Elegiac Sonnets and Other Poems


Read by LibriVox Volunteers

(5 stars; 3 reviews)

Charlotte Turner Smith (1749 – 1806) was an English poet and novelist. She initiated a revival of the English sonnet, helped establish the conventions of Gothic fiction, and wrote political novels of sensibility.

It was in 1784, in debtor's prison with her husband Benjamin, that she wrote and published her first work, Elegiac Sonnets. The work achieved instant success, allowing Charlotte to pay for their release from prison. Smith's sonnets helped initiate a revival of the form and granted an aura of respectability to her later novels.

Stuart Curran, the editor of Smith's poems, has written that Smith is "the first poet in England whom in retrospect we would call Romantic". She helped shape the "patterns of thought and conventions of style" for the period. Romantic poet William Wordsworth was the most affected by her works. He said of Smith in the 1830s that she was "a lady to whom English verse is under greater obligations than are likely to be either acknowledged or remembered". By the second half of the nineteenth century, however, Smith was largely forgotten. (3 hr 4 min)

Chapters

Sonnet I 1:15 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet II. Written at the close of Spring 1:10 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet III. To a Nightingale 1:19 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet IV. To the Moon 1:14 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet V. To the South Downs 1:19 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet VI. To Hope 1:15 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet VII. On the Departure of the Nightingale 1:19 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet VIII. To Spring 1:07 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet IX. 1:13 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet X. To Mrs. G. 1:09 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XI. To Sleep 1:20 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XII. Written on the Sea Shore 1:16 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XIII. From Petrarch 1:06 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XIV. From Petrarch 1:13 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XV. From Petrarch 1:18 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XVI. From Petrarch 1:12 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XVII. From the 13th Cantata of Metastasio 1:20 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XVIII. To the Earl of Egremont 1:09 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XIX. To Mr. Hayley 1:22 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XX. To the Countess of A---- 1:17 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XXI. Supposed to be written by Werter 1:17 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XXII. By the same 1:16 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XXIII. By the same 1:23 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XXIV. By the same 1:22 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XXV. By the same 1:27 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XXVI. To the River Arun 1:12 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XXVII. 1:19 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XXVIII. To Friendship 1:15 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XXIX. To Miss C---- 1:20 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XXX. To the River Arun 1:11 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XXXI. Written on Farm Wood, on the South Downs, May 1784 1:25 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XXXII. To Melancholy. Written on the Banks of the Arun 1:25 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XXXIII. To the Naiad of the Arun 1:15 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XXXIV. To a Friend 1:07 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XXXV. To Fortitude 1:17 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XXXVI. 1:11 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XXXVII. Sent to the Honourable Mrs O'Neill with painted flowers 1:16 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XXXVIII. From the Novel of Emmeline 1:12 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XXXIX. To Night. From the same 1:23 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XL. From the same 1:18 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XLI. To Tranquility 1:19 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XLII. Composed during a walk on the Downs, in November 1787 1:27 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XLIII. 1:21 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XLIV. Written in the Church-yard at Middleton in Sussex 1:14 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XLV. On leaving a part of Sussex 1:20 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XLVI. Written at Penshurst, in Autumn 1788 1:18 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XLVII. To Fancy 1:19 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet XLVIII. To Mrs. **** 1:09 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet XLIX. From the Novel of Celestina 1:29 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet L. From the same 1:16 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet LI. From the same 1:27 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet LII. From the same 1:23 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet LIII. From the same 1:25 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet LIV. The Sleeping Woodman 1:18 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet LV. The Return of the Nightingale 1:18 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet LVI. The Captive escaped in the Wilds of America 1:21 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet LVII. To Dependence 1:13 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet LVIII. The Glow-worm 1:20 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet LIX. Written Sept. 1791, during a remarkable Thunder Storm 1:26 Read by David Barnes
Ode to Despair. From the Novel of Emmeline 2:48 Read by Cori Samuel
Elegy 4:53 Read by David Barnes
Song. From the French of Cardinal Bernis 1:41 Read by Cori Samuel
The Origin of Flattery 8:26 Read by David Barnes
The Peasant of the Alps 3:24 Read by Cori Samuel
Song 1:02 Read by David Barnes
Thirty-eight 3:04 Read by Cori Samuel
Verses intended to have been prefixed to the Novel of Emmeline 2:20 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet LX. To an amiable Girl 1:13 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet LXI. Supposed to have been written in America 1:23 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet LXII. Written on passing by Moon-light through a village, while the grou… 1:15 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet LXIII. The Gossamer 1:19 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet LXIV. Written at Bristol in the Summer of 1794 1:13 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet LXV. To Dr Parry of Bath, with some Botanic Drawings which had been made… 1:24 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet LXVI. Written in a tempestuous night, on the coast of Sussex 1:15 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet LXVII. On passing over a dreary tract of country, and near the ruins of … 1:27 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet LXVIII. Written at Exmouth, Mid-summer 1795 1:18 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet LXIX. Written at the same place, on seeing a Seaman return who had been … 1:24 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet LXX. On being cautioned against walking on a Headland overlooking the Se… 1:17 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet LXXI. Written at Weymouth in Winter 1:27 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet LXXII. To the Morning Star. Written near the Sea 1:12 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet LXXIII. To a Querulous Acquaintance 1:20 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet LXXIV. The Winter Night 1:14 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet LXXV. 1:18 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet LXXVI. To a Young Man entering the world 1:14 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet LXXVII. To the Insect of the Gossamer 1:19 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet LXXVIII. Snow-drops 1:14 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet LXXIX. To the Goddess of Botany 1:19 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet LXXX. To the Invisible Moon 1:09 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet LXXXI. 1:16 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet LXXXII. To the Shade of Burns 1:10 Read by Cori Samuel
Sonnet LXXXIII. The Sea view 1:21 Read by David Barnes
Sonnet LXXXIV. To the Muse 1:19 Read by Cori Samuel
The Dead Beggar 2:13 Read by David Barnes
The Female Exile 3:02 Read by Cori Samuel
Occasional Address. Written for the Benefit of a distressed Player, detained at… 5:15 Read by David Barnes
Inscription on a Stone in the Church-Yard at Boreham, in Essex 0:59 Read by Cori Samuel
A descriptive Ode 5:06 Read by David Barnes
Verses supposed to have been written in the New Forest, in early Spring 1:38 Read by Cori Samuel
Song. From the French 1:35 Read by David Barnes
Apostrophe to an Old Tree 3:10 Read by Cori Samuel
The Forest Boy 8:24 Read by David Barnes
Ode to the Poppy. Written by a deceased Friend 2:50 Read by Cori Samuel
Verses written by the same Lady on seeing her two Sons at play 2:05 Read by David Barnes
Verses on the Death of the same Lady, written in September 1794 2:28 Read by Cori Samuel
Fragment, descriptive of the Miseries of War 3:33 Read by David Barnes
April 4:14 Read by Cori Samuel
Ode to Death 2:12 Read by David Barnes

Reviews

beautiful sonnets read beautifully


(5 stars)

The 2 readers here do a fantastic job! These sonnets are read clearly and with rhythm, for free! Some of the best recording I've heard on Librivox and some great poetry. I wish each poem didn't have the "read for Librivox" tag, it takes up time and breaks up an otherwise fluid listening experience, but that's a small complaint about free poems read well.