Bab Ballads and Savoy Songs
W. S. Gilbert
Publisher: Project Gutenberg
Summary
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Publisher: Project Gutenberg
Sorry, we have no synopsis for this book right now. Sign in to read it on 24symbols.com
Art comes in many shapes and sizes and many different forms. And one person’s art is often someone else’s object of derision. But what we can all agree on is that Art exists, that it’s something perhaps unique to humankind but very definitely evokes a deep reaction whether of ‘wow!’ or ‘what?’ In this volume we take Art as our subject and have it reviewed and explored by other Artists, by Classic Poets. True Art ignites an individual response or a collective awareness. Our DNA seems to cultivate that. When we engage with Art the results are at times as surprising as they are interesting. In the words of Keats, Shakespeare, Wharton, Chatterton and very many others Art is seen and understood both as that individual reaction and a collective experience. Art is where it’s at. 01 - The Poetry of Art - An Introduction 02 - The Man With the Blue Guitar by Wallace Stevens 03 - Botticlelli’s Madonna in the Louvre by Edith Wharton 04 - Before a Painting by James Weldon Johnson 05 - Sonnet 20 - A Woman's Face with Nature's Own Hand Painted by William Shakespeare 06 - Sonnet 24 - Mine Eye Hath Played the Painter and Hath Steeled by William Shakespeare 07 - Sonnet 83 - I Never Saw That You Did Painting Need by William Shakespeare 08 - Art and Heart by Ella Wheeler Wilcox 09 - Colors by Stephen Vincent Benet 10 - I Have Colours in My Head by Daniel Sheehan 11 - I Would Not Paint a Picture by Emily Dickinson 12 - To the Painter, To Draw Him a Picture by Robert Herrick 13 - On Mr Alcock of Bristol, an Excellent Miniature Painter by Thomas Chatterton 14 - On the Portrait of Two Beautiful Young People by Gerard Manley Hopkins 15 - Portrait d'une Femme by Ezra Pound 16 - To a Beautiful Female Portrait by Henry Alford 17 - The Portrait by Ford Madox Ford 18 - Her Portrait Immortal by Richard Le Gallienne 19 - My Last Duchess by Robert Browning 20 - Portrait of My Father As a Young Man by Rainer Maria Rilke 21 - On a Portrait of Dante by Giotto by James Russell Lowell 22 - Written Under a Portrait of Keats by John Boyle O'Reily 23 - On Seeing the Elgin Marbles For the First Time by John Keats 24 - Jade by Edith Wharton 25 - Ozymandias by Percy Bysshe Shelley 26 - An Inscription for Zheng Shujin's Painting by Qiu Jin 27 - The New Colossus by Emma Lazarus 28 - Rome - Building a New Street in the Ancient Quarter, April 1887 by Thomas Hardy 29 - How Many Paltry Foolish Painted Things by Michael Drayton 30 - To the Painter of an Ill Drawn Picture of Cleone by Anne Kingsmill-Finch 31 - An Art Critic by Ambrose Bierce 32 - A Portrait by Richard Brinsley SheridanShow book
This is a collection of 26 poems read by LibriVox volunteers for January 2016.Show book
The apprenticeships are only meant to last a year - there were never any guarantees beyond that. For Ava, Liv, Mason and Trent, they're just trying to get through the day. They don't know why there's an endless stream of strangers passing through, but no-one ever tells them anything. In a couple of months they'll be kicked out anyway, and God knows what happens after that. Who's looking out for them? Scissors is a play about family, heritage and legacy, and is part of Chris Bush's trilogy of plays about a Sheffield manufacturing family, Rock / Paper / Scissors. The three plays were first performed simultaneously with the same cast moving between three theatres in Sheffield – the Crucible, the Lyceum and the Studio – as part of Sheffield Theatres' fiftieth birthday celebrations in 2022.Show book
The CBS Radio Workshop aired from January 27, 1956 through September 22, 1957 and was a revival of the prestigious Columbia Workshop which aired from 1936 to 1943. Creator William Froug launched the series with the powerhouse two-part adaptation of "Brave New World" and booked author Aldous Huxley to narrate his famous novel. "We'll never get a sponsor anyway…," CBS vice president Howard Barnes explained to Time, "…so we might as well try anything."The CBS Workshop regularly featured the works of the world's greatest writers including Ray Bradbury, Archibald MacLeish, William Saroyan, Aldous Huxley, Lord Dunsany, Mark Twain, Edgar Allan Poe, Thomas Wolfe and Ambrose Bierce. Music was composed by Bernard Herrman, Jerry Goldsmith and others. Enjoy 12 of the greatest episodes from this award-winning drama series.5/25/56 "The Little Prince" w/ Raymond Burr and Dick Beals6/8/56 "Bring on the Angels" w/ Mason Adams and Louis Van Rooten6/29/56 "The Eternal Joan" w/ Elspeth Eric and Ed Prentiss7/13/56 "The Case of the White Kitten" w/ Kenny Delmar and Mason Adams7/27/56 "Star Boy: The Blackfoot Indian Legend of the Two Morning Stars"8/10/56 "Only Johnny Knows: An Appraisal of the Three Ages of Child Raising"8/17/56 "Colloquy No. 2: A Dissertation on Love, or Boy Meets Girl" w/ Frank Baxter8/24/56 "The Billion Dollar Failure of Figger Fallup" w/ Joseph Julian8/31/56 "Colloquy No. 3: An Analysis of Satire" w/ Stan Freberg and Alan Reed9/7/56 "The Hither and Thither of Danny Dither"10/5/56 "Roughing It" w/ Samuel Clemens, Louis Van Rooten and Daws Butler10/12/56 "A Writer at Work" w/ William Conrad and Hector ChevignyShow book
Full-cast dramatiztion of Wilde's only published novel featuring Ian Hunter, David Enders and Lewis StringerShow book
Through the poems in The Dream Women Called, Lori Wilson attends to the spirits of depression, uncertainty, and fear while wondering at the beauty in what’s broken, the remarkable in the ordinary, and the balm that the natural world can offer. Following a single speaker, we’re reminded how many lives one woman can live.This book is about crossing into a new version of your own story—after a marriage ends, the parents die, the children are grown, or the faith is discarded—and finding a place to stand, a new way to take up space in the world. Uniting past and present, these poems create multifaceted portraits, particularly of relationships between mothers and daughters. Wilson’s poems sift through memory, dreams, art, imagination, nature, and close observation, turning each discovery over in order to see it fully. Beneath the fine-grained imagery of these lyric excavations are the sometimes opposing but fundamental desires to be whole and to be seen, which often means looking within as well as turning toward the world outside. The speaker is listening always for the dream women who call, for whatever may beckon from the present and future, preparing her in some way for a life that’s truly hers.Show book