Books Should Be Free
Loyal Books
Free Public Domain Audiobooks & eBook Downloads
Search by: Title, Author or Keyword

Poetry

Results per page: 30 | 60 | 100
  • <
  • Page 7 of 8 
  • >
Book type:
Sort by:
View by:

By: Edward Woodley Bowling (1837-1907)

Book cover Climber's Dream

Edward Woodley Bowling was apparently a rector at the Church of All Saints in Houghton Conquest, Bedfordshire, England in the late 1800's, this poem is taken from Sagittulae, Random Verses. In this book's introduction he writes "The general reader will probably think that some apology is due to him from me for publishing verses of so crude and trivial a character. I can only say that the smallest of bows should sometimes be unstrung, and that if my little arrows are flimsy and light they will, I trust, wound no one."

By: Lennox Amott

Book cover The Minstrel A Collection of Poems

By: Laura Ann Young Pinney (1849-)

Book cover Within the Golden Gate A Souvenir of San Francisco Bay

By: Frederick W. (Frederick William) Thomas (1806-1866)

Book cover The Emigrant or Reflections While Descending the Ohio

By: James Allan Mackereth (1871-)

Book cover Ioläus The man that was a ghost

By: R. C. Lehmann (1856-1929)

Book cover The Vagabond and Other Poems from Punch

By: George W. Doneghy

Book cover The Old Hanging Fork and Other Poems

By: Maria L. Stewart

Book cover Our Little Brown House, A Poem of West Point Written for the New Year's Festival at the Cadets' Sabbath-school of the Methodist Episcopal Church, January 1, 1879

By: Herman George Scheffauer (1878-1927)

Book cover The Masque of the Elements

By: Thomas Cowherd (1817-1907)

Book cover The Emigrant Mechanic and Other Tales in Verse Together with Numerous Songs Upon Canadian Subjects

By: William Stephen Pryer

Book cover Rowena & Harold A Romance in Rhyme of an Olden Time, of Hastyngs and Normanhurst

By: John D. Cossar

Book cover A Leaf from the Old Forest

By: Sallie Southall Cotten

Book cover The White Doe The Fate of Virginia Dare

By: J. C. Manning

Book cover The Death of Saul and other Eisteddfod Prize Poems and Miscellaneous Verses

By: Horace Smith (1836-1922)

Book cover Interludes being Two Essays, a Story, and Some Verses

By: Theodore H. (Theodore Harding) Rand (1835-1900)

Book cover Song-waves

By: Jean McKishnie Blewett (1862-1934)

Chore Time by Jean McKishnie Blewett Chore Time

Jean McKishnie Blewett (4 November 1862 – 19 August 1934) was a Canadian journalist, author and poet. Blewett was a regular contributor to The Globe, a Toronto newspaper and in 1898 became editor of its Homemakers Department. In 1919, assisted by the Imperial Order of the Daughters of the Empire, she published a booklet titled Heart Stories to benefit war charities. During this time she regularly lectured on topics such as temperance and suffragism. She used the pseudonym Katherine Kent for some of her writing...

By: James McIntyre (1828-1906)

Book cover Lines Addressed to an Old Bachelor

LibriVox volunteers bring you 13 recordings of Lines Addressed to an Old Bachelor by James McIntyre. This was the Weekly Poetry project for January 27, 2013.Another poem from Canada's cheese poet, James McIntyre.

By: Sarah Frances Price (1849-1903)

Book cover Songs from the Southland

By: Thomas Runciman (1841-1909)

Book cover Songs, Sonnets & Miscellaneous Poems

By: Anonymous

The Real Mother Goose by Anonymous The Real Mother Goose

A heartwarming collection of nursery rhymes that will take you back to your childhood!

Eirik the Red's Saga by Anonymous Eirik the Red's Saga

In this saga, the events that led to Eirik the Red’s banishment to Greenland are chronicled, as well as Leif Eirikson’s discovery of Vinland the Good (a place where wheat and grapes grew naturally), after his longboat was blown off-course. By geographical details, this place is surmised to be present-day Newfoundland, and is likely the first European discovery of the American mainland, some five centuries before Christopher Columbus’s journey.

