Poets of Nature
Sinopse
It is hard to top the pleasure of a woodland walk in Spring unless of course you have a lyric poet as your guide. Now that is possible with Poets of Nature. Let Walt Whitman, John Keats, Emily Dickinson, Henry David Thoreau, Emily Bronte and Ralph Waldo Emerson take you into that realm of Nature where we seldom wander. <p>with<br> <br> Jonathan Epstein <br> Malcolm Ingram<br> Tara Franklin<br> Brian Saxton<br> Julie Webster<br> Emma Micklewright<br> <br> Disc 1<br> <b>Gonzalo De Berceo </b> <i>The Praise of Spring</i><br> <b>William Wordsworth</b> <i>Daffodils, Lines Composed a few miles above Tintern Abbey</i><br> <b>John Clare</b><u> </u> <i>Spring s Messengers, In Hilly Wood, Field Path, Firwood</i><br> <b>John Keats</b> <i> I Stood a Tiptoe Upon a little Hill, </i><br> <b>Alfred Lord Tennyson</b> <i>The Mermaid</i><br> <b>Emily Bronte </b> <i>excerpts from Wuthering Heights, A Daydream</i><br> <b>Anne Bronte</b> <i>Lines Composed in a Wood on a Windy Day</i><br> <b>Charlotte Bronte</b> <i>excerpts from Jane Eyre</i><br> <b>Elizabeth Barrett Browning</b> <i>Sonnets from the Portuguese no. 29</i><br> <b>Robert Browning</b> <i>Home Thoughts from Abroad</i><br> <b>Henry David Thoreau</b> <i>from Walden, the Fall of the Leaf, Summer Rain, Mist</i><br> <br> Disc 2<br> <b>Walt Whitman</b> <i>excerpts from Song of Myself (Leaves of Grass), We too how long we were Fooled, These I Singing in Spring</i><br> <b>Ralph Waldo Emerson </b> <i>Nature, Woodnotes</i><br> <b>William Cullen Bryant </b> <i>Inscription to the Entrance of a Wood</i><br> <b>Emily Dickinson</b> <i>Nature, the Bee is not Afraid of Me, The Grass so Little has to Do, A Something in a Summer s Day, Indian Summer, Autumn, There s a Certain Slant of Light, A Light Exists in Spring, <br> A Lady Red Upon a Hill, High from the Earth, What Mystery Pervades a Well, Could I but ride Indefinite as doth the Meadow Bee, New Feet withing My Garden Go, The Sun Just Touched the Morning, An Altered Look about the Hills, Wh
Sinopse
It is hard to top the pleasure of a woodland walk in Spring unless of course you have a lyric poet as your guide. Now that is possible with Poets of Nature. Let Walt Whitman, John Keats, Emily Dickinson, Henry David Thoreau, Emily Bronte and Ralph Waldo Emerson take you into that realm of Nature where we seldom wander. <p>with<br> <br> Jonathan Epstein <br> Malcolm Ingram<br> Tara Franklin<br> Brian Saxton<br> Julie Webster<br> Emma Micklewright<br> <br> Disc 1<br> <b>Gonzalo De Berceo </b> <i>The Praise of Spring</i><br> <b>William Wordsworth</b> <i>Daffodils, Lines Composed a few miles above Tintern Abbey</i><br> <b>John Clare</b><u> </u> <i>Spring s Messengers, In Hilly Wood, Field Path, Firwood</i><br> <b>John Keats</b> <i> I Stood a Tiptoe Upon a little Hill, </i><br> <b>Alfred Lord Tennyson</b> <i>The Mermaid</i><br> <b>Emily Bronte </b> <i>excerpts from Wuthering Heights, A Daydream</i><br> <b>Anne Bronte</b> <i>Lines Composed in a Wood on a Windy Day</i><br> <b>Charlotte Bronte</b> <i>excerpts from Jane Eyre</i><br> <b>Elizabeth Barrett Browning</b> <i>Sonnets from the Portuguese no. 29</i><br> <b>Robert Browning</b> <i>Home Thoughts from Abroad</i><br> <b>Henry David Thoreau</b> <i>from Walden, the Fall of the Leaf, Summer Rain, Mist</i><br> <br> Disc 2<br> <b>Walt Whitman</b> <i>excerpts from Song of Myself (Leaves of Grass), We too how long we were Fooled, These I Singing in Spring</i><br> <b>Ralph Waldo Emerson </b> <i>Nature, Woodnotes</i><br> <b>William Cullen Bryant </b> <i>Inscription to the Entrance of a Wood</i><br> <b>Emily Dickinson</b> <i>Nature, the Bee is not Afraid of Me, The Grass so Little has to Do, A Something in a Summer s Day, Indian Summer, Autumn, There s a Certain Slant of Light, A Light Exists in Spring, <br> A Lady Red Upon a Hill, High from the Earth, What Mystery Pervades a Well, Could I but ride Indefinite as doth the Meadow Bee, New Feet withing My Garden Go, The Sun Just Touched the Morning, An Altered Look about the Hills, Wh