Junte-se a nós em uma viagem ao mundo dos livros!
Adicionar este livro à prateleira
Grey
Deixe um novo comentário Default profile 50px
Grey
Assine para ler o livro completo ou leia as primeiras páginas de graça!
All characters reduced
Whisper of Silence - Listen to the Madness of Silence - cover
LER

Whisper of Silence - Listen to the Madness of Silence

Jeitendra Sharma

Editora: Pencil

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Sinopse

About the Book:We human can achieve and create all possible knowledge that we have today, even an individual can reach here by oneself. thousand years of wisdom, struggle, pain, suffering but still we fight; fight for more, this system of capitalism creates a divide and there is no alternative to it because it brings the luxuries to powerful, privileged and no one will want to give it up. 
 
In this book, You will find a need for Revolution, love and madness.  rationality can not win against human emotions, emotions are so powerful that it blinds the rationality of a man. and whenever You feel of having two choices there is a fight between emotion and rationality. 
 
I hope these poems will touch both sides of You, emotions and rationality. 
Disponível desde: 19/05/2021.

Outros livros que poderiam interessá-lo

  • Born in the USA - The Massachusetts Poets - Exploring America in poems - cover

    Born in the USA - The...

    Ralph Waldo Emerson, Emily...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    1 - Born in the USA - The Massachusetts Poets - An Introduction 
    2 - June by Horatio Alger Jr 
    3 - America the Beautiful by Katharine Lee Bates 
    4 - Beyond by Katharine Lee Bates 
    5 - Come Unto Me by Katherine Lee Bates 
    6 - Turn Me to My Yellow Leaves by William Stanley Braithwaite 
    7 - Hymn to the North Star by William Cullen Bryant 
    8 - Song of Marion's Men by William Cullen Bryant 
    9 - October by William Cullen Bryant 
    10 - The Death of Slavery by William Cullen Bryant 
    11 - Hope is the Thing With Feathers by Emily Dickinson 
    12 - I Measure Every Grief by Emily Dickinson 
    13 - Where Roses Would Not Dare to Go by Emily Dickinson 
    14 - A Light Exists in Spring by Emily Dickinson 
    15 - This Was a Poet - It Is That by Emily Dickinson 
    16 - Credo by W E B Du Bois 
    17 - Concord Hymn by Ralph Waldo Emerson 
    18 - Letters by Ralph Waldo Emerson 
    19 - Water by Ralph Waldo Emerson 
    20 - A Nation's Strength by Ralph Waldo Emerson 
    21 - Fate by Ralph Waldo Emerson 
    22 - The Eyes of My Regret by Angelina Weld Grimké 
    23 - The Black Finger by Angelina Weld Grimke 
    24 - Tenebris by Angelina Weld Grimké 
    25 - In the Reading Room of the British Museum by Louise Imogen Guiney 
    26 - Forms of Heroes by Nathaniel Hawthorne 
    27 - The Ocean by Nathamiel Hawthorne 
    28 - Address to the Moon by Nathaniel Hawthorne 
    29 - The Old Man of the Sea by Oliver Wendell Holmes 
    30 - Hymm for the Celebration at the Laying of the Cornerstone of Harvard Memorial Hall, Cambridge, October 6th 1870 by Oliver Wendell Holmes 
    31 - Old Ironsides by Oliver Wendell Holmes 
    32 - A Calendar of Sonnets - February by Helen Hunt Jackson 
    33 - A Calender of Sonnets - May by Helen Hunt Jackson 
    34 - A Calender of Sonnets - November by Helen Hunt Jackson 
    35 - The Fir Tree and the Brook by Helen Hunt Jackson 
    36 - The Poet by Amy Lowell 
    37 - Meeting House Hill by Amy Lowell 
    38 - Madonna of the Evening Flowers by Amy Lowell 
    39 - Late September by Amy Lowell 
    40 - Lilacs by Amy Lowell 
    41 - Midnight by James Russell Lowell 
    42 - A Contrast by James Russell Lowell 
    43 - Winter Evening Hymn to My Fire by James Russell Lowell 
    44 - Threnodia by James Russell Lowell 
    45 - A Requiem by James Russell Lowell 
    46 - To My Mother by Edgar Allan Poe 
    47 - In Youth I Have Known One by Edgar Allan Poe 
    48 - The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe 
    49 - A Dream Within a Dream by Edgar Allan Poe 
    50 - Alone by Edgar Allan Poe 
    51 - Here by the Brimming April Streams by Phillip Henry Savage 
    52 - On the 10th October by Phillip Henry Savage 
    53 - November Blind by Phillip Henry Savage 
    54 - Casey at the Bat by Ernest L Thayer 
    55 - The Summer Rain by Henry David Thoreau 
    56 - Woof of the Sun by Henry David Thoreau 
    57 - Pray to What Earth Does This Sweet Cold Belong by Henry David Thoreau 
    58 - What's the Railroad to Me by Henry David Thoreau 
    59 - A Day by John Greenleaf Whittier 
    60 - The Pumpkin by John Greenleaf Whittier 
    61 - The Hunters of Men by John Greenleaf Whittier 
    62 - The Farewell of a Virginia Slave Mother by John Greenleaf Whittier 
    63 - I H B Died August 11th 1898 by William Winter
    Ver livro
  • Night Became Years - cover

