Poets & Their Afflictions – Tuberculosis - Poems by poets all linked by suffering similar ailments
John Keats, Kahlil Gibran, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Friedrich Schiller, Emily Brontë, D H Lawrence, Henry David Thoreau, Stephen Crane, Ivor Gurney, William Ernest Henley, Sidney Lanier, George Orwell, Katherine Mansfield, Anne Brontë
Narrateur Richard Mitchley, Ghizela Rowe, Gideon Wagner
Maison d'édition: The Copyright Group
Synopsis
The stereotypical image of a poet is one of unknown talent starving in a garret and who’s faithfulness and legacy to the art is discovered only after their death. In some cases this is undoubtedly true, but Poets being human and with the same building blocks of physical and mental health as the rest of us, also had the same afflictions and problems as the rest of us. The long roll call of names and the truncated legacies that were left behind is filled with these lost talents. In this volume we bring together the poems and verse of those wordsmiths whose lives were blighted by tuberculosis, then more commonly known as consumption, and its debilitating and usually terminal effects. The long roll call and the truncated legacies that were left behind are filled with the names of these lost talents.
Durée: environ 2 heures (02:25:07) Date de publication: 25/06/2025; Unabridged; Copyright Year: 2025. Copyright Statment: —

