Texts to Art Songs and Choral Works by B. Naylor
Legend:
The symbol [x] indicates a placeholder for a text that is not yet in the database.
A * indicates that a text cannot (yet?) be displayed on this site because of its copyright status.
Note: A language code in a blue rectangle like ENG indicates that a translation to that language is available.
A grey rectangle like FRE indicates a particular translation (usually one set to music) exists but isn't yet available.
Song Cycles, Collections, Symphonies, etc.:
- Four Poems by W. H. Davies
- no. ?. No careless mind (Text: William Henry Davies) [x]
- no. ?. Old Autumn (Text: William Henry Davies) [x]
- no. ?. No place or time (Text: William Henry Davies) [x]
- no. ?. Silver hours (Text: William Henry Davies) [x]
- Presences
- no. ?. The ancient gods (Text: Mary Gladys Meredith Webb)
- Sing Nowell
- no. ?. Ecce puer (Text: James Joyce)
- Six Poems from "Miserere"
- no. 1. Tenebrae (Text: David Emery Gascoyne) [x]*
- no. 2. Pieta (Text: David Emery Gascoyne) [x]*
- no. 3. De Profundis (Text: David Emery Gascoyne) [x]*
- no. 4. Kyrie (Text: David Emery Gascoyne) [x]*
- no. 5. Lachrymae (Text: David Emery Gascoyne) [x]*
- no. 6. Ex Nihilo (Text: David Emery Gascoyne) [x]*
- Sonnets from the Portuguese
- no. ?. And therefore if to love can be desert (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning) GER
- no. ?. Yet, love, mere love, is beautiful indeed (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning) GER
- no. ?. Can it be right to give what I can give? (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning) GER
- no. ?. Indeed this very love which is my boast (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning) GER
- no. ?. The face of all the world is changed, I think (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning) GER
- no. ?. What can I give thee back, O liberal (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning) GER
- Speaking from the Snow
- no. 1. Beauty's end is in sight (Text: Cecil Day Lewis) [x]*
- no. 2. Now she is like the white tree-rose (Text: Cecil Day Lewis) [x]*
- no. 3. Rest from loving and be living (Text: Cecil Day Lewis) [x]*
- no. 4. Twenty weeks near past (Text: Cecil Day Lewis) [x]*
- Three Feminine Things
- no. ?. The last vermillion (Text: Ruth Pitter) [x]*
- no. ?. Sorrow and weakness (Text: Ruth Pitter) [x]*
- no. ?. See how my yew-tree (Text: Ruth Pitter) [x]*
- Three Songs of Regret
- no. ?. Dust (Text: Mary Gladys Meredith Webb)
- Two Lyrics
- no. ?. The Background and the Figure (Text: Thomas Hardy)
- no. ?. Love lures life on (Text: Thomas Hardy)
All titles of vocal settings in Alphabetic order
- And therefore if to love can be desert (in Sonnets from the Portuguese) (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning) GER
- Beauty's end is in sight (in Speaking from the Snow) (Text: Cecil Day Lewis) [x]*
- Can it be right to give what I can give? (in Sonnets from the Portuguese) (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning) GER
- De Profundis (in Six Poems from "Miserere") (Text: David Emery Gascoyne) [x]*
- Dreams of the Sea (Text: William Henry Davies)
- Dust (in Three Songs of Regret) (Text: Mary Gladys Meredith Webb)
- Ecce puer (in Sing Nowell) (Text: James Joyce)
- Ex Nihilo (in Six Poems from "Miserere") (Text: David Emery Gascoyne) [x]*
- Indeed this very love which is my boast (in Sonnets from the Portuguese) (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning) GER
- Kubla Khan or A Vision in a Dream (Text: Samuel Taylor Coleridge) FRI
- Kyrie (in Six Poems from "Miserere") (Text: David Emery Gascoyne) [x]*
- Lachrymae (in Six Poems from "Miserere") (Text: David Emery Gascoyne) [x]*
- Love lures life on (in Two Lyrics) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
- No careless mind (in Four Poems by W. H. Davies) (Text: William Henry Davies) [x]
- No place or time (in Four Poems by W. H. Davies) (Text: William Henry Davies) [x]
- Now she is like the white tree-rose (in Speaking from the Snow) (Text: Cecil Day Lewis) [x]*
- Old Autumn (in Four Poems by W. H. Davies) (Text: William Henry Davies) [x]
- Pieta (in Six Poems from "Miserere") (Text: David Emery Gascoyne) [x]*
- Rest from loving and be living (in Speaking from the Snow) (Text: Cecil Day Lewis) [x]*
- See how my yew-tree (in Three Feminine Things) (Text: Ruth Pitter) [x]*
- Silver hours (in Four Poems by W. H. Davies) (Text: William Henry Davies) [x]
- Since thou, O fondest and truest (Text: Robert Seymour Bridges)
- Sorrow and weakness (in Three Feminine Things) (Text: Ruth Pitter) [x]*
- Tenebrae (in Six Poems from "Miserere") (Text: David Emery Gascoyne) [x]*
- The ancient gods (in Presences) (Text: Mary Gladys Meredith Webb)
- The Background and the Figure (in Two Lyrics) (Text: Thomas Hardy)
- The Death of Œnone (Text: Alfred Tennyson, Lord)
- The ecstatic (Text: Cecil Day Lewis) *
- The face of all the world is changed, I think (in Sonnets from the Portuguese) (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning) GER
- The last vermillion (in Three Feminine Things) (Text: Ruth Pitter) [x]*
- 'The three stars' and 'Epode' (Text: David Emery Gascoyne) [x]*
- To Sleep (Text: John Keats) CAT FRE GER NYN SPA
- Twenty weeks near past (in Speaking from the Snow) (Text: Cecil Day Lewis) [x]*
- What can I give thee back, O liberal (in Sonnets from the Portuguese) (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning) GER
- Yet, love, mere love, is beautiful indeed (in Sonnets from the Portuguese) (Text: Elizabeth Barrett Browning) GER
Last update: 2023-05-11 11:27:53