Sonnets on Anglo-Saxon History
Ann Hawkshaw
Read by Phil Benson
The history of Britain up to the Norman Conquest in the form of 100 prose commentaries, each followed by a sonnet. The commentaries set the historical scene, quoting from Bede, the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and noted historians of the times, Hawkshaws sonnets are both imaginative and reflective, often casting new light on historical figures and events. Born in Yorkshire, Ann Hawkshaw spent much of her creative life in Manchester, where her husband John Hawkshaw was elected to Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society and, as a friend of Elizabeth Gaskell, she was drawn into the intellectual and literary circle of the city. - Summary by Phil Benson (2 hr 32 min)
Chapters
Introductory, Sonnets 1-9 | 14:32 | Read by Phil Benson |
Sonnets 10-19 | 16:04 | Read by Phil Benson |
Sonnets 20-29 | 14:49 | Read by Phil Benson |
Sonnets 30-38 | 14:07 | Read by Phil Benson |
Sonnets 39-47 | 13:48 | Read by Phil Benson |
Sonnets 48-56 | 13:07 | Read by Phil Benson |
Sonnets 57-64 | 12:40 | Read by Phil Benson |
Sonnets 65-72 | 12:47 | Read by Phil Benson |
Sonnets 73-78 | 9:29 | Read by Phil Benson |
Sonnets 79-89 | 16:41 | Read by Phil Benson |
Sonnets 90-98, Conclusion | 14:28 | Read by Phil Benson |