Connected as guest
Quick search all music
Look for artists, albums, and tracks on the site.
From $9.90
05:15:21
Audio Quality
Select your favorite audio quality such as Hi-Res, Lossless or High Quality.
Audio Extension
Select extension based on previous Audio Quality
aac
mp3
mp4
m4a
oga
ogg
opus
wma
aiff
flac
wav
wv
(C) 2002 Naxos AudioBooks
Title
Pop.
Time
The Aeneid: Book I: I tell about war and the hero
Jill Balcon
03:38
The Aeneid: Book I: JUNO: Shall I give up? Own myself beaten?
02:27
The Aeneid: Book I: AEOLUS: O queen, it is for you to be fully aware what you ask
01:33
The Aeneid: Book I: AENEAS: Oh, thrice and four times blessed
01:53
The Aeneid: Book I: NEPTUNE: Does family pride tempt you to such impertinence?
03:02
The Aeneid: Book I: Jupiter from high heaven looked down
06:16
The Aeneid: Book I: NARRATOR: As they walked through the woods
00:43
The Aeneid: Book I: Meanwhile the two pressed on apace, where the track pointed
01:48
The Aeneid: Book I: There was a grove, most genial in its shade
06:17
The Aeneid: Book I: ILLIONEUS: O queen, who under God, have founded a city
00:29
The Aeneid: Book I: DIDO: Trojans, put fear away from your hearts, and forget your troubles!
02:38
The Aeneid: Book I: AENEAS: I am here, before you, the one you look for
00:30
The Aeneid: Book I: But Venus was meditating a new and artful scheme
The Aeneid: Book II: All fell silent now, and their faces were all attention
The Aeneid: Book II: AENEAS: We were tricked by cunning and crocodile tears
The Aeneid: Book II: So now the sky rolled round, and night raced up from the ocean
The Aeneid: Book II: Meantime, Troy was shaken through and through by her last pangs
The Aeneid: Book II: AENEAS: Not the Trojans alone paid their account in blood
The Aeneid: Book II: AENEAS: Inside the palace, all was confusion, groans, agony
The Aeneid: Book II: VENUS: My son, what anguish suprs you to this ungoverned rage?
The Aeneid: Book II: ANCHISES: O god omnipotent, if any prayers can sway you
The Aeneid: Book II: AENEAS: Let little Ascanius walk beside me
The Aeneid: Book II: AENEAS: For a start, I returned to the shadowed gate in the city wall
The Aeneid: Book III: AENEAS: After the gods had seen fit to destroy our Asian empire
The Aeneid: Book IV: But now for some while the queen had been growing more grieviously love-sick
The Aeneid: Book IV: These words blew to a blaze the spark of love in the queen's heart
The Aeneid: Book IV: So now, as Aurora was rising out of her ocean bed
The Aeneid: Book IV: Jove Omnipotent bent down his gaze upon Dido's city
The Aeneid: Book IV: DIDO: Unfaithful man, did you think you could do such a dreadful thing?
The Aeneid: Book IV: With these words, Dido suddenly ended, and sick at heart
The Aeneid: Book IV: But hapless Dido, frightened out of her wits by her destiny
The Aeneid: Book IV: AENAS: Jump to it men! To your watch! Get to the rowing benches!
The Aeneid: Book IV: Trembling, distraught by the terrible thing she was doing
The Aeneid: Book V: Meanwhile, Aeneas held his fleet on its course through the deep sea
The Aeneid: Book VI: At long last they slid to the shores of Euboean Cumae
The Aeneid: Book VI: But the Sibyl, not yet submissive to Pheobus, there in her cavern
The Aeneid: Book VI: Now the doves, as they fed, flitted on from spot to spot
The Aeneid: Book VI: A dreadful ferryman looks after the crossing
The Aeneid: Book VI: Huge Cerberus, monstrously couched in a cave confronting them
The Aeneid: Book VI: AENEAS: Poor unhappy Dido, so the message was true that came to me
The Aeneid: Book VI: Side by side they went the twilight way
The Aeneid: Book VI: Deep in a green valley stood father Anchises
The Aeneid: Book VI: When Anchises had finished he drew his son and the Sibyl
The Aeneid: Book VI: ANCHISES: But Romans, never forget that government is your medium!
The Aeneid: Book VII: Caeta too, who was nurse to Aeneas
The Aeneid: Book VII: Aeneas, his lieutenants and fair Ascanius
The Aeneid: Book VII: LATINUS: Trojans - oh yes, your city and line are not unknown to us
The Aeneid: Book VII: Latinus received this speech of Illioneus with a gaze
The Aeneid: Book VII: But look! From Argos, city of Inachus, now returning
The Aeneid: Book VII: QUEEN OF LATINUS: Husband, must our Lavinia be wed to a Trojan, an outcast?
The Aeneid: Book VII: TURNUS: I am not, as you seem to think, unaware
The Aeneid: Book VII: While they fought over the plain there, with neither side prevailing
The Aeneid: Book VII: Latinus said no more
The Aeneid: Book VII: Five great towns establish workshops for the production of armaments
The Aeneid: Book VII: NARRATOR: Thus the seeds of war were sown
The Aeneid: Book XII: When Turnus saw that the Latins were crushed by defeat
The Aeneid: Book XII: The morrow's dawn was just beginning to shower its light
The Aeneid: Book XII: AENEAS: Let the sun witness my invocation now
The Aeneid: Book XII: So saying, he ran forward and launched a weapon right at the foe
The Aeneid: Book XII: Now while the victorious Turnus littered the battlefield with dead
The Aeneid: Book XII: When he had spoken, Aeneas sallied forth in his might
The Aeneid: Book XII: Aeneas and Turnus tore through the battle
The Aeneid: Book XII: A further calamity now befell the war-weary Latins
The Aeneid: Book XII: The picture of their changed fortunes struck Turnus dumb, bewildered him
The Aeneid: Book XII: So then they drew apart, leaving a space in the midst for combat
The Aeneid: Book XII: Meantime the king of all-powerful Olympus addresses Juno
The Aeneid: Book XII: JUNO: It is because your wishes, great consort, were known to me
The Aeneid: Book XII: Turnus, shaking his head replied
by Jill Balcon
CD Quality (Lossless)
16bit / 44.1 kHz
Stereo
Lossless: FLAC, M4A, WAV, WV, AIFF
Lossy: AAC, MP3, M4A, MP4, OGA, OGG, OPUS, WMA