The Song of Roland by Anonymous The Song of Roland

The Song of Roland is an epic poem, originally sung in Old French. It tells the story of the Battle of Roncevaux Pass in 778. This is an English translation. Translated by Charles Kenneth Scott-Moncrieff.

By: Various

Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern by Various Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern

The Library of the World's Best Literature, Ancient and Modern, is a work of enormous proportions. Setting out with the simple goal of offering "American households a mass of good reading", the editors drew from literature of all times and all kinds what they considered the best pieces of human writing, and compiled an ambitious collection of 45 volumes (with a 46th being an index-guide). Besides the selection and translation of a huge number of poems, letters, short stories and sections of books, the collection offers, before each chapter, a short essay about the author or subject in question...

By: Unknown

The Keepsake by Unknown The Keepsake

“The Keepsake, or, Poems and Pictures For Childhood and Youth”, is a collection of twenty pastoral poems published as one collection in London, 1818. The topics are moral encouragement for children, young and old alike.

By: Anonymous

Book cover The Anti-Slavery Alphabet

By: Unknown

Humour of the North by Unknown Humour of the North

Some day an enterprising editor may find time to glean from the whole field of Canadian literature a representative collection of wit and humour. . . . The present little collection obviously makes no such ambitious claim. It embraces, however, what are believed to be representative examples of the work of some of our better-known writers, many of which will no doubt be quite familiar to Canadian readers, but perhaps none the less welcome on that account.

Book cover The Odyssey

By: William Shakespeare (1564-1616)

Book cover The Rape of Lucrece

The Rape of Lucrece (1594) is a narrative poem by William Shakespeare about the legendary Lucretia. Lucrece draws on the story described in both Ovid's Fasti and Livy's history of Rome. In 509 BC, Sextus Tarquinius, son of Tarquin, the king of Rome, raped Lucretia (Lucrece), wife of Collatinus, one of the king's aristocratic retainers. As a result, Lucrece committed suicide. Her body was paraded in the Roman Forum by the king's nephew. This incited a full-scale revolt against the Tarquins led by Lucius Junius Brutus, the banishment of the royal family, and the founding of the Roman republic.

Book cover Venus and Adonis

Venus and Adonis is Shakespeare's narrative poem about the love of the goddess Venus for the mortal youth Adonis, dedicated partly to his patron, the Earl of Southampton (thought by some to be the beautiful youth to which many of the Sonnets are addressed). The poem recounts Venus' attempts to woo Adonis, their passionate coupling, and Adonis' rejection of the goddess, to which she responds with jealousy, with tragic results. This recording features three different readers performing the narration, Venus, and Adonis.

By: Unknown (384 BC - 322 BC)

Book cover The Poetics of Aristotle
Book cover The Metamorphoses of Ovid Vol. I, Books I-VII

By: Various

Book cover The Night Before Christmas and Other Popular Stories For Children

By: Anonymous

Book cover The Ladies Delight

By: Francis William Bourdillon (1844-1912)

Aucassin and Nicolette. by Francis William Bourdillon Aucassin and Nicolette.

Aucassin and Nicolette is a medieval romance written in a combination of prose and verse called a “song-story.” Created probably in the early 13th century by an unknown French author, the work deals with the love between the son of a count and a Saracen slave girl who has been converted to Christianity and adopted by a viscount. Since Aucassin’s father is strongly opposed to their marriage, the two lovers must endure imprisonment, flight, separation in foreign lands, and many other ordeals before their ardent love and fierce determination finally bring them back together...

By: Unknown (750? BC - 650? BC)

Book cover The Odyssey of Homer

By: George F. Dillon (1836-1893)

Book cover Song Celestial; Or, Bhagavad-Gîtâ

By: Unknown (750? BC - 650? BC)

Book cover The Odyssey Done into English prose
Book cover The Younger Edda Also called Snorre's Edda, or The Prose Edda

By: Charles Knight (1791-1873)

Mind Amongst the Spindles by Charles Knight Mind Amongst the Spindles

Lowell Massachusetts was founded in the 1820s as a planned manufacturing center for textiles and is located along the rapids of the Merrimack River, 25 miles northwest of Boston. By the 1850s Lowell had the largest industrial complex in the United States. The textile industry wove cotton produced in the South. In 1860, there were more cotton spindles in Lowell than in all eleven states combined that would form the Confederacy. Mind Amongst the Spindles is a selection of works from the Lowell Offering, a monthly periodical collecting contributed works of poetry and fiction by the female workers of the textile mills...

