"Verdaj fajreroj": Kolekto da versaĵoj

audiobook

"Verdaj fajreroj": Kolekto da versaĵoj

by Roman Frenkel

EO·~22 minutes·28 chapters

Chapters

28 total
1

ROMANO FRENKEL.

0:01
2

“VERDAJ FAJREROJ”

0:46
3

KREDU!...

0:18
4

DU MINIATUROJ POR ENMUZIKIGO.

0:21
5

AL ŜI.

0:29
6

AL SIRIUS’O.

0:27
7

ANKAŬ...

0:20
8

KANTO SOMERA.

0:16
9

KANTO AŬTUNA.

0:14
10

VINTRA KANTETO.

0:22

Description

A tender, mournful voice threads through this lyrical collection, begun as a personal tribute to a beloved wife whose sudden death left the poet yearning for solace. The opening verses place the reader at an altar once bright with floral garlands, now shadowed by loss, while the poet’s devotion persists in each line addressed to “the green star” of eternal fidelity. Through intimate confessions and whispered promises, the work invites listeners to feel the ache of grief softened by the steady rhythm of nature’s cycles.

The anthology unfolds across the seasons, offering miniature poems that celebrate spring’s rebirth, summer’s heat, autumn’s melancholy, and winter’s quiet stillness. Celestial images of stars and the sea mingle with earthy symbols of lilies, roses, and lilacs, creating a mosaic of hope that suggests comfort will eventually return. Listeners will be carried along a path where sorrow and beauty intertwine, finding reassurance that even in darkness, the world’s gentle music endures.

Collections

Browse all

Details

Language

eo

Duration

~22 minutes (21K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Andrew Sly, Mark C. Orton, Marc Vanden Bempt and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2015-05-08

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Roman Frenkel

Roman Frenkel

A Russian Esperanto poet, translator, and educator whose small body of work helped early Esperanto literature find young readers and new poetic voices. He is best known for the poetry collection Verdaj fajreroj and for bringing stories by Nikolai Gogol into Esperanto.

View all books

You may also like