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The excursion train starting at eight You're there when the clock gives the warnin' And there for an hour you'll wait And as you're waiting in the train You'll hear the guard sing this refrain: Are ye right there, Michael, are ye right? Do you think that we'll be there before the night? Ye've been so long in startin' That ye couldn't say for ...
His best-known story "Eight O'Clock in the Morning" was published in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (November 1963). Ray Nelson and artist Bill Wray adapted the story as their comic "Nada" published in the comic book anthology Alien Encounters (No. 6, April 1986), and director John Carpenter adapted it as his film They Live (1988).
These poems were used to teach history to generations of British schoolchildren: So William decided these rebels to quell By ringing a curfew – a sort of a bell And if any Saxon was found out of bed After eight o'clock sharp it was "Off with his head!"
"'Tis eight o'clock,--a clear March night," Poems founded on the Affections. 1798 Lines: 1798, 13 July Composed a few miles above Tintern Abbey, On Revisiting the Banks of the Wye during a Tour. Former title: Bore the title of: "Lines, written a few miles, etc." in the 1798 edition. From 1815 onward, the poem bore the current title.
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Eight O'clock: for voice and piano: words by A. E. Housman: Vocal: ca. 1928: Greeting: for voice and piano: words by Ella Young: Vocal: 1929: The Aspidistra: for voice and piano: words by Claude Flight: Vocal: 1929: Cradle Song: for voice and piano: words by William Blake: Oxford University Press Vocal: 1929–1933: The Tiger (Tiger, Tiger) for ...
"Wee Willie Winkie" is a Scottish nursery rhyme whose protagonist has become popular as a personification of sleep. It has a Roud Folk Song Index number of 13711.. Scots poet William Miller (1810-1872), appears to have popularised a pre-existing nursery rhyme, adding additional verses to make up a five stanza poem.