The Old Folks we Loved Long Ago.
Battling with life,
’Mid care and strife,
The daily toils in hope I undergo;
Yet mem’ry will wander,
Fonder oh, fonder,
To the dear old folks I loved long ago.
Long years have gone
Since in the morn
Of life I heard the river’s gentle flow;
And oft mem’ry lingers,
As point time’s fingers,
To the dear old folks I loved long ago.
Dell, hill, and tree,
Flower, bird, and bee,
All as of yore, make music sweet and low,
And, though on earth riven,
I hope to meet in heaven
The dear old folks I loved long ago.
Then up, my soul,
Strive for the goal,
Oh, linger not to weep and wail in woe;
For far in yon azure blue
Methinks I yet may know
The dear old folks I loved long ago.
CONTENTS
OF
Beadle’s Dime Song Book,
NO. 2.
- Alice Gray,
- America,
- Banks of the Old Mohawk
- Be Kind to Each Other,
- Billy Grimes the Rover,
- Bryan O’Lynn,
- Come Sit Thee Down,
- Cora Lee,
- Crazy Jane,
- Darling Nelly Moore,
- Darling Old Stick,
- Fireman’s Victory,
- Good News from Home,
- Good-Night,
- Grave of Lilly Dale,
- Graves of a Household,
- Home, Sweet Home,
- I have no Mother Now,
- I’m leaving Thee in Sorrow, Annie,
- I miss Thee so,
- I Shouldn’t like to Tell,
- I Wandered by the Brook-Side,
- Katy Darling,
- Kathleen Mavourneen,
- Little Katy; or, Hot Corn,
- Mary of the Wild Moor,
- Mable Clare,
- Mary Alleen,
- Mill May,
- Minnie Moore,
- Minnie Dear,
- Mrs. Lofty and I,
- Mr. Finagan,
- My Eye and Betty Martin,
- My Love is a Saileur Boy,
- My Mother Dear,
- My Grandmother’s Advice,
- My Mother’s Bible,
- New England,
- Oh! I’m Going Home,
- Oh! Scorn not thy Brother,
- O! the Sea, the Sea,
- Old Sideling Hill,
- Our Boyhood Days,
- Our Father Land,
- Peter Gray,
- Rory O’More,
- Somebody’s waiting for Somebody,
- The Farmer Sat in his Easy Chair,
- The Farmer’s Boy,
- The Irishman’s Shanty,
- The Old Folks are Gone,
- The Post-Boy’s Song,
- The Quilting Party,
- Three Bells,
- ’Tis Home where the Heart is,
- Waiting for the May,
- We Stand Here United,
- What other Name than Thine, Mother?
- Where the Bright Waves are Dashing,
- What is Home without a Mother,
- Widow Machree,
- Willie’s on the Dark Blue Sea,
- Winter-Sleigh-Bell Song,
- Nancy Bell; or, Old Pine Tree.
CONTENTS
OF
Beadle’s Dime Song Book,
NO. 3.
- Annie, Dear, Good-by,
- A Sailor’s Life for Me,
- Bessy was a Sailor’s Bride,
- Bonny Jean,
- Comic Katy Darling,
- Comic Parody,
- Darling Jenny Bell,
- Darling Rosabel,
- Death of Annie Laurie,
- Ettie May,
- Few Days,
- Give ’em String and let ’em Went,
- Go it while You’re Young,
- Hail Columbia,
- Happy Hezekiah,
- I’d Choose to be a Daisy,
- I have Something Sweet to Tell You,
- Isle of Beauty,
- I Think of Old Ireland wherever I Go,
- Jeannette and Jeannot,
- John Jones,
- Jordan is a Hard Road to Travel,
- Kitty Kimo,
- Lather and Shave,
- Lager Bier Song,
- Linda has Departed,
- Lillie Bell,
- Love Not,
- Man the Life-Boat,
- My Dear Old Mother,
- My Girl with a Calico Dress,
- My Heart’s in Old Ireland,
- My Poor Dog Tray,
- Old Rosin the Bow,
- Over the Left,
- Old Dog Tray, No. 2.
- Parody on the West,
- Pop Goes the Weasel,
- Pretty Jane,
- Rosa Lee,
- Song of the Locomotive,
- Sparking Sarah Jane,
- The American Girl,
- The American Boy,
- The Boys of Kilkenny,
- The Emigrant’s Farewell,
- The Fine Old English Gentleman,
- The Fine Old Irish Gentleman,
- The Fine Old Dutchman,
- The Fireman’s Death,
- The Fireman’s Boy,
- The Girl I Left behind Me,
- The Gold-Digger’s Lament,
- The Indian Hunter,
- The Old Oaken Bucket,
- The Old Whiskey Jug,
- The Other Side of Jordan,
- The Pirate’s Serenade,
- The Yellow Rose of Texas,
- Ten O’Clock, or, Remember, Love, Remember,
- Tilda Horn,
- True Blue,
- To the West,
- Uncle Ned,
- Unhappy Jeremiah,
- Vilkins and his Dinah,
- We Miss Thee at Home,
- What Will Mrs. Grundy Say?
