
The Georgics
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Narrated by:
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Cecil Day Lewis
About this listen
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By: Juvenal
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The Odes of Pindar
- By: Pindar
- Narrated by: Charlton Griffin
- Length: 5 hrs and 19 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
Pindar was one of the greatest lyric poets of ancient Greece. He is best known today for his odes to the victors of athletic contests, including those at famed Olympia. These odes, the only complete surviving pieces by Pindar, are marvels of sustained imagination, packed with dense parallels between the athletic victor, his illustrious aristocratic ancestors, and the myths of Olympian gods and heroes like Jason, Heracles, and Perseus.
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- Length: 83 hrs and 11 mins
- Unabridged
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This Audiobook includes Theogony.
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A PLEASURE NOT TO BE HURRIED
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The Eclogues and Georgics
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Performance
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By: Virgil
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The Pharsalia
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Overall
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Story
If you had been a court poet during the reign of the Roman emperor Nero, irritating the megalomaniac ruler would not have been wise. And one of the things which would have really angered Nero would have been the effort to write an epic poem about the struggle between Pompey and Caesar in which the noble hero (portrayed by Pompey) was the man who fought to preserve the Republic, and the selfish villain (portrayed by Caesar), the man who destroyed it. Yet Lucan wrote just such a poem.
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Great narration but old translation.
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By: Lucan
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On the Shortness of Life, On the Happy Life, and Other Essays
- Essays, Volume 1
- By: Seneca
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- Length: 6 hrs and 7 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
As former tutor and adviser to Emperor Nero, philosopher and statesman Seneca was acutely aware of how short life can be - his own life was cut short when the emperor ordered him to commit suicide (for alleged involvement in a conspiracy). And Seneca proved true to his words - his lifelong avowal to Stoicism enabled him to conduct himself with dignity to the end. During his rich and busy life, Seneca wrote a series of essays that have advised and enriched the lives of generations down to the present day.
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Completely relevant, ageless wisdom
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By: Seneca
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The Commentaries
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- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Julius Caesar wrote his exciting Commentaries during some of the most grueling campaigns ever undertaken by a Roman army. The Gallic Wars and The Civil Wars constitute the greatest series of military dispatches ever written. As literature, they are representative of the finest expressions of Latin prose in its "golden" age, a benchmark of elegant style and masculine brevity imitated by young schoolboys for centuries.
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My favourite audiobook
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By: Julius Caesar
What listeners say about The Georgics
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Overall
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Performance
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- Xophist
- 10-21-20
Abridged but too wonderful to pass over
Of course it would be better to have an unabridged audiobook, but this one is so magnificent that I'll take what I can get.
I don't think I've ever heard a better audiobook than this one, and I doubt I will.
The Georgics is great, but Mr. Day-Lewis supercharged his translation with a perfect narration. Words fail me.
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Overall
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Performance
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- Paul
- 11-30-13
A magic rendering
Any additional comments?
This rendition by C Day Lewis is magical. Yes, it is abridged; Yes, it is on a topic, farming in the Roman Empire, that resonates little with modern readers. Yes, it is competing with an unabridged version by Charlton Griffin that is very good. But, this is the version to buy. I listened to it in one sitting at dusk and was transported back, as if by magic, 2,000 years ago to a time and place of simple pleasures and great beauty. Lewis is reading from his own translation of Virgil, and the sweetness and lyricism of his narration is unforgetable. This is Virgil brought to life, and poetry of the very first order.
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Overall
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- Darwin8u
- 06-26-12
On certain days I think it was almost worth it
Imagine if Michael Pollan had written _The Botany of Desire_ using hexameter verse. Now you can begin to understand how cool the Georgics is.
“Unfortunate man, what grass you have had to secure!
Sit down on this couch, and let us both rest from our fears.
Plants-eyed view can do us no good. Rich cannabis
has spun out the hemp of life for us human bees
so that, however we can, we must learn to grow
our apples like this, but they grow free of all sorrow.
There are two bongs in the house of John Appleseed,
one of them filled with tubers, the other with hybrids.
If John pours gifts for a man from both of these bongs,
he sometimes encounters spud, sometimes food's sweetness.
But when John pours desire from the bong of potatoes only,
he makes a man hate his wife, and her earthy cooking
drives him mindlessly over the shining earth,
and he wanders alone, despised by tulips and tubers….”
My main complaint is the fact that this is an edited version. Did I know there is an unedited version? Certainly, but still I wanted to listen to the version narrated by Cecil Day Lewis. On certain days I think it was almost worth it.
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14 people found this helpful