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Poetry |
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By: Sidney Lanier (1842-1881) | |
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The Song of the Chattahoochee.
Sidney Clopton Lanier was an American musician, poet and author. He served in the Confederate army, worked on a blockade running ship for which he was imprisoned (resulting in his catching tuberculosis), taught, worked at a hotel where he gave musical performances, was a church organist, and worked as a lawyer. As a poet he used dialects. He became a flautist and sold poems to publications. He eventually became a university professor and is known for his adaptation of musical meter to poetry. Many schools, other structures and two lakes are named for him. | |
My Springs
LibriVox volunteers bring you 9 recordings of My Springs by Sidney Lanier. This was the Fortnightly Poetry project for April 7th, 2013. This rather lovely poem is the poet's tribute to his wife's eyes. | |
By: Charles A. Gunnison (1861-1897) | |
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In Macao
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By: Henry Abbey (1842-1911) | |
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Stories in Verse
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By: George Puttenham (-1590) | |
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The Arte of English Poesie
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By: Thomas Hood (1799-1845) | |
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Workhouse Clock
There were scarcely any events in the life of Thomas Hood. One condition there was of too potent determining importance—life-long ill health; and one circumstance of moment—a commercial failure, and consequent expatriation. Beyond this, little presents itself for record in the outward facts of this upright and beneficial career, bright with genius and coruscating with wit, dark with the lengthening and deepening shadow of death. | |
By: Henry John Newbolt (1862-1938) | |
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Poems: New and Old
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By: George Colman (1762-1836) | |
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Broad Grins Comprising, With New Additional Tales in Verse, Those Formerly Publish'd Under the Title "My Night-Gown and Slippers."
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By: William Barksted (fl. 1611) | |
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Seven Minor Epics of the English Renaissance (1596-1624)
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By: Richard Morris (1833-1894) | |
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Early English Alliterative Poems in the West-Midland Dialect of the Fourteenth Century
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By: Jessie Duncan [Translator] Westbrook | |
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Hindustani Lyrics
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By: Laurence Hope (1865-1904) | |
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Hira-Singh's Farewell to Burmah
Adela Florence Nicolson was an English poet who wrote under the pseudonym Laurence Hope. She was born in England and joined her father in 1881, who was employed in the British Army at Lahore (The traditional capital of Punjab for a millennium, Lahore was the cultural centre of the northern Indian subcontinent which extends from the eastern banks of the Indus River to New Delhi.) Her father was editor of the Lahore arm of The Civil and Military Gazette, and it was he who in all probability gave Rudyard Kipling (a contemporary of his daughter) his first employment as a journalist... | |
By: Maciej Kazimierz Sarbiewski (1595-1640) | |
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The Odes of Casimire, Translated by G. Hils
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By: Arthur Hugh Clough (1819-1861) | |
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Amours De Voyage
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By: Henry Hart Milman (1791-1868) | |
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Nala and Damayanti and Other Poems
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By: John Lydgate (1370?-1451?) | |
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The Temple of Glass
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By: Thomas Burke (1886-1945) | |
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Song Book of Quong Lee of Limehouse
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By: Adelaide Anne Procter (1825-1864) | |
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Three Rulers
Adelaide Anne Procter was an English poet and philanthropist. She worked prominently on behalf of unemployed women and the homeless, and was actively involved with feminist groups and journals. She became unhealthy, possibly due to her charity work, and died of tuberculosis at the age of 38. Procter's literary career began when she was a teenager; her poems were primarily published in Charles Dickens's periodicals Household Words and All the Year Round and later published in book form. Her charity work and her conversion to Roman Catholicism appear to have strongly influenced her poetry, which deals most commonly with such subjects as homelessness, poverty, and fallen women... | |
Legends and Lyrics Part 2
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By: Olive Tilford Dargan (1869-1968) | |
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Path Flower and Other Verses
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By: Samuel Daniel (1562-1619) | |
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Elizabethan Sonnet-Cycles Delia - Diana
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By: Léonce Rabillon (1814-1886) | |
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La Chanson de Roland : Translated from the Seventh Edition of Léon Gautier
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By: Adam Lindsay Gordon (1833-1870) | |
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Song of Autumn
Adam Lindsay Gordon was an Australian poet, jockey and politician. | |
By: Charles Moreton | |
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The Maid and the Magpie An Interesting Tale Founded on Facts
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By: Edward Dyson (1865-1931) | |
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'Hello, Soldier!' Khaki Verse
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By: William J. Lampton (1851-1917) | |
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Flag and the Faithful
LibriVox volunteers bring you 12 recordings of The Flag and the Faithful by William J. Lampton. This was the Weekly Poetry project for January 20, 2013.William J. Lampton was the second cousin of Jane Clemens (the youngest of the three daughters of Samuel Langhorne Clemens, better known by his pen name Mark Twain.)He launched his jounalist carreer in 1877 by starting the Ashland (Kentucky) Weekly Review, with his father’s money. Lampton wrote several book, as well as humorous poems he called 'yawps'. These were printed in the New York Sun and published in Yawps and Other Things ca. 1900. | |
By: J. L. B. | |
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The Butterfly's Funeral A Sequel to the Butterfly's Ball and Grasshopper's Feast
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By: DuBose Heyward (1885-1940) | |
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Carolina Chansons: Legends of the Low Country
This is a collection of poems about Charleston and the South Carolina Lowcountry. DuBose Heyward was a Charleston native best known for his novel Porgy, which was the basis for the Gershwin opera Porgy and Bess. Hervey Allen, who later wrote Anthony Adverse, met Heyward after moving to Charleston to teach. Together they founded the Poetry Society of South Carolina, which is still active today. | |