The Emigrant Mechanic
PREFACE.
BOOK I.
BOOK II.
BOOK III.
BOOK IV.
BOOK V.
BOOK VI.
BOOK VII.
BOOK VIII.
ACROSTICS.
FAMILY PIECES
COWPER
MISCELLANEOUS POEMS.
- JENNY AND HER PET LAMB.
- TO A VERY TALL SUNFLOWER.
- BIRTHDAY THOUGHTS AND ASPIRATIONS.
- SONG TO THE LILY OF THE VALLEY.
- DAISY, I HAVE SOUGHT FOR THEE.
- THE CHARMS OF JUNE.
- TO DR. LAYCOCK, ON HIS LEAVING BRANTFORD ON
ACCOUNT Of ILLNESS.
- TO MR. COWHERD, FROM HIS FRIEND, H. S. LAYCOCK.
- TO THE CHRISTIANS OF BRANTFORD.
- TO THE SAME.
- VERSES WRITTEN IMMEDIATELY AFTER READING HORACE
SMITH'S “BACHELOR'S FARE.”
- STANZAS ON THE PEACEFUL STRUGGLE IN EUROPE.
- LINES WRITTEN ON THE MORNING OF THE DREADFUL FIRE
WHICH CONSUMED THE B. B. &G. R. R. DEPOT BUILDINGS.
- TO THE REV. J. W AND HIS BRIDE
- STANZAS ON HEARING AN AUCTIONEER QUOTE THE
FOLLOWING PASSAGE OF SCRIPTURE: “THERE WAS SILENCE IN HEAVEN ABOUT THE
SPACE OF HALF AN HOUR.”—
- WINTER'S RAVAGES, AN APPEAL TO THE RICH ON BEHALF
OF THE POOR.
- A CANADIAN NATIONAL SONG.
- A CALL TO THE SOIREE* OF THE MECHANIC'S
INSTITUTE, DECEMBER 23, 1857.
- AN ADDRESS BY THE MEMBERS OF THE “INSTITUTE” TO
THEIR FRIENDS AT THE SOIREE.
- ALCOHOL'S ARRAIGNMENT AND DOOM.
- TO MY BELOVED FRIEND MR. JAMES WOODYATT.
- TRIBUTARY VERSES, WRITTEN IMMEDIATELY ON HEARING
OF DR. O'CARR'S DEATH.
- STANZAS, SUGGESTED BY THE DREADFUL RAILWAY
ACCIDENT AT THE DESJARDINS CANAL, MARCH 12, 1857.
- TRIBUTARY STANZAS TO THE MEMORY OF DR. LAYCOCK,
WHO WAS ACCIDENTALLY KILLED WHILE ON A PROFESSIONAL JOURNEY, DECEMBER
10, 1857.
- SONG OF THE CANADIAN CRADLER.
- STANZAS, ADDRESSED TO THE REV. J. B. HOWARD AND
HIS FAMILY AS A TRIBUTE OF RESPECT ON THEIR DEPARTURE FROM BRANTFORD,
AUGUST, 1858.
- GRUMBLINGS.
- VERSES, SUGGESTED BY THE FEARFUL ACCIDENT ON THE
GREAT WESTERN R. R. NEAR COPETOWN, ON THE NIGHT OF THE 18TH MARCH,
1859.
- A TRIBUTE TO THE MEMORY OF THE REV. THOMAS
FAWCETT WHO LOST HIS LIFE BY THE ACCIDENT ABOVE MENTIONED.
- A TRIBUTE TO THE MEMORY OF MR. RICHARD FOLDS, WHO
DEPARTED THIS LIFE APRIL 21, 1859.
- TO THE HUMMING BIRD.
- TO THE SAME.
- FIRE SONG.
- THE FIRE ALARM.
- MY OLD ARM CHAIR.
- A TRIBUTE TO THE BRAVERY OF MY COUSIN, MRS. T. A.
COWHERD, WHO CROSSED THE ATLANTIC IN MID-WINTER WITH THREE HELPLESS
CHILDREN, AND UNDER VERY TRYING CIRCUMSTANCES.
- CANADIANS' WELCOME TO H. R. H. THE PRINCE OF
WALES, 1860.
- BRANTFORD'S WELCOME TO THE PRINCE OF WALES, 1860.
- A CALL FOR HELP FOR GARIBALDI.
- LINES SUGGESTED BY THE NEW YORK TRIBUNE'S ACCOUNT
OF LINCOLN'S DEPARTURE FROM SPRINGFIELD, ILLINOIS, FOR WASHINGTON.
- “Sumpter has Fallen, but Freedom is Saved.”
- SONG.
- THE SEWING MACHINE.
- TABBY AND TIBBY.
- LINES COMPOSED AT MR. M'LARTY'S, WEST MISSOURI,
AUGUST 3, 1873.
- FAMILY PIECES
- TO MY WIFE.
- TO THE SAME, WHEN AWAY FROM HOME
- TO MY DEAR LITTLE BOYS, JAMES, CHRISTOPHER AND
ALFRED.
- TO ALFRED, JUST LEARNING TO WALK
- TO AMELIA MY LAST INFANT DAUGHTER
- TO FREDRIC
- TO MY DAUGHTER IDA, WHEN THREE MONTHS OLD.
- TO MY WIFE, ON THE THIRTEENTH ANNIVERSARY OF OUR
WEDDING DAY
- TO THE SAME, ON THE TWENTY-FIFTH ANNIVERSARY OF
OUR MARRIAGE.
- TO THE SAME, ON THE THIRTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF OUR
MARRIAGE.
- FAREWELL TO MY HARP
This page copyright © 2002 Blackmask Online.
http://www.blackmask.com