|
CD 1
|
1 |
1887 From Clee to heaven the beacon burns
|
1:31
|
2 |
Loveliest of trees, the cherry now
|
0:39
|
3 |
THE RECRUIT: Leave your home behind, lad
|
1:05
|
4 |
REVEILLE: Wake: the silver dusk returning
|
1:08
|
5 |
Oh see how thick the goldcup flowers
|
1:30
|
6 |
When the lad for longing sighs
|
0:36
|
7 |
When smoke stood up from Ludlow
|
1:16
|
8 |
'Farewell to barn and stack and tree'
|
1:02
|
9 |
On moonlit heath and lonesome bank
|
1:23
|
10 |
MARCH: The sun at noon to higher air
|
1:01
|
11 |
On your midnight pallet lying
|
0:42
|
12 |
When I watch the living meet
|
0:45
|
13 |
When I was one - and - twenty
|
0:45
|
14 |
There pass the careless people
|
0:56
|
15 |
Look not in my eyes, for fear
|
0:50
|
16 |
It nods and curtseys and recovers
|
0:29
|
17 |
Twice a week the winter thorough
|
0:35
|
18 |
Oh, when I was in love with you
|
0:25
|
19 |
TO AN ATHLETE DYING YOUNG
|
1:24
|
20 |
Oh fair enough are sky and plain
|
0:44
|
21 |
BREDON HILL: In summertime on Bredon
|
1:30
|
22 |
The street sounds to the soldiers' tread
|
0:37
|
23 |
The lads in their hundreds to Ludlow come in for the fair
|
1:08
|
24 |
Say, lad, have you things to do
|
0:36
|
25 |
This time of year a twelvemonth past
|
0:43
|
26 |
Along the fields as we came by
|
0:56
|
27 |
'Is my team ploughing'
|
1:25
|
28 |
THE WELSH MARCHES: High the vanes of Shrewsbury gleam
|
1:41
|
29 |
THE LENT LILY: 'Tis spring; come out to ramble
|
0:48
|
30 |
Others, I am not the first
|
0:51
|
31 |
On Wenlock Edge the wood's in trouble
|
1:07
|
32 |
From far, from eve and morning
|
0:34
|
33 |
If truth in hearts that perish
|
0:49
|
34 |
THE NEW MISTRESS
|
1:08
|
35 |
On the idle hill of summer
|
0:47
|
36 |
White in the moon the long road lies
|
0:51
|
37 |
As through the wild green hills of Wyre
|
1:39
|
38 |
The winds out of the west land blow
|
0:53
|
39 |
'Tis time, I think by Wenlock town
|
0:39
|
40 |
Into my heart an air that kills
|
0:31
|
41 |
In my own shire, if I was sad
|
1:29
|
42 |
THE MERRY GUIDE: Once in the wind of morning
|
2:23
|
43 |
THE IMMORTAL PART: When I meet the morning beam
|
2:04
|
44 |
Shot so quick, so clean an ending
|
1:33
|
45 |
If it chance your eye offend you
|
0:27
|
46 |
Bring, in this timeless grave to throw
|
1:07
|
47 |
THE CARPENTER'S SON: 'Here the hangman stops his cart'
|
1:19
|
48 |
Be still, my soul, be still; the arms you bear are brittle
|
1:22
|
49 |
Think no more, lad; laugh, be jolly
|
0:32
|
50 |
Clunton and Clunbury, Clungunford and Clun
|
1:08
|
51 |
Loitering with a vacant eye
|
1:05
|
52 |
Far in a western brookland
|
0:46
|
53 |
THE TRUE LOVER: The lad came to the door at night
|
1:34
|
54 |
With rue my heart is laden
|
0:28
|
55 |
Westward on the high - hilled plains
|
0:45
|
56 |
THE DAY OF BATTLE: 'Far I hear the bugle blow'
|
0:46
|
57 |
You smile upon your friend to - day
|
0:24
|
58 |
When I came last to Ludlow
|
0:26
|
59 |
THE ISLE OF PORTLAND: The star - filled seas are smooth to - night
|
0:42
|
60 |
Now hollow fires burn out to black
|
0:26
|
61 |
HUGHLEY STEEPLE: The vane on Hughley steeple
|
1:03
|
62 |
'Terence, this is stupid stuff'
|
2:58
|
63 |
I Hoed and trenched and weeded
|
0:43
|