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A Personal Anthology of Shakespeare

Read by Martin Clifton


William Shakespeare



This personal anthology is my choice of speeches from Shakespeare that I enjoy reading (that I would like to have had by heart years ago!) a…

On the Antiseptic Principle of the Practice of Surgery

Read by Martin Clifton


Joseph Lister



Joseph Lister was born near London in 1827. He studied medicine at the University of London and pursued a career as a surgeon in Scotland. H…

On A Note Of Triumph

Read by Martin Gabel


Norman Corwin, Martin Gabel, Lud Gluskin and Bernard Hermann



On June 6, 1944, as D-Day unfolded, the Columbia Broadcasting System commissioned Norman Corwin to create a radio show to celebrate a potent…

The Idiot

Read by Martin Geeson


Fyodor Dostoyevsky



The extraordinary child-adult Prince Myshkin, confined for several years in a Swiss sanatorium suffering from severe epilepsy, returns to Ru…

The Soul of Man

Read by Martin Geeson


Oscar Wilde



“(T)he past is what man should not have been. The present is what man ought not to be. The future is what artists are.”Published originally …

The Greek View of Life

Read by Martin Geeson


Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson



“With the Greek civilisation beauty perished from the world. Never again has it been possible for man to believe that harmony is in fact the…

Phaedrus

Read by Martin Geeson


Plato



“For there is no light of justice or temperance, or any of the higher ideas which are precious to souls, in the earthly copies of them: they…

Confessions

Read by Martin Geeson


Jean-Jacques Rousseau



“Thus I have acted; these were my thoughts; such was I.”Rousseau’s lengthy and sometimes anguished dossier on the Self is one of the most re…

The Mabinogion

Read by Martin Geeson


Anonymoustranslated By Charlotte Guest and William James McGlothlin



Sample a moment of magic realism from the Red Book of Hergest:On one side of the river he saw a flock of white sheep, and on the other a flo…

Confessions of an English Opium-Eater

Read by Martin Geeson


Thomas De Quincey



“Thou hast the keys of Paradise, O just, subtle, and mighty Opium!”Though apparently presenting the reader with a collage of poignant memori…

The Diary of a Superfluous Man

Read by Martin Geeson


Ivan Turgenev



Turgenev's shy hero, Tchulkaturin, is a representative example of a Russian archetype - the "superfluous man", a sort of Hamlet no…

First Love

Read by Martin Geeson


Ivan Turgenev



The title of the novella is almost an adequate summary in itself. The "boy-meets-girl-then-loses-her" story is universal but not, …

A Problem in Modern Ethics

Read by Martin Geeson


John Addington Symonds



“Society lies under the spell of ancient terrorism and coagulated errors. Science is either wilfully hypocritical or radically misinformed.”…

Bel Ami

Read by Martin Geeson


Guy de Maupassant



“He had faith in his good fortune, in that power of attraction which he felt within him - a power so irresistible that all women yielded to …

Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia

Read by Martin Geeson


Samuel Johnson



In this enchanting fable (subtitled The Choice of Life), Rasselas and his retinue burrow their way out of the totalitarian paradise of the H…

An Essay on Man

Read by Martin Geeson


Alexander Pope



Pope’s Essay on Man, a masterpiece of concise summary in itself, can fairly be summed up as an optimistic enquiry into mankind’s place in th…

Confessions

Read by Martin Geeson


Jean-Jacques Rousseau



"She was more to me than a sister, a mother, a friend, or even than a mistress, and for this very reason she was not a mistress; in a w…

Confessions

Read by Martin Geeson


Jean-Jacques Rousseau



“The smallest, the most trifling pleasure that is conveniently within my reach, tempts me more than all the joys of paradise.”Here again is …

Oscar Wilde

Read by Martin Geeson


Frank Harris



Consumers of biography are familiar with the division between memoirs of the living or recently dead written by those who "knew" t…

A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy

Read by Martin Geeson


Laurence Sterne



After the bizarre textual antics of "Tristram Shandy", this book would seem to require a literary health warning. Sure enough, it …

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