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RURAL TALES, BALLADS AND SONGS (1802)

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MARKET-NIGHT. A BALLAD

1
‘O Winds, howl not so long and loud;
Nor with your vengeance arm the snow:
Bear hence each heavy-loaded cloud;
And let the twinkling Star-beams glow.
2

RURAL TALES, BALLADS AND SONGS (1802)

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THE WIDOW TO HER HOUR-GLASS

1
COME, friend, I’ll turn thee up again:
Companion of the lonely hour!
Spring thirty times hath fed with rain
And cloath’d with leaves my humble bower,
Since thou hast stood5
In frame of wood,

RURAL TALES, BALLADS AND SONGS (1802)

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THE MILLER’S MAID. A TALE

NEAR the High road upon a winding stream
An honest Miller rose to Wealth and Fame:
The noblest Virtues cheer’d his lengthen’d days,
And all the Country echo’d with his praise:
His Wife, the Doctress of the neighb’ring Poor,

RURAL TALES, BALLADS AND SONGS (1802)

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Walter AND Jane: OR, THE POOR BLACKSMITH. A COUNTRY TALE

BRIGHT was the summer sky, the Mornings gay,
And Jane was young and chearful as the Day.
Not yet to Love but Mirth she paid her vows;
And Echo mock’d her as she call’d her Cows.

RURAL TALES, BALLADS AND SONGS (1802)

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RICHARD AND KATE; OR, FAIR-DAY. A SUFFOLK BALLAD

1
‘Come, Goody, stop your humdrum wheel,
Sweep up your orts,

(1)

RURAL TALES, BALLADS AND SONGS (1802)

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RURAL TALES, BALLADS AND SONGS (1802)

CONTENTS.



Editors’ Introduction

Prefaces

EMMA’S KID (1801–2)

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EMMA’S KID


(1)

First published in The Edinburgh Monthly Magazine and Review, 1 (1810), 50–52, and
collected in Remains with Bloomfield’s note: ‘Originally accompanying a pair of kid-leather

SONG, FOR A HIGHLAND DROVER (1801)

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TO GENERAL LOYD (1800–1)

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TO GENERAL LOYD. THE HUMBLE PETITION OF THE OLD ELMS AT THE WEST END OF WOOLWICH BARRACKS
(1800–1).


(1)

Bloomfield does not date the poem, but the building of a new barrack block at Woolwich

TO IMMAGINATION (1800)

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TO IMMAGINATION (1800)

Editorial Introduction

Pagination

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