One’s Self I Sing
Robert Burns poetry
Robert Bruce’s March to Bannockburn (text and audio reading)
Green Grow the Rushes (modernized version, Celtic Woman)
Flow Gently Sweet Afton by Robert Burns (You Tube video, including lyrics)
To a Louse by Robert Burns (eText and You Tube video)
To a Mouse by Robert Burns (You Tube video with embedded text)
Auld Lang Syne (You tube video with embedded text)
My Love is like a Red, Red Rose (song and e-Text)
Editing Burns for the 21st century has updated audio renditions of several Burns poems
Poetry of Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Snow Storm
Good-bye
The Rhodora
John Keats, selected poetry
Please allow the entire post to load before paging down. If you page down before the entire post has loaded, the audio players will automatically begin playing all at once. If this happens, simply press the pause button on each audio player before continuing.
e-text for Ode to a Grecian Urn
To Sleep
Sonnet on the Sea
The Human Seasons
To One Who Has Been Long in City Pent
e-text for To One Who Has Been Long in City Pent
e-text for Ode to a Nightingale
Ode to Autumn
On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer
Thanatopsis by William Cullen Bryant
Summary: The title is from the Greek thanatos (“death”) and the suffix -opsis (literally, “sight”); it has often been translated as “Meditation upon Death”.
Due to the unusual quality of the verse and Bryant’s age when the poem was first published in 1817 by the North American Review, Richard Henry Dana, Sr., then associate editor at the Review, initially doubted its authenticity, saying to another editor, “No one, on this side of the Atlantic, is capable of writing such verses.”
Walter de la Mare, selected poems
William Cowper, selected poems
Robert Browning, selected poetry
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, selected poetry
Percy Bysshe Shelley, selected poems
Ode To a Skylark (excerpt from Poems Every Child Should Know)
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, selected poems
William Butler Yeats, selected poetry
The Lake Isle of Innisfree e-text
Aedh Wishes for the Coths of Heaven
Aedh Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven e-text
A Prayer for My Daughter e-text
A Cradle Song
THE angels are stooping
Above your bed;
They weary of trooping
With the whimpering dead.
God’s laughing in Heaven
To see you so good;
The Sailing Seven
Are gay with His mood.
I sigh that kiss you,
For I must own
That I shall miss you
When you have grown.
A Child’s Garden of Verses by Robert Louis Stevenson
Click here to see downloadable material from CurrClick which could be used with this book. Clicking these links will take you away from My Audio School.
To listen, click play in the box below or click on the chapter titles in this post.
Lord Byron, selected poems
Please allow the entire post to load before paging down. If you page down before the entire post has loaded, the audio players will automatically begin playing all at once. If this happens, simply press the pause button on each audio player before continuing.
She Walks in Beauty
The Prisoner of Chillon
abridged reading
Norton Anthology of Poetry links
The Norton Anthology of Poetry has provided a web companion with several poems read aloud. Here is their homepage where you can find several additional resources. Below are links to the poems on their site. Click on the links to go to their site, and then click on the speaker beside the text of each poem to hear it read aloud. You’ll need QuickTime for the audio player to work.
Geoffrey Chaucer (1343 – 1400) The Pardoner’s Prologue and Tale
Sir Patrick Spens Early Modern Ballads
Thomas Wyatt (1503 – 1542) They Flee from Me
Elizabeth I (1533 – 1603) When I Was Fair and Young
Edmund Spenser (1552 – 1599) Sonnet 75
Christopher Marlowe (1564 – 1593) The Passionate Shepherd to His Love
William Shakespeare (1564 – 1616) Sonnet 146
John Donne (1572 – 1631) A Valediction Forbidding Mourning
Anne Bradstreet (1612 – 1672) To My Dear and Loving Husband
Anna Letitia Barbauld (1743 – 1825) The Rights of Woman
William Blake (1757 – 1827) London
Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772 – 1834) Kubla Khan
Alfred, Lord Tennyson (1809 – 1892) Ulysses
Walt Whitman (1819 – 1892) Song of Myself
Emily Dickinson (1830 – 1886) #712
William Butler Yeats (1865 – 1939) Easter 1916
Wallace Stevens (1879 – 1955) Sunday Morning
William Carlos Williams (1883 – 1963) This Is Just to Say
Marianne Moore (1887 – 1972) Poetry
Wilfred Owen (1893 – 1918) Dulce Et Decorum Est
Langston Hughes (1902 – 1967) The Weary Blues
W. H. Auden (1907 – 1973) In Memory of W. B. Yeats
Dylan Thomas (1914 – 1953) Fern Hill
Gwendolyn Brooks (1917 – 2000) We Real Cool
Denise Levertov (1923 – 1997) Tenebrae
Adrienne Rich (b. 1929) Diving into the Wreck
Derek Walcott (b. 1930) A Far Cry from Africa
Eavan Boland (b. 1944) That the Science of Cartography Is Limited
Rita Dove (b. 1952) Parsley
Li-Young Lee (b. 1957) Persimmons
Robert Louis Stevenson, selected poetry
Click here to see a downloadable unit study from CurrClick about Robert Louis Stevenson. This link will take you away from My Audio School.
