Songs of the Road


Leído por LibriVox Volunteers

(3.8 stars; 5 reviews)

Although best known for the creation of the detective Sherlock Holmes, Arthur Conan Doyle did not only write works of mystery and of adventure - he was also a rather successful poet. This is a collection of poems written by the famous author. - Summary by Carolin (1 hr 21 min)

Capítulos

A Hymn of Empire 2:54 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Sir Nigel's Song 1:21 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
The Arab Steed 3:15 Leído por ImkeStevens
A Post-Impressionist 4:09 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Empire Builders 2:57 Leído por Greg Giordano
The Groom's Encore 4:40 Leído por Ellen Preckel
The Bay Horse 1:14 Leído por Ellen Preckel
The Outcasts 1:53 Leído por Phil Chenevert
The End 1:11 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
1902-1909 4:40 Leído por Catherine R. Salazar
The Wanderer 4:41 Leído por Greg Giordano
Bendy's Sermon 7:10 Leído por Martin Geeson
Compensation 3:06 Leído por Greg Giordano
The Banner of Progress 1:08 Leído por Greg Giordano
Hope 1:55 Leído por Greg Giordano
Religio Medici 2:16 Leído por Eric Metzler
Man's Limitation 1:26 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Mind and Matter 1:05 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
Darkness 1:38 Leído por Greg Giordano
A Woman's Love 1:04 Leído por Julia Niedermaier
By the North Sea 1:01 Leído por Phil Schempf
December's Snow 1:14 Leído por Phil Schempf
Shakespeare's Expostulation 6:13 Leído por Martin Geeson
The Empire 0:48 Leído por Greg Giordano
A Voyage 2:00 Leído por Greg Giordano
The Orphanage 1:19 Leído por Onlam
Sexagenarius Loquitur 1:16 Leído por Ruth Golding
Night Voices 1:09 Leído por Bruce Kachuk
The Message 1:03 Leído por Winston Tharp
The Echo 0:46 Leído por Julia Niedermaier
Advice to a Young Author 1:06 Leído por Julia Niedermaier
A Lilt of the Road 10:13 Leído por Eric Metzler

Reseñas

MASTER WORDSMITH


(4.5 stars)

Poetry lends itself to.many moods. One can abandon oneself to the soaring passion of Wordsworth or read and re-read Frost, attempting to wring every subtle meaning from his musings. The epics of Homer and The like give us fanciful historic narrative, and "device" poems such as "Canturbury Tales" or "Decameron" furnish us with various short stories loosely woven into a whole. Milton and Dante give us grandiose renderings of religious import. ACD gives us short poems which are witty and pithy, but my enjoyment of them lies in his carefully turned phrasing and unsurpassed rhyming meter. His is, indeed,the work of a brilliant wordsmith.