By: Unknown (70 BC - 19 BC)

Book cover The Æneid of Virgil Translated into English Verse by E. Fairfax Taylor

By: Various

Book cover Rig Veda Americanus Sacred Songs of the Ancient Mexicans, With a Gloss in Nahuatl

By: Unknown

Book cover The Illustrated Alphabet of Birds

By: Anonymous

Book cover Select Epigrams from the Greek Anthology

By: Unknown (750? BC - 650? BC)

Book cover Odysseus, the Hero of Ithaca Adapted from the Third Book of the Primary Schools of Athens, Greece

By: Virgil (70 BC - 19 BC)

Book cover Aeneid, prose translation

The Aeneid is the most famous Latin epic poem, written by Virgil in the 1st century BC. The story revolves around the legendary hero Aeneas, a Trojan prince who left behind the ruins of his city and led his fellow citizens to Italy, where he became the ancestor of the Romans. The first six of the poem’s twelve books tell the story of Aeneas’ wanderings from Troy to Italy, while the poem’s second half treats the Trojans’ victorious war upon the Latins. This is the recording of J.W.MacKail's prose translation.

By: Unknown (1048-1122)

Book cover Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám and Salámán and Absál Together With A Life Of Edward Fitzgerald And An Essay On Persian Poetry By Ralph Waldo Emerson

By: Anonymous

Book cover The Three Bears

By: Unknown (65 BC - 8 BC)

Book cover The Works of Horace

By: Tommaso Campanella (1568-1639)

Book cover Sonnets of Michael Angelo Buonarroti and Tommaso Campanella

Michael Angelo and Campanella represent widely sundered, though almost contemporaneous, moments in the evolution of the Italian genius. Michael Angelo was essentially an artist, living in the prime of the Renaissance. Campanella was a philosopher, born when the Counter-Reformation was doing all it could to blight the free thought of the sixteenth century; and when the modern spirit of exact enquiry, in a few philosophical martyrs, was opening a new stage for European science. The one devoted all his mental energies to the realisation of beauty: the other strove to ascertain truth...

By: Unknown (43 BC - 18?)

Book cover The Metamorphoses of Publius Ovidus Naso in English blank verse Vols. I & II

By: Various

Book cover Poems Teachers Ask For, Book Two

By: Unknown (348-)

Book cover The Hymns of Prudentius

By: Various

Book cover Poems Teachers Ask For Selected by readers of "Normal Instructor-Primary Plans"

By: Unknown (70 BC - 19 BC)

Book cover The Æneids of Virgil Done into English Verse

By: Anonymous

Book cover The Mouse and the Christmas Cake

By: Unknown (973-1057)

Book cover The Diwan of Abu'l-Ala

By: Various

Book cover Christmas Sunshine

By: Harriet Beecher Stowe (1811-1896)

Book cover Eliza Crossing the River

LibriVox volunteers bring you 9 recordings of Eliza Crossing the River by Harriet Beecher Stowe. This was the Fortnightly Poetry project for April 27th, 2014.Harriet Beecher Stowe was an American abolitionist and author. Her novel Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852) was a depiction of life for African Americans under slavery; it reached millions as a novel and play, and became influential in the United States and United Kingdom. It energized anti-slavery forces in the American North, while provoking widespread anger in the South...

By: Unknown

Book cover Codex Junius 11

By: Anonymous

Book cover King Winter
Book cover Punky Dunk and the Gold Fish

By: Anthony Munday (1560? -1633)

Book cover Sir Thomas More

Sir Thomas More is a collaborative Elizabethan play by Anthony Munday and others depicting the life and death of Thomas More. It survives only in a single manuscript, now owned by the British Library. The manuscript is notable because three pages of it are considered to be in the hand of William Shakespeare and for the light it sheds on the collaborative nature of Elizabethan drama and the theatrical censorship of the era. The play dramatizes events in More's life, both real and legendary, in an episodic manner in 17 scenes, unified only by the rise and fall of More's fortunes.

