Bayly, Thomas Haynes, 1797-1839.
Bayly, Nathaniel Thomas Haynes, 1797-1839
Bayly, Thomas Haynes
Thomas Haynes Bayly English poet, songwriter, dramatist, and writer
Bayly, Thomas
Bayly, Nathaniel Thomas Haynes
VIAF ID: 27808896 (Personal)
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/27808896
Preferred Forms
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- 200 _ | ‡a Bayly ‡b Thomas Haynes ‡f 1797-1839
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Bayly, Nathaniel Thomas Haynes, ‡d 1797-1839
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Bayly, Thomas Haynes
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Bayly, Thomas Haynes ‡d 1797-1839
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Bayly, Thomas Haynes, ‡d 1797-1839
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Bayly, Thomas Haynes, ‡d 1797-1839
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- 100 0 _ ‡a Thomas Haynes Bayly ‡c English poet, songwriter, dramatist, and writer
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (60)
Works
Title | Sources |
---|---|
Aylmers | |
The barrack room | |
I cannot dance tonight | |
[caption title, f.66v:] Oh Gallop away my own dear Knight. [space] Bayly. | |
[caption title, p. 1:] Poetry by Thomas Haynes Bayly. // The Widows. // Composed, for the Musical Bijou | of 1831, by Henry RBishop .: | |
The Carrier dove | |
Church bells are ringing | |
[Civil War envelope showing a soldier waving goodbye to people on a porch with message "Soldier's farewell" and verses from a song] | |
The culprit. | |
Dark eyed one, dark eyed one : sung by Mr. Horn as Sarastro with the most enthusiastic approbation in the opera of the Magic flute | |
Daughter | |
Ding, dong, bell | |
Draw a bucket of water | |
Flowers of loveliness. - | |
Fly away, pretty moth! a ballad | |
Forfeit game. The twelve days of Christmas | |
Gaily the troubadour touch'd his guitar. | |
A gentleman in difficulties: an entirely original farce, in one act. | |
Grenadier. | |
Hand-game | |
Here comes a lusty wooer | |
Hickory dickory dock ! | |
Hush-a-bye, baby | |
I'd be a butterfly | |
I'll hang my harp on a willow tree | |
I'll twine for thee, the fairest flowers | |
In happier hours, 183-?: | |
Isabel | |
Isabel ! : [wake dearest wake!] : sung by Miss Ashe also by Miss Stephens at the Nobility's Concerts | |
Jack and Jill | |
Johnnie see-saw | |
Johnson's new universal cyclopedia, 1881, accessed online via Google Books, Mar. 11, 2015 : | |
Knee-game | |
Lang lang ists her, Arr, guit, G-Dur - BSB Mus. N. 122,520 : [caption title:] Lang, lang ist's her. T.H. Bayley. | |
Little Bo-peep | |
Little Jack Horner | |
Little Miss Muffet | |
Long, long ago | |
Long, long ago aufgeführte Musik xB 1307 | |
Love of the butterflies. | |
man with the gun | |
May thy lot in life be happy : sung with the most rapturous applause by Miss Taylor in Mr. Shannon's admired petite comedy of My wife or my place, at the Theatre Royal Haymarket | |
Melodies of various nations | |
Miniature lyrics, no.ii / the music composed and arranged by Sir J. Stevenson and various composers, the poetry by Thomas H. Bayly, esq. | |
Mother Hubbard | |
Mr. Greenfinch | |
My little adopted | |
The nightingale. | |
No! ne'er can thy home be mine. | |
Now the day is over | |
Oh! ask me not to be your bride. | |
Oh! No we never mention her | |
The old kirk yard; | |
"One hour," and "Matrimony." | |
One hour; or, the carnival ball | |
Paul's steeple | |
The peasant's bride ballad | |
Perfection. | |
Perry merry | |
Perseverance | |
The Pilot | |
A Pocket book for chemists : chemical manufacturers, metallurgists, dyers, distillers, brewers, sugar refiners, photographers, students, etc. | |
queen of hearts | |
The rose that all are praising, 183-? | |
Rough sketches of Bath ; Epistles from Bath ; Parliamentary letters ; The dandies of the present ; The tribute of a friend ; Small talk ; Mournful recollections ; Erin ; Outlines of Edinburgh | |
She never blamed him never | |
She wore wreath of roses : a ballad as sung by Mrs. Wood | |
Shed not a tear | |
Sigh not for summer flowers | |
Sing a song of sixpence | |
The soldier's tear | |
song at bedtime | |
Songs, ballads, and other poems | |
Speech... delivered in the House of representatives, June 30, 1846. In committee of the whole on the state of the Union, on the bill reported from the committee of ways and means, amendatory of the tariff law of 1842. | |
The Spitalfields weaver | |
The swiss cottage : or, Why don't she marry? | |
Though the Summer may have Roses. | Written by | Thomas H. Bayly. | Composed by | Henry R. Bishop. | New York, | Published by E, Riley 29 Chatham S.|t | Lith. of Pendleton New York. | |
Tom Noddy's secret, a farce, in one act. | |
Toujours gai | |
The Troubador | |
Under the rose | |
We met! A ballad from the Songs of the boudoir | |
Wee Willie Winkie | |
Weeds of witchery : [humorous poems] | |
You can't marry your grandmother | |
예수탄일 | |
往事難忘 |