- Woodman, Spare that Tree.
CONTENTS
OF
Beadle’s Dime Song Book,
NO. 4.
- Ain’t I Glad to get out of the Wilderness,
- A National Song,
- Answer to Katy Darling,
- A Merry Gipsy Girl again,
- A Parody on “Uncle Sam’s Farm,”
- Ben Fisher and Wife,
- Bonnie Jamie,
- Broken-Hearted Tom, the Lover,
- By the Sad Sea-Waves,
- Columbia Rules the Sea,
- Come, Gang awa’ wi’ Me,
- Commence you Darkies all,
- Cottage by the Sea,
- Daylight is on the Sea,
- Don’t you cry so, Norah, Darling,
- Erin is my Home,
- Gal from the South,
- He Led Her to the Altar,
- Home, Sweet Home,
- I am a Freeman,
- I’ll hang my Harp on a Willow-Tree,
- I’m not Myself at all,
- Indian Hunter,
- I’ve been Roaming o’er, the Prairie,
- I Wish He would Decide, Mamma,
- Jane Monroe,
- Johnny is Gone for a Soldier,
- Jolly Jack the Rover,
- Kate was once a little Girl,
- Kitty Tyrrel,
- Let Me Kiss Him for his Mother,
- Linda’s Gone to Baltimore,
- Maud Adair, and I,
- Molly Bawn,
- My ain Fireside,
- My Boyhood’s Home,
- Nora, the Pride of Kildare,
- O, God! Preserve the Mariner,
- Oh, Kiss, but never tell,
- Old Uncle Edward,
- Paddy on the Canal,
- Poor old Maids,
- Ship A-Hoy!
- Somebody’s Courting Somebody,
- Song of the Farmer,
- Song of Blanche Alpen,
- Sparking Sunday Night,
- Sprig of Shilleleh,
- Stand by the Flag,
- The Farmer’s Boy,
- The Hazel Dell,
- The Harp that once Through Tara’s Hall,
- The Indian Warrior’s Grave,
- The Little Low Room where I Courted my Wife,
- The Low Backed Car,
- The Old Brown Cot,
- The Old Kirk-Yard,
- The Railroad Engineer’s Song,
- They don’t wish Me at Home,
- Tom Brown,
- Terry O’Reilly,
- Uncle Gabriel,
- Uncle Tim the Toper,
- We were Boys and Girls together,
- We are Growing Old together,
- We are all so Fond of Kissing,
- Where are now the Hopes I Cherished?
- Within a Mile of Edinburgh Town,
- Would I were a Boy again,
- Would I were a Girl again,
- Would I were with Thee.
CONTENTS
OF
Beadle’s Dime Song Book,
NO. 5.
- A Dollar or Two,
- A Man’s a Man for a’ That,
- Angel’s Whisper,
- Auld Lang Syne,
- A Yankee Ship, and a Yankee Crew,
- Bashful Young Man,
- Call Me Pet Names,
- Camptown Races,
- Charity,
- Cheer, Boys, Cheer,
- Comin’ Thro’ the Rye,
- Der mot Astore,
- Dilla Burn,
- Down the Burn, Davy, Love,
- Dumbarton’s Bonnie Dell,
- Ever of Thee,
- Gum-Tree Canoe,
- Hark! I hear an Angel Sing,
- I’d Offer Thee this Hand of Mine,
- In the Days when I Was Hard Up,
- John Anderson, my Jo, John,
- Johnny was a Shoemaker,
- Kind Relations,
- Last Week I took a Wife,
- Mary of Argyle,
- Meet Me by Moonlight,
- Napolitaine,
- Norah M’Shane,
- Nothing Else to Do,
- Och! Paddy, is it Yerself?
