White Ash Flies Colin Mahoney
-
- 예술
White Ash Flies is an audible, on-line anthology drawn from that abiding and rich sea of content, the public domain. I’ll select and serialize recordings of myself reading my favorite poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and correspondence, sacred and profane, in as heterogeneous a mix as I can passably manage. I’ll also be sharing original content from time to time.
-
The Dead
White Ash Flies closes out this St. Patrick's Day with The Dead, a short story by James Joyce, from his collection, Dubliners. Read by Colin Mahoney.
-
Zander's Sunday Sauce - Psalm 22 - Psalm 34
Zander’s Sunday Sauce: Tonight we’re serving up Psalm 22 from the Revised Standard Version of the Old Testament, which could fairly be called a lamentation with ramifications.
-
He Named His Boat Clover - The Strange Death of the Count de Foix
White Ash Flies presents another installment of Zander’s Appendix following up on our previous episode: Another set of three shorter poems, written and read by Colin Mahoney:
4 min, 25 sec - He Named His Boat Clover
5 min, 15 sec - The Strange Death of the Count de Foix
7 min, 38 sec - A Letter From Here -
Monday with Dad - Ecce Homo - The Agency to End Agency
White Ash Flies opens its fourth season with another installment of Zander's Appendix, an occasional series of original work, featuring three short poems written and read by Colin Mahoney.
4 min, 10 sec - Monday with Dad
6 min, 53 sec - Ecce Homo
8 min, 23 sec - The Agency to End Agency
4 min, 10 sec -
The Elixir of Life
White Ash Flies Presents The Elixir of Life, a short story by Honore de Balzac (1799-1850), translated by Clara Bell, and read by Colin Mahoney.
-
The Sorrows of Niobe
White Ash Flies presents The Sorrows of Niobe, from Book 6 of Ovid’s Metamorphoses, published in 8 CE, in which the goddess Latona makes Niobe pay dearly for her presumption, just as in the preceding story, Arachne was punished by Minerva for her presumption: surpassing the goddess in a weaving competition. The translation into English from Latin is Arthur Golding’s, published in 1567.