Thank you very much for your love and support. I truly appreciate your kind words. Don't fail to contact me on richardarmitagelife@gmail.com, write your full name so I can know where you are writing me from.
I love Mr Armitage and I admire him a lot! 😍😍💖💙💜❤ I always enjoy every single work of him! Thank you so much for sharing this little sample. I always love so much to listen his sexy manly voice always pronouncing the English perfectly understandable, but it's even better to hear it seeing him while reading appreciate his expressions! 😍😍💖💜❤💙 Mr Armitage always mesmerizes me!
I am pleased to read your beautiful comments filled with love and kindness. Don't fail to contact me on richardarmitagelife@gmail.com stating your full name so I can know where you are writing from
From the North and South, Spooks etc never bored watching him. And his voice really lower my blood pressure 😊I’ll tell my quack I don’t need med anymore. I had a natural med 😉😍
Richard Armitage reads Byron's poem beautifully . It is a shame that the subtitles are so distractingly high though, covering his chin. Could they be lowered?
This poem is one of my favourites ... read so many times in my old days. Wish to hear with his voice: How Do I Love Thee, by Elizabeth Barrett Browning and She Dwelt Among the Untrodden Ways by William Wordsworth.
You read this so well such a lovely deep voice that melts my heart. Please could I ask where I'm able to purchase your audio books. If your able to answer my question thank you in advance Richard xx ❤️
Mr. Armitage with your fine voice, would you please do this over in the manner it deserves? This conversational "technique" going round these past 20 years in the British theatre is truly crippling. There is a good deal of music in this poem and the choppy modern technique really doesn't work here. I can help if needed....
No specious splendour of this stone Endears it to my memory ever; With lustre only once it shone, And blushes modest as the giver. Some, who can sneer at friendship's ties, Have, for my weakness, oft reproved me; Yet still the simple gift I prize,- For I am sure the giver loved me. He offer'd it with downcast look, As fearful that I ,ight refuse it; I told him when the gift I took, My only fear should be to lose it. This pledge attentively I view'd, And sparkling as I held it near, Methought one drop the stone bedew'd, And ever since I've loved a tear. Still, to adorn his humble youth, Nor wealth nor birth their treasures yield; But he who seeks the flowers of truth, Must quit the garden for the field. 'Tis not the plant uprear'd in sloth, Which beauty shows, and sheds perfume; The flowers which yield the most of both In Nature's wild luxuriance bloom. Had Fortune aided Nature's care, For once forgetting to be blind, His would have been an ample share, If well proportion'd to his mind. But had the goddess clearly seen, His form had fix'd her fickle breast; Her countless hoards would his have been, And none remain'd to give the rest.
@@RSLiterature And that 's praiseworthy because we love poems and hearing them in Richard Amitage' s voice is charming. But around the world, people may not understand English well when they hear it, but they can understand subtitles. Which makes the experience more enjoyable. A Brazilian fan of Byron and Richard Amitage. 👏👏👏😘