Edgar Allan Poe Poems
Edgar Allan Poe
Leído por Shurtagal





Edgar Allan Poe (1809 - 1849) is widely famed as one of the greatest writers of all time. He is best known for his works of horror, such as "The Tell Tale Heart." However, and this is less known, Poe also wrote many love poems. In this collection of forty-eight poems by Edgar Allan Poe we will go through a wide variety of themes, from horror and raw creepiness in "The Raven" to pure love in "A Valentine" to depression in "Alone." Throughout all of his poems Poe kept a very strong meter and rhyme scheme. This is most obvious in "The Bells." (Summary by Shurtagal) (1 hr 21 min)
Capítulos
The Raven | 7:46 | Leído por Shurtagal |
The Bells | 4:09 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Ulalume | 4:45 | Leído por Shurtagal |
To Helen | 3:36 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Annabel Lee | 1:46 | Leído por Shurtagal |
A Valentine | 1:11 | Leído por Shurtagal |
An Enigma | 0:56 | Leído por Shurtagal |
To My Mother | 0:48 | Leído por Shurtagal |
For Annie | 2:35 | Leído por Shurtagal |
To F---- | 0:51 | Leído por Shurtagal |
To Francis S. Osgood | 0:36 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Eldorado | 0:54 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Eulalie | 1:04 | Leído por Shurtagal |
To Marie Louise (Shew) | 1:04 | Leído por Shurtagal |
The City in the Sea | 2:23 | Leído por Shurtagal |
The Sleeper | 3:01 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Bridal Ballads | 1:08 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Lenore | 2:13 | Leído por Shurtagal |
To One in Paradise | 1:10 | Leído por Shurtagal |
The Coliseum | 2:44 | Leído por Shurtagal |
The Haunted Palace | 2:05 | Leído por Shurtagal |
The Conqueror Worm | 1:36 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Silence | 0:58 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Dream-Land | 2:13 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Hymn | 0:40 | Leído por Shurtagal |
To Zante | 0:59 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Sonnet - To Science | 0:52 | Leído por Shurtagal |
The Forest Reverie | 1:21 | Leído por Shurtagal |
The Valley of Unrest | 1:21 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Israfel | 1:43 | Leído por Shurtagal |
To ---- | 0:41 | Leído por Shurtagal |
To -------- | 0:26 | Leído por Shurtagal |
To The River | 0:44 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Song | 0:50 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Spirits of The Dead | 1:33 | Leído por Shurtagal |
A Dream | 0:50 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Romance | 1:03 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Fairy Land | 1:37 | Leído por Shurtagal |
The Lake -- To ----- | 1:02 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Evening Star | 0:55 | Leído por Shurtagal |
The Happiest Day | 1:09 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Imitation | 0:53 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Hymn To Aristogeton And Harmodius | 0:56 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Dreams | 1:59 | Leído por Shurtagal |
“In Youth I Have Known One” | 2:00 | Leído por Shurtagal |
A Paean | 1:52 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Alone | 1:11 | Leído por Shurtagal |
The Village Street | 3:09 | Leído por Shurtagal |
Reseñas





A LibriVox Listener
This is not the narrator for Poe. It feels like I'm back in the eleventh grade with some pseudointellectual reading out of a textbook. The material is more powerful than his voice allows. It's like getting Justin Beiber when you want James Earl Jones.
hmmm....





James
I agree with the guy that didn't rate this but seeing as I have to I'll put a 1 1/2 because of the voice but for the poems itself I would give a 4 1/2. I love Poe and his poems and there are some I can listen to for hours on end and others once in a while. The reason I wanted to write this is because I was listening to my favorite poem (Annabel Lee) and the narrator's voice was killing my vibe!!! I don't think this narrator has the right voice for this. Their is depth and emotion in these poems but the person reading them sounds like of mix of unimpressed, distant, and slightly high.
SOME CAN READ POETRY! SOME CANNOT!





Avid Listener
Poetry is more than a mass of words rrad with some attention to meter. It should not be read with grade school effort, and it certainly requires good diction. The continual dismissing of ending letters (especially "t") when going to words beginning with vowel sounds completely destroys any reading, but especially poetry. This reader would probably be ok for prose fiction, but not for poetry.
Keep trying and don’t be in a hurry





Violet
This reader has an honest timber to the words but does not give the impression of understanding what he’s reading. Don’t give up, keep trying. Slow down your pace and digest what you’re reading. So many of these poems we about loss. Try to connect with what you’re reading.





Alina Kizmich
I loved the reading of the book. Yes, the reader sometimes stutters, but the voice and the manner of reading is perfect. Especially I fell in love with the reading of Raven. He has tragedy in his voice, which I have never found in other readers, but which is so essential for the poem.
not the Edgar Allan Poe i kno ((anh anh ahn ahn)) no no no no





raelynn
sucks.............. I dawnt like it
Very good!





M
I really enjoy the recordings of this reader, I find his voice very relaxing to listen to.





T3KH34D
horrible reading no emotion and sound like a angry teenager reading his emotions bands lyrics.