Greetings to all. It's a beautiful, cold evening in the high mountain town where I'm sitting right now, and I would be presenting a poem from the book which I'm reading currently. The book is titled Other Men's Flowers and is annotated by Field Marshal A. P. Vivel. The book contains works of various renowned British poets such as William Shakespeare, Rudyard Kipling, Walter de la Mer, Christina Rossetti, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Robert Browning, etc
Himanshi Thakur
@GreyMatter · 3:07
Hi Gunjan and thank you so much for inviting me to such a beautiful poems narration. And, you know, honestly, I am so bad with classic literature, for some reason I am not able to decipher what the poet tries to say most of the time. And, you know, I can understand some easy ones, of course, the ones from Robert Frost and Colleridge and as you mentioned, and a few others
Adarsh Rai
@TheDevilsHorse · 4:47
I am a very simple reader when it comes to reading. I don't read more of English poetry and all I do write it, but it would amaze a lot of people. And to a lot of people whom I have told, they say that's pretty as much. So what I was saying is john Keats I can relate to. He was very young when he died
Swell Team
@Swell · 0:15
Hi Gunjan. This poem was really awesome and thank you for this book recommendation too. Because the moment you started reading this poem, I was actually thinking that I should start reading this book. I really loved each and every line and the title All That's Past. What message I could pick up out of this particular poem is whatever has happened, has happened. All that's past is past. So enjoy and explore with what you are and especially have that kind of connectivity with that of nature
Hi, Gunjan. Thank you so much for this poem, which I enjoyed tremendously. I haven't read all that much De la Mer and it's very nice to have these words coming into my evening in your voice