Songs and Other Verses
byDollie Radford
London: John Lane, The Bodley Head..... Philadelphia: MDCCCXCV J.B. Lippincott, Co.
INDEX
- I could not through the burning day 13
- Because I built my nest so high 14
- My lover’s lute has golden strings 16
- If all the world were right 18
- If my poor words were colours 19
- The little songs which come and go 20
- When summer sweetness fills the land 21
- Ah bring it not so grudgingly 22
- How shall I in my pride array 24
- Outside your heart the lonely way 26
- Ah, Love, through what unfathomed deeps 28
- And will you sing the songs anew 30
- page: 8
- How can I measure your sorrow 33
- If you will sing the songs I play 34
- Through all the golden summer time 35
- I do not love you very much 36
- To my children—Shall I make a song for you 37
- Sleep my little dearest one 40
- My little dear so fast asleep 41
- How the unknown poets die—In the light of a summer sky 43
- To the Caryatid in the Elgin Room, British Museum—So long ago, and day by day 48
- Comrades—What shall I do when you pass by 51
- For windows by L. D.—Arising from her jewelled bower 54
- A Concert—Ah, was it all a fantasy 55
- To a Stranger—Last night I lay and dreamed of you 58
- October—From falling leaf to falling leaf 61
- In Summer days—Is it the sunshine on my eyes 63
- Nobody in Town—I stand upon my island home 67
- page: 9
- A November rose—You came to see me yesterday 69
- A Model—Year after year I sit for them 72
- New Year Card—Greeting dear friend through shower and sun 76
- A Novice—What is it, in these latter days 78
- From the Suburbs—It rushes home our own express 82
- From our Emancipated Aunt in Town—All has befallen as I say 87