
42 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.423 |
Wider Buses |
Buses? Some would like 'em slower |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
46 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
86.463 |
Windy Morning |
The sky is wild above the lofty elms |
WILKES, Arnold |
Breakfast In Bed |
WILKES, Arnold |
M0117199LC |
454.708 |
1.961 |
66 |
A book of verse printed in Liverpool |
494 |
Aunt Betty's funeral |
A sad occasion love, but at least |
WILKINSON, L. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
43 |
|
457 |
The song of the needles |
The pattern is complex, progress is slow |
WILKINSON, L. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
2 |
|
81.354 |
Colours |
Brown is a tree swaying in the wind |
WILKINSON, Laura |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
33 |
|
82.633 |
The old man's reverie |
An old man sat on the low porch seat |
WILKINSON, T. T. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
534-535 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.231 |
The old man's reverie |
An old man sat on the low porch seat |
WILKINSON, T. T. |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, (part 2, modern). Collected, compiled, and edited, with notes, by John Harland, 3rd ed., corrected, revised and enlarged by T. T. Wilkinson |
|
715811827 |
79.254 |
1.976 |
534-535 |
Reprinted from 3rd edition, first published 1882. Revised by T T Wilkinson |
84.149 |
For England |
O let me sing a lyric to the nations |
WILLETTE, A. J. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
71 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.150 |
Lost love |
Farewell: we meet no more |
WILLETTE, A. J. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
72 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
81.567 |
Alphabet poem |
A is an ant very, very small |
WILLEY, Laura |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
150 |
|
86.757 |
The kiss |
A kiss is pressing of two lips together |
WILLIAMS, Derek |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
105 |
|
2.081 |
On joining the colours |
Our comrades dear |
WILLIAMS, George Mansell |
Biographies, sketches and rhymes, edited by Sam Mellor |
CALDER VALLEY POETS |
M0012737LC |
53.479 |
1.916 |
199-200 |
|
4.658 |
Ormskirk Market |
In Ormskirk Market to and fro |
WILLIAMS, Hilda |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
152-153 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
81.332 |
Flowers |
Flowers in the fields |
WILLIAMS, James |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
24 |
|
82.693 |
If |
If West ham win the cup I'll most likely faint |
WILLIAMS, James |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
1 |
|
80.805 |
How shall I say? |
I have walked the dunes |
WILLIAMS, John Trevor |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
32-33 |
|
4.323 |
Ammon's dialect warks |
Thirs noan monny foak ut Ah've weeshed Ah could meet |
WILLIAMS, Ron |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
16 |
|
5.195 |
Grenfilt thro' t' seasons |
When t' Springtoime dawns i' t' village |
WILLIAMS, Ron |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
24 |
|
5.194 |
Mi mooerlond church |
Ah walk op t' quiet pathway, ut leads opon tuh t'mooer |
WILLIAMS, Ron |
IN Lancashire language: Lancashire poems, selected by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895085 |
401.717 |
1.991 |
23 |
|
82.795 |
How strange |
How strange to think that someone else |
WILLIAMS, Sarah |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
56 |
|
81.290 |
Hand poem |
I like to touch my dad's hand |
WILLIAMS, Susie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
3 |
|
82.816 |
Animals |
I love animals |
WILLIAMSON, Niall |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
69 |
|
6.219 |
The German war-cry of 1870 |
Hark! The Teutons' voices swelling |
WILLIS, T. A. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
99-100 |
|
81.393 |
My chocolate aliens |
They floated along |
WILLITTS, Ellie |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
57 |
|
4.822 |
Johnny Green's description of Tinker's Gardens |
Heigh! Hall o' Nabs, an' Sam, an' Sue |
WILSON, Alexander |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
33-35 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
84.318 |
Johnny Green's description of Tinker's Gardens |
Heigh! Hall o' Nabs, an' Sam, an' Sue |
WILSON, Alexander |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
52-56 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
84.317 |
Johnny Green's trip fro' Owdam to see a balloon ascent |
To-day at noon fro' th' loom aw went |
WILSON, Alexander |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
50-52 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
84.320 |
Johnny Green's trip fro' Owdam to see the Liverpool Railway |
Last New Year's Day eawr Nan hoo said |
WILSON, Alexander |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
61-64 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
81.591 |
Johnny Green's Weddin' |
Neaw lads, wheer are yo beawn' so fast |
WILSON, Alexander |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
285-288 |
|
84.319 |
Johnny Green's wedding and description of Manchester College |
Neaw lads, wheer are yo beawn' so fast |
WILSON, Alexander |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
57-60 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
793 |
Jone's ramble fro' Owdam to Karsy Moor races |
Come Dick, an' Nan, an' Davy |
WILSON, Alexander |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
314-316 |
|
792 |
Jonny Green's wedding, and description of Manchester College |
Neaw, lads, wheer are yo' beawn so fast? |
WILSON, Alexander |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
310-312 |
|
84.321 |
Paganini; or, Manchester fiddling mad |
Oh!,, have you heard the noise of late |
WILSON, Alexander |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
65-67 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
84.323 |
The Buckingham cheque |
You've heard of Billy Hogarth, whose paintings are sublime |
WILSON, Alexander |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
77 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
5.165 |
The poets corner |
Where the sun shines so brightly, both daily and nightly |
WILSON, Alexander |
The FESTIVE wreath: a collection of original contributions read at a literary meeting held in Manchester, March 24th, 1842, at the Sun Inn Long Millgate, edited by John Bolton Rogerson |
|
M0001205LC |
2.926 |
1.842 |
37-42 |
|
84.322 |
The poet's corner |
When the Sun shines so brightly, both daily and nightly |
WILSON, Alexander |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
70-75 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
321 |
From Hitler, wi' love |
A great little place is eawr valley |
WILSON, Jean |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
138 |
|
692 |
Cum, Geordy haud the bairn |
Cum Geordy, haud the bairn |
WILSON, Joe |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
204 |
Tyneside |
689 |
Keep yor feet still |
Wor Geordy and Bob Johnson byeth lay i' one bed |
WILSON, Joe |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
199-201 |
Tyneside |
1.787 |
Aw wish yor muther wad cum; or, wor Geordy's notions aboot men nursin bairns |
Cum, Geordy, had the bairn |
WILSON, Joseph |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
73-74 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.788 |
Dinnit clash the door! |
Oh, dinnet clash the door! |
WILSON, Joseph |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
75 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
1.789 |
Thee deeth o' Renforth: the champion sculler of the world |
Ye cruel Atlantic Cable |
WILSON, Joseph |
NORTH country poets: poems and biographies of natives or residents of Northumberland... [Vol. 1], (Modern section), edited by William Andrews |
|
M0081097LC |
317.300 |
1.888 |
76 |
Northumberland, Cumberland, Westmoreland, Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire |
82.159 |
Nature's own |
Shafts of sunlight through golden leaves |
WILSON, Marguerite |
Selected writings from Lancashire authors |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0187321LC |
685.798 |
1.999 |
68 |
90th anniversary anthology of the Lancashire Authors' Association edited by Betty Lightfoot |
81.532 |
I love my cat |
My cat is called Amber, she's witty and smart |
WILSON, Michael |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
128 |
|
4.821 |
Jone's ramble fro' Owdam to Karsy Moor races |
Come Dick, an' Nan, an' Davy |
WILSON, Michael |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
31-33 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
84.302 |
Jone's ramble fro' Owdam to Karsy Moor races |
Come Dick, an' Nan, an' Davy |
WILSON, Michael |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
Dec-14 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
84.306 |
Medley of devils |
There are devils of all sorts, and of every rank and station |
WILSON, Michael |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
22-23 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
84.305 |
Salford Fair |
On Whitsun Monday morn, aw went to Salford fair |
WILSON, Michael |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
19-21 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
84.303 |
Soldier Jack |
I'm a Soldier Jack who went with Dick |
WILSON, Michael |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
15-18 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
84.307 |
The chapter of foes |
The foes of old England - France, Holland, and Spain |
WILSON, Michael |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
24 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
84.308 |
The Peterloo massacre |
Come, Robin, sit deawn, an aw'll tell thee a tale |
WILSON, Michael |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
26-27 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
82.535 |
Avarice |
What man in his wits had not rather be poor |
WILSON, Rev. Thomas |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
439 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
82.528 |
The toper's plea for drinking |
If life, like a bubble, evaporates fast |
WILSON, Rev. Thomas |
BALLADS and songs of Lancashire, ancient and modern / collected, compiled and edited, with notes by John Harland |
|
M0018155LC |
79.242 |
1.875 |
429-430 |
2nd ed. Collected by John Harland and revised by T T Wilkinson |
2.964 |
Homeless |
It's come lass, we've got to pull out |
WILSON, S. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
158-159 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.965 |
The anger of the sea |
You look at me with grey cold face |
WILSON, S. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
160 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
1.443 |
Avarice |
What man in his wits had not rather be poor |
WILSON, Thomas |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
156 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
84.311 |
Humours of Smithy Door Market |
Good laws! what a medley of groups |
WILSON, Thomas |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
31-34 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
84.315 |
Rough Joe in search of a wife |
Aw'm a country lad yo mun know, an' aw live wi' my feyther an' mother |
WILSON, Thomas |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
43-45 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
84.314 |
Salford Fair |
Come Sam an' Jack, an' Bill an' Dick, an' Ned an' Joe an' Dan |
WILSON, Thomas |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
