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Classics

Classics

The Wind in the Willows

Kenneth Grahame · novel, 1908

Four animal friends -- the home-loving Mole, the river-devoted Rat, the reclusive Badger, and the reckless, motor-car-obsessed Toad -- live along an English riverbank and in the surrounding Wild Wood. The book follows their seasons of friendship, adventure, and misadventure, culminating in Toad's imprisonment for stealing a motor-car, his escape in disguise, and the four friends banding together to retake Toad Hall from the weasels and stoats who have seized it. Order is restored, Toad is humbled (at least briefly), and the companions return to their contented riverside lives.

5 hrs50 sec29 Apr
Classics

Just So Stories

Rudyard Kipling · linked children's fables, 1902

Twelve playful origin tales explain how animals and human inventions came to be as they are, from the whale's narrow throat and the elephant's trunk to the first picture-letter and the alphabet. Each story is told in an incantatory, repetitive style addressed to a 'Best Beloved' child listener, with a verse and a moral or joke at the end. The final tale, about Solomon and a boastful butterfly, rounds out the collection with a story about wisdom, marriage, and the limits of showing off.

2 hrs50 sec28 Apr
Classics

The Jungle Book

Rudyard Kipling · linked story collection, 1894

A collection of tales set in colonial India, most following Mowgli, a human boy raised by wolves in the Seeonee jungle, who must navigate the Law of the Jungle, the enmity of the lame tiger Shere Khan, and his uneasy place between the animal and human worlds. Alongside the Mowgli stories, the book includes standalone tales: Kotick the white seal's quest to find a slaughter-free island for his kind, Rikki-tikki-tavi the mongoose's lethal campaign against cobras in a garden bungalow, Little Toomai's secret witness of the elephants' midnight dance, and a comic-philosophical night conversation among the animals of a British military camp.

4 hrs50 sec27 Apr
Classics

The Man Who Would Be King

Rudyard Kipling · short story, 1888

Two British adventurers and former soldiers, Daniel Dravot and Peachey Carnehan, scheme to travel to the remote region of Kafiristan and make themselves kings by using rifles, military drilling, and Masonic ritual to dominate the local tribes. They succeed spectacularly for a time, but Dravot's insistence on taking a local wife exposes them as mortal men rather than gods, triggering a violent uprising that kills Dravot and destroys everything they built. Carnehan survives crucifixion and a year of wandering to return to India and tell the story to the newspaper editor who first met them, dying in an asylum shortly after.

1 hrs50 sec26 Apr
Classics

The Red Badge of Courage

Stephen Crane · novel, 1895

Young Union soldier Henry Fleming enlists dreaming of Homeric glory, then panics and flees his first real battle, spending the rest of the novel wrestling with cowardice, self-deception, and the chaos of Civil War combat. After receiving an accidental head wound that passes as a battle scar, he returns to his regiment and fights with genuine ferocity in subsequent charges. The novel ends with Henry marching away from the battlefield, having shed some illusions about heroism while still imperfectly reckoning with his own failures.

4 hrs47 sec25 Apr
Classics

Maggie: A Girl of the Streets

Stephen Crane · novella, 1893

Maggie Johnson grows up in the brutal poverty of New York's Bowery tenements, raised by a drunken, violent mother and a hardened brother. Seduced by the swaggering bartender Pete and cast out by her family as ruined, she finds every door closed to her. The story ends with her death, implied to be suicide by drowning, while her mother performs theatrical grief and Pete drinks himself senseless in a saloon.

2 hrs47 sec24 Apr
Classics

The Beast in the Jungle

Henry James · novella, 1903

John Marcher spends his entire adult life convinced that some extraordinary, terrible fate is destined to befall him, and he enlists May Bartram as his devoted companion and witness to this vigil. May dies without ever making him understand what she has long perceived: that his obsessive waiting has itself consumed his life, and that the catastrophe was his failure to love her. Only after her death, jolted by the sight of a grief-ravaged stranger at a cemetery, does Marcher grasp the truth and collapse in horror on her grave.

1 hrs50 sec23 Apr
Classics

Daisy Miller: A Study

Henry James · novella, 1879

Frederick Winterbourne, an American long resident in Europe, meets the vivacious and unconventional Daisy Miller in Switzerland and follows her social career in Rome, where her free behavior with an Italian acquaintance scandalizes the expatriate American community. Unable to decide whether Daisy is innocently ignorant of European social codes or genuinely reckless, Winterbourne withholds the full warmth of his regard. Daisy contracts malaria after a moonlit visit to the Colosseum with her Italian companion and dies, and only afterward does Winterbourne learn she was innocent all along and had wished for his good opinion.

