Emily Dickinson on Death
Emily Dickinson
Gelesen von Libby Gohn





Emily Dickinson is one of the most intriguing of American poets. Since she grew increasingly reclusive, very few of her poems were published until after her death. This collection includes two letters Dickinson wrote to her friends on the occasion of the deaths of her friend, Mr. Humphrey, and her brother, Austin. The rest of collection consists of her poetry on the subject of death. (Summary by Libby Gohn) (0 hr 28 min)
Kapitel
01 - Amherst, January 2, 1851, to Mrs. Strong | 5:59 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
02 - Autumn, 1876, to Dr. and Mrs. Holland | 2:32 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
03 - 'Let down the bars, O Death!' | 0:39 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
04 - 'Going to Heaven!' | 1:16 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
05 - 'Morns like these we parted' | 0:47 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
06 - 'I read my sentence steadily' | 0:57 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
07 - 'The only ghost I ever saw' | 0:55 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
08 - Memorials | 1:07 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
09 - The Journey | 0:51 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
10 - Going | 1:13 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
11 - 'If I should die' | 0:58 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
12 - Ghosts | 1:05 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
13 - 'What inn is this' | 0:44 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
14 - Till The End | 1:05 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
15 - The Chariot | 1:13 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
16 - 'Death is a dialogue' | 0:40 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
17 - At Length | 0:55 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
18 - Numen Lumen | 1:00 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
19 - 'I meant to find her when I came' | 0:51 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
20 - 'If I may have it when it's dead' | 0:52 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
21 - 'There's been a death in the opposite house' | 1:14 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
22 - 'After great pain, a formal feeling comes' | 1:09 | Gelesen von Libby Gohn |
Bewertungen





Malola Zap
Dickinson, magnificent as usual. The gravitas of each sentence just stump all over your core. The selection of poetry is really good, but I'm not sure Miss Gohn is the right person to read poems. She did a good job in the technical parts of the reading, however she was a matter-of-fact type of rhythm that doesn't play along too well with the pacing of poetry (especially if it's "sparkly" like some of Dickinson's poems, however somber they may appear by their content). She was pleasantly good, but not mind-blowing good. With the letters, however, she did an excellent job. I would like to hear Miss Gohn in essays and more epistles. I'm quite sure she'll excel at that.