40-42 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
4.829 |
The country wedding |
Sam, at Jack o' Neddur's, wur tir't o' livin' single life |
WILSON, Thomas |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
46 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
84.313 |
The country wedding |
Sam, at Jack o' Neddur's, wur tir't o' livin' single life |
WILSON, Thomas |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
38-40 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
81.593 |
The countryman's description of the collegiate church |
Yo gentlefolk aw, listen unto mea song |
WILSON, Thomas |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
291 |
|
84.312 |
The countryman's description of the collegiate church |
Yo gentlefolk aw, listen unto mea sung |
WILSON, Thomas |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
35-37 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
84.316 |
The meddling parson |
My theme is of a parson, a cobbler's son is he |
WILSON, Thomas |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
46-49 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
1.435 |
The toper's plea for drinking |
If life, like a bubble, evaporates fast |
WILSON, Thomas |
The BEST of old Lancashire in poetry and verse, selected and edited by Cliff Hayes |
|
1872226507 |
419.431 |
1.992 |
148 |
Same ISBN as "The River Wyre: people and places" |
84.309 |
The weaver |
In dirty streets, 'mid filth and smoke |
WILSON, Thomas |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
28-29 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
84.310 |
Young Edward slain at Waterloo |
Sweet smiling Aurora was glimmering o'er us |
WILSON, Thomas |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
29-31 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
84.304 |
Impromtu |
Six jolly fellows in the Castle met |
WILSON, William |
The songs of the Wilsons: with a memoir of the family and several additional songs never before published, edited by John Harland |
WILSON, Michael |
M0108163LC |
414.918 |
1.865 |
8 |
Songs by Michael, Thomas and Alexander Wilson of Manchester are included in this volume. Some are in Lancashire dialect and have South-East Lancashire subjects. |
81.440 |
My magic powers |
If I had magic powers |
WINDER, Lisa |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
81 |
|
82.832 |
The forest's story |
I remember when life was good |
WINSTANLEY, Brittanee |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
78 |
|
458 |
Provence |
Come and linger a while in this land of the sun |
WINTER, F. |
PASSING clouds |
|
M0303931LC |
782.876 |
2.001 |
3 |
|
86.310 |
A Long Way Out |
Well, they always say the same, "You are a long way out!" |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
32 |
|
86.307 |
A Nice Afternoon |
Fancy meeting you up here - and how are you to-day? |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
29 |
|
86.293 |
After a Visit To Haworth |
The fabled street, the uphill street of dreams |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
15 |
|
86.315 |
Ammon Wrigley |
There was a boy at Castleshaw |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
37 |
|
87.995 |
An Aunt and Grandmother Lived Near The Park |
An Aunt and Grandmother lived near the park |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Lark in Smoke |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012318LC |
50.846 |
1.963 |
23 |
|
87.988 |
At four or five o'clock |
At four or five o'clock - no later hour |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Lark in Smoke |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012318LC |
50.846 |
1.963 |
16 |
|
86.280 |
Beloved Hills |
Beloved hills we roamed from childhood hours |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
1 |
|
87.986 |
Beyond familiar places |
Beyond familiar places lay The Town |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Lark in Smoke |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012318LC |
50.846 |
1.963 |
14 |
|
86.316 |
Bleakhey Nook |
Bleakhey Nook is quiet now |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
38 |
|
87.997 |
Christmas was Christmas then - so long to wait |
Christmas was Christmas then - so long to wait |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Lark in Smoke |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012318LC |
50.846 |
1.963 |
25 |
|
86.320 |
Denshaw |
Once there was an Old Cross |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
42 |
|
86.299 |
Dobcross Dob |
Do you know the crossroads |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
21 |
|
86.305 |
Drought 1959 |
One afternoon, the summer near its end |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
27 |
|
86.294 |
Eld or Geld? |
Why was Runninghill so named |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
16 |
|
86.286 |
George Shaw |
George Shaw was a gentleman who lived at St. Chad's |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
|
|
86.287 |
Grey Lady |
Don't take any notice! |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
9 |
|
87.992 |
High Days and Holidays in summertime |
High days and holidays in summertime |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Lark in Smoke |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012318LC |
50.846 |
1.963 |
20 |
|
86.321 |
Highwayman |
Only the old tavern that faces Staley Street |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
43 |
|
86.331 |
Hills of Home |
Alphin and Alderman |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
53 |
|
86.323 |
History |
There was a man, John |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
45 |
|
87.993 |
Holidays By the Sea! Those Blissful Days |
Holidays by the sea! Those blissful days |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Lark in Smoke |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012318LC |
50.846 |
1.963 |
21 |
|
86.298 |
Holy Trinity, Dobcross |
A poet of our times, one John Betjeman |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
20 |
|
86.313 |
House Hunting |
It may be rather rudery |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
35 |
|
87.996 |
I Learnt To Read Before I Went To School |
I learnt to read before I went to school |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Lark in Smoke |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012318LC |
50.846 |
1.963 |
24 |
|
86.329 |
I like a Village Shop |
I like a little village shop |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
51 |
|
86.296 |
In This Wild Countryside |
In this wild countryside one sometimes dreams |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
18 |
|
86.328 |
Indian Head |
Wings against the hillside that morning in the past |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
50 |
|
86.306 |
James Platt |
It was so long ago |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
28 |
|
86.288 |
Janes Bird |
A little girl of long ago |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
10 |
|
86.308 |
Jeptha |
Mighty Man of Valour |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
30 |
|
86.302 |
Lee Cross |
As I walked by Lee Cross |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
24 |
|
86.303 |
Marsh Marigolds |
In Greenfield as the people know |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
25 |
|
86.309 |
Mountain Ash |
Bright brown hare so full of grace |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
31 |
|
86.281 |
Names Like Bells |
Uppermill, Greenfield, Delph, Dobcross |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
3 |
|
87.985 |
No Ice Cream Chimes |
No ice cream chimes! But ice cream carts came round |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Lark in Smoke |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012318LC |
50.846 |
1.963 |
13 |
|
86.324 |
Not For Me |
Not for me a cruising ship, all "matched luggage" |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
46 |
|
86.311 |
Old House |
We never own an old house |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
33 |
|
86.319 |
Old Mill |
Old mill in the valley, derelict |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
41 |
|
86.292 |
Old Saddleworth Names |
Buckley and Whitehead, Lees and Schofield |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
14 |
|
86.291 |
Once There Was Music |
Once there was music here |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
13 |
|
86.301 |
Packhorse Bridges |
If all the little bridges high upon the moor |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
23 |
|
86.282 |
Pennine Magic |
Bats in the belfry |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
4 |
|
86.314 |
Pule Hill |
Once there were Volunteers |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
36 |
|
86.325 |
Remembrance |
I sometimes think of how we went that day |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
47 |
|
86.295 |
Riders |
The racecourse is gone and the riders too |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
17 |
|
87.987 |
Sally go round the sun |
Sally go round the sun - the runic spell |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Lark in Smoke |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012318LC |
50.846 |
1.963 |
15 |
|
86.284 |
Snowfall |
Quietly falls the snow |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
6 |
|
86.285 |
Somebody Gave Peter |
Somebody gave Peter a little glass ball |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
7 |
|
86.289 |
St.Chad |
Before the Saxon herdsmen on the banks of the Tame |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
11 |
|
86.283 |
Swans at Uppermill |
You sailed upon the millpond proud as ships |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
5 |
|
86.290 |
Talking |
Little lambs and daffodils dancing in the fields |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
12 |
|
86.300 |
Thames and Tame |
Southern Thames and Northern Tame |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
22 |
|
86.322 |
The Black Lad |
Riding Riding Riding high |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
44 |
|
87.998 |
The books of childhood! Christmas Annuals |
The books of childhood! Christmas Annuals |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Lark in Smoke |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012318LC |
50.846 |
1.963 |
26 |
|
86.297 |
The Farm Cart |
There is an old farm cart |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
19 |
|
86.330 |
The Rooks |
They came to shoot the rooks down |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
52 |
|
86.327 |
The Stile |
I had walked for a mile |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
49 |
|
87.990 |
The streets round Rochdale Road |
The streets round Rochdale Road, where I was born |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Lark in Smoke |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012318LC |
50.846 |
1.963 |
18 |
|
87.994 |
The Town That Throbbed With Engines Through The Day |
The town that throbbed with engines through the day |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Lark in Smoke |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012318LC |
50.846 |
1.963 |
22 |
|
86.312 |
The Well |
When they made the well that Monday, there was so much ado |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
34 |
|
86.317 |
The Wheel |
I'd like to talk to thosewho heard of other days |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
39 |
|
87.991 |
Unaltered yet the streets |
Unaltered yet the streets my childhood knew |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Lark in Smoke |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012318LC |
