Showing 101–150 of 614 results

Grandma Janice’s Poems and Stories

The poems and stories in this collection were selected with the reader?s grandchildren in mind. ?The Raggedy Man? and ?Little Orphant Annie,? both by James Whitcomb Riley, the Hoosier Poet were favorites of the reader when she was a child on a farm in Indiana. Other favorites were picked up along the way as she read to her own daughter and to her students, while other gems were discovered while looking for poems and stories to include in this collection. It is hoped that this collection will bless the hearts of many children and parents alike as they listen together.

Humour of the North

Some day an enterprising editor may find time to glean from the whole field of Canadian literature a representative collection of wit and humour. . . . The present little collection obviously makes no such ambitious claim. It embraces, however, what are believed to be representative examples of the work of some of our better-known writers, many of which will no doubt be quite familiar to Canadian readers, but perhaps none the less welcome on that account. (Summary from the Introduction)

Hymn Collection 001

Librivox volunteers sing twenty of their favourite hymns. All Glory Laud and Honor – Words translated from the Latin of Theodolph of Orleans; Tune: St. Theodulph by Melchior Teschner; harmony by William H. Monk. Amazing Grace – Tune: New Britain by James P. Car?rell and Da?vid S. Clay?ton, Harmony by Edwin Othello Excell. Be Thou My Vision – Tune: Slane (Irish traditional). Blessed Assurance – Tune: Assurance, by Phoebe Knapp. Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing – Tune: Nettleton by John Wyeth. Dear Lord and Father of Mankind – Music: Repton by Charles Parry. For The Beauty of the Earth – Tune: Dix by Conrad Kocher. His Eye is on the Sparrow – Tune: His Eye is on the Sparrow by Charles Hutchinson Gabriel. I Am a Poor Wayfaring Stranger – Tune first found in Kentucky Harmony by Ananias Davisson. I Sing the Almighty Power of God – Tune: Forest Green (Trad. English), arr. by Ralph Vaughan Williams. I Surrender All – Tune: I surrender all by Winfield Scott Weeden. It is Well with My Soul – Tune: Ville du Havre by Philip Paul Bliss. Just As I Am – Tune: Woodworth by William B. Bradbury. My Jesus I Love Thee – Tune: Gordon by Adoniram J. Gordon. Rock of Ages – Tune: Toplady by Thom?as Hast?ings. Softly and Tenderly – Words and Music by Will Thompson. Tis So Sweet to Trust in Jesus – Tune: Tis So Sweet to Trust in Jesus by William James Kirkpatrick. Trust and Obey – Tune: Trust and Obey, by Daniel B. Towner. We Gather Together – Arrangement and Latin translation: Eduard Kremser; English translation: Theodore Baker.

Hymns of the Christian Church

A collection of classic Christian hymns spanning the centuries. Some LibriVox volunteers read the hymns; others sung them. (Summary by Leon Mire)

Lavender Lit 101 – International LGB Literature up to 1923

International LGB Literature up to 1923 This is a collection of 30 American and European gay, lesbian, & bisexual writers from the 16th thru early 20th Centuries. Heavy on poetry — including a rousing WWI anthem from 1915 — with a few short stories and essays. Non-English works should be read where possible in their original language. – Summary by BellonaTimes

LibriVox 10th Anniversary Collection

This year is the 10th anniversary of our beloved LibriVox and to celebrate, readers have found and recorded 100 items with a connection to the number ten… … dix… zehn… diez…dez… ??????… There are short stories, poems, excerpts from books, bible readings and non-fiction articles. The items are mostly in English, but this year we have eighteen contributions in other languages: French, German, Russian, Spanish and Yiddish.

LibriVox 11th Anniversary Collection

“LibriVox is a hope, an experiment, and a question: can the net harness a bunch of volunteers to bring books in the public domain to life…” Hugh McGuire, LibriVox’s founder, August 9, 2005 This year is the 11th anniversary of our beloved LibriVox. The readings in this collection celebrate that “bunch of volunteers” who make up the worldwide LibriVox community. The readings are held together by their connection to the number “eleven.” The collection is multilingual. The selections, which are chosen by the readers, include fiction, nonfiction, poems, short stories, and articles.

LibriVox 16th Anniversary Collection

“LibriVox is a hope, an experiment, and a question: can the net harness a bunch of volunteers to bring books in the public domain to life…” Hugh McGuire, LibriVox’s founder, August 9, 2005 In celebration of LibriVox’s sixteenth anniversary, here is collection of short works of various kinds and from varied authors which include in their title the words ‘sixteen’ or ‘sixteenth’ or the number ’16.’ Each piece is selected and read by a LibriVox volunteer.

LibriVox 8th Anniversary Collection

For the past few years we have celebrated the anniversary of LibriVox with a collection loosely themed on the number of the anniversary year. This year is no exception. Readers have contributed 88 recordings in Dutch, English, French, German, Japanese, Polish and Yiddish, and this feast of fiction, poetry, essays, articles and musical items ranges from lectures to love letters, science to songs, travel to taxes, and politics to pirates, spiced with a dash of humour. It has, as always, been enormous fun for the readers and singers, and we hope that you, the listener, will gain just as much enjoyment as we have had producing it. (Introduction by Ruth Golding) Some additional notes: Section 5, Extract from The Eight-oared Victors, Chapter 35, was written by Howard Garis under his pseudonym Lester Chadwick. Section 37, Love Letters of Henry VIII to Anne Boleyn by Henry VIII also includes letters to Henry from Anne Boleyn (1501-1536). Section 53, Letters I to VIII of Political and Social Letters of a Lady of the 18th Century was edited by Emily Fanny Dorothy Osborn McDonnell (1851-1925). Section 54 Eight Little Letters Make Three Little Words: Words by Bert Kalmar (1884-1947); Music by Ted Snyder (1881-1965). Section 55, Koenig Heinrich der Achte ? Prologue was translated into the German by Wolf Graf Baudissin (1789-1878). Section 65, The Eight Immortals of the Wine Cup was translated into English by Shigeyoshi Obata. Section 77, In The Year 2889 was jointly written by Jules Verne (1828-1905) and Michel Verne (1861-1925). Section 79, Eight-day Clocks was written by Mary Mapes Dodge under her pseudonym Joel Stacy. Section 82, Que ne suis je la foug?re Bergerette du 18i?me si?cle. Words: Riboutt? (1770-1834); Music: Pergolesi (1710-1736).

Local Color Collection Vol. 001

In this celebration of diversity, learn about the myriad histories and cultures behind our volunteers. (summary by Eric Ray)

Long Poems Collection 003

LibriVox?s Long Poems Collection 003: a collection of 8 public-domain poems longer than 5 minutes in length.

Long Poems Collection 005

Long Poems Collection 005: a collection of 10 public-domain poems longer than 5 minutes in length.

Long Poems Collection 007

LibriVox?s Long Poems Collection 007: a collection of 15 public domain poems greater than 10 minutes in length. Meta-Coordinator/Cataloging: Jc Guan & TriciaG

Long Poems Collection 008

LibriVox?s Long Poems Collection 008: a collection of 14 public-domain poems longer than 10 minutes in length.