Thanatopsis
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- Publication date
- 2022-04-27
- Topics
- librivox, audiobooks, pholisophy, death, literature, poetry
LibriVox volunteers bring you 11 recordings of Thanatopsis, by William Cullen Bryant.
M4B Audiobook (27MB)
This was the Fortnightly Poetry project for April 12, 2022.
Read in English by Adrian Stephens; Bruce Kachuk; CalmDragon; yourbookvoice; KevinS; Larry Wilson; LeeSalter; Michele Fry; Peter Yearsley; Richa Jain and William Allan Jones.
The author was only 18 when he wrote this contemplation on death, his most famous poem. His teenage musings on nature's capacity to delight us and calm us while we live, then enfold us -- every one of us -- in its bosom for all eternity, captures a serene truth. The earth is a giant graveyard and a consummate leveler, for everybody suffers the same fate in the end. (Summary by Michele Fry)
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M4B Audiobook (27MB)
- Addeddate
- 2022-04-27 21:10:16
- Identifier
- thanatopsis_2204.poem_librivox
- Ocr
- tesseract 5.0.0-1-g862e
- Ocr_autonomous
- true
- Ocr_detected_lang
- en
- Ocr_detected_lang_conf
- 1.0000
- Ocr_detected_script
- Latin
- Ocr_detected_script_conf
- 1.0000
- Ocr_module_version
- 0.0.15
- Ocr_parameters
- -l eng+Latin
- Ppi
- 600
- Run time
- 0:59:01
- Year
- 2022
comment
Reviews
Reviewer:
msfry
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-
April 28, 2022
Subject: What is Thanatopsis?
Subject: What is Thanatopsis?
The word is derived from the Greek 'thanatos' (death) and 'opsis' (view, sight). The poem is a somewhat comforting view of death, i.e., we all suffer the exact same fate in the end whether we die poor and obscure, or rich and famous. It does not consider religious concepts of life after death, or the value of living a good life, but is typical of the musings of a young man trying to figure things out. It was a challenge to read a poem having neither rhyme nor meter, (more elevated prose than poem). It is poignant nonetheless.
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