50.846 |
1.963 |
19 |
|
86.304 |
War Memorial |
They wrote our names upon a stone |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
26 |
|
87.989 |
What dreams of fabled splendour |
What dreams of fabled splendour in the names |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Lark in Smoke |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012318LC |
50.846 |
1.963 |
17 |
|
87.885 |
When I was small |
When I was small the German Bands had gone |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Lark in Smoke |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012318LC |
50.846 |
1.963 |
10 |
|
86.318 |
When Robert was a Young Man |
When Robert was a young man, he worked on the canal |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
40 |
|
86.326 |
Whitsuntide |
The past lives again |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
48 |
|
86.332 |
Yorkshire Street |
Oldham is a busy town |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Rhyming Through Saddleworth |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012315LC |
50.838 |
1.960 |
54 |
|
87.884 |
|
In clouded skies the lark still soars and sings |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
Lark in Smoke |
WINTERBOTTOM, Vera |
M0012318LC |
50.846 |
1.963 |
1 |
|
82.962 |
The sun |
The sun explodes |
WISSETT, Lauren |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
152 |
|
6.255 |
Evening |
With half-shut eyes and dreamy flood of hair |
WITHERS, Percy |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
150 |
Sela - nom de plume |
6.282 |
Luck at last |
Faint was the sound of the falling leaves |
WITHERS, Percy |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
178-179 |
Sela -nom de plume |
6.254 |
Night |
Amid the myriad stars on this dark night |
WITHERS, Percy |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
149-150 |
Sela - nom de plume |
6.256 |
On a coming of age |
Behind thee lies the passage of thy years |
WITHERS, Percy |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
150-151 |
Sela - nom de plume |
6.211 |
Sidney at Penshurst |
Ah, there again the blackbird's evesong |
WITHERS, Percy |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
56-60 |
|
6.281 |
The north wind |
The wind that hurtles the snow |
WITHERS, Percy |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
177-178 |
Sela - nom de plume |
84.049 |
Apollo and Silenus |
Apollo played. Bird, flower, beast and tree |
WOLFE, Humbert |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
3 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
86.738 |
SSHHHH! |
Your hair, melancholy, turned day into night |
WOOD, Brian |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
85 |
|
81.459 |
If I was the size of a lion |
If I was the size of a lion |
WOOD, Jordan |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
92 |
|
6.291 |
Ballade |
Come, let us greet the cheerful days |
WOOD, Leonard B. |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
187 |
|
81.333 |
A short way of saying hello |
A message from space |
WOOD, Michael |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
24 |
|
87.807 |
Your comforter |
Sorrow, may circle us, God will comfort |
WOOD, Olive M. |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
95 |
|
81.475 |
Mums! Mums! |
Mums |
WOODS, Derek |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
99 |
|
80.806 |
T. F. B. |
The tranquility of the night |
WOODS, Dianne |
Don't judge this book by its cover |
THE MERSEYSIDE ASSOCIATION OF WRITERS WORKSHOPS |
1871474000 |
355.507 |
1.990 |
33 |
|
82.943 |
Hidden treasures |
One day I found a treasure trove |
WOODS, Kathryn |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
140-141 |
|
84.067 |
Finisterre |
O that on some forsaken strand |
WOODS, Margaret L. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
21 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.069 |
King Mark |
Old and grey was Mark the King |
WOODS, Margaret L. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
23 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.070 |
On the step |
The little old lady |
WOODS, Margaret L. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
24-26 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
84.068 |
What if I love thee |
What if I love thee? 'Tis for me alone |
WOODS, Margaret L. |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
22 |
Most of the poems are by members of Manchester Lyric Club |
81.313 |
Animals |
Monkeys swing |
WOODWARD, Rachel |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
15 |
|
82.807 |
Splitting up |
Dads are caring |
WOOLARD, James |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
63 |
|
170 |
At Hawkshead |
I could record with no reluctant voice |
WORDSWORTH, William |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
67-68 |
|
171 |
Esthwaite Water: the unclaimed garments |
Well do I call to mind the very week |
WORDSWORTH, William |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
68 |
|
172 |
Furness Abbey |
But now to school |
WORDSWORTH, William |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
70-71 |
|
174 |
The River Duddon |
Sole listener, Duddon! To the breeze that played |
WORDSWORTH, William |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
72-75 |
|
173 |
Windermere and Hawkshead |
Bright was the summer's noon when quickening steps |
WORDSWORTH, William |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
71-72 |
|
82.881 |
Have you ever imagined |
Have you ever imagined |
WORMALD, Kaylie |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
106 |
|
82.835 |
The forest's story |
I remember when life was good |
WORTHINGTON, Tamisa |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
80 |
|
43 |
Tis far the better way |
Some folks are always grumbling |
WRIGHT, Elsie |
An ACCRINGTON miscellany: prose and verse by local writers / compiled by Ronald Y. Digby and Alice Miller; edited by J.C. Goddard |
|
M0042255LC |
155.707 |
1.970 |
191-192 |
|
305 |
Tis far the better way |
Some folks are always grumbling |
WRIGHT, Elsie |
A SECOND Bacup miscellany: prose and verse by local writers, compiled by Ronald Y.Digby and Kenneth F.Bowden; edited by K.F. Bowden |
|
902228196 |
65.207 |
1.975 |
196 |
|
642 |
In praise of home |
The rolling hills of Rossendale that stand so firm and fair |
WRIGHT, Emily Cooper |
A way with words |
ROSSENDALE WRITERS |
M0109919LC |
424.529 |
1.992 |
24 |
|
6.271 |
To Apollo |
Why kneels the bard before the shrine |
WRIGHT, J Kentish |
A SELECTION of verses from the Manchester University magazine, 1868-1912, with a preface by Sir Alfred Hopkinson - Vice-Chancellor from 1898 to 1913 |
|
M0129212LC |
491.587 |
1.913 |
163-164 |
|
967 |
A messenger of heaven |
What I would like to be in Heaven |
WRIGHT, James William |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
253 |
|
966 |
A wish |
I send you a wish sincere |
WRIGHT, James William |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
252 |
|
968 |
Tis far the better way |
Some folks are always grumbling |
WRIGHT, James William |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
254 |
|
82.865 |
My old fogies |
My mum is mad |
WRIGHT, Neil |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
98 |
|
87.251 |
A Surrey Album, 1976 |
The Sprays near Fernhurst cast a haze |
WRIGHT, Roy |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
29 - 30 |
|
87.226 |
Alas Poor Dylan! |
Do not forget, do not forget |
WRIGHT, Roy |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
4 |
|
87.256 |
Children, 1945 - 1980 |
Children play while the sunshafts |
WRIGHT, Roy |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
35 |
|
87.257 |
Christchurch (Oxon) House "Nous" 1980 |
The old men don't remember very well |
WRIGHT, Roy |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
37 - 38 |
|
87.252 |
Envoi, 1980 |
Go, little weeds, to the bitter and jobless |
WRIGHT, Roy |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
30 |
|
87.253 |
Old Thunderboots |
When Sidney Caulfield was the boss |
WRIGHT, Roy |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
31 |
|
87.249 |
Photograph Album |
Pay homage to a sound and honest man |
WRIGHT, Roy |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
27 |
|
87.231 |
Red Tape Worms |
At sunset on the battlefield |
WRIGHT, Roy |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
9 |
|
87.229 |
Rumba |
Move swiftly to this stealthy rhythm |
WRIGHT, Roy |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
7 |
|
87.255 |
Saltwood |
The walls of Saltwood glinted white and grey |
WRIGHT, Roy |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
34 |
|
87.245 |
Sensation |
In the blue summer evenings |
WRIGHT, Roy |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
23 |
|
87.254 |
The Cat |
In my brain as in his lair |
WRIGHT, Roy |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
33 |
|
87.230 |
The Lovers |
She must think that I am strong |
WRIGHT, Roy |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
8 |
|
87.250 |
The Origins of Gibbet Hill near Haslemere |
There was a time before the Welfare State |
WRIGHT, Roy |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
28 |
|
87.227 |
War and Peace |
O, men loaded down with fears |
WRIGHT, Roy |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
5 |
|
87.228 |
War Dance |
Let us be gay |
WRIGHT, Roy |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
6 |
|
86.659 |
Abused |
Yes, I heard the door a-closing |
WRIGHT, Shaun |
THE Pied Piper of words: an anthology of poetry by northern writers / edited by Madeleine Fish |
|
1898722080 |
1.050.445 |
0 |
7 |
|
87.258 |
Tom Tower, Oxford |
From Northern grammar schools the chemists come |
WRIGHT, T. |
Weeds and flowers |
FORBES, Duncan and WRIGHT, Roy |
M0357596LC |
1.155.194 |
1.980 |
39 |
|
526 |
Owd Betty's advice |
So Mary, lass, tha'rt bahn to wed |
WRIGHT, William |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
96-97 |
Yorkshire poetry |
151 |
(no title) |
Aw's bred un born I' Friezland |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
167 |
Two verses only quoted |
152 |
(no title) |
Whene'er I drink of Friezland ale |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Lancashire Literary Worthies |
ANGUS-BUTTERWORTH, L. M. |
B8037394 |
6.204 |
1.980 |
168 |
Three verses quoted |
4.661 |
A bad cowd |
Aw'm nawt i' poor fettle toh neet |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
158-159 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
737 |
A bad cowd |
Aw'm nawt i' poor fettle toh neet |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
92-93 |
1980 reprint |
758 |
A country courtship |
When Aw started a courtin' eaur Moll |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
247-248 |
1980 reprint |
3.806 |
A December Night |
O warm is the ingle nook |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
150 |
|
3.814 |
A doomed oak |
When wur theau born owd rugged oak |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
157-158 |
|
85.565 |
A doomed oak |
When wur theau born owd rugged oak |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
16-17 |
|
3.764 |
A Driving Shot in a Driving Wind |
A driving shot in a driving wind |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
78 |
|
741 |
A driving shot in a driving wind |
A driving shot in a driving wind |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
110 |
1980 reprint |
85.595 |
A driving Shot in a Driving Wind |
A driving shot in a driving wind |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
75 |
|
81.598 |
A flint arrow-head found on Pule Hill |
