Primavera: Poems by Four Authors

audiobook

Primavera: Poems by Four Authors

by Stephen Phillips, Laurence Binyon, Arthur Shearly Cripps, Manmohan Ghose

EN·~32 minutes·17 chapters

Chapters

17 total

PRIMAVERA: POEMS BY FOUR AUTHORS

0:07

PREFACE

0:58

PREFACE

4:44

PRIMAVERA

0:27

POEMS

1:13

YOUTH

5:36

TESTAMENTUM AMORIS

0:38

AMAVIMUS, AMAMUS, AMABIMUS

1:00

TO A LOST LOVE

0:56

RAYMOND AND IDA

2:37

Description

This modest volume brings together the verse of four close friends, three still undergraduates at Oxford, whose work reflects the late‑Victorian Anglican aesthetic. Bound in a dark brown wrapper stamped with a simple wood‑cut, the collection was praised early on for its polished craftsmanship and subtle fragrance of youthful longing. The poems glide with restrained refinement, offering a quiet melancholy that feels both timeless and intimate.

The pieces vary in tone yet share a common delicacy: Binyon’s “Testamentum Amoris” and Phillips’s “To a Lost Love” whisper of regret rather than raw grief, while Ghose’s “Raymond and Ida” adds a faint exotic hue through careful prosody. A single blank‑verse prologue to “Orestes” showcases a sonorous gravitas, and Cripps’s “Seasons’ Comfort” allows a modest, jocund note to surface. Listeners will find themselves drawn into a world where each stanza is a gentle breath of past spring, inviting contemplation of love, loss, and the fleeting vigor of youth.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~32 minutes (30K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Barbara Tozier, Bill Tozier, Sankar Viswanathan, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2006-09-04

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the authors

Stephen Phillips

Stephen Phillips

1864–1915

Remembered for lyrical verse and ambitious stage dramas, this English writer rose quickly to fame around the turn of the 20th century. His work drew on classical and legendary subjects, and for a time he was one of the best-known literary dramatists in Britain.

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Laurence Binyon

Laurence Binyon

1869–1943

Best known for the moving First World War lines beginning "They shall grow not old," this English poet also spent decades helping readers see the beauty of Asian art. His career joined literature, scholarship, and museum work in a way that still feels unusually wide-ranging.

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AS

Arthur Shearly Cripps

1869–1952

A priest, poet, and novelist, he spent much of his life in what is now Zimbabwe and became known for writing with deep sympathy for African communities. His work joins spiritual reflection with a sharp sense of justice, giving it unusual warmth and moral force.

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Manmohan Ghose

Manmohan Ghose

1869–1924

Among the earliest Indian poets to write in English, this lyrical voice moved between India and England and brought a distinctly personal, reflective style to his work. He is also remembered as the elder brother of Sri Aurobindo, though his own poetry stands in its own quiet light.

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