Title; Contents; Songs of Travel and Other Verses; I -- The Vagabond (to an Air of Schubert); II -- Youth and Love-I; III -- Youth and Love-II; IV; V; VI; VII; VIII; IX; X; XI; XII -- We Have Loved of Yore (to an Air of Diabelli); XIII -- Mater...
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Universitätsbibliothek der Eberhard Karls Universität
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Title; Contents; Songs of Travel and Other Verses; I -- The Vagabond (to an Air of Schubert); II -- Youth and Love-I; III -- Youth and Love-II; IV; V; VI; VII; VIII; IX; X; XI; XII -- We Have Loved of Yore (to an Air of Diabelli); XIII -- Mater Triumphans; XIV; XV; XVI (to the Tune of Wandering Willie); XVII -- Winter; XVIII; XIX -- To Dr. Hake (on Receiving a Copy of Verses); XX -- To -; XXI; XXII; XXIII; XXIV; XXV -- If this Were Faith; XXVI -- My Wife; XXVII -- To the Muse; XXVIII -- To an Island Princess; XXIX -- To Kalakaua (with a Present of a Pearl); XXX -- To Princess Kaiulani. Wanderlust, unfettered freedom, and the eternal allure of the open road -- these are the themes that surface time and time again in Robert Louis Stevenson's charming 1896 book of verse, Songs of Travel. Fans of traditional poetry will adore this cycle of thematically interrelated poems that draw parallels between the perils and pleasures of travel and the vulnerability and abandon of romance XXXI -- To Mother MaryanneXXXII -- In Memoriam E.H.; XXXIII -- To My Wife (a Fragment); XXXIV -- To My Old Familiars; XXXV; XXXVI -- To S.C.; XXXVII -- The House of Tembinoka; XXXVIII -- The Woodman; XXXIX -- Tropic Rain; XL -- An End of Travel; XLI; XLII; XLIII -- To S.R. Crockett (on Receiving a Dedication); XLIV -- Evensong; Endnotes.