The same wild hills are round me flung |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
311-313 |
|
751 |
A flint arrow-head found on Pule Hill |
The same wild hills are round me flung |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
211-212 |
1980 reprint |
3.755 |
A Flint Arrow-head found on Pule Moor |
The same wild hills are around me flung |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
62-63 |
|
3.772 |
A Good Day |
O for a bye-road, up the dale |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
98-99 |
|
3.795 |
A greeting |
Where rolling sheep-lands seek the moor |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
136-137 |
|
736 |
A greeting |
Where rolling sheep-lands seek the moor |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
90-91 |
1980 reprint |
85.593 |
A greeting |
Where rolling sheep-lands seek the moor |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
72-73 |
|
3.788 |
A hunting day |
I need not go a-hunting, I need not go again |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
126-128 |
|
85.599 |
A Hunting Day |
I need not go a-hunting, I need not go again |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
82-84 |
|
3.736 |
A Hunting Morn |
A hunting morn is o'er the hill |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
28 |
|
85.614 |
A Hunting Morn |
The winter sun is o'er the Chew |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
116 |
|
4.324 |
A Lancashire neet |
A Lancashire neet is the king o' neets, An' there's nowt i' this world as hearty an' kind |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
17 |
|
799 |
A Lancashire neet |
A Lancashire neet is the king of neets |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
329-330 |
|
569 |
A Lancashire neet |
A Lancashire neet is the king of neets |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
151-152 |
Lancashire poetry |
85.584 |
A Lancashire neet |
A Lancashire neet is the king of neets |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
51-52 |
|
3.738 |
A Merry Thrush |
A bonnie brown thrush in a whitethorn bush |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
31 |
|
3.761 |
A moorland grave mound |
O gentle Spirit of the hills |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
72-74 |
|
746 |
A moorland grave mound |
O gentle spirit of the hills |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
158-160 |
1980 reprint |
3.782 |
A moorland inn |
Near Broadstone Clough, in Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
115-117 |
|
749 |
A Moorland inn |
Near Broadstone Moors, in Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
182-184 |
1980 reprint |
3.796 |
A Parson's Pitchers |
What had you in those pitchers, John |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
138-140 |
|
757 |
A rainy evening on the Stanedge Moors |
The moor is dark and wild the sky! |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
245-246 |
1980 reprint |
3.810 |
A rare old Inn |
The Ram's Head stands by Denshaw moor |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
152 |
|
795 |
A song of parting |
Come shap yorsel, an' let's go wom |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
322-323 |
|
3.812 |
A song of parting |
Come, stir good folks, and let's go home |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
154 |
|
85.607 |
A Springtime Letter |
Oh, here is Mollie's letter |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
104-105 |
|
82.050 |
A springtime thrush |
A bonnie brown thrush in a whitethorn bush |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
193 |
|
3.787 |
A summer's night on a moor |
I climb the rough stairs up the moor |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
125 |
|
85.567 |
A Summer's Night on a Moor |
I climb the rough stairs up the moor |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
20 |
|
3.803 |
A Trout Stream |
Wading up a trout stream on a summer day |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
148 |
|
728 |
A winter's neet |
Come, Jamie, poo thi' chair op, lad, its nobbut drafty theer |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
45-47 |
1980 reprint |
3.791 |
All I Ask |
Old tales to tell when old friends meet |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
131 |
|
85.571 |
All I ask |
Old tales to tell when old friends meet |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
28 |
|
769 |
Alphin and Alderman |
In Rimmon Clough there dwelt of yore |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
292-293 |
1980 reprint |
85.597 |
An Alehouse Pot |
Aw wonder what the potter thowt |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
77-79 |
|
733 |
An old Friarmere hunting day |
Jamie o' Topper's coom deawn th' lone |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
68-70 |
1980 reprint |
3.815 |
An old Friarmere hunting day |
Jamie o' Topper's coom deawn th' lone |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
159-161 |
|
794 |
An old Friarmere hunting day |
Jamie o' Topper's coom deawn th' lone |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
320-322 |
|
3.800 |
An old north riding road |
I saw a man in a coat of gree |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
143 |
|
85.610 |
An Old Shepherd |
In the ingle nook tonight |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
108-109 |
|
81.597 |
An owd Friezlonder |
Aw'r bred un born i' Friezlond |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
309-311 |
Frieslond |
723 |
An owd Friezlonder |
Aw'r bred un born i' Friezlond |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
35-36 |
1980 reprint Frieslond |
4.660 |
An owd Friezlonder |
Aw'r bred un born i' Friezlond |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
156-157 |
Frieslond. A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
3.730 |
Apology |
I was born on a bare, bleak hill |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
15 |
|
715 |
Apology |
I was bred on the cold grey hills |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
2nd page after title page |
1980 reprint |
85.560 |
Apology |
I was bred on the cold grey hills |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
9 |
|
3.743 |
April on the Mooredge |
I heard a blackbird singing in the wood by Wicken Hall |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
41-42 |
|
85.612 |
At the rising of the Sun |
Climbing the fields to the moor height |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
112 |
|
3.807 |
August days |
I'm wearing heather in my cap |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
150 |
|
798 |
Bill o' Jack's grace |
We're o' ready neaw an' fere op o' th'itch |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
328 |
|
3.742 |
Bill's o' Jack's |
As I walked out to Bill's o' Jack's |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
39-40 |
A song for Lads and Lasses. This famous old inn stood in the heart of thr finest moorland scenery in Yorkshire. It has just been demolished to the great regret of the thousands that loved it. |
85.618 |
Bill's o' Jack's |
As I walked out to Bill's O' Jack's |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
124-125 |
|
3.780 |
By Ladhill Bridge |
By Ladhill Bridge, and up the way |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
111-113 |
|
740 |
By Ladhill Bridge |
By Ladhill Bridge, and up the way |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
108-110 |
1980 reprint |
756 |
Castleshaw |
Where the lordly moors of Stanedge |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
236-239 |
1980 reprint |
3.801 |
Castleshaw and the Roman fort |
Where the lordly moors of Stanedge |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
144-147 |
inscribed to Thos Thompson ESQ |
85.588 |
Castleshaw valley |
The dear old days like jewels bright |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
60-64 |
|
3.809 |
Come out, the Spring is roaming |
Come out, the Spring is roaming |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
151 |
'the first cock of hay drives the cuckoo away' is an old local saying |
85.606 |
Come out, the Spring is roaming |
Come out, the Spring is roaming |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
103 |
|
748 |
Coming night - Knott Hill |
Now darkly comes o'er Broadstone's fading height |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
181 |
1980 reprint |
85.582 |
Donty's Supperin' Do |
Now if yo'll mak' a less noise an' hearkin a bit |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
43-48 |
|
3.798 |
Exit |
Life is ashes, it is said |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
141 |
|
85.617 |
Exit |
Life is ashes, it is said |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
120 |
|
3.762 |
Flowers in an Oldham Alehouse |
You four flowers, did you grow |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
75-76 |
|
85.581 |
Flowers in an Oldham Alehouse |
You four flowers, did you grow |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
41-42 |
|
81.596 |
Friezland ale |
Whene'er I drink of Friezland ale |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
306-309 |
|
3.739 |
Friezland ale |
Whene'er I drink of Friezland ale |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
32-34 |
Friezland-said to mean furze or gorse land-forms part of the Pennine parish of Saddleworth, Yorkshire |
720 |
Friezland ale |
Whene'er I drink of Friezland ale |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
27-29 |
1980 reprint |
4.659 |
Friezland ale |
Whene'er I drink of Friezland ale |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
154-156 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
85.574 |
Friezland ale |
Whene'er I drink of Friezland ale |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
31-33 |
|
744 |
Friezland and Friarmere |
Two dalesmen sat by an old oak 'speer' |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
138-139 |
1980 reprint |
85.590 |
Grenfilt |
You may go from Delph to Hades |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
66-67 |
|
742 |
Grouse driving on Bill Jack's moors |
When the Grouse Wind roves through an August sky |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
134-135 |
1980 reprint |
3.756 |
Grouse Driving on Bill's o' Jack's Moors |
When the Grouse Wind roves through an August sky |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
64-65 |
|
3.794 |
Hearing the Cuckoo on Crompton moor |
A new voice on the hills, enchanting and clear |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
135 |
|
85.570 |
Heather Time on Highmoor |
On old Highmoor heather's in bloom |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
27 |
|
3.805 |
I love the road |
I love the road o'er the moorland broad |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
150 |
|
85.577 |
I Love the Road |
I love the road o'er the moorland broad |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
36 |
|
3.741 |
In 'Auld Lang Syne' |
I was born by the moors at the wane of the year |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
37-38 |
|
3.792 |
In Saddleworth |
It's good to be in Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
132-133 |
|
85.591 |
In Saddleworth |
It's good to be in Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
68-69 |
|
81.997 |
In the country |
O for some low, grey, gobled inn |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
1 |
|
85.562 |
In the Country |
Oh for a bye-road up the dale |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
Dec-13 |
|
3.802 |
In Wimberry Time |
Oh bother this sewing, my cotton's too rough |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
148 |
|
716 |
Inscriptions |
