Audiobook: In a Belgian Garden and Other Poems
- Download Introduction audio
- Download In a Belgian Garden audio
- Download A Lincolnshire Maiden audio
- Download Hidden Treasure audio
- Download A River Sunset audio
- Download The Madonna audio
- Download An Idol in a Shop Window audio
- Download Through a Long Cloister audio
- Download The Chambly Rapid audio
- Download The Snowdrift audio
- Download On Mount Royal audio
- Download The Vision audio
- Download A Year Ago audio
- Download Eternity audio
- Download The Old School Bell audio
- Download On A Swiss Mountain audio
- Download Rheims audio
- Download The Mystic audio
- Download A Song of the Homeland audio
- Download The Frozen Brook audio
- Download The Indifferent Ones audio
- Download In a Forest audio
- Download The Ships of Memory audio
- Download The Obelisk audio
- Download The Parting Ways audio
- Download Calvary audio
- Download The Golden Bowl audio
- Download The Lace-Maker of Bruges audio
Audiobooks Genres
Author
Description
These magnificent poems written by a lover of the natural splendor of untrodden lands are both thrilling and exhilarating. Visions and observations of the wonders of creation are gradually unlocked and elegantly illustrated in ways hitherto unimagined by the passive observer of the eclectic world that surrounds us, while sparing no omission of the very obvious and egregious rampant destruction, both physical and moral, of the Great War.
Frank Oliver Call, the poet, the educator, the skillful wordsmith takes us on a journey to lands near and far, both those untouched by the ravages of civilization and those savagely ravaged by that same civilization run amok. While deftly expressing his love and awe for the raw beauty of nature and his condemnation for "Death's dark wing" that had drifted over places tranquil and serene he once cherished, the poet concedes that much of life and its possible purpose is not nor never can be understood by us mortals. However, recognizing the imperative nature of life itself Call goes on to acknowledge that, "onward driven must our frail barques go," while adding the plea, "O God, that we might know, might only know!"
Come, then, come on this magical exploration of an era since passed, an era of beauty but one of death, destruction and devastation. Let us appreciate the prescience of this poet's description of lives altogether too able to be transformed in an instant from peace to furious frenzy. And let us dream, dream of how idyllic life could, should and just may possibly one day be. - Summary by Bruce Kachuk
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