The Homing Bee
E. Pauline Johnson
Lu par LibriVox Volunteers
It is eminently fitting that this daughter of Nature should have been laid to rest in no urban cemetery. According to her own request she was buried in Stanley Park, Vancouver's beautiful heritage of the forest primeval. A simple stone surrounded by rustic palings marks her grave and on this stone is carved the one word "Pauline." There she lies among ferns and wild flowers a short distance from Siwash Rock, the story of which she has recorded in the legends of her race. In time to come a pathway to her grave will be worn by lovers of Canadian poetry who will regard it as one of the most romantic of our literary shrines. (from the Biographical Sketch in the Flint and Feather collection) (0 hr 13 min)
Chapitres
The Homing Bee - Read by BK | 1:17 | Lu par Bruce Kachuk |
The Homing Bee - Read by DL | 1:10 | Lu par David Lawrence |
The Homing Bee - Read by FS | 1:15 | Lu par fshort |
The Homing Bee - Read by GB | 1:12 | Lu par Garth Burton |
The Homing Bee - Read by GG | 1:23 | Lu par Greg Giordano |
The Homing Bee - Read by IK | 1:13 | Lu par Ian King |
The Homing Bee - Read by LAH | 1:11 | Lu par Lee Ann Howlett |
The Homing Bee - Read by LIAN | 1:03 | Lu par Lian Pang |
The Homing Bee - Read by LLW | 1:20 | Lu par Leonard Wilson (1930-2024) |
The Homing Bee - Read by MK | 1:11 | Lu par Maria Kasper |
The Homing Bee - Read by TP | 1:04 | Lu par Tomas Peter |