When I sit by the hearth at midnight alone |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
1-Feb |
1980 reprint |
4.662 |
Inscriptions |
When I sit by the hearth at midnight alone |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
159-160 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
85.592 |
Inscriptions |
When I sit by the hearth at midnight alone |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
70-71 |
|
85.589 |
Jim |
We played by steam and hedgerow |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
65 |
|
85.564 |
Life |
Life is short un fere uncertain |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
15 |
|
1.008 |
Mat o' Jamie's |
Mi fayther's gone to bunt his piece |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
282-284 |
1980 reprint |
85.604 |
Mat o' Jamie's |
Mi fayther's gone to bunt his piece |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
94-98 |
|
3.732 |
My Father and Mother |
When I sit by the hearth at midnight alone |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
18-19 |
|
3.797 |
My Way |
I go my way o'er hill and dale |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
141 |
|
85.572 |
Nan O'Ratcher's |
Hoo ne'er does nowt fro' morn toh neet |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
29 |
|
797 |
Nem o' th' owd poots at a churn getting |
Is that thee, Nem, hay do come in |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
324-328 |
|
3.740 |
O'er the Hills and Far Away |
In April days when the young buds peep |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
35-36 |
|
3.733 |
On a Yorkshire Moor |
Over a hill the west wind loves |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
20-21 |
|
964 |
On a Yorkshire moor |
Over a hill the west wind loves |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
246-248 |
|
717 |
On a Yorkshire moor |
Over a hill the west wind loves |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
3-Apr |
1980 reprint |
3.781 |
On Doldrum Hill in June |
Just you and I on Doldrum Hill |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
114 |
|
85.563 |
On Doldrum Hill in June |
Just you and I on Doldrum hill |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
14 |
|
965 |
On hearing a song-thrush near the town |
I heard a song-thrush near the town |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
249-250 |
|
735 |
On hearing the cuckoo on Crompton Moor |
A new voice on the hills, enchanting and clear |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
89 |
1980 reprint |
3.765 |
On seeing a moorland lad in the town |
Who needs to be told that he comes from the hills |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
79-80 |
|
729 |
On seeing a moorland lad in the town |
Who needs to be told that he comes from the hills |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
56-57 |
1980 reprint |
85.615 |
On the Stanedge Moors |
When the Stanedge moors are August brown |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
118 |
|
745 |
Owd cronies |
Mi warp's nobbut twitly, un mi weft's nobbut smo |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
154-157 |
1980 reprint |
767 |
Owd Puddle's alehouse |
Owd Puddle keeps an alehouse ut back o' Dont's o' Ben's |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
276-280 |
1980 reprint |
85.568 |
Owd Puddle's alehouse |
Owd Puddle keeps an alehouse ut back o' Dont's o' Ben's |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
21-24 |
|
800 |
Owdham footbo' |
It's run an' jump an' hop an' skip |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
330 |
|
4.828 |
Owdham footbo' |
It's run an' jump an' hop an' skip |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
SONGS of the people: Lancashire dialect poetry of the Industrial Revolution, Brian Hollingworth, editor |
|
M0129168LC |
61.422 |
1.977 |
43 |
isbn wrong on this entry - should be either M0015409LC or M0013727LC |
404 |
Owdham footbo' |
It's run an' jump an' hop an' skip |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Lancashire authors' anthology: verse and prose in standard English and dialect, edited by John P. Berry |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0031238LC |
118.573 |
1.984 |
105 |
|
3.776 |
Parting |
Two shepherds came over the moor one day |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
107 |
|
724 |
Parting |
Two shepherds came over the moor one day |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
37 |
1980 reprint |
3.759 |
Roving o'er a Moorland |
Roving o'er a moorland, singing a song |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
69 |
|
85.569 |
Roving o'er a Moorland |
Roving o'er a Moorland, singing a song |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
26 |
|
761 |
S.L.T. Died April 17th 1910 |
Round him the Gods eternal flung |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
267 |
1980 reprint |
763 |
Saddleworth |
A Saddleworth lad is the lad for me |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
269 |
1980 reprint |
3.804 |
Saddleworth |
Said Jack the shepherd, strong and hale |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
149 |
|
3.734 |
Saddleworth Church |
Revered I stand |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
22-26 |
|
760 |
Saddleworth Church |
Revered I stand |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
258-262 |
1980 reprint |
85.602 |
Saddleworth Church |
Revered I stand |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
87-92 |
|
85.596 |
Saddleworthshire |
Said Jack the shepherd, strong and hale |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
76 |
|
3.789 |
Spring in the North Country |
From the arms of haggard winter |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
129 |
|
81.595 |
Spring in the North Country |
From the arms of haggard winter |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
306 |
|
721 |
Spring in the North Country |
From the arms of haggard winter |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
30 |
1980 reprint |
85.573 |
Spring in the North Country |
From the arms of haggard winter |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
30 |
|
85.601 |
Springtime Calling |
With a good steak in my pocket |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
86 |
|
85.576 |
Sunbeam and Shadow |
Wind and shadow and sun |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
35-36 |
|
725 |
Th' heaunds ur eaut agen |
The days of the tempest are howling again |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
38 |
1980 reprint |
3.773 |
Th' heunds are eaut agen |
The dogs of the tempest are howling again |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
100 |
|
1.009 |
The Bill o' Jack's grace |
Neaw then, o yoh naybors, yoh'r fere op o'th' 'itch |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
315 |
1980 reprint |
3.768 |
The brown hare of Whitebrook Head |
When down the dale by Alphin they heard John Andrew's horn |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
85-86 |
|
752 |
The brown hare of Whitebrook Head |
When down the dale by Alphin they heard John Andrew's horn |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
213-214 |
1980 reprint |
3.745 |
The Call of the Country |
I'm coming to the hills again! |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
44-45 |
|
753 |
The call of the Country |
I'm coming to the hills again! |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
221-222 |
1980 reprint |
85.579 |
The Dalesman |
I met a dalesman in the town |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
39 |
|
755 |
The Delph Show |
Fro' th' Isle o' th' Skye to th' Laddy Rocks |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
232-233 |
1980 reprint |
3.767 |
The fairy etcher |
A fairy stood on my window sill |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
83-84 |
Frost Pictures on the Window Pane |
727 |
The fairy etcher |
A fairy stood on my window sill |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
43-44 |
1980 reprint |
85.583 |
The fairy etcher |
A fairy stood on my window sill |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
49-50 |
|
3.766 |
The Fields of Lurden |
The fields that lie on Lurden |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
81-82 |
|
731 |
The fields of Lurden |
The fields that lie on Lurden |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
58 |
1980 reprint |
3.778 |
The fool |
A fool is he, a drunken sot |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
108 |
|
3.754 |
The Green Road |
The red is on the rowan, where the throstle takes its fill |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
60-61 |
|
3.777 |
The heather cock |
Though sweet the song of soaring lark |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
108 |
|
3.751 |
The Hill Country |
The Dawn came singing over the hill |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
53-54 |
|
734 |
The hill of sleep |
Here Morn her earliest anthem sings |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
71-72 |
1980 reprint |
4.663 |
The hill of sleep |
Here Morn her earliest anthem sings |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
161-162 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
3.774 |
The hill of sleep |
In my green pulpit of the hills |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
101 |
|
82.034 |
The hills o' Longdendale |
When lanes were April ribboned |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Red rose leaves: a collection of prose and verse by members of the Lancashire Authors' Association; edited by Edith Pearce |
LANCASHIRE AUTHORS' ASSOCIATION |
M0004813LC |
10.631 |
1.925 |
114-115 |
|
3.769 |
The Hills of Longdendale |
When lanes were blossom-scentedand linnet songs were new |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
87 |
|
3.770 |
The Homestead |
Out on the hill in wind and rain |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
88-91 |
|
85.605 |
The Homestead |
Out on the hill in wind and rain |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
99-102 |
|
4.664 |
The homestead |
Upon a hill where winds are wild |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
162-166 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
738 |
The homestead |
Upon the hill where winds are wild |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
94-97 |
1980 reprint |
3.811 |
The Hounds are Out at Lingards |
The hounds are out at Lingards |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
152 |
|
750 |
The men of the Churchside |
Up the lane and through the meadows |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
204-209 |
1980 reprint |
3.771 |
The Men of the 'Churchside' |
Up the lane and through the meadows |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
92-97 |
In the following lines I have strung together many, if not all, of the old folk and farm beliefs, customs and usages once common in the Pennine parish of Saddleworth |
726 |
The millstone |
Why art thou here, grey moorland stone |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
39 |
1980 reprint |
759 |
The moorland men - The coronation of George V June 22nd 1911 |
We're Saddleworth men and moorland bred |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
249-250 |
1980 reprint |
3.735 |
The Pennines |
In the Pennine dales in springtime |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
27 |
|
85.603 |
The Pennines |
In the Pennine dales in springtime |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
93 |
|
3.783 |
The road to Ripponden |
Up the road by Rooden water |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
118-119 |
|
85.616 |
The Roamer's Return |