e-text for From a Railway Carriage
The Whole Duty of Children e-text
In Flanders Field by John McCrae
Carl Sandburg
Carl Sandburg Biography in Sound
Carl Sandburg: Selected poems
Read the text of Chicago Poet, along with several other Sandburg poems, at Poet’s Corner. This link will take you away from My Audio School. Kids, please get permission before leaving My Audio School.
Soup
I saw a famous man eating soup.
I say he was lifting a fat broth
Into his mouth with a spoon.
His name was in the newspapers that day
Spelled out in tall black headlines
And thousands of people were talking about him.
When I saw him,
He sat bending his head over a plate
Putting soup in his mouth with a spoon.
Jazz Fantasia by Carl Sandburg
Drum on your drums, batter on your banjoes,
Sob on the long cool winding saxophones.
Go to it, O jazzmen.
Sling your knuckles on the bottoms of the happy tin pans,
Let your trombones ooze,
And go hushahusha-hush with the slippery sand-paper.
Moan like an autumn wind high in the lonesome tree-tops,
Moan soft like you wanted somebody terrible,
Cry like a racing car slipping away from a motorcycle cop,
Bang-bang! you jazzmen,
Bang altogether drums, traps, banjoes, horns, tin cans-
Make two people fight on the top of a stairway
And scratch each other’s eyes in a clinch tumbling down the stairs.
Can the rough stuff …
Now a Mississippi steamboat pushes up the night river
With a hoo-hoo-hoo-oo …
And the green lanterns calling to the high soft stars …
A red moon rides on the humps of the low river hills …
Go to it, O jazzmen.
The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere
Right click “save target as” to download the above link.
To read the text of this poem, click here.
Click here to see a downloadable lapbook about Paul Revere.
These links will take you away from My Audio School.
Selected Poems by Robert Frost
Click here to see a selection of downloadable curriculum resources from CurrClick for studying poetry. This link will take you away from My Audio School.
Clicking the following links will take you away from My Audio School. Kids, please get permission before leaving My Audio School. This excellent site, Robert Frost Out Loud, has several recordings of Frost poems recited by the poet himself, many more read by a Frost enthusiast, and text for each included poem.
Click here to listen to Robert Frost reading his own poem, Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening.
Robert Frost reads his poem The Road Not Taken
You can hear more audio recordings of Robert Frost poetry at Robert Frost Out Loud. Poems with a blue arrow beside the title are recorded in the poet’s own voice. To listen, click on the poem titles.
Click here to read the e-text for the following poems.
A Boy’s Will is Frost’s first full volume of poetry. E-text for A Boy’s Will (you must have Adobe Reader to open this e-text).
Contents:
Part I
1. Into My Own
2. Ghost House
3. My November Guest
4. Love and a Question
5. A Late Walk
6. Stars
7. Storm Fear
8. Wind and Window Flower
9. To the Thawing Wind
10. A Prayer in Spring
11. Flower-gathering
12. Rose Pogonias
13. Asking for Roses
14. Waiting—Afield at Dusk
15. In a Vale
16. A Dream Pang
17. In Neglect
18. The Vantage Point
19. Mowing
20. Going for Water
Part II
21. Revelation
22. The Trial by Existence
23. In Equal Sacrifice
24. The Tuft of Flowers
25. Spoils of the Dead
26. Pan with Us
27. The Demiurge’s Laugh
Part III
28. Now Close the Windows
29. A Line-storm Song
30. October
31. My Butterfly
32. Reluctance
Robert Frost: Essential American Poets
Robert Frost: Essential American Poets is a podcast from The Poetry Foundation gives brief biographical information about Robert Frost, along with archival recordings of Frost reading his own poetry, recorded at the Library of Congress in 1959.