- Christmas at Sea
- Cities and Thrones and Powers
- The Dark Ages
- The Darkling Thrush
- The Dying Swan
- Eddi's Service
- The End of the Play
- Farewell, Ungrateful Traitor
- Gather the Harvest
- If I Can Stop One Heart from Breaking
- I'm Nobody! Who are you?
- In The Droving Days
- An Invitation
- Jenny Kiss'd Me
- The Jolly Dead March
- The Jumblies
- The Legend of Jubal
- Mine and Thine
- New Year's Chimes
- Now Winter Nights Enlarge
- On Love
- Out of Sight
- The Passing of the Year
- The Prairies
- Sigh No More (from Much Ado About Nothing)
- The Snow Shower
- Song's End
- Sonnet 18
- Sonnet 130 (My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun)
- Two Workers
- When You Are Old
This is a collection of 31 poems read by LibriVox volunteers for December 2016.
It also includes a long poem, The Legend of Jubal by George Eliot
"And his brother's name was Jubal: he was the father of all such as handle the harp and organ."
- Genesis 4:21
Re-imagined from a few bare lines in Genesis, George Eliot’s epic poem describes man’s loss of innocense, the birth of animal husbandry, of industry, commerce, and art. In a surprise ending, she tells of human transcendence. Each of us has a divine gift to offer the world. (Summary by Josh Mitteldorf)
It also includes a long poem, The Legend of Jubal by George Eliot
"And his brother's name was Jubal: he was the father of all such as handle the harp and organ."
- Genesis 4:21
Re-imagined from a few bare lines in Genesis, George Eliot’s epic poem describes man’s loss of innocense, the birth of animal husbandry, of industry, commerce, and art. In a surprise ending, she tells of human transcendence. Each of us has a divine gift to offer the world. (Summary by Josh Mitteldorf)
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