Home to dear old Saddleworth, home once more |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
119 |
|
3.752 |
The Royal Tiger Inn |
At the Tiger Inn at Austerlands |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
55 |
|
85.600 |
The Royal Tiger Inn |
At the Tiger inn at Austerlands |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
85 |
|
3.760 |
The Ruined farmstead |
Out on the hill in the mist and rain |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
70-71 |
|
85.578 |
The Ruined Farmstead |
Out on the hill in the mist and rain |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
37-38 |
|
85.585 |
The Saddleworth Hills |
The brave old hills of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
52 |
|
3.747 |
The Scouthead Road |
The road from top of Austerlands that swings out to the east |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
46-48 |
|
3.746 |
The Scouthead Road |
The road from top of Austerlands that swings out to the east |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
|
|
85.609 |
The Scouthead Road |
The road from top of Austerlands that swings out to the east |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
106-107 |
|
3.785 |
The Shelf Road |
I leave the stifling valley and I climb the breezy Shelf |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
122-123 |
|
730 |
The Shelf road |
I leave the stifling valley and I climb the breezy shelf |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
48-50 |
1980 reprint |
3.744 |
The Song of a Tramp |
I'm brown and tanned as the wild moorland |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
43 |
|
3.784 |
The song of the Lightside Valley |
There's a song of a moorland valley |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
120-121 |
|
754 |
The song of the Lightside valley |
There's a song of a moorland valley |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
229-231 |
1980 reprint |
3.775 |
The song thrush |
Fling to the sky |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
102-106 |
|
722 |
The song thrush |
Fling to the sky |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
31-34 |
1980 reprint |
85.586 |
The Song Thrush |
I fling to the sky |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
53-57 |
|
3.748 |
The Songthrush near a Town |
I heard a songthrush near the town |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
49-50 |
|
85.611 |
The Songthrush near a Town |
I heard a songthrush near the town |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
110-111 |
|
3.813 |
The throstle's lament |
Where are the bonnie hawthorns gone? |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
155-156 |
|
3.758 |
The Twelfth of August |
It is the twelfth of August, I cannot rest in bed |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
68 |
|
3.793 |
The War Memorial |
Thou art not reared in some down-trodden place |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
134 |
|
191 |
The Watermill |
Deep in the clough there stands a wreck |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
LANCASHIRE in prose and verse: an anthology, compiled by R.H. Case |
|
M0041700LC |
154.454 |
1.930 |
149-154 |
|
81.599 |
The Watermill |
Deep in the clough there stands a wreck |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
313-319 |
|
718 |
The Watermill |
Deep in the clough there stands a wreck |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
5-Sep |
1980 reprint |
3.753 |
The Watermill |
Down in a clough there stands a wreck |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
56-59 |
|
3.737 |
The west wind in spring |
O wind from the moorlands that lie to the west |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
29-30 |
|
81.594 |
The west wind in spring |
O wind from the moorlands that lie to the west |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
304-305 |
|
732 |
The west wind in spring |
O wind from the moorlands that lie to the west |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
66-67 |
1980 reprint |
543 |
The west wind in spring |
O wind from the moorlands that lie to the west |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
MY North countrie: an anthology of poetry and prose of the Northern counties, collected and arranged by Wilfred Pickles |
|
B5506075 |
81.026 |
1.955 |
116-118 |
Lancashire poetry |
85.613 |
The west wind in spring |
O wind from the moorlands that lie to the west |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
113-114 |
|
3.786 |
The wind of the hills |
There's a bracing wind on the highlands |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
124 |
|
719 |
The wind of the hills |
There's a dreary wind in the lowlands |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
10-Nov |
1980 reprint |
3.749 |
To a Moorland Lass on her Eighteenth Birthday |
Here's to you Jennie Morison, a year has gone by |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
51 |
|
796 |
To a southern friend |
Yo' tell me deawn i'Hereford on a springtime moon |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
323 |
|
3.750 |
To a southern friend |
You tell me down in Hereford on a spring-time morn |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
52 |
|
85.575 |
To a southern friend |
You tell me down in Hereford on a spring-time morn |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
34 |
|
762 |
To John Haigh, on his 82 birthday |
Op wi' um, mi lads, here's health to owd John |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
268 |
1980 reprint |
85.598 |
To the Moorland lass on her eighteenth birthday |
Here's to you Jennie Morison, a year has gone by |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
80-81 |
|
3.731 |
To the Reader |
Like the wind among the heather |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
16-17 |
|
85.561 |
To the Reader |
Like the wind among the heather |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
10-Nov |
|
85.587 |
Town and Country |
I couldn't live on your hills, she said |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
58-59 |
|
3.757 |
Town and Country |
The weary town grinds at its toil |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
66-67 |
|
764 |
Triolets: A December night |
O warm is the ingle nook |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
275 |
1980 reprint |
766 |
Triolets: August days |
I'm wearing heather in my cap |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
275 |
1980 reprint |
765 |
Triolets: Molly's Kiss |
When Molly kissed me yesterday |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
275 |
1980 reprint |
3.763 |
Tunstead |
Grey among the high green meadows |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
77 |
|
747 |
Tunstead |
Grey among the high green meadows |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
161- |
1980 reprint |
85.594 |
Up Denshaw Way |
Up Denshaw way from Oldham town |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
74-75 |
|
3.790 |
We'll go again a- Roaming |
We'll go again a-roaming, a roaming we'll go |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
130 |
|
3.799 |
Whitebrook Head |
The rock-strewn moor behind the farm |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
142 |
|
743 |
Whitebrook Head |
The rock-strewn moor behind the farm |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
136-137 |
1980 reprint |
85.566 |
Winds of the Pennines |
Winds of the Pennines fresh and free |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
18-19 |
|
3.779 |
Youth and age |
Down the path, from upland meadows |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of the Pennine Hills: a book of the open air |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0012129LC |
49.628 |
1.938 |
109-110 |
|
739 |
Youth and age |
Down the path, from upland meadows |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Songs of a moorland parish with prose sketches: a collection of verse and prose, chiefly relating to the parish of Saddleworth |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
M0063748LC |
273.651 |
1.912 |
106-107 |
1980 reprint |
85.580 |
Youth and Age |
Down the path, from upland meadows |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
Under Pennine skies: an anthology of poetry and song, collected and arranged by Alan Fletcher |
WRIGLEY, Ammon |
950926809 |
49.619 |
1.983 |
40 |
|
86.193 |
Back in the old schoolyard |
Cast your mind back in time to days when you were small |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
46-47 |
|
86.188 |
Beautiful Tripe |
Tripe, tripe, beautiful tripe |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
52-53 |
|
86.191 |
Black Pud Stud |
I'm the black pud stud from Bolton I like 'em big and round |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
58-59 |
|
86.090 |
Buggerlugs Loves Sugarbutty |
I'm your Buggerlugs, you're my Sugarbutty |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
32-33 |
|
86.083 |
Clocking Well Fed Up |
Our factory isn't all that bad |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
23 |
|
86.089 |
Commotion In the Cludgie |
If Owd Teddy Giles had gone in for a trophy |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
31 |
|
86.070 |
Dixie's Dog |
One day not very long ago in a patch of pea soup fog |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
7 |
|
86.075 |
Elephantitis |
The other day I got up, I'd been suppin' t'night before |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
13 |
|
86.088 |
Fisherman's Friend |
Go and have a suck on a Fisherman's Friend: Don't you dare stop till you get to the end |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
30 |
|
86.079 |
Holes in the Road |
The water board and gasmen |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
18 |
|
86.093 |
King Arthur and the Chastity Belt |
King Arthur held his Guinevere right tenderly in his arms |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
38-39 |
|
86.073 |
Knocking Nelly and the Mothman |
Now Nelly's had some real close shaves I've told you about before |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
11 |
The Knocking Nelly Trilogy: Part Three |
86.072 |
Knocking Nelly and the Sixty Niner |
I've heard some say the tales of Nelly are both coarse and shocking |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
10 |
The Knocking Nelly Trilogy: Part Two |
86.080 |
Lancashire Lasses |
I know a girl and she's called Anabella |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
19 |
|
86.189 |
Let's all shout for Hughie! |
Every night at twelve o' clock there's a little game we play |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
54-55 |
|
86.074 |
Manchester Recruits |
Cold and grey on a market day |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
12 |
|
86.069 |
Our Bill and the Concrete Mixer |
Our Bill had a concrete mixer |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
6 |
|
86.068 |
Pie Saturday |
Roll up, roll up and purchase your pies |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
5 |
|
86.082 |
Plastic Pies |
Standing on the station at a quarter past eleven |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
22 |
|
86.084 |
Queens of the Highway |
I'll tell you of the Queens of the Highway |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
24 |
|
86.087 |
Robin Hood and the Bogey Rolling Contest |
In days of old when men were men |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
28-29 |
|
86.194 |
Saturday cowboys |
Half past nine on a Saturday morning |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
48-49 |
|
86.078 |
Sid Farouk |
Emmanuel Shark was an agent |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
17 |
|
86.071 |