2 hrs49 sec22 Apr
Classics

Eugene Onegin

Alexander Pushkin · novel in verse, 1823–1831

Eugene Onegin follows a bored, fashionable St. Petersburg dandy who retreats to the country, coldly rejects the sincere love of the provincial girl Tatiana, and kills his friend Lenski in a pointless duel. Years later, Onegin encounters Tatiana transformed into a poised society princess and falls desperately in love with her, only to be firmly refused because she is now another man's faithful wife.

4 hrs45 sec21 Apr
Classics

Acadia: or, A Month with the Blue Noses

Frederic S. Cozzens · travel sketch, 1859

Cozzens, an ailing New Yorker, travels to Nova Scotia intending to reach Bermuda but is stranded by a cancelled steamer and spends a month exploring Halifax, the Acadian village of Chezzetcook, the ruined French fortress of Louisburgh, Cape Breton, and finally the pastoral valley of Grand-Pré. Along the way he weaves comic observations about his travelling companion Picton, the Scottish settlers, freed Black Nova Scotians, and Micmac Indians into a sustained meditation on the tragic expulsion of the Acadian French. The book closes at Grand-Pré, where Cozzens reads aloud the 1755 proclamation that forced eighteen thousand Acadians onto transport ships, and calls the act an inexcusable cruelty that New England should stop celebrating.

6 hrs50 sec20 Apr
Classics

The Queen of Spades

Alexander Pushkin · short story, 1834

A calculating Russian officer named Herman becomes obsessed with a secret three-card gambling formula supposedly known by an elderly Countess. He terrorizes the old woman into her grave, receives the secret from her ghost, wins twice at faro, then loses everything on the final card and ends his days in a madhouse.

17 min48 sec19 Apr
Classics

The Kreutzer Sonata and Other Stories

Leo Tolstoy · short fiction collection, 1889–1890s

The centerpiece novella follows Posdnicheff, a man who murdered his wife in a jealous rage, as he recounts on a train journey how sexual corruption, false ideals of love, and a loveless marriage drove him to the act. The accompanying stories extend Tolstoy's moral vision through a folk-tale about a fool whose honest labor defeats greed and devilry, a peasant feud extinguished only by a deathbed plea for forgiveness, a court serf destroyed by a single act of misplaced trust, and a parable in which a tyrant's cruelty is undone not by violence but by one man's quiet, candle-lit faith.

5 hrs50 sec18 Apr
Classics

The Castle of Otranto

Horace Walpole · Gothic novel, 1765

On the wedding day of Conrad, heir to the usurper Prince Manfred of Otranto, the young man is crushed to death by a gigantic supernatural helmet. Manfred, desperate to secure a male heir, pursues his son's intended bride Isabella while supernatural portents multiply around him. The novel ends in revelation, abdication, and tragedy as the true heir of the wronged Prince Alfonso is unmasked and Manfred accidentally murders his own daughter Matilda.

3 hrs50 sec17 Apr
Classics

Goblin Market, The Prince's Progress, and Other Poems

Christina Rossetti · poetry collection, 1862 and 1866

This collection gathers Rossetti's two major published volumes alongside miscellaneous verse, ranging from the narrative poem 'Goblin Market,' in which sisterly love rescues a young woman from a supernatural addiction, to the allegorical 'The Prince's Progress,' in which a dilatory prince arrives too late to save his waiting bride. The remaining poems move across lyric, devotional, and dramatic modes, meditating on thwarted love, mortality, spiritual longing, and the consolations of faith.

4 hrs50 sec16 Apr
Classics

A Shropshire Lad

A. E. Housman · lyric poetry collection, 1896

A Shropshire Lad is a sequence of 63 short poems set against the rural English county of Shropshire, voiced largely by a young man who broods on the brevity of youth, the deaths of friends and soldiers, unrequited love, and the consolation of the natural landscape. The poems move from pastoral celebration through elegy and dark irony to a stoic acceptance that suffering is the common lot of humanity and that death is the only lasting rest. Housman closes with the poet-speaker defending his melancholy verse as a kind of inoculation against life's inevitable griefs, invoking the legend of Mithridates who made himself immune to poison by taking it in small doses.