By: William Shakespeare (1554-1616)

Book cover Reign of King Edward the Third

By: Unknown

Book cover Winter Sport

Librivox volunteers bring you 13 readings of Winter Sport, by an unknown author. This was the weekly poem for the week of November 23 - 30, 2014.

By: Anonymous

Book cover The Death and Burial of Cock Robin

By: George MacDonald (1824-1905)

Book cover Wind and the Moon

Librivox volunteers bring you 15 readings of The Wind and the Moon by George Macdonald. This is the fortnightly poetry project for September 28, 2014.

By: Anonymous

Book cover The Wonders of a Toy Shop

By: Unknown (1886-1961)

Book cover Hymen

By: Various

Book cover Aunt Kitty's Stories

By: Anonymous

Book cover The Tiny Picture Book

By: Unknown (1564-1616)

Book cover Cromwell

By: Anonymous

Book cover Amusing Trial in which a Yankee Lawyer Renders a Just Verdict
Book cover The Courtship, Marriage, and Pic-Nic Dinner of Cock Robin & Jenny Wren With the Death and Burial of Poor Cock Robin
Book cover Naughty Puppies

By: Unknown

Book cover The Emperor's Rout

By: Anonymous

Book cover The Fox and the Geese; and The Wonderful History of Henny-Penny
Book cover Punky Dunk and the Mouse

By: Unknown

Book cover My Dog Tray

By: Various

Book cover Cavalier Songs and Ballads of England from 1642 to 1684

By: Anonymous

Book cover Punky Dunk and the Spotted Pup
Book cover Fairy's Album With Rhymes of Fairyland

By: Unknown

Book cover Tommy Tatters Uncle Toby's Series

By: Anonymous

Book cover The Assemble of Goddes
Book cover The Interlude of Wealth and Health
Book cover The Entertaining History of Jobson & Nell

By: Unknown (1836-1897)

Book cover Revised Edition of Poems
Book cover Dame Duck's First Lecture on Education
Book cover The Arctic Queen
Book cover Th' History o' Haworth Railway fra' th' beginnin' to th' end, wi' an ackaant o' th' oppnin' serrimony

By: Various

Book cover Eyes of Youth A Book of Verse by Padraic Colum, Shane Leslie, Viola Meynell, Ruth Lindsay, Hugh Austin

By: Unknown

Book cover Old Mother Hubbard and Her Dog
Book cover Surprising Stories about the Mouse and Her Sons, and the Funny Pigs. With Laughable Colored Engravings

By: Anonymous

Book cover Little Girl to Her Flowers

This is a small volume with short poems about flowers. Listeners may wish to refer to the online text, which includes very neat illustrations.

By: Unknown

Book cover The Peacock and Parrot, on their Tour to Discover the Author of "The Peacock At Home"

By: Anonymous

Book cover The Ghost of Chatham; A Vision Dedicated to the House of Peers

By: Unknown (1869-1952)

Book cover Rhymes of the East and Re-collected Verses
Book cover My Flower-pot Child's Picture Book
Rookie rhymes, by the men of the 1st and 2nd provisional training regiments, Plattsburg, New York by Unknown Rookie rhymes, by the men of the 1st and 2nd provisional training regiments, Plattsburg, New York

By: BS Murthy

Bhagvad-Gita: Treatise of Self-help by BS Murthy Bhagvad-Gita: Treatise of Self-help

The spiritual ethos and the philosophical outlook that the Bhagvad - Gita postulates paves the way for the liberation of man, who, as Rousseau said, ‘being born free, is everywhere in chains’. But equally it is a mirror of human psychology, which enables man to discern his debilities for appropriate redressal. All the same, the boon of an oral tradition that kept it alive for over two millennia became its bane with the proliferation of interpolations therein. Besides muddying its pristine philosophy, these insertions affect the sequential conformity and structural economy of the grand discourse...


Page 7 of 8   
Popular Genres
More Genres
Languages
Paid Books