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January
Read by Inkell
Anonymous
In 365 Foreign Dishes (Version 2)
This is collection of international recipes with a concentration on European countries, from Austrian Goulasch and Scotch Scones to Egyptian…
Miller's: The Study
Read by Rosemary McDonald (1938-2025)
Edmund Mackenzie Sneyd-Kinnersley
In H.M.I.: Some Passages in the Life of One of H.M. Inspectors of Schools
Sneyd-Kinnersley was an Inspector of Schools in a period when regulations were rapidly changing and access to free public education was expa…
Pictured
Read by Bruce Kachuk
Madison Cawein
In The Garden of Dreams
Madison Cawein from Kentucky, displays a wider range of his poetic dreams, from the bright to the dark. - Summary by Larry Wilson
The Perfect Reader
Read by Winnifred Assmann
Christopher Morley
In Plum Pudding (version 2)
Christopher Morley: A modern humorist with the tang of an Elizabethan. Plum Pudding: Thus Mr. Morley entitles his new volume, in which he ha…
ArisÆma Fimbriatum
Read by Teresa Pierce
Various
In Scientific American Supplement, No. 508, September 26, 1885
The Scientific American may be the oldest continuously published periodical in the United States, having launched its first publication in 1…
Fungi from Yuggoth
Read by Peter Tucker
H. P. Lovecraft
In Short Poetry Collection 269
This is a collection of 45 poems read in English by LibriVox volunteers during October 2025.
Fungi from Yuggoth
Read by Phil Schempf
H. P. Lovecraft
In Short Poetry Collection 215
This is a collection of 49 poems read in English by LibriVox volunteers for April 2021.
Episode of Nisus and Euryalus
Read by Inkell
George Gordon, Lord Byron
In Hours of Idleness
Hours of Idleness was Byron's first book of poems published when he was only 19. In it he experiments with various poetic styles and provid…
Reading a Letter
Read by Bruce Kachuk
D. H. Lawrence
In New Poems
This is an exceptional collection of superb and introspectively distinct poems from the pen of master author D. H. Lawrence. Never failing t…
An April Dawn
Read by Sonia
Kate Seymour MacLean
In The Coming of the Princess, and Other Poems
There is truth, doubtless, in the remark, that we are enriched less by what we have than by what we hope to have. As the poetic art in Canad…