Love, Nature, Death, and the Self: Three Centuries of English-Language Poetry in Free Audiobooks

Love, Nature, Death, and the Self: Three Centuries of English-Language Poetry in Free Audiobooks

Poetry was once among the central entertainments of educated life. It was memorized, recited aloud, argued over, and carried by heart. This collection follows three centuries of English-language verse, from Shakespeare’s sonnets through the Romantics, Victorians, and early moderns. Hear how earlier generations imagined love, nature, ambition, faith, grief, beauty, and the self. Listen free on HearCandy

Shakespeare's Sonnets cover
Shakespeare’s Sonnets
William Shakespeare
One hundred fifty-four sonnets that defined the love poem in English. The fair young man, the dark lady, and the most-quoted compressed wisdom in the language.
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Songs of Innocence and Experience cover
Songs of Innocence and Experience
William Blake
Blake’s twin books — the bright lambs and church bells of innocence, the chimney sweepers and tigers of experience. Two contrary states of the soul, in poems short enough to memorize.
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The Marriage of Heaven and Hell cover
The Marriage of Heaven and Hell
William Blake
Blake’s prose-poem-prophecy turning Christian doctrine inside out. “The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom” — the manifesto of every Romantic to come.
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Milton: A Poem cover
Milton: A Poem
William Blake
Blake rewrites Paradise Lost as a vision in which Milton himself returns to earth to repair his own theology. The source of the hymn “Jerusalem” and one of his major prophetic books.
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Jerusalem: The Emanation of the Giant Albion cover
Jerusalem: The Emanation of the Giant Albion
William Blake
Blake’s longest and most ambitious work — a sprawling mythological vision in which the giant Albion (England) is restored to spiritual wholeness. Difficult, hallucinatory, unforgettable.
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Poems of William Blake cover
Poems of William Blake
William Blake
A representative selection across Blake’s career — including “The Tyger,” “London,” and other anthology staples.
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The Prelude cover
The Prelude
William Wordsworth
Wordsworth’s autobiographical epic — the growth of a poet’s mind, from childhood among the Lakes through revolutionary France. The greatest long poem in English about its own author.
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The Excursion cover
The Excursion
William Wordsworth
A nine-book philosophical poem on solitude, nature, and the consolations of moral life. Wordsworth’s most ambitious published work.
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Selection from the Sonnets cover
Selection from the Sonnets
William Wordsworth
A curated set of Wordsworth’s sonnets — the form he revived and made his own, treating it as a chamber for thought rather than a vehicle for courtship.
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The Rime of the Ancient Mariner cover
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
An old sailor stops a wedding guest to tell a story of an albatross, a cursed voyage, and a slow return to grace. The most famous narrative poem in English.
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Kubla Khan cover
Kubla Khan
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
A fragment recovered from an opium dream — “In Xanadu did Kubla Khan / A stately pleasure-dome decree.” Fifty lines that have haunted the language.
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Frost at Midnight cover
Frost at Midnight
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Coleridge sits awake watching his sleeping infant and turns the meditation into the model for every conversation poem that followed.
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Childe Harold's Pilgrimage cover
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage
Lord Byron
The autobiographical travel epic that made Byron the most famous poet in Europe overnight. Cynicism, beauty, and the prototype of the Byronic hero.
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Manfred cover
Manfred
Lord Byron
A guilt-ridden magician summons spirits to seek oblivion in the Swiss Alps. The closet drama that influenced Nietzsche and named a Tchaikovsky symphony.
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The Corsair cover
The Corsair
Lord Byron
A pirate-captain epic in heroic couplets — Byron’s biggest popular hit, selling ten thousand copies on its first day of publication.
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The Giaour cover
The Giaour
Lord Byron
A fragmented Turkish tale — vampires, vengeance, lost love — and the introduction of “Giaour” (infidel) to English readers.
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Selected Poems and Prose cover
Selected Poems and Prose
Percy Bysshe Shelley
The widest entry into Shelley’s work: lyrics, odes, philosophical fragments, and prose. Includes “Ode to the West Wind,” “To a Skylark,” and “Mont Blanc.”
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Queen Mab cover
Queen Mab
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Shelley’s early atheist epic in nine cantos — the fairy queen Mab shows a sleeping girl visions of human history, present injustice, and future utopia. Got him expelled and disowned.
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The Cenci cover
The Cenci
Percy Bysshe Shelley
A tragedy in blank verse based on the 16th-century murder of the tyrannical Count Cenci by his own children. Shelley’s nearest approach to playable theater.
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The Masque of Anarchy cover
The Masque of Anarchy
Percy Bysshe Shelley
A poem of nonviolent protest written after the Peterloo Massacre — “Rise like Lions after slumber.” A founding text of nonviolent resistance literature.
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Poems cover
Poems
John Clare
Selected works by England’s great peasant poet — close-observed nature, the lost commons, asylum lyrics. A century of being underrated.
