| Airs 1 To 13 (Begin Act I) |
| A1 |
Through All The Employments Of Life |
| A2 |
'Tis Woman That Seduces All Mankind |
| A3 |
If Any Wench Venus's Girdle Wear |
| A4 |
If Love The Virgin's Heart Invade |
| A5 |
A Maid Is Like The Golden Oar |
| A6 |
Virgins Are Like The Fair Flower In Its Lustre |
| A7 |
Our Polly Is A Sad Slut! Nor Heeds What We Have Taught Her |
| A8 |
Can Love Be Controul'd By Advice |
| A9 |
O Polly, You Might Have Toy'd And Kist |
| A10 |
I Like A Ship In Storms, Was Tost |
| A11 |
A Fox May Steel Your Hens, Sir |
| A12 |
Oh, Ponder Well! Be Not Severe |
| A13 |
The Turtle Thus With Plaintive Crying |
| Airs 14 To 29 (End Act I And Begin Act II) |
| B14 |
Pretty Polly, Say |
| B15 |
My Heart Was So Free |
| B16 |
Were I Laid On Greenland's Coast |
| B17 |
O What Pain It Is To Part |
| B18 |
The Miser Thus A Shilling Sees |
| B19 |
Fill Ev'ry Glass, For Wine Inspires Us |
| B20 |
Let Us Take The Road |
| B21 |
If The Heart Of A Man Is Deprest With Cares |
| B22 |
Youth's The Season Made For Joys |
| B23 |
Before The Barn-Door Crowing |
| B24 |
The Gamesters And Lawyer Are Jugglers Alike |
| B25 |
At The Tree I Shall Suffer With Pleasure |
| B26 |
Man May Escape From Rope And Gun |
| B27 |
Thus When A Good Huswife Sees A Rat |
| B28 |
How Cruel Are The Traytors |
| B29 |
The First Time At The Looking-Glass |
| Airs 30 To 46 (End Act II And Begin Act III) |
| C30 |
When You Censure The Age |
| C31 |
Is Then His Fate Decreed, Sir? |
| C32 |
You'll Think, E'er Many Days Ensue |
| C33 |
If You At An Office Solicit Your Due |
| C34 |
Thus When The Swallow, Seeking Prey |
| C35 |
How Happy Could I Be With Either |
| C36 |
I'm Bubbled |
| C37 |
Cease Your Funning |
| C38 |
Why How Now, Madam Flirt |
| C39 |
No Power On Earth Can E'er Divide |
| C40 |
I Like The Fox Shall Grieve |
| C41 |
When Young At The Bar You First Taught Me To Score |
| C42 |
My Love Is All Madness And Folly |
| C43 |
Thus Gamesters United In Friendship Are Found |
| C44 |
The Modes Of The Court So Common Are Grown |
| C45 |
What Gudgeons Are We Men! |
| C46 |
In The Days Of My Youth I Could Bill Like A Dove |
| Airs 47 To 69 (End Act III) |
| D47 |
I'm Like A Skiff On The Ocean Tost |
| D48 |
When A Wife's In Her Pout |
| D49 |
A Curse Attends That Woman's Love |
| D50 |
Among The Men, Coquets We Find |
| D51 |
Come, Sweet Lass |
| D52 |
Hither, Dear Husband, Turn Your Eyes |
| D53 |
Which Way Shall I Turn Me - How Can I Decide? |
| D54 |
When My Hero In Court Appears |
| D55 |
When He Hold Up His Hands Arraign'd For His Life |
| D56 |
Our Selves, Like The Great, To Secure A Retreat |
| D57 |
The Charge Is Prepar'd; The Lawyers Are Met |
| D58 |
O Cruel, Cruel, Cruel Case! |
| D59 |
Of All The Friends In Time Of Grief |
| D60 |
Since I Must Swing |
| D61 |
But Now Again My Spirits Sink |
| D62 |
But Valour The Stronger Grows |
| D63 |
If Thus - A Man Can Die |
| D64 |
So I Drink Off This Bumper |
| D65 |
But Can I Leave My Pretty Hussies |
| D66 |
Their Eyes, Their Lips, Their Busses |
| D67 |
Since Laws Were Made For Ev'ry Degree |
| D68 |
Would I Might Be Hang'd! |
| D69 |
Thus I Stand Like The Turk, With His Doxies Around |
In cooperation with Argonaut Books.
Booklet says c. 1962 by Argonaut Books, Inc. Liner notes are “adapted from the introductions by Louis Kronenberger, Max Goberman and Regina Barnes to the facsimile of the 1729 edition of The Beggar’s Opera published by Argonaut Books”