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Meg Merrilies
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Berries
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Romance
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Hymn of Pan
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Written in March
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"When the Hounds of Spring"
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Song
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"Under the Greenwood Tree"
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To Violets
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On May Morning
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The Lepracaun
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Hunting Song
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The Lady of Shallot
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Hymn to Diana
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The Song of Wandering Aengus
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The Shepherd to His Love
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Robin Hood and the Butcher
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A Sea Song
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Epitaph on a Hare
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The Pilgrim
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Lullaby for Titania
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Israfel
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Jaffar
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A Song of Sherwood
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The Destruction of Sennacherib
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Ivry
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The Tiger
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The Terrible Robber Men
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Sir Patrick Spens
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"Blow, Blow, Thou Winter Wind"
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The Pied Piper of Hamelin
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"Time, You Old Gipsy Man"
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The Solitary Reaper
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My Lost Youth
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Battle Hymn of the Republic
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Gathering Song of Donald Dhu
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The Minstrel-Boy
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Bannockburn
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Fable
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Good Hours
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Winter
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A Chanted Calendar
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The Cloud
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Bugle Song
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The Forsaken Merman
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Nurses's Song
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To a Mouse
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The Fairies
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La Belle Dame Sans Merci
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Spring
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"I Wandered Lonely"
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The Gay Gos-hawk
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An Old Song of Fairies
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Moon Folly
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Star-Talk
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Jim Jay
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The Ghosts of the Buffaloes
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A Christmas Carol
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Escape at Bedtime
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Song of the Chattahoochee
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Sea Fever
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O Captain! My Captain!
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The Snow
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A Song for My Mother
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The Fountain
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Nature's Friend
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Tree-Toad
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An Ancient Christmas Carol
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An Old Christmas Carol
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King John and the Abbot of Canterbury
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The Sands of Dee
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Sister, Awake!
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The Skeleton in Armor
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By Bendemeer's Stream
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A Prayer
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Young Lochinvar
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Off the Ground
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Auld Daddy Darkness
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Meg Merrilies
Old Meg she was a Gipsy,
And liv'd upon the Moors:
Her bed it was the brown heath turf,
And her house was out of doors.
Her apples were swart blackberries,
Her currants pods o' broom;
Her wine was dew of the wild white rose,
Her book a churchyard tomb.
Her Brothers were the craggy hills,
Her Sisters larchen trees—
Alone with her great family
She liv'd as she did please.
No breakfast had she many a morn,
No dinner many a noon,
And 'stead of supper she would stare
Full hard against the Moon.
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But every morn of woodbine fresh
She made her garlanding,
And every night the dark glen Yew
She wove, and she would sing.
And with her fingers old and brown
She plaited Mats o' Rushes,
And gave them to the Cottagers
She met among the Bushes.
Old Meg was brave as Margaret Queen
And tall as Amazon:
An old red blanket cloak she wore;
A chip hat had she on.
God rest her aged bones somewhere—
She died full long agone!
John Keats
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