    Night Became Years

    Jason Stefanik

    • 0
    • 1
    • 0
    Night Became Years is poetry in the sauntering tradition of the flâneur. Stefanik loafers his way over sacred geography and explores his own mixed heritage through the lexicon of Elizabethan canting language. Comparing the terminology of fifteenth-­century English beggar vernacular with a contemporary Canadian inner­-city worldview, the poems in Night Became Years unfold as separate entities while at the same time forming a larger narrative on the possibilities of poetry today and the nature of mixed­-blood identity.
    Ver livro
  • Poetry Hour The - Volume 14 - cover

    Poetry Hour The - Volume 14

    John Donne, William Shakespeare,...

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    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 John Donne and Jane Austen as well as themes on November, The Female Poet, Westminster Memorials 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 Poetry Hour – Volume 14 - An Introduction 
    John Donne – An Introduction 
    Death Be Not Proud by John Donne 
    The Good Morrow by John Donne 
    The Expiration by John Donne 
    A Valediction Forbidding Mourning by John Donne 
    Westminster Memorials – An Introduction 
    Longing by Matthew Arnold 
    London by William Blake 
    Heaven by Rupert Brooke 
    Apostasy by Charlotte Bronte 
    When We Two Parted by Lord Byron 
    He That is Down Needs Fear No Fall by John Bunyan 
    Turtle Soup by Lewis Carroll 
    A Thought For A Lonely Death Bed by Elizabeth Barrett Browning 
    November 
    November by Thomas hood 
    November by Amy Lowell 
    November by John Payne 
    A November Night by Sara Teasdale 
    At Day Close In November by Thomas Hardy 
    The Poetry of William Shakespeare - An Introduction 
    If Music Be the Food of Love, from Twelfth Night by William Shakespeare 
    How Like A Winter Hath My Absence Been (Sonnet 97) by William Shakespeare 
    Shall I Compare Thee to A Summers Day (Sonnet 18) by William Shakespeare 
    The Witches Spell by William Shakespeare 
    Full Fathom Five by William Shakespeare 
    No Longer Mourn For Me by William Shakespeare 
    Sonnet 116 by William Shakespeare  
    The Female Poet – An Introduction. Volume 2 
    No Coward Soul is Mine by Emily Bronte  
    If Thou Must Love Me Let It Be For Nought by Elizabeth Barrett Browning  
    If Infinite Worlds, Infinite Centres by Margaret Cavendish  
    Isabella Valancy Crawford – We Parted in Silence 
    When My Love Did What I Would Not, What I Would Not by Mary Elizabeth Coleridge  
    I’m Ceded – I’ve Stopped Being Theirs by Emily Dickenson  
    Ah, Silly Pug by Queen Elizabeth I  
    Sweet Evenings Come and Go Love by George Eliot  
    The Poets of 19th Century America. An Introduction – Volume 2 
    Heaven is What I Cannot Reach by Emily Dickinson  
    Knee Deep in June by James Whitcomb Riley <
    Ver livro
  • The Deep Blue Sea (The Rattigan Collection) - cover

