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The History of English Poetry
- Narrated by: Derek Jacobi
- Length: 8 hrs and 5 mins
- Unabridged Audiobook
- Categories: Literature & Fiction, Classics
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Summary
English literature is a treasure trove of wonderful poetry. From Shakespeare to Milton, Keats to Shelley and Tennyson to Yeats, this accessible history (especially written for Naxos Audiobooks) introduces the listener to countless small masterpieces, including all the old favorites and some lesser-known gems.
Whitfield explores this most expressive of art forms and traces the historical development of a rich and diverse canon of poetical works. The lyrical powers of the most remarkable poets of the English language are illustrated with over 70 extracts.
This is the latest release from Naxos Audiobooks' successful History series, which includes accounts of English literature, theatre, and opera.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your My Library section along with the audio.
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What listeners say about The History of English Poetry
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
- Chris
- 15-05-10
An Excellent introduction
I was expecting an anthology but this is a narrative history of the arts with examples read to illustrate the story. For a person like me who has little understanding of poetry this reaally gives a great overview. It is very well read by the narrator as well. It left me wanting to listen to more poetry
21 people found this helpful
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- Peter Smith
- 23-06-19
A useful overview but opinionated and shallow.
This gives a useful broad view of the whole of English poetry but nothing more imo. Given its breadth it might be forgiven for its lack of depth but the writer is opinionated too and this combination results in some startling admissions of lack of understanding. He says that Ted Hughes’ poetry, for example, is about violence in animals and doesn’t mean much beyond that. Really, Hughes’ poetry challenges human moral pretension and anthropocentrism by presenting unsentimental but inspiring vignettes of nature, I.e. of reality. This is pretty significant, I think. The writer says several times that given writings are difficult to understand these days, as if this is their fault, so this underestimation of what he writes about is not limited to Hughes but is a general characteristic of the book. There are no close analyses or observations about actual pieces of poetry either, which adds to the sense of shallowness and accentuates the impression of opinionatedness. The reading by Derek Jacobi is very good but the hammy readings of American poetry are hopeless.
6 people found this helpful
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- Mr
- 09-05-15
profoundly illuminating and worth every penny
I struggled to understand poetry before this book but brilliantly explained and narrated a revelation
6 people found this helpful
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- Ms
- 09-11-15
For Those With a Serious Interest in the Subject
Would you listen to The History of English Poetry again? Why?
Yes, but only to dip in and out of parts that might be relevant.
What other book might you compare The History of English Poetry to, and why?
A Way With Words IV By Prof Michael D.C Drout. Some of the same ground is covered, but from different angles.
What does Derek Jacobi bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you had only read the book?
He brings to life what might otherwise be quite dry.
Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?
No - Far too long for that and I also wanted to seek out some of the poets mentioned.
Any additional comments?
It's a good history to & introduction. Not all of it is appealing to me, but there's a lot packed in & is a good introduction. I was a little surprised by the detour to the USA & I'm not convinced it's relevancy back to English poetry was totally smooth.
4 people found this helpful
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- Sarah
- 13-01-18
Enchanting, informative, re-awakened a love
My interest in poetry had waned in recent years but listening to this book has inspired me to seek out more, Blake, Tennyson, Plath the full canon. My imagination has been restoked.
3 people found this helpful
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- James Bullion
- 16-12-18
Great survey of poetry
This book covers a brief history of English poetry from beowulf to the 1960's encompassimg English and American poets. Lucid commentary and good readings from Jacob. Could have done with a little more poetry and less commentary perhaps. But you certainly get the sweep of history and poetic movements. Peters out after modernism, thankfully because who wants a disjointed narrative of postmodernism.
2 people found this helpful
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- Stephen Gott
- 25-12-21
An Ideal Gateway Into The World Of English Poetry.
As a novice in the field and history of poetry. I found this introduction both informative and inspiring. The overall narration by Derek Jacobi was as brilliant, as you would expect. The poetry readings by various artists were good.
A number of commenters have pointed out the books limitations, such as its infrequent female voices and I would add to this its failure to include poetry from the multicultural world, that the English language has been part of for several centuries. However, that said I have been encouraged by this book to continue the poetic journey and make those and other discoveries along the way.