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To the Rural Muse and Other Poems cover
To the Rural Muse and Other Poems
John Clare
Clare’s 1835 collection, written in the years before his asylum confinement — pastoral, exact, deeply rooted in Northamptonshire.
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Selected Poems cover
Selected Poems
John Keats
The canonical short list: the great odes (“Nightingale,” “Grecian Urn,” “Autumn”), “La Belle Dame sans Merci,” “Bright star.” Everything Keats wrote in his last three years before dying at twenty-five.
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Poems 1817 cover
Poems 1817
John Keats
Keats’s first published book — apprentice work, but already containing “I stood tip-toe upon a little hill” and “Sleep and Poetry.” The poet finding his voice.
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Selected Poems cover
Selected Poems
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
A representative selection of EBB’s range — the political verse, the sonnets, the dramatic monologues, and the famous “How do I love thee?”
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Sonnets from the Portuguese cover
Sonnets from the Portuguese
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Forty-four love sonnets written privately for Robert Browning during their courtship. The most famous English sonnet sequence after Shakespeare.
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Runaway Slave at Pilgrim's Point cover
Runaway Slave at Pilgrim’s Point
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
An abolitionist dramatic monologue — a fugitive woman speaks from the rock the Pilgrims landed on. Among the most powerful protest poems of the era.
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Edgar Allan Poe Poems cover
Edgar Allan Poe Poems
Edgar Allan Poe
Selected verse: “The Raven,” “Annabel Lee,” “The Bells,” “Lenore.” Sound-obsessed, hypnotic, the foundation of American Symbolism.
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The Bells and Other Poems cover
The Bells and Other Poems
Edgar Allan Poe
Poe’s onomatopoeic masterpiece plus a wider selection — the late poems where his rhythmic experiments became inescapable.
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The Raven and Other Poems cover
The Raven and Other Poems
Edgar Allan Poe
Poe’s most famous poem plus selected lyrics. “Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary…”
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Miscellaneous Poe: Poems and Short Stories cover
Miscellaneous Poe: Poems and Short Stories
Edgar Allan Poe
A mixed entry — poems alongside the prose tales Poe is equally remembered for. “The Tell-Tale Heart,” “The Cask of Amontillado,” and the verse that haunted them.
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Idylls of the King cover
Idylls of the King
Alfred, Lord Tennyson
Tennyson’s twelve-book Arthurian cycle — the Round Table from formation to ruin. A Victorian elegy for ideals that no longer hold.
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In Memoriam A.H.H. cover
In Memoriam A.H.H.
Alfred, Lord Tennyson
One hundred thirty-three lyrics, written over seventeen years, mourning Tennyson’s friend Arthur Hallam. The greatest English elegy and a private record of faith wrestled into existence.
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The Princess cover
The Princess
Alfred, Lord Tennyson
A medley about a women’s university — comic, lyrical, full of embedded songs (“Tears, idle tears”; “Sweet and low”). Less famous than In Memoriam but more inventive.
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Maud, and Other Poems cover
Maud, and Other Poems
Alfred, Lord Tennyson
A monodrama in fragments — love, madness, and the Crimean War seen through a single deranged narrator. Tennyson called it his favorite.
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Robert Browning 200th Anniversary Collection cover
Robert Browning 200th Anniversary Collection
Robert Browning
A curated selection covering Browning’s range — dramatic monologues, lyrics, late philosophical poems. The simplest entry to a famously difficult poet.
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The Ring and the Book cover
The Ring and the Book
Robert Browning
Twelve interlocking dramatic monologues retelling a single 1698 Roman murder trial from ten different angles. Browning’s epic — twenty thousand lines, his most ambitious work.
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Pippa Passes cover
Pippa Passes
Robert Browning
A young factory girl walks through town singing — and her songs alter the lives of strangers she never sees. Includes the line “God’s in his heaven — / All’s right with the world.”
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Leaves of Grass cover
Leaves of Grass
Walt Whitman
The book Whitman rewrote and expanded for forty years — “Song of Myself,” “I Sing the Body Electric,” “When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom’d.” The founding text of American free verse.
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Goblin Market and Other Poems cover
Goblin Market and Other Poems
Christina Rossetti
The title poem — two sisters tempted by goblin fruit — is the most unsettling Victorian fairy tale ever written. Plus “Up-Hill,” “Remember,” “In the Bleak Midwinter.”
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Poems: Series One cover
Poems: Series One
Emily Dickinson
The first posthumous collection — heavily edited, but the first time the world saw “Because I could not stop for Death” and “I’m Nobody! Who are you?”
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Poems: Series Two cover
Poems: Series Two
Emily Dickinson
A second posthumous gathering — more nature lyrics, more death poems, more of the compressed metaphysics that made her unique.
