World Poets
AtumArts
- 11 / 49
1
William Shakespeare - Tomorrow, Hamlet's Soliloquy - Great Poetry
1:24
2
Hamlet's Soliloquy To be or not to be - William Shakespeare
2:44
3
Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam illustrated by Edmund Dulac
22:10
4
Rumi - Those who don't feel this Love - Sufi Poetry
1:48
5
Rumi - Only Breath, Read by Karen Golden
2:28
6
Charles Baudelaire - The Enemy - French Poetry
1:51
7
Charles Baudelaire - Death - French Poetry
1:34
8
Charles Baudelaire - Be Drunken - French Poetry
2:08
9
Alexander Pushkin - The Prophet - Russian Poetry
2:32
10
Alexander Pushkin - Madonna - Russian Poetry
1:49
Victor Hugo - Regret - Great French Poems
3:11
12
Victor Hugo - The Vale To You, To Me The Heights - Great French Poems
2:26
13
John Milton - To the Nightingale - English Poetry
1:54
14
Walt Whitman - When I heard the Learn’d Astronomer - American poetry
1:38
15
John Milton - On the Morning of Christ’s Nativity - Great Poems
10:39
16
John Milton - On His Blindness - Great English Poems
1:47
17
Kahlil Gibran The Prophet - On Children, read by Karen Golden
2:33
18
Kahlil Gibran The Prophet - On Death read by karen Golden
3:08
19
Emily Dickinson - If I can stop one heart from breaking - Great American Poems
1:13
20
Emily Dickinson - If I should die and you should live - American Poetry
1:40
21
William Shakespeare - Sonnet 18 - Shall I compare thee to a summer's day
1:28
22
William Shakespeare - All the world's a stage
2:38
23
Rumi - Behold the Water of Waters - Great Sufi Poems
2:03
24
Rudyard Kipling - If - English Poetry
3:27
25
Goethe - Legend - German Poets
1:48
26
Goethe - Haste not! Rest not! German Poetry
2:19
27
A Psalm of Life by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - American Poets
3:27
28
Rumi - Let go of your worries - Sufi Poems read by Karen Golden
1:47
29
Rumi - Did I not say to you - Great Mystic Poems read by Karen Golden
2:58
30
Rumi - I am a sculptor - Great Mystic Poems read by Karen Golden
1:52
31
Percy Bysshe Shelley - Love’s Philosophy - Great Poems
1:36
32
Percy Bysshe Shelley - The Flower That Smiles Today - Great Poems
1:39
33
Percy Bysshe Shelley - Ozymandias - Great Poems
2:02
34
Percy Bysshe Shelley - To a Skylark - Great Poems
5:29
35
Rabindranath Tagore - Leave This, a poem from Gitanjali read by Milad Sidky
1:32
36
Rabindranath Tagore - Distant Time, a poem from Gitanjali
1:34
37
Romantic Poems by Sappho the Greek Poetess, read by Karen Golden
3:15
38
Rumi - At the Twilight - Great Poems read by Karen Golden
1:33
39
Rumi - No Need to Ask - Great Sufi Poems read by Karen Golden
1:22
40
Rumi - Zero Circle - Great Sufi Poems read by Karen Golden
1:59
41
Rumi - when i die - Great Sufi Poems read by Milad Sidky
3:12
42
Rumi - A Moment of Happiness - Sufi Poems read by Karen Golden
2:04
43
Rumi - The Guest House, Great Poems read by Karen Golden
2:05
44
Rumi - Pain is a treasure, Great Poems
1:36
45
Rabindranath Tagore - False Religion, Indian Poem read by Milad Sidky
2:56
46
Rabindranath Tagore - Jana Gana Mana - The Morning Song of India
2:10
47
Rumi - I Am Thine and Thou Art Mine, read by Karen Golden
1:39
48
Dante Alighieri - My Lady - A poem by the Italian Poet
1:59
49
A Lament For Adonis by Sappho the Greek Poetess
1:37

Victor Hugo - Regret - Great French Poems

5 months ago
36

"Regret" is one of the great poems written by the French Poet Victor Hugo (1802 – 1885), who is considered to be one of the greatest French writers of all time.
He wrote internationally-acclaimed novels such as “Les Misérables” and “The Hunchback of Notre-Dame"
--
REGRET
Yes, Happiness hath left me soon behind!
Alas! we all pursue its steps! and when
We've sunk to rest within its arms entwined,
Like the Phoenician virgin, wake, and find
Ourselves alone again.

Then, through the distant future's boundless space,
We seek the lost companion of our days:
'Return, return!' we cry, and lo, apace
Pleasure appears! but not to fill the place
Of that we mourn always.

I, should unhallowed Pleasure woo me now,
Will to the wanton sorc'ress say, 'Begone!
Respect the cypress on my mournful brow,
Lost Happiness hath left regret--but _thou_
Leavest remorse, alone.'

Yet, haply lest I check the mounting fire,
O friends, that in your revelry appears!
With you I'll breathe the air which ye respire,
And, smiling, hide my melancholy lyre
When it is wet with tears.

Each in his secret heart perchance doth own
Some fond regret 'neath passing smiles concealed;--
Sufferers alike together and alone
Are we; with many a grief to others known,
How many unrevealed!

Alas! for natural tears and simple pains,
For tender recollections, cherished long,
For guileless griefs, which no compunction stains,
We blush; as if we wore these earthly chains
Only for sport and song!

Yes, my blest hours have fled without a trace:
In vain I strove their parting to delay;
Brightly they beamed, then left a cheerless space,
Like an o'erclouded smile, that in the face
Lightens, and fades away.
--
Read by Phil Schempf
https://librivox.org/short-poetry-collection-174-by-various/
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CREDITS
MUSIC
Mysterious Sorrows - Aakash Gandhi
--
Photos and vids
https://pixabay.com/photos/smoke-backdrop-macro-creative-4988505/
Painting of Vincent van Gogh
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Vincent_van_Gough_-_Sorrow_(F1655).jpg
Vincent van Gogh, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
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