- Oft in the Stilly Night,
- Roll on Silver Moon,
- Sambo, I have Miss’d You,
- Sammy Slap, the Bill-Sticker,
- Simon the Cellarer,
- Something to Love Me,
- Some Love to Drink,
- Sourkrout and Sausages,
- Still so Gently o’er Me Stealing,
- The Gay Cavalier,
- The Gambler’s Wife,
- The Grave of Uncle True,
- The Grave of Bonaparte,
- The Ingle Side,
- The Irish Emigrant’s Lament,
- The Ivy Green,
- The Lass that Loves a Sailor,
- The Last Rose of Summer,
- The Lily of the West,
- The Minute Gun at Sea,
- The Monks of Old,
- The Musical Wife,
- The Ocean Burial,
- The Old Arm-Chair,
- The Poor Little Fisherman’s Girl,
- The Rat-catcher’s Daughter,
- The Rose of Allendale,
- The Tail iv Me Coat,
- The Watcher,
- Thou art Gone from my Gaze,
- Thou hast Wounded the Spirit,
- ’Tis Midnight Hour,
- Twilight Dews,
- Umbrella Courtship,
- Wake! Dinah, Wake!
- Washington, Star of the West,
- We’ll have a little Dance To-Night Boys,
- We Met by Chance,
- When I Saw Sweet Nelly Home,
- When the Swallows Homeward Fly,
- Whoop de Doodle do,
- William of the Ferry,
- Will You Love Me Then as Now?
CONTENTS
OF
Beadle’s Dime Song Book,
NO. 6.
- Annie Lisle,
- Beautiful World,
- Be Kind to the Loved Ones,
- Bobbin’ Around,
- Bonnie Dundee,
- Courting in Connecticut,
- Dearest Mae,
- Dear Mother, I’ll Come again,
- Ella Ree,
- Fairy Dell,
- Far, far upon the Sea,
- Gentle Hallie,
- Gentle Nettie Moore,
- Happy are we To-night,
- Hattie Lee,
- He Doeth All Things Well,
- I can not Call her Mother,
- I’ll Paddle my own Canoe,
- I’m Standing by thy Grave, Mother,
- Is it Anybody’s Business?
- Jane O’Malley,
- Jenny Lane,
- Joanna Snow,
- Johnny Sands,
- Lilly Dale,
- Little more Cider,
- Lulu is our Darling Pride,
- Marion Lee,
- Meet me by the Running Brook,
- Minnie Clyde,
- Not for Gold,
- Not Married Yet,
- Oh, carry me Home to Die,
- Oh! Silber Shining Moon,
- Oh! Spare the Old Homestead,
- Old Homestead,
- Ossian’s Serenade,
- Over the River,
- Riding on a Rail,
- Sailor Boy’s Last Dream,
- “Say Yes, Pussy,”
- Spirit Voice of Belle Brandon,
- Squire Jones’s Daughter,
- The Bloom is on the Rye,
- The Blue Junietta,
- The Carrier Dove,
- The Child’s Wish,
- The Cottage of my Mother,
- The Female Auctioneer,
- The Irish Jaunting Car,
- The Lords of Creation shall Woman obey,
- The Maniac,
- The Merry Sleigh-Ride,
- The Miller’s Maid,
- The Modern Belle,
- The Mountaineer’s Farewell,
- The Old Mountain Tree,
- The Strawberry Girl,
- The Snow Storm,
- The Song my Mother used to Sing,
- Three Grains of Corn,
- Washington’s Grave,
- What is Home without a Sister,
- Where are the Friends?
- Why Chime the Bells so Merrily?
- Why don’t the Men propose?
- Will Nobody Marry Me?
- Young Recruit.
CONTENTS
OF
Beadle’s Dime Song Book,
NO. 7.
- A Ride I once was Taking,
- Beautiful Venice,
- Billy Patterson,
- Breeze of the Night,
- Bright-Eyed Little Nell of Narragansett Bay,
- Come, Willie dear, I’m weeping now,
- Deal with me Kindly,
- Dixie’s Land No. 1,
- Dixie’s Land No. 2,
- Dolcy Jones,
- Down among the Cane-Brakes,
- Fairy Belle,
- Farewell, old Cottage,
- Glendy Burk,
- Here’s a Health to thee, Tom Moore,
- Ho, Gondolier, awake,
- How shall I watch thy Coming,
- Hush-a-by, Baby,
- I Love my Native Land,
- It is Recorded,
- Julianna Johnson,
- Lily Ray,
- Little Daisy,
- Little Ella,
- Maggie by my Side,
- Maggie, the Pride of the Vale,
- Mary May,
- Mary’s Welcome Home,
- Massa in de Cold Ground,
- Massa sound is Sleeping,
- My Brodder Gum,
- My Canoe is on the Ohio,
- My old House, my dear, happy Home,
- My own Mountain Home,
- Nelly Bly,
- No, thank you, Sir, or Fairy May,
- Oh, don’t you remember the Time,
- Oh, I’m a jolly Bachelor,
- Old Ironsides,
- Old K. Y. Ky,
- Our Union, Right or Wrong,
- Over the Summer Sea,
- Paddy Boghree,
- Queen Mary’s Escape,
- Revolutionary Times,
- Ring de Banjo,
- Roy, Neill,
- She’s Black, but that’s no matter,
- Some Folks,
- Take me Home to Die,
- The Anchor’s Weighed,
- The Evening Gun,
- The Happy Switzer,
- The Home I leave Behind Me,
- The Messenger Bird,
- The Newfoundland Dog,
- The Old Stage Coach,
- The Pilot,
- The Reefer’s Song,
- The Ship on Fire,
- The Sleighing Glee,
- The Star of my Home,
- Under the Willow she’s sleeping,
- Virginia Belle,
- Way down in Cairo,
- We are Coming, Sister Mary,
- Who’ll have me,
- Willie, my Brave,
- Will you list to me, Nellie?