54 min50 sec15 Apr
Classics

Poems by Emily Dickinson, Three Series, Complete

Emily Dickinson · poetry collection, posthumously published 1890–1896

This volume gathers all three posthumous series of Emily Dickinson's poems, edited by Mabel Loomis Todd and T. W. Higginson from manuscripts found after her death in 1886. The poems are organized into four recurring thematic sections across the series: Life, Love, Nature, and Time and Eternity. Written in near-total seclusion and almost entirely unpublished during her lifetime, they range from compressed lyrics on hope, pain, and desire to sustained meditations on death, immortality, and the natural world.

3 hrs50 sec14 Apr
Classics

The Rime of the Ancient Mariner

Samuel Taylor Coleridge · narrative poem, 1798

An old sailor compels a wedding guest to hear his tale of how he shot a friendly albatross during a voyage to Antarctic waters, bringing supernatural doom upon his entire crew. All two hundred crew members die, while the Mariner is condemned to live, and he is only partially released from his curse when he spontaneously blesses sea creatures he had previously found repulsive. He returns home but is forever compelled to wander and retell his story as penance.

20 min50 sec13 Apr
Classics

Sonnets from the Portuguese

Elizabeth Barrett Browning · sonnet sequence, 1850

A sequence of 44 Petrarchan sonnets tracing the speaker's emotional journey from isolated grief and self-doubt through the gradual acceptance of a beloved's love and finally to full, joyful surrender. The poems record, in near-autobiographical terms, Browning's courtship by the poet Robert Browning, moving from her conviction that she is too broken and unworthy to be loved toward a transformed sense of life, purpose, and devotion. The sequence ends with the speaker offering her own inner life back to the beloved as he has offered her flowers all year.

28 min48 sec12 Apr
Classics

In Memoriam A.H.H.

Alfred, Lord Tennyson · elegy sequence, 1850

In Memoriam is a sequence of 131 lyric poems written over seventeen years following the sudden death in 1833 of Tennyson's closest friend, Arthur Henry Hallam, who died in Vienna. The poems trace the poet's journey through raw grief, religious doubt, and philosophical crisis, arriving finally at a hard-won faith in God, love, and human progress. The sequence ends not in despair but in affirmation, culminating in a wedding poem that envisions Hallam as a noble forerunner of a higher race toward which all creation moves.

2 hrs50 sec11 Apr
Classics

American Indian Love Lyrics and Other Verse

Selected by Nellie Barnes · anthology of translated Native American songs, 1925

Compiled by Nellie Barnes and introduced by Mary Austin, this 1925 anthology gathers translated songs and ceremonial verse from dozens of North American tribes, ranging from Ojibwa love lyrics and Navaho night-chant prayers to Pima rain songs and Omaha ritual invocations. A substantial second section analyzes the poetic forms underlying these songs, examining thought-movement, repetition patterns, stanzaic structure, and the inseparable relationship between melody and verse in oral composition. Together the two parts argue that Native American song-poetry represents a living, sophisticated literary tradition rooted in landscape, ceremony, and communal life.

2 hrs50 sec10 Apr
Classics

Songs of Innocence and of Experience

William Blake · illustrated poetry collection, 1789/1794

Blake's paired collection presents two contrasting visions of the human condition: Songs of Innocence offers a world of divine protection, childlike joy, and pastoral warmth, while Songs of Experience answers with the same subjects recast in exploitation, repression, and disillusionment. Together the two halves form a sustained argument that innocence is not simply replaced by experience but that the two states coexist and define each other. The collection moves from a piper commissioned by a heavenly child to a bard who witnesses Earth imprisoned by jealous authority, ending with a call for youth to embrace truth over the stumbling confusion of received wisdom.

27 min50 sec9 Apr
Classics

The Waste Land

T. S. Eliot · modernist poem, 1922

The Waste Land is a five-part poem set against the backdrop of post-World War I Europe, weaving together fragments of myth, literary allusion, and urban life to portray a civilization drained of spiritual vitality. Through shifting voices, languages, and scenes ranging from London streets to the banks of the Thames, Eliot depicts sterility, disconnection, and the longing for regeneration. The poem ends not with resolution but with a tentative gathering of fragments and the Sanskrit injunctions to give, sympathize, and control, followed by the peace-word 'Shantih.'