The Ballad of Knocking Nelly |
Gasman, coalman, water board or the bloke who mends the telly |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
8-Sep |
The Knocking Nelly Trilogy: Part One |
86.085 |
The Half Timer |
At five o'clock th'alf timer wakes, he's only just a lad |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
25 |
|
86.092 |
The Martians Have Landed in Wigan |
There are strange goings on in a quaint Northern town |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
36-37 |
|
86.077 |
The One Place for Me |
Some live by the sea and with them I'll agree |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
16 |
|
86.076 |
The Police Constable and the Rare Butterfly |
Harold Brown was thirty three and worked in Barclay's Bank |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
14-15 |
|
86.091 |
The Return of Farting Arthur |
The news got round, the word had spread, it would be a special day |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
34-35 |
|
86.086 |
Transport digs |
There's songs of transport drivers and about their fancy rigs |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
26-27 |
|
86.192 |
Vasectomy |
Albert was a quiet lad, he liked a quiet life |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
44-45 |
|
86.095 |
When granny sang me songs |
There's a shoebox in the attic full of fading photographs |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
42-43 |
|
86.195 |
When your clogs let water in |
What can you do when your clogs let water in |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
50-51 |
|
86.190 |
Who Put The Thing In Thingie? |
For thirteen years I went to school, to learn my ABC |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
56-57 |
|
86.081 |
Young Molly Kershaw |
I met a young lady last weekend |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
Wrigley's Writings: songs and monologues |
WRIGLEY, Bernard |
1872895492 |
693.262 |
1.999 |
20-21 |
|
2.967 |
Poplars |
Lofty and sinuous, tall and strong |
WRIGLEY, Maurice J. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
163 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
2.966 |
The wreck |
I trusted and pledged my troth |
WRIGLEY, Maurice J. |
CONTEMPORARY Lancashire poetry, edited by S. Fowler Wright |
|
M0035643LC |
132.295 |
1.928 |
161-162 |
The County Series of Contemporary Poetry - Vol 5 |
81.417 |
Red |
Rosy apples are red |
WROE, Elizabeth |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
70 |
|
82.973 |
A parody - little car |
Twinkle, twinkle little car |
WYLIE, Jack |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
157 |
|
82.972 |
Winter weather |
The cold clinging mist |
WYLIE, Matthew |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
157 |
|
81.551 |
Colours from the world |
What is white |
WYNN, Amanda |
COSMIC West Lancashire, edited by Carl Golder |
|
754301575 |
691.291 |
1.998 |
139 |
|
969 |
Normal college hymn |
Praise and thanks to Thee, O Father |
YATES, Annie May |
Lancashire authors: a series of biographical sketches |
SWANN, John Randal |
M0015058LC |
66.683 |
1.924 |
256 |
|
5.027 |
My gronfaither, Willie |
My gronfaither, Willie |
YATES, Edwin |
Poems and songs, edited by George Milner with a preface and an introductory essay on the dialect of Lancashire considered as a vehicle for poetry |
WAUGH, Edwin |
M0003355LC |
8.279 |
1.893 |
144-147 |
Contains selections from "Poems and songs", 1883, and "Poems and songs, second series", 1889 |
2.898 |
A grand time o' th' year |
It's a grand time o' th' yer to be eawt in |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
109-110 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
4.315 |
A Lancashire mon |
Ah wer bred anung th' hills, but Ah'm Lanky |
YATES, Henry |
LANCASHIRE lingo lines, edited by Bob Dobson |
|
1872895441 |
660.378 |
1.999 |
11 |
|
2.932 |
A Lancashire mon |
Aw wer bred amung th' hills, but aw'm Lanky |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
135-136 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
4.666 |
A Lancashire mon |
Aw wer bred amung th' hills, but aw'm Lanky |
YATES, Henry |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
168 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
801 |
A Lancashire mon |
Aw wer bred amung th' hills, but aw'm Lanky |
YATES, Henry |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
339 |
|
2.830 |
A new year's resolution |
Aw wish theaw'd give o'er grumblin' lass |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
74-76 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.766 |
A poet's reverie |
Calmly I sit within a shade of bliss |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
6-Aug |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
84.921 |
A poet's reverie |
Calmly I sit within a shade of bliss |
YATES, Henry |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
232-233 |
|
2.880 |
A wreath o' blue smook |
A wreath o' blue smook, filt'rin' up throo green leaves, mon |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
81-83 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.912 |
Allus do thi best |
Wodsoe'er thi task be |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
130-131 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.795 |
An Old Letter |
Faded and crumpled, brown and grey |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
14-15 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.905 |
Autumn |
Trees are reefin' o ther sails |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
119-120 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.892 |
Aw'm growin' owd |
For sixty yers aw've hed mi' fling |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
100-101 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.801 |
Britannia |
They chided us for growing old |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
24-26 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.827 |
By the river |
Watching by the river |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
67-69 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.930 |
Ceawnt fifty |
Ther's an' owd gowden rule 'at aw learnt when a lad |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
133-134 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.885 |
Cuckoo |
A twel'month full hed pass'd id reawnd |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
90-91 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.909 |
Cupid's Darts |
This world 'ud soon grow stale |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
125-126 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.796 |
Dead Daisies |
I see them now before me lie |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
15-17 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.815 |
Dead! |
Yestreen we knew that, full of life |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
47-49 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.798 |
Desire and destiny |
A warrior wished for the tented fields |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
20-22 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
6.037 |
Desire and destiny |
A warrior wished for the tented fields |
YATES, Henry |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
234-236 |
|
2.794 |
Dost thou remember? |
Dost thou remember life's spring tide? |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
Dec-14 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.879 |
Eawr bonny rose |
Ther's a fleawr 'at grows i' gardens |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
80-81 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.813 |
Eleanore |
By the sad sea |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
44-46 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.904 |
Friendship |
If ther's owt i' this world 'at con soothe mi sad spirit |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
118 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.893 |
Gi'e me a frolic |
Gi'e me but a frolic to leaven mi life |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
101-103 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.799 |
Give me back the love |
Give me back the love I gave thee |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
22-24 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.817 |
Home |
There is no holier influence |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
51 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.931 |
Hooam ageon |
They may long as they like for ther eawtlandish places |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
134-135 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.901 |
Hooam's best |
Hooam ageon, wi' mi trailin' feet |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
114-115 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.822 |
Hope: a sonnet |
I sing of hope the ladder up to heaven |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
58 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.888 |
I' bonny June |
When aw wer a lad aw went swingin' deawn t' loyne |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
93-94 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.763 |
I love but thee |
When spring flies o'er with laughing eyes |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
1-Feb |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.890 |
If aw'd mi way |
If aw'd mi way aw'd live to smile |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
96-98 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.825 |
In memoriam |
Where the Atlantic breaks upon the coast |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
63-66 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.891 |
It's allus sunny somewheer |
I' th' owd days o' happy childhood |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
98-99 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.903 |
It's wod we mek do |
Aw once yerd mi mam give her answer reet weel |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
116-117 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.811 |
John Henry Newman |
A long life spent in groping for the light |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
41-42 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.826 |
John Ruskin Obit 1900 |
Why say he died? Can one be said to die |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
66-67 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.768 |
June |
O wedded June |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
10-Dec |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
6.033 |
June |
O wedded June |
YATES, Henry |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
228 |
|
2.895 |
Love rules |
I' every walk we plant eawr feet |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
104-105 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.882 |
May dew |
Th'owd squire to th' matron doffed his hat |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
85-87 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.910 |
Maytime |
Come doff yo'r clogs an' don yo'r shoon |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
126-128 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.818 |
Memories |
I know not why it should be so |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
52-53 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.884 |
Mi idols |
When things go wrang, an' cleawds hang low |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
88-90 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.907 |
Mollie |
Aw corn'd explain just why |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
