The Raven
Edgar Allan Poe
Read by Chris Goringe
Perhaps Edgar Allen Poe's most famous poem, the "Raven" is a macabre exploration of a man, his memories of Lenore, and the black bird that interrupts his studies on a dark December night, with tap-tap-tapping at his chamber door. (Summary by Hugh) (0 hr 9 min)
Chapters
The Raven | 9:30 | Read by Chris Goringe |
Reviews
So its said, it is So. Our darkened friend Edgar Allen Poe.
Serindipidous 1
What a sweet bedtime read. I sleep so deep awaiting the arrival of the day , It's a rhythm and the rhyme. That's what way thus Raven did say... Lenore tis thus Evermore.
It was amazing!
Amethyst
This is my first time reading/listening to Edgar Allan Poe work. And I am already hooked. I'll be picking up one of his poetry again soon. The writing itself is phenomenal, each words is placed carefully to convey every emotions and story in such a way it rolled off the tongue easily. The narrator did a good job at conveying the emotions, but a better mic would be excellent.
A raven
potuc
Great reading of a classic Edgar Allen Poe poem, or, as I like to humorously call it, a Poem. It feels fitting to end this review with the main line: “Quoth the raven, Nevermore.”
terrible
Zara
I love the raven, it's such a classic and this person's voice was a terrible choice for it
Rolley
narrator needs to submerge in the poem . not poke it from arms length
Brian TT
Truly strange and not a little dark. It seems like an opiated reverie or a fevered dream somewhere between sleep and wakefulness. He will see Lenore never more and hopefully the Raven, in the dawn will be gone for evermore. I like the English reader. If Poe had been an Englishman, he probably would’ve sounded like him.
love the Raven hate the reading
Pratfo
there's a ready by Christopher Lee on YouTube I've gone back to for years 100x better than this reading. go check that one out if you see this.
Poe's genius
A LibriVox Listener
This is one of the best pulled off literary pieces ever and an icon of virtuosity amongst writers. Look for Poe's review on his own poem. It's a Masterpiece: His whole work.