Classic Comic Verse by Lewis Carroll, William Shakespeare, Lord Byron, Edward Lear, W.S. Gilbert and others

Classic Comic Verse by Lewis Carroll, William Shakespeare, Lord Byron, Edward Lear, W.S. Gilbert and others cover $28.00 Out of Stock
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VARIOUS AUTHORS
Classic Comic Verse by Lewis Carroll, William Shakespeare, Lord Byron, Edward Lear, W.S. Gilbert and others
John Moffatt, David Timson, Cathy Sara, Roger May (readers)

[ Naxos Audio Books / 2 CD ]

Release Date: Thursday 1 June 2006

This item is currently out of stock. It may take 6 or more weeks to obtain from when you place your order as this is a specialist product.

Here are the favorites from Lewis Carroll, Edward Lear, Jonathan Swift, Thomas Hood, Hillaire Belloc, W.S. Gilbert, William Shakespeare, Lord Byron, John Keats, C.S. Calverley- all the way through to the masterly pen of our age, John Betjeman. And that is not to forget perhaps the greatest of them all: Anon.

"Nearly anyone typically stumped by poetry will enjoy this solid collection of classic comic verse. (And poetry aficionados will enjoy it twice as much!) The poems range from standard poetic structure-couplets, triplets, quatrains, ballads, and sonnets-to the whimsy of limericks, proverbs, and nonsense verse. Not only are the pieces delivered with high energy and flawless articulation, they're genuinely funny! Part of the thrill of this audio production is the moment the listener realizes he's laughing at a joke made over three hundred years ago. Now THAT'S classic humor."
R.A.P. © AudioFile 2001, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine

Comedy is totally subjective. What makes one person roar with laughter can fail to elicit even the faintest of smiles from another. But the classics of comic verse have stood the test of time.

Here are the favorites from Lewis Carroll, Edward Lear, Jonathan Swift, Thomas Hood, Hillaire Belloc, W.S. Gilbert, William Shakespeare, Lord Byron, John Keats, C.S. Calverley- all the way through to the masterly pen of our age, John Betjeman. And that is not to forget perhaps the greatest of them all: Anon.

They wrote in couplets, triplets, in quatrains and trochaic dimeters. There are ballads, sonnets, proverbs, and nonsense verse. Poems to inform, divert, satirize, castigate and praise. And then there is the delightfully abused form, the limerick. A collection to make all listeners smile, laugh, remember and discover.

Tracks:

The Ruined Maid (Thomas Hardy)
Abroad and at Home (Jonathan Swift)
My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun (Shakespeare)
O a Tired Housewife (Anon)
A Joke Verified (Thomas Moore)
The Executive (John Betjeman)
Matilda (Hilaire Belloc)
The Duel (Thomas Hood)
Hiawatha's Photographing (Lewis Carroll)
Father William (Lewis Carroll)
The Platypus (Lewis Carroll)
The Owl and the Pussycat (Edward Lear)
Etiquette (W.S. Gilbert)
How to get on in Society (John Betjeman)
There was a young lady named Bright (Anon)

must many more