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Edgar Allan Poe's The Raven (ASMR Reading) (Flames) (Wind)

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  • čas přidán 2. 12. 2020
  • Well this was much harder to record then I expected... my old English is a little rusty. If I ever do an outtakes video this has given me plenty of content. :D

Komentáře • 6

  • @elphieofkiamoko
    @elphieofkiamoko Před 2 lety

    Ok real talk, if I was a dragon, Poe things would be what I hoard. I've probably heard over a hundred readings of this poem (heck, even I'm planning on doing a reading of it), and 1) THANK YOU FOR RELEASING IT IN DECEMBER, WHEN THE POEM IS ACTUALLY SET. Everyone releases it in October and I just have to wait xD
    2) The sound effects are so solid, and you capture the feelings SO well, especially the *longing* when he goes off on his tangent about how her hand will never again touch his chair. Man, I *felt* that.

  • @jaskiniarpg8805
    @jaskiniarpg8805 Před 3 lety

    Love the narration

  • @ssake1_IAL_Research
    @ssake1_IAL_Research Před 2 lety +2

    Edgar Allan Poe wasn't the real author of "The Raven," he merely claimed it as a kind of 19th-century "identity theft." The poem's premiere was submitted anonymously to "American Review" under the pseudonym "---- Quarles" by the true author, Mathew Franklin Whittier, younger brother of poet John Greenleaf Whittier. Poe, a reviewer for the NY "Evening Mirror," seeing the poem in an advance copy of "American Review," scooped Mathew in his own paper by a couple of days. Mathew must have shared a copy of "The Raven" with Poe in 1842, so Poe had a handwritten copy. This enabled him to convince his editor that he had permission to scoop "American Review"--but he mysteriously left the "Mirror" shortly afterwards (suggesting that he may have been fired for lying about it). It is absurd that any editor of a newly-launched monthly literary magazine like the "Review," would have given a daily newspaper this permission. The real author was unable to reveal his identity and hence could not publicly defend himself. My paper, "Evidence that Edgar Allan Poe Stole 'The Raven' from Mathew Franklin Whittier," is downloadable at the following link. It can also be found by that title on Academia.edu.
    www.ial.goldthread.com/MFW_The_Raven.pdf

  • @thenarrativenerd6072
    @thenarrativenerd6072 Před 3 lety +3

    Please do the outtakes video!

  • @rayraysmama1
    @rayraysmama1 Před 3 lety

    My favorite ahh and with your amazing voice reading it just makes 1000 times better ty so
    Much

  • @miso5744
    @miso5744 Před 2 lety

    Your voice/acting is amazing and the ambience sounds...💜