122-123 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.803 |
Morning |
When morning's beams break from the rosy east |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
28-30 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.810 |
Musings |
White sea sand for the couch, I lie |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
39-41 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
6.030 |
Never mind 'em |
Never heed wod foos may say |
YATES, Henry |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
223-224 |
|
2.808 |
Nightfall: In The Mountains |
A calm steals o'er the landscape, and the light |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
37-38 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.805 |
On dreamland's shore |
On dreamlands shore I walk betimes |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
32-33 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.797 |
On the threshold: meditations on a new year |
Another year! What pigmies are we all |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
17-20 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.767 |
Only for thee |
Only for thee, when life was young |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
8-Oct |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
6.032 |
Only for thee |
Only for thee, when life was young |
YATES, Henry |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
226-227 |
|
2.889 |
Owd Dan |
Ther's a mon 'at aw allus shake hands wi' |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
94-96 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
81.604 |
Owd Peter |
Owd Peter wer a gradely mon |
YATES, Henry |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
335-336 |
|
6.031 |
Owd Peter |
Owd Peter wer a gradely mon |
YATES, Henry |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
224-225 |
|
2.911 |
Owd Peter |
Owd Peter wer a gradely mon |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
128-130 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.899 |
Owd Simon |
Owd Simon at Windy Gap loved a good tune |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
110-112 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.764 |
Philosophy |
Be wise and learn |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
2-Apr |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
6.038 |
Philosophy |
Be wise and learn |
YATES, Henry |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
236-237 |
|
2.929 |
Pleasant thowts |
Are yo' searchin' change o' scene |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
131-132 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.812 |
Sabbath Bells |
Oh, the soothing sabbath bells |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
42-44 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.894 |
Sing at yo'r werk |
It's one o' t' best wrinkles aw've piked up i' life |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
103-104 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.821 |
Spring is Coming |
Spring is coming o'er the meadows |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
56-57 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.806 |
St George |
Meeting around the board once more |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
34-35 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.820 |
St. George And Merrie England |
Here's to the sainted man of old |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
55-56 |
Poems by Blackburn author. Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft' A Toast |
2.829 |
Stop at hooam to-neet |
It's thirty yer this varra day |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
71-73 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
81.603 |
Stop at hooam to-neet |
It's thirty yer this varra day |
YATES, Henry |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
333-335 |
|
6.029 |
Stop at hooam to-neet |
It's thirty yer this varra day |
YATES, Henry |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
221-223 |
Marriage |
2.883 |
Th' Nick o' Pendle |
They wer breet days an' bonny, an' milestooans wer few |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
87-88 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
802 |
Th' Nick o' Pendle |
They wer breet days an' bonny, an' milestooans wer few |
YATES, Henry |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
340 |
|
2.897 |
Th' owd heawsehowd gods |
Aw dreamt last neet o' th' heawsehowd gods |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
107-108 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.908 |
Th' owd knocker -up |
For mercies smo, or nowt at o |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
124-125 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.896 |
The land o' Saint George |
It's favoured o' natur' |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
106-107 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.823 |
The old trysting place |
Tis a spot of remembrance, tho' years have gone by |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
58-60 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.809 |
The Summer's Dead |
The trees are full of sighs and pain to-night |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
38-39 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.900 |
Things o come reet i' th' end |
Aw used to chafe an' fret mi soul |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
112-114 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.906 |
Three wishes |
Aw dreamt a dreom one winter's neet |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
120-122 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.804 |
To king frost |
Twas meet that thou should'st end thy spite |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
30-32 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.828 |
To memory |
Come memory with thy magic wand |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
69-70 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.824 |
To my brother authors |
No niche in fame for learned store |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
60-63 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.816 |
To Thee, Our Father |
To thee, our father, king of kings |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
49-50 |
Poems by Blackburn author. Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft' Hym for the coronation of Edward VII |
2.878 |
Tom's gone hooam |
Th'sun is shinin' breet this mornin' |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
78-80 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.877 |
Try to understand things |
As we tramp throo life's long journey |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
76-78 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.886 |
Up among th' hills |
It's up among th' hills, among th' heather |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
92-93 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.814 |
Victoria |
Victoria, God bless her |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
46-47 |
Poems by Blackburn author. Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft' (Jubilee 1887) |
2.902 |
Wassail |
Here's a breet merry Kesmas |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
115-116 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.819 |
Watching |
To the dim distance, where I see no one |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
53-55 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.807 |
When We Meet Again |
When we meet again, old friend |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
35-37 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
6.034 |
When we meet again |
When we meet again, old friend |
YATES, Henry |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
230-231 |
|
2.765 |
Winds of Ocean |
You ask me for the winds I love |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
4-Jun |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
2.881 |
Wisdom |
At fifteen, aw thowt aw wer wise |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
83-85 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
4.665 |
Wisdom |
At fifteen, aw thowt aw wer wise |
YATES, Henry |
A LANCASHIRE miscellany of dialect verse, edited by James Bennett |
|
b6021514 |
148.037 |
1.960 |
167-168 |
A selection of Lancashire dialect poems printed in the "Oldham Chronicle" between 1956 and 1959 |
6.036 |
Wisdom |
At fifteen, aw thowt aw wer wise |
YATES, Henry |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
233-234 |
|
803 |
Wisdom |
At fifteen, aw thowt aw wer wise |
YATES, Henry |
A LANCASHIRE garland of dialect prose and verse, selected and edited by G. Halstead Whittaker |
|
M0039049LC |
146.524 |
1.936 |
341-342 |
|
81.605 |
Wisdom |
At fifteen, aw thowt aw wer wise |
YATES, Henry |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
336-338 |
|
2.802 |
Youth and age |
When life was young the hours flew by |
YATES, Henry |
Songs of the twilight and the dawn |
YATES, Henry |
M0063750LC |
273.654 |
1.904 |
26-27 |
Nom de plume 'Tansy Tuft'. Poems by Blackburn author |
87.836 |
Thank You Lord |
I thank you Lord for the sleep I had |
YATES, Jessie |
NORTH West Christian Messengers edited by Chris Walton |
|
1861610920 |
1.048.474 |
1.996 |
124 |
|
81.051 |
My owd case clock |
Thy clock's to thee, a gradely mate |
YATES, May |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
159-160 |
|
81.053 |
Ned o' Jooan's Experience |
Owd Ned o' Jooan's had often thowt |
YATES, May |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
166-169 |
Hargreaves, Walter (stepsister) |
81.602 |
Owd cronies |
Mi warp's nobbut twitly, un mi weft's nobbut smo |
YATES, May |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
326-330 |
|
81.600 |
The hill of sleep |
Here Morn her earliest anthem sings |
YATES, May |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
319-321 |
|
81.601 |
The Homestead |
Upon a hill where winds are wild |
YATES, May |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
321-326 |
|
81.054 |
Th'owd cobbler |
Workin' away fro' youth to owd age |
YATES, May |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
173 |
|
81.052 |
Th'owd weyver's farewell to his looms |
Mi weyvin's welly done, for sure, aw'm beawn to finish here |
YATES, May |
A LANCASHIRE anthology, selected and edited with short biographical notices of the authors, by May Yates |
|
M0041823LC |
154.700 |
1.923 |
163-166 |
|
84.230 |
I brought her nothing but the may |
I brought her nothing but the may |
YEAMES, Karil |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
130 |
The author's mame is a pseudonym |
84.229 |
Out of the shadows |
Out of the shadows I come, out of the dark |
YEAMES, Karil |
A NEW lyric book, edited by F.T. Houghton Turner |
|
M0319970LC |
945.208 |
1.929 |
129 |
Author's name is a pseudonym |
82.997 |
Somewhere in our school, today |
A group of talented musicians entertained us |
YEAR 5 |
HIDDEN treasures: South Lancashire. Edited by Simon Harwin |
|
754339068 |
910.094 |
2.002 |
171 |
no names given |
5.274 |
Verses supposed to be written by the Queen of France |
O sanguinary herd! a moment pause |
Z. R. |
The poets and poetry of Blackburn (1793-1902), compiled by George Hull |
|
M0042476LC |
156.137 |
1.902 |
2 |
An early fugitive poem written Blackburn July 22 1793 |
81.063 |
Hevin' a spree at Blackpool |
One day Billy Swaddles, Dick Widdup an' me |
|
Hevin' a spree at Blackpool - Clock almanac |
|
M0369501LC |
1.203.569 |
0 |
|
Photocopy of this Yorkshire poem in stock in Burnley Local Studies Collection at T51 HEV. Yorkshire poem with first line "One day Billy Swaddles, Dick Widdop and me" |