Main content
Sorry, this episode is not currently available

Summer Over England

Poet Nigel Forde presents an evocation of summer, drawn from many seasonal recordings in the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ archive - in poetry, prose and reportage, and in times of peace and war.

Between the two halves of tonight's prom, poet Nigel Forde presents a seasonal reflection. Summer more than any other time of year is richly represented in the recordings held in the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Archive. 'Summer Over the British Isles' was a famous 1937 feature programme evoking the moment when the country could perhaps relax a little, ease its braces and its stays, and stretch out in the long grass ...and hope it wouldn't rain.

It was also a vaguely patriotic and - with hindsight - prophetic programme capturing an era that was about to be blown apart by the off-stage murmurs of war from Europe. But there's much more - Laurie Lee recalling the 'Hill Cricket' played on summer days in the Cotswold villages of his youth, Alistair Cooke describing a day at Lords and that other immortal voice of cricket, John Arlott, recalling long shadows and steepling catches. Vita Sackville-West describes the joys of great summer gardens; Henry Williamson forsakes otters to hymn the beauty of Devon and we catch the sound of conflict in 1964 when Britain's seaside became a battleground for disaffected youngsters...

20 minutes

Last on

Thu 26 Aug 2010 19:45

Broadcast

  • Thu 26 Aug 2010 19:45