Poetry Hour - Volume 18


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Poetry Hour - Volume 15


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Poetry Hour - Volume 19


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Rilke's Book of Hours


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A FINALIST FOR THE PEN/WEST TRANSLATION AWARD The 100th Anniversary Edition of a global classic, containing beautiful translations along with the original German text. While visiting Russia in his twenties, Rainer Maria Rilke, one of the twentieth century's greatest poets, was moved by a spirituality he encountered there. Inspired, Rilke returned to Germany and put down on paper what he felt were spontaneously received prayers. Rilke's Book of Hours is the invigorating vision of spiritual practice for the secular world, and a work that seems remarkably prescient today, one hundred years after it was written. Rilke's Book of Hours shares with the reader a new kind of intimacy with God, or the divine—a reciprocal relationship between the divine and the ordinary in which God needs us as much as we need God. Rilke influenced generations of writers with his Letters to a Young Poet, and now Rilke's Book of Hours tells us that our role in the world is to love it and thereby love God into being. These fresh translations rendered by Joanna Macy, a mystic and spiritual teacher, and Anita Barrows, a skilled poet, capture Rilke's spirit as no one has done before.




Poetry Hour - Volume 13


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Poetry Hour - Volume 16


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Poetry Hour - Volume 17


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The Poetry Hour


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The Poetry Hour - Volume 4. Poetry is often cited as our greatest use of words. The English language has well over a million of them and poets down the ages seem, at times, to make use of every single one. But often they use them in simple ways to describe anything and everything from landscapes to all aspects of the human condition. Poems can evoke within us an individual response that takes us by surprise; that opens our ears and eyes to very personal feelings. Forget the idea of classic poetry being somehow dull and boring and best kept to children's textbooks. It still has life, vibrancy and relevance to our lives today. Where to start? How to do that? Poetry can be difficult. We've put together some very eclectic Poetry Hours, with a broad range of poets and themes, to entice you and seduce you with all manner of temptations. In this hour we introduce poets of the quality and breadth of Robert Browning and William Butler Yeats as well themes on Music, Ireland, Lesbians and more. All of them are from Portable Poetry, a dedicated poetry publisher. We believe that poetry should be a part of our everyday lives, uplifting the soul & reaching the parts that other arts can't. Our range of audiobooks and ebooks cover volumes on some of our greatest poets to anthologies of seasons, months, places and a wide range of themes. Portable Poetry can found at iTunes, Audible, the digital music section on Amazon and most other digital stores. This audio book is also duplicated in print as an ebook. Same title. Same words. Perhaps a different experience. But with Amazon's whispersync you can pick up and put down on any device - start on audio, continue in print and any which way after that. Portable poetry - Let us join you for the journey. The contents of this volume are: The Poetry of Music (An Introduction, If Music Be The food Of Love by William Shakespeare, Music When Soft Voices Die by Percy Bysshe Shelley, For Music by Lord Byron, Music by Wilfred Owen, The Legacy of the Lute by Letitia Elizabeth Landon, Music, An Ode by Algernon Charles Swinburne, To Music to Becalm his Fever by Robert Herrick), Forbidden Love - The Lesbian Poets - Volume 1 (An Introduction, I Found The Words To Every Thoughts by Emily Dickenson, I Can Give Myself To Her by Akiko Masana, Ode to Sappho by Radclyffe Hall, A Letter to a Brother of the Pen in Tribulation by Aphra Behn, Friendships Mystery to My Dearest Lucasta by Katherine Phillips, Bitter Rain by Wu Sao), The Poetry of William Butler Yeats (An Introduction, An Irish Airman Forsees His Death, He Remembers Forgotten Beauty, The Falling of Leaves, A Man Young and Old, When You Are Old), The Female Poets of the Seventeenth Century - Volume 1 (An Introduction, To My Dear and Loving Husband by Anne Bradstreet, Love Arm'd by Aphra Behn, Against Love by Katherine Phillips, Love The Soul of Poetry by Anne Killigrew, The Wish by Lady Mary Chudleigh, Constantinople by Lady Mary Wortley Montagu), The Poetry of Spring (An Introduction, Spring by Gerard Manley Hopkins, Daffodils by William Wordsworth, To Spring by William Blake, In The Green and Gallant Spring by Robert Louis Stevenson), The Poetry of William Blake (An Introduction, The Angel That Presided O'er My Birth, The Tyger, To Spring, London), The Poetry of Walt Whitman (An Introduction, A Clear Midnight, Miracles, Italian Music in Dakota), The Poetry of Ireland - A Nation in Verse (An Introduction, Ireland by Francis Ledwidge, I Saw From the Beach by Thomas Moore, The Wind That Shakes The Barley by Katharine Tynan, He Wishes For The Clothes of Heaven by WB Yeats, After Death by Fanny Parnell).







Directing Herbert White


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The debut poetry collection by the actor, director, and writer James Franco I’m a nocturnal creature, And I’m here to cheat time. You can see time and exhaustion Taking pay from my face— In fifty years My sleep will be death, I’ll go like the rest, But I’ll have played All the games and all the roles. —from “Nocturnal” “There’s never been a book quite like this. Hollywood — fame, celebrity, the promise of becoming an artist — is the beast at its center. Franco knows it like Melville knows whaling. Hollywood in this book devours its young. Obsessed with myths about its own past, it can be survived only by finding a vantage point that is not Hollywood. Bold yet subtle, fearless yet disarming, Franco has made a book you will never forget.” — Frank Bidart, winner of the Bollingen Prize in American Poetry “A star-studded cast moves like ghosts across the screen of James Franco’s poetic consciousness, imbuing the writing with scenes of icons who are also humans replete with sorrow and presence in our own psyches. James Dean, Monica Vitti, Catherine Deneuve, Sal Mineo, Heath Ledger, pass and fade. The author has a wonderful self-reflexive insouciance about his own fame and roles inhabited, from Hart Crane to Allen Ginsberg to Harvey Milk’s lover. Franco is a gifted contemporary Renaissance kind of guy, surveying the waterfront of illusion, suffering, and impermanance. We leave the movie theater a little wiser.” — Anne Waldman, poet, editor, scholar, and cultural/political activist