The Farmer's Bride

The Farmer's Bride

Charlotte Mew

The Farmer's Bride is a collection of 28 poems by British modernist writer Charlotte Mew. Mews poetry is varied in style and content and manifests a strong interest in love, longing, death, and nature. Mew's life was marked by loneliness and depression, and she eventually committed suicide. Her work earned her the admiration of her peers, including Virginia Woolf, who characterized her as "very good and quite unlike anyone else."

The Farmer's Bride Fame The Narrow Door The Fete Beside the Bed

In Nunhead Cemetery The Pedlar

Decherease The Changeling Ken A Quoi Bon Dire The Quiet Road On the Asylum Road Jour de Morts

Read for Librivox by Elisabeth Klett

The Forest Road Madeleine in Church Exspecto Ressurectionem On the Road to the Sea The Sunlit House The Shade-Catchers Le Sacre-Coeur dong Saturday Market Arracombe Wood Sea Love The Road to Kerrity | have been Through the Gates The Cenotaph

Total running time 1:06:47

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Cover image: The Young Shepardess by William Adolphe Bonguereau (1825 1905). Cover designed by Availle. This design is in the public domain.

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