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- john
- 02-03-20
mesmerising
As someone who likes poetry but never studied it I found this audio book superb
I learnt so much discovered truly outstanding works all delivered by a fantastic narrator whose voice was sublime
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- geraldine
- 12-11-15
Disappointed! no english women poets in this!
What could have made this a 4 or 5-star listening experience for you?
I would have liked to have seen more than a fleeting reference to the contribution of women poets. It took until near the end of the book in the chapter on American poetry for women poets to get even a slight look in!
The chapter on modern poetry missed an opportunity to include many fantastic women poets as well!
Would you ever listen to anything by Peter Whitfield again?
No
What aspect of Derek Jacobi’s performance might you have changed?
The narrator performed well
3 people found this helpful
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- Roger
- 27-10-09
Enjoyable and enlightening
This is an engaging survey of English language poetry, incorporating poems from both England and America. The mark of a good survey is that is leaves you wanting to dig deeper into the subject, and this certainly book does that. The book covers not only different poets, but the development of poetry over the centuries, and it left me wanting more.
Derek Jacobi is an excellent reader, but he doesn't read most of the poems. The readers of the poems are themselves good, but be warned: poetry takes more concentration and involvement than our multi-tasking, couch-potato society is used to, and you'll find yourself rewinding to rehear many of the poems. It is well worth it.
37 people found this helpful
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- Loyal Customer
- 21-06-15
Thrilling and Educational
The combination of the writing and narration is so stimulating that I often had to pause it so I could consider what I just heard. I enjoyed the general sweep of the history and discovered some poetry not previously on my radar.
7 people found this helpful
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- Laurel
- 12-06-12
Not Simply a Textbook
I would have never believed that Derek Jacobi could sound as dull as any college professor until I started listening to this book. It made me leave the book, then come back to it, only to leave again. Yet my love of poetry is so strong, I kept coming back.
Then I found my mistake. It was not Mr. Jacobi who made the book hard to listen to. It was the poetry, the old 'must be translated into modern English to understand' poetry. For after Spense comes Shakespeare and then (for me) the poems begin to sing and Derek Jacobi's wondrous voice gave the poems wings.
So I listened, and back tracked, and listened again. Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats, Browning, Kipling, Whitman, Longfellow ... and the list goes on. Not enough of any one poet, just a reminder of the feasts they have laid before me.
So now I have pulled my dusty poetry books from the shelf and begun to read again.
15 people found this helpful
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- Info Seeker
- 25-09-17
Straightforward but unexciting
What did you like best about The History of English Poetry? What did you like least?
This narrative filled in some gaps in my knowledge of English poetry (or more correctly, poetry in English, since American poets are also included). The text is adequate, but pretty dry and somewhat dull to listen to. Mostly it's a run-through of major poets and trends in poetry over time, with short examples from actual poems. Although it's a fairly recent book, the coverage ends with poets writing in the mid-20th century.
Would you be willing to try another book from Peter Whitfield? Why or why not?
Probably not, unless I heard from other people that it was more interesting and lively than this one.
What did you like about the performance? What did you dislike?
Derek Jacobi's reading is very good, as expected, although I wish someone had told him how to pronounce "Lanier". The short quotes from individual poems are read by other British actors, some of whom are better readers than others. In particular, their attempts to mimic American regional accents are on the level of Vivien Leigh playing Scarlett O'Hara. Surely they could have brought in a few native speakers to do the American poets with strong regional or ethnic associations.
Do you think The History of English Poetry needs a follow-up book? Why or why not?
No. It covers the topic adequately.
3 people found this helpful
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- B. Williams
- 17-05-21
Fantastic overview of English (and touching on American) poetry
What a delight it was to get this survey, sample, and history of English poetry. The story is exceptionally well told through narration and recitals. This is one of my favorite Audible recordings of all time.
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- Tony Damigo
- 15-12-19
Time Well Spent
Peter Whitfield has created a wonderfully enlightening history of English Poetry. For those of us who enjoy walking the poetic corridors of time, I highly recommend this audiobook. As a bonus, it is narrated by Derek Jacobi, who provides the listener with a marvelous performance.