The Chinese Nightingale, and Other Poems

audiobook

The Chinese Nightingale, and Other Poems

by Vachel Lindsay

EN·~1 hours·6 chapters

Chapters

6 total

Produced by A. Light.

1:23:43

I

1:26

II

2:39

III

1:14

IV

2:01

V

2:20

Description

In the opening poem, a humble laundryman named Chang becomes a conduit for a fantastical vision that fuses the clatter of a San Francisco night with the mythic echoes of ancient China. A bright, gray nightingale sings of forgotten love, jade carvings, and silk‑woven histories, while the city’s streetlamps flicker like distant lanterns. The piece swirls between the ordinary and the otherworldly, inviting listeners to hear a timeless song that bridges cultures and eras.

The collection expands this lyrical curiosity into a kaleidoscope of American concerns, wartime reflections, and playful satire. From urgent verses on the Great War to witty odes about mice, presidents, and prairie life, each poem carries Lindsay’s rhythmic vigor and vivid imagination. Together they form a spirited tapestry that captures both the grand sweep of history and the intimate pulse of everyday moments.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (89K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

1996-07-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Vachel Lindsay

Vachel Lindsay

1879–1931

A restless, theatrical poet, he tried to bring verse off the page and back into the human voice. His chants, performances, and vivid rhythms made him one of the most distinctive American poets of the early 20th century.

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