Category:John Wall Callcott compositions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
This category provides a list of John Wall Callcott works on CPDL, sorted alphabetically by title of the works pages.See the composer page for a list of works sorted by lyricist and genre.
Pages in this category
The following 97 pages are in this category, out of 97 total.
A
B
C
D
F
G
H
- Hail memory (John Wall Callcott)
- Hail! Happy Albion! (John Wall Callcott)
- Hark! the cock crows (John Wall Callcott)
- Harold the valiant (John Wall Callcott)
- Hast thou left thy blue course (John Wall Callcott)
- The haughty wife of Jove (John Wall Callcott)
- High on a mountain's lofty brow (John Wall Callcott)
- The historians (John Wall Callcott)
I
L
M
O
- O blessed retirement (John Wall Callcott)
- O God, my gracious God, to thee (John Wall Callcott)
- O snatch me swift (John Wall Callcott)
- O vainly wise (John Wall Callcott)
- O voi che sospirate (John Wall Callcott)
- Oh love, how swift thy fairest prospects fade (John Wall Callcott)
- Oh thou where'er (thie bones att reste) (John Wall Callcott)
- Oh! Sovereign of the willing soul (John Wall Callcott)
- On a summer's morning early (John Wall Callcott)
- Once upon my cheek he said the roses grew (John Wall Callcott)
- Out of the deep (John Wall Callcott)
P
S
T
- The coming morn (John Wall Callcott)
- Thee, the voice, the dance, obey (John Wall Callcott)
- Thou art beautiful, queen of the valley (John Wall Callcott)
- Thou palsied earth (John Wall Callcott)
- Thou, Lord, hast been a defence unto the poor (John Wall Callcott)
- Though from thy bank of velvet torn (John Wall Callcott)
- Through all the changing scenes of life (John Wall Callcott)
- Thyrsis, when we parted (John Wall Callcott)
- To all you ladies now at hand (John Wall Callcott)
- To God, our never-failing strength (John Wall Callcott)
- The tomb of Shakespeare (John Wall Callcott)
- Triumphant love, with roseate garlands crown'd (John Wall Callcott)
W
- The Water King (John Wall Callcott)
- Waterloo (John Wall Callcott)
- Whann Battayle smethinge (John Wall Callcott)
- When Arthur first in court began to wear long hanging sleaves (John Wall Callcott)
- Whene'er my dame a-hedging goes (John Wall Callcott)
- Why does beauteous Lina weep? (John Wall Callcott)
- With sighs, sweet rose (John Wall Callcott)