Read by an ensemble cast
Evocative, emotional, imaginative, personal, and powerful, these poems revolutionized the art form and still move and inspire us today. The best, most beloved poems by the six leading Romantic poets, performed by renowned British actors in top-quality studio productions. Listen as Douglas Hodge (Middlemarch), Derek Jacobi (Cadfael), Jeremy Northam (Gosford Park), Prunella Scales (An Ideal Husband), Nicol Williamson (Macbeth), and more read these lush, sensuous, rhythmic masterpieces. William Blake: "Tyger, Tyger, burning bright
." Includes Songs of Innocence, Songs of Experience, Poetical Sketches, a selection from The Rosetti Manuscript, more. Lord Byron: Highlights from Don Juan, The Giaour, and Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, shorter lyrics such as "So we'll go no more a roving" and "Fare thee well," and more, linked by informative commentary. Samuel Taylor Coleridge: "In Xanadu did Kubla Khan a stately pleasure-dome decree
." Includes "Kubla Khan," "Frost at Midnight," "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner," and more, all placed within the context of the poet's life and times. John Keats: "Ode on a Grecian Urn," "Ode to a Nightingale," "La Belle Dame Sans Merci," "The Eve of St. Agnes," "On First Looking into Chapman's Homer," selections from Endymion, and more. Percy Bysshe Shelley: Excerpts from Prometheus Unbound, Queen Mab, and the autobiographical Epipsychidion, lyrical masterpieces "Ode to the West Wind" and "To a Skylark," and more, linked and illuminated by commentary. Williams Wordsworth: Selections from Lyrical Ballads; poems including "I wandered lonely as a cloud," "Composed upon Westminster Bridge," and "To a Sky-Lark;" and many more, with commentary. 12 hours on 10 CDs
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Review Summary: A wealth of beautiful poetry, but spare the life stories
Review: Unfortunately, I cannot write a totally positive review of this collection of poetry. But the fault does not lie with the fine recording itself, nor with the talented British actors selected to read these poems. The fault lies rather with the poets Byron and Shelley. You may admire their poetry, and know absolutely nothing about their lives--and that is perhaps the way it should be.
I've never particularly cared for Byron's verse but much of Shelley's poetry I have always admired, and loved. Unfortunately, on this recording, for Shelley, Byron, Wordsworth, and Coleridge, we don't just hear their poetry, we must endure talk about the various events of their lives. For Wordsworth and Coleridge, this is fine. But for Byron and Shelley, this amounts to not much more than a running account of their wantonness and irresponsibility, thoughtlessness toward others, selfishness and lust. These two poets certainly brought great suffering into the lives of others, especially the women they loved and later abandoned, and the children they carelessly fathered out of wedlock and then abandoned. Thankfully, they died young, Shelley at age 30, Byron at age 36, before they could ruin other lives. There's no doubt their poetry is inspired and often very beautiful. But at what cost to others, and ultimately to themselves? Having to listen to the wastrel saga of their lives distracts from the appreciation of their verse. For that reason, I am reluctant to recommend the discs devoted to Shelley and Byron. Sample and admire their poetry to your heart's content, but spare the biographical commentary about their selfish lives.
As for the others, they are absolutely wonderful! Nicol Williamson does not just read Blake; he IS Blake. Listening to him read the Songs of Innocence brought tears to my eyes. You will come away from hearing the Blake CD overwhelmed by this man's humanity and spiritual depth, as well as his poetic inspiration. The other poet who truly surprised me was Coleridge. We've all heard stories about his opium addiction, but the man himself is presented as excessively thoughtful and considerate of others. He apparently had a very nervous disposition, and was easily discouraged. His life-story is presented in a very positive light, and he comes off very well here.
The Keats CD is another miracle. We are spared the details of Keats' short tragic life. Douglas Hodge reads Keats' greatest poems with such perfect phrasing and the finest British diction, again it is as though one is listening to Keats himself read; it's simply stunning. I will come back to this particular disc many times to hear this authentic Keatsean voice, which gives the great odes their perfect vehicle.
The two Wordsworth CDs are also quite excellent, and again one often has the sense that this is Wordsworth reading from his own work. All of his greatest poems are presented here, as well as generous excerpts from the Prelude. He comes across as a great poet of nature, and above all else a man who tried to see harmony and concord in nature. But it is also evident that he was a man consciously trying to beat back a sense of deep depression as he grew older.
This superb set is sure to be a constant resource for me for many years. This poetry was meant to be heard. Of course not all the poems in this collection are great, but if you are familiar with the romantic poets you will find the poems you most admire in this collection, and you will likely find new ones to admire as well. I highly recommend this set. Many thanks to Highbridge audio for these recordings. Here's hoping that the Victorian poets will soon be presented in the same format.
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Review Summary: Some Beautiful Readings of Some Beautiful Poems
Review: I think poetry needs to be listened to...not just read. The trick is finding an audio Cassette or audio CD that does justice to the music of the poem. Since the Romantic poets wrote some of the most wonderful poetry in the English language, many people will want to have such an audio product. I do recommend this CD without reservation. Why four versus five stars? One of the most interesting parts of the CD collection are the autobiographical materials that precede the poems; neither John Keats nor William Blake received "that historical treatment" in this audio product. This is a minor complaint. Also, some of the readers are better than others. Jeremy Northam version of Coleridge's THE EOLIAN HARP is wonderful, perhaps worth the price of the CD alone.
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Review Summary: GIFTED ACTORS READ TREASURED POEMS
Review: "Tyger! Tyger! burning bright
In the forests of the night,
What immortal hand or eye
Could frame thy fearful symmetry?"
William Blake
Remember Eng. Lit. class when it was announced that assigned reading would be the works of the Romantic Poets? That usually elicited a chorus of groans (I confess, myself included). What a difference it would have made if my introduction to this poetry had been in the voices of the marvelous British actors featured on this audio edition! Familiar words and phrases take on new meaning when delivered by these talented performers. Listeners may find additional insights into an author's intent revealed in the deep, rich tones of Derek Jacobi or the lyrical delivery of Prunella Scales.
Highbridge has gathered an ensemble cast to bring the words of the world's most famous writers to life. Performers, in addition to Jacobi and Scales, are Jeremy Northam, Nicol Williamson, Stella Gonet, Haydn Gwynne, Douglas Hodge, David Horovitch, Alex Jennings, Nathaniel Parker, Diana Quick, and Sian Thomas. Each voice is perfectly matched to the verses rendered.
Among the poets whose works are performed are William Blake, a visionary British artist and writer,who illustrated all of his own writings. In addition to "Songs of Experience" from which the famous lines quoted above are taken, we hear Blake's compelling "Songs of Innocence."
The handsome Lord Byron is represented by his satirical "Don Juan plus others, while "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" remembers Samuel Taylor Coleridge. A collection would be incomplete without "On A Grecian Urn" and "Ode To A Nightingale" by John Keats and Shelley's "To A Skylark." Remember "I wandered lonely as a cloud" (from "Lyrical Ballads" by William Wordsworth with Coleridge)? It, too, is included along with many others - over 12 hours of beautiful poetry.
"The Romantic Poets" is an audio book to be treasured and heard over and over again - enjoy!
- Gail Cooke