Audiolibro: Rebel Verses
- Download The Rebel audio
- Download Song of Revolt audio
- Download There aint no God audio
- Download The Night is Dark audio
- Download Return audio
- Download Nietzsche audio
- Download Sacrament audio
- Download Fightin' Tomlinson audio
- Download The Labourer's Hymn audio
- Download Oliver Cromwell audio
- Download Anywhere but Here audio
- Download East Wind audio
- Download Peter Wray audio
- Download Oh Fools audio
- Download Elfin Dancer audio
- Download A. G. Webster audio
- Download Oh to be Home audio
- Download Give Soldiers a Vote audio
- Download Alone audio
- Download Flesh of our Flesh audio
- Download This Town is Hell audio
- Download Timberland Bells audio
- Download Dame Peach audio
- Download Friends audio
- Download Charing Cross audio
- Download Love not too Much audio
- Download Machiavelli audio
- Download Remorse audio
- Download The Mandrake's Horrid Scream audio
- Download One Day audio
- Download No Wife audio
- Download To an Old Friend audio
- Download Is it Finished audio
- Download Oh Lincoln, City of my Dreams audio
- Download The Fool audio
Géneros de audiolibros
Autor
Descripción
Mr. Bernard Gilbert is one of the discoveries of the War. For years, it seems, he has been writing poetry, but it is only recently that an inapprehensive country has awakened to the fact. Now he is taking his rightful place among our foremost singers. What William Barnes was to Dorset, what T. E. Brown was to the Manx people—this is Mr. Gilbert to the folk of his native county of Lincoln. He has interpreted their lives, their sorrows, their aspirations, with a surprising fidelity. Mr. Gilbert never loses his grip upon realities. One feels that he knows the men of whom he writes in their most intimate moods; knows, too, their defects, which he does not shrink from recording. There is little of the dreamy idealism of the South in the peasant people of Lincolnshire. The outwardly respectable chapel-goer who asks himself, in a moment of introspection
But why not have a good time here?
Why should the Devil have all the beer?
is true to type. But he has, too, his softer moods. Fidelity in friendship, courage, resource and perseverance—these are typical of the men of the Fens. - Summary by The New Witness, 1918
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