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Whence come these dismal sounds that fill our ears

DMI number:
31234
First Line:
Whence come these dismal sounds that fill our ears
Last Line:
And bid the place for ever bear his name
Poem Genre / Form:
Imitation / translation / paraphrase, Ten-line stanza ababcdcdee, and Narrative verse
Themes:
Grief / sadness / melancholy, Sex / relations between the sexes, and Supernatural
Related People
Author:
Jerome [Jeremiah] Stone
Confidence:
Absolute (100%)
Comments:
Forster (1980): 66.
Content/Publication
Title:
A collection of original poems by Scotch gentlemen [Vol II] [ESTC T116768] [ECCO]
Page No(s):
pp.127-134
Poem Title:
Albin and the Daughter of Mey. An old tale, translated from the Irish.
Attribution:
By the late Mr. Jerom Stone.
Attributed To:
Jerome [Jeremiah] Stone
Title:
A collection of original poems by Scotch gentlemen. Volume II [N14984] [ecco]
Page No(s):
pp.127-134
Poem Title:
Albin and the Daughter of Mey. An old tale, translated from the Irish.
Attribution:
By the late Mr. Jerom Stone.
Attributed To:
Jerome [Jeremiah] Stone
Title:
A collection of the most esteemed pieces of poetry [T124631] [ecco]
Page No(s):
pp.47-54
Poem Title:
Albin and the Daughter of Mey. An old tale, translated from the Irish.
Attribution:
By the late Mr. Jerom Stone.
Attributed To:
Jerome [Jeremiah] Stone