Audiobook: Bible (KJV) 25: Lamentations

Audiobook: Bible (KJV) 25: Lamentations

The Book of Lamentations is a series of mournful poems written by the Prophet Jeremiah as he saw the destruction of Jerusalem. Jeremiah laments the desolation of this once great city, as well as the condition of the people, many of whom were once surrounded by great wealth and honor. Jeremiah has been referred to by many as “The Weeping Prophet”, and this book merely confirms the sense of this title.
(Summary by Mark Penfold)

Other Audiobook

Audiobook: National Geographic Magazine Vol. 10 – 12. December 1899

The National Geographic Magazine, an illustrated monthly, Vol X, December 1899. It includes the following

Audiobook: Lying Lover: or, The Ladies’ Friendship

“The spark of this play is introduced with as much agility and life as he

Audiobook: The Legends of Genesis

The Legends of Genesis is the English translation of the introduction to Gunkel’s massive commentary,

Audiobook: Beaux Stratagem

Two gentlemen of broken fortune, disguised as master and servant, and thinking that a good

Audiobook: Pussy Black-Face: The Story of a Kitten and Her Friends

“My name is Pussy Black-Face, and I am a naughty young kitten. I wish I

Audiobook: Perpetual Peace: A Philosophic Essay (Hastie Translation)

This essay, written in 1795, puts forth a plan for a lasting peace between nations

Audiobook: Tales of the Fish Patrol

Wildest among the fisher-folk may be accounted the Chinese shrimp-catchers. It is the habit of

Audiobook: Peter the Great

“There are very few persons who have not heard of the fame of Peter the

Audiobook: Asphodel

Like the Asphodel, a plant which grows far away from England, Daphne grows far away

Audiobook: The Smalcald Articles

MANUAL OF SURGERY, OXFORD MEDICAL PUBLICATIONS BY ALEXIS THOMSON, F.R.C.S.Ed. PREFACE TO SIXTH EDITION Much

Audiobook: Thrilling Narratives of Mutiny, Murder and Piracy

A collection of true stories of the high seas, from the nineteenth century. Shipwrecks, mutiny,

Audiobook: Essays of Francis Bacon

Voltaire was an atheist. Diderot was Enlightened. But trite titles seldom encompass completely the beliefs