$20 Worth of Music for Ten Cents!
BEADLE’S
DIME MELODIST,
COMPRISING THE MUSIC AND WORDS
CONTENTS:
- A Hundred Years Ago,
- A Lowly Youth,
- Anna Bell,
- Annie Lowe,
- Be Quiet do, I’ll Call my Mother,
- Bime, Bome Bell,
- Bonny Eloise,
- Carry Me Home to Tennessee,
- Ettie May,
- Far on the Deep Blue Sea,
- Fare Thee well, Katy Dear,
- Forgive but don’t Forget,
- Hope on, Hope Ever,
- I had a Gentle Mother,
- I’ll Dream of Thee no More,
- In the Wild Chamois’ Track,
- Keemo Kimo,
- Jennie with her Bonnie Blue E’e,
- Love Me little, Love Me long,
- Marion Lee,
- Mary of Lake Enon,
- Mary of the Glen,
- Mother, Sweet Mother, why Linger Away?
- My Soul in one unbroken Sigh,
- Oft in the Stilly Night,
- Oh, my Love he is a Salieur,
- Oh, Whisper what Thou Feelest,
- Old Josey,
- Once upon a Time,
- One Cheering Word,
- One Parting Song, and then Farewell,
- Poor Thomas Day,
- Pretty Nelly,
- Round for Three Voices,
- Scenes that are Brightest,
- Sleeping I Dreamed, Love,
- Softly ye Night Winds,
- Some One to Love,
- Strike the Light Guitar,
- Swinging, Swinging all Day Long,
- ’Tis Pleasant to be Young,
- ’Tis the Witching Hour of Love,
- The Dearest Spot of Earth,
- The Female Smuggler,
- The Good-by at the Door,
- The Hazel Dell,
- The Leaves that Fall in Spring,
- The Low-Backed Car,
- The Mother’s Smile,
- The Old Folks are Gone,
- The Winds that Waft my Sighs to Thee,
- There is a Flower that Bloometh,
- There is Darkness on the Mountain,
- Thou art Mine own, Love,
- Where is Home?
- Why do I Weep for Thee?
- Widow Machree,
- Wild Tiadatton,
- Winsome Winnie,
- Work, Work,
- Yes, let Me like a Soldier Die.
BEADLE’S
Dime Cook Book.
CONTENTS.
- Seven Recipes to make Bread,
- Six Recipes to make Biscuits or Rolls,
- Seventeen Recipes to make Hot Bread and Cakes,
- Fourteen Recipes for Breakfast Dishes,
- Sixteen Recipes for Preparing Beef for the Table,
- Eleven Recipes for Preparing Veal for the Table,
- Fifteen Recipes for Preparing Mutton for the Table,
- Fourteen Recipes for Preparing Pork for the Table,
- Twelve Recipes for Preparing Poultry and Game for the Table,
- Ten Recipes for Preparing Fish for the Table,
- Nine Recipes for Nice Breakfast Dishes,
- Ten Recipes for Soups,
- Eighteen Recipes for Vegetables,
- Seven Recipes for Sauces,
- Eighteen Recipes for Pies,
- Twenty-one Recipes for Puddings,
- Thirty Recipes for Cakes,
- Five Recipes for Tea, Coffee, and Chocolate,
- Twelve Recipes for Jellies,
- Sixteen Recipes for Preserves,
- Eight Recipes to Keep and Dry Fruits,
- Four Recipes for Jams.
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The COOK-BOOK embraces Recipes, Directions, Rules and Facts relating to every department of Housekeeping.
The RECIPE-BOOK is a perfect treasure house of knowledge, for the kitchen, parlor, nursery, sick-room, the toilet, &c., &c.
The BOOK OF ETIQUETTE can truly be called a useful work. It embodies all the information necessary to “post” the reader, old or young, male or female, upon every point of etiquette or social usage.
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