26 min49 sec8 Apr
Classics

The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam

Omar Khayyam, rendered by Edward FitzGerald · Persian quatrains in English verse, 11th-century original / 1859 translation

FitzGerald's English rendering of Omar Khayyam's Persian quatrains weaves independent verses into a loose meditation on mortality, the unknowability of fate and the divine, and the case for seizing present pleasure. The speaker ranges from dawn revels and the company of a beloved to philosophical despair at unanswerable questions about creation and predestination, concluding that no piety or wisdom can alter what is written, and that the present moment is the only ground worth standing on. The collection closes with the image of an empty glass turned down where the speaker once sat among the guests.

58 min50 sec18 Mar
Classics

Faust: Der Tragödie erster Teil

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe · verse drama, 1808

The scholar Faust, despairing that a lifetime of learning has brought him no true knowledge, makes a wager with the devil Mephistopheles: if Mephistopheles can ever make Faust content enough to wish a moment to last forever, Faust's soul is forfeit. Mephistopheles leads Faust into the world of pleasure and seduction, where Faust falls in love with the innocent young Margarete (Gretchen). The affair ends in catastrophe: Gretchen's mother dies from a sleeping potion, her brother Valentin is killed in a duel, she drowns her illegitimate child, and is condemned to death, while Faust flees with Mephistopheles.

3 hrs50 sec3 Mar
Classics

The Sorrows of Young Werther

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe · epistolary novel, 1774

Told almost entirely through letters, the novel follows Werther, a sensitive young German, who falls hopelessly in love with Charlotte, a woman already engaged and later married to the steady, respectable Albert. Unable to conquer his passion or find relief in work, society, or nature, Werther sinks into despair and ultimately shoots himself with pistols borrowed from Albert, dying the following morning.

3 hrs50 sec1 Mar
Classics

The Little Dog Trusty; The Orange Man; and the Cherry Orchard

Maria Edgeworth · children's moral tales, 1801

Three short didactic stories for young readers illustrate the virtues of honesty, integrity, and good temper through contrasting child characters. In the first, truthful Frank is rewarded with the family dog while his lying brother Robert is whipped. In the second, honest Charles defends an orange-seller's goods and is publicly celebrated, while the thieving Ned is kicked by a horse and shamed. In the third, ill-tempered Owen destroys his companions' cherries in a rage, works alone and falls behind, but is ultimately forgiven and helped by good-natured Marianne, learning the value of cooperation and self-control.

35 min50 sec28 Feb
Classics

An Enemy of the People

Henrik Ibsen · stage play, 1882

Dr. Thomas Stockmann discovers that the celebrated Baths of his Norwegian coastal town are contaminated with deadly bacteria, but when he tries to expose the truth he is systematically abandoned by his brother the Mayor, the liberal press, and the townspeople, who vote to declare him an enemy of the people. Stripped of his post, his income, and his home, Stockmann refuses to recant and resolves to stay and fight, concluding that the strongest man is he who stands most alone.

3 hrs47 sec27 Feb
Classics

Uncle Vanya

Anton Chekhov · play, 1897

On a Russian country estate, the middle-aged Ivan 'Vanya' Voitski and his niece Sonia have spent their lives managing the property and sending the profits to support Sonia's father, the retired Professor Serebrakoff. When the professor arrives with his beautiful young wife Helena and announces he intends to sell the estate, Vanya's long-suppressed rage and sense of wasted life explodes, culminating in a botched attempt to shoot Serebrakoff. The professor and Helena depart, and Vanya and Sonia are left to resume their quiet, joyless labor, sustained only by Sonia's fragile hope of rest and peace in the afterlife.

1 hrs43 sec26 Feb
Classics

A Doll's House

Henrik Ibsen · stage play, 1879

Nora Helmer appears to be a cheerful, childlike wife in a comfortable Norwegian household, but she harbors a secret: she forged her dying father's signature years ago to borrow money that saved her husband Torvald's life. When the moneylender Krogstad threatens to expose her, the crisis forces Nora to see her marriage and her own identity with devastating clarity. The play ends with Nora walking out on her husband and children to find herself as an independent person.

2 hrs49 sec25 Feb
Classics

The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus

Christopher Marlowe · play, 1604 quarto

Doctor Faustus, a brilliant German scholar who has mastered every legitimate field of learning, sells his soul to Lucifer in exchange for twenty-four years of power and pleasure, served by the demon Mephistophilis. He squanders his supernatural gifts on pranks, spectacles, and sensual indulgence rather than the grand ambitions he imagined. When the contract expires, Faustus is dragged to hell despite his last-hour terror and desperate pleas for mercy.

2 hrs48 sec24 Feb

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