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Poems: Third Series cover
Poems: Third Series
Emily Dickinson
The last of the early Higginson/Todd editions — many of the love poems and friendship lyrics first appeared here.
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Selected Poems of Emily Dickinson cover
Selected Poems of Emily Dickinson
Emily Dickinson
A compact entry into Dickinson’s nearly 1,800 poems — the indispensable handful.
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Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins cover
Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins
Gerard Manley Hopkins
Hopkins died in 1889 unpublished; his Jesuit superiors thought his sprung-rhythm experiments incomprehensible. When the poems finally appeared in 1918, they sounded thirty years ahead of their time.
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The Wild Swans at Coole cover
The Wild Swans at Coole
W. B. Yeats
Yeats in middle age — “Easter, 1916,” “The Second Coming,” and the title poem about the swans he had counted for nineteen autumns at Coole Park.
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The Wind Among the Reeds cover
The Wind Among the Reeds
W. B. Yeats
Yeats at his most ornate Celtic-twilight phase — “He Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven,” “The Song of Wandering Aengus.”
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The Tower cover
The Tower
W. B. Yeats
Yeats at his most masterful — “Sailing to Byzantium,” “Leda and the Swan,” “Among School Children.” His greatest single volume.
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Responsibilities cover
Responsibilities
W. B. Yeats
Yeats’s transitional volume — abandoning the dreamy Celtic mood for harder, public, modern verse.
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Spoon River Anthology cover
Spoon River Anthology
Edgar Lee Masters
Two hundred forty-four epitaphs spoken by the dead of a small Illinois town — each ghost telling the truth they couldn’t tell while alive. A landmark of American free verse.
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The Black Riders and Other Lines cover
The Black Riders and Other Lines
Stephen Crane
Crane’s stark, parable-like poems — predating Imagism by a decade. Compressed, bitter, philosophically alone.
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Oak and Ivy cover
Oak and Ivy
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Dunbar’s 1893 debut — printed at his own expense — combining standard English lyrics with the dialect poems that made his name. The first major book of poetry by an African American to win a national audience.
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North of Boston cover
North of Boston
Robert Frost
The book that made Frost — “Mending Wall,” “The Death of the Hired Man,” “Home Burial.” Conversation-poems that look like rural sketches and turn metaphysical.
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A Boy's Will cover
A Boy’s Will
Robert Frost
Frost’s first book — quieter, more lyrical than what followed, but already recognizably him.
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Mountain Interval cover
Mountain Interval
Robert Frost
Includes “The Road Not Taken,” “Birches,” “Out, Out—.” The middle of Frost’s great early run.
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New Hampshire cover
New Hampshire
Robert Frost
The volume that won Frost the first of his four Pulitzers. “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening,” “Fire and Ice,” “Nothing Gold Can Stay.”
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Selected Poems cover
Selected Poems
Robert Frost
A career-spanning selection — the easiest way in if you only want one Frost volume.
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Chicago Poems cover
Chicago Poems
Carl Sandburg
The book that made Sandburg — “Hog Butcher for the World, / Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat.” American free verse made out of slang and street sound.
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Cornhuskers cover
Cornhuskers
Carl Sandburg
Sandburg’s second book, sharing the 1919 Pulitzer — moving from the city to the prairie, but the voice unchanged.
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Slabs of the Sunburnt West cover
Slabs of the Sunburnt West
Carl Sandburg
Sandburg in his maturity — the West, the railroads, and a long title poem about the dry country and what it takes from those who live there.
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Love Songs cover
Love Songs
Sara Teasdale
The book that won the first Columbia Poetry Prize (later the Pulitzer) — lyric poetry stripped to its essence.
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Flame and Shadow cover
Flame and Shadow
Sara Teasdale
Teasdale’s mature collection — quieter, more elegiac, her voice darkening before the end.
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Rivers to the Sea cover
Rivers to the Sea
Sara Teasdale
The book that established Teasdale — short lyrics with the polish of song and the directness of speech.
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Helen of Troy and Other Poems cover
Helen of Troy and Other Poems
Sara Teasdale
Teasdale’s second book — dramatic monologues alongside the lyrics, including the title poem in Helen’s voice.
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Renascence and Other Poems cover
Renascence and Other Poems
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Millay’s first book, including the title poem she wrote at nineteen — a vision-of-rebirth poem that announced an extraordinary voice.
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Second April cover
Second April
Edna St. Vincent Millay
Millay in her early twenties — “What lips my lips have kissed,” “Spring,” “The Poet and His Book.” Skill at full flame.
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The Harp-Weaver, and Other Poems cover
The Harp-Weaver, and Other Poems
Edna St. Vincent Millay
The book that won Millay the Pulitzer — at thirty-one, she was the third woman to win it.
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Poems cover
Poems
Edna St. Vincent Millay
A career-overview collection — Millay’s sonnets, ballads, and the later poems that grew political.
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