    The Deep Blue Sea (The Rattigan...

    Terence Rattigan

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Written in the early fifties when Rattigan was at the height of his powers, The Deep Blue Sea is a powerful account of lives blighted by love - or the lack of it.
    
    
    The play opens with the failed suicide of Hester Collyer, who has deserted her husband for the raffish charms of an ex-fighter pilot.
    
    
    This edition includes an authoritative introduction by Dan Rebellato, biographical sketch and chronology.
    
    
    The Deep Blue Sea premiered at the Duchess Theatre, London, in March 1952. It has twice been adapted for film: in 1955, starring Vivien Leigh, and in 2011, starring Rachel Weisz, Tom Hiddleston and Simon Russell Beale.
    
    
    'a masterpiece... a play that cuts at the heart' Telegraph
    
    
    'probably his greatest play... Ibsenesque' Financial Times
    
    'masterly... a perennially moving play' Guardian
    
    'excellent... particularly moving... interlaced with moments of humour and black comedy' WhatsOnStage
    Ver livro
  • Transformations - Poems - cover

    Transformations - Poems

    Anne Sexton

    • 0
    • 1
    • 0
    Pulitzer Prize–winning poet Anne Sexton morphs classic fairy tales into dark critiques of the cultural myths underpinning modern society Anne Sexton breathes new life into sixteen age-old Brothers Grimm fairy tales, reimagining them as poems infused with contemporary references, feminist ideals, and morbid humor. Grounded by nods to the ordinary—a witch’s blood “began to boil up/like Coca-Cola” and Snow White’s bodice is “as tight as an Ace bandage”—Sexton brings the stories out of the realm of the fantastical and into the everyday world. Stripping away their magical sheen, she exposes the flawed notions of family, gender, and morality within the stories that continue to pervade our collective psyche.   Sexton is especially critical of what follows these tales’ happily-ever-after endings, noting that Cinderella never has to face the mundane struggles of marriage and growing old, such as “diapers and dust,” “telling the same story twice,” or “getting a middle-aged spread,” and that after being awakened Sleeping Beauty would likely be plagued by insomnia, taking “knock-out drops” behind the prince’s back. Deconstructed into vivid, visceral, and often highly amusing poems, these fairy tales reflect themes that have long fascinated Sexton—the claustrophobic anxiety of domestic life, the limited role of women in society, and a psychological strife more dangerous than any wicked witch or poisoned apple.  
    Ver livro
  • In the Bear's House - cover

    In the Bear's House

    N. Scott Momaday

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    "Let me say at the outset that this book is not about Bear (he would be spoken of in the singular and masculine, capitalized and without an article), or it is only incidentally about him. I am less interested in defining the being of Bear than in trying to understand something about the spirit of wilderness, of which Bear is a very particular expression . . . Bear is a template of the wilderness."—from the IntroductionSince receiving the Pulitzer Prize in 1969 for his novel House Made of Dawn, N. Scott Momaday has had one of the most remarkable careers in twentieth-century American letters. Here, in In the Bear's House, Momaday passionately explores themes of loneliness, sacredness, and aggression through his depiction of Bear, the one animal that has both inspired and haunted him throughout his lifetime.With transcendent dignity and gentleness, In the Bear's House celebrates Momaday's extraordinary creative vision and his evolution as one of our most gifted artists.
    Ver livro