エピソード

  • The Long Night
    2020/11/03

    A short little apocalyptic poem.

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    1 分
  • "The Masque of the Red Death" by Edgar Allan Poe (+Pocast Update!)
    2020/10/21

    A story about rich people sequestering themselves away from a deadly pandemic while the rest of the world suffers :)

    Content warning for some short, typical 1800s descriptions that may be considered offensive today.

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    18 分
  • Deceit of the Raven Witch
    2020/10/20

    A witchy narrative poem for the Halloween season!

    Disclaimer: This poem unintentionally contains stereotypes about women and beauty that have been heavily incorporated into the collective unconscious' witch canon.

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    9 分
  • "The Tell-Tale Heart" by Edgar Allan Poe
    2020/10/07

    CONTENT WARNINGS:

    • Connotation between mental illness and murder
    • Use of outdated terms relating to mental illness, specifically "mad"

    One of my favorite Poe stories, this episode follows a character (presumably a man) who finds himself haunted by his murder of a kindly old fellow with an "evil eye."

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    15 分
  • History of Language
    2020/10/06

    A semi-humorous poem speculating on when human language evolved.

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    2 分
  • "The Destruction of Sennacherib" by George Gordon Byron
    2020/09/16

    Lord Byron's 1815 poem about King Sennacherib's seige on Jerusalem, especially the Biblical version of the story. I'm not a big fan of religion or religious tales, but just as a work of art -- with its rhythm, metaphors, rhymes, etc. -- this poem is incredible.

    Also yes, I was (indirectly) named for Lord Byron. (My dad was named for him and I was named for my dad.) This happens to be the only poem I've read of his at time of recording, actually.

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    2 分
  • The Books That We Read
    2020/09/15

    Another teensy tiny episode: a short poem I wrote back when I had no clue how to conjugate Early Modern English verbs or use Early Modern English informal second person pronouns.

    Note to past me: It's thou hast, not thee hath!

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    2 分
  • "The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe
    2020/09/02

    Poe's famous 1845 poem, long interpreted to be told from the perspective of a man feeling guilty about killing his wife.

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    10 分