An everyday story of towering genius, set in and around the Lakeland retreat of William and Dorothy Wordsmith.
The Wordsmiths of Gorsemere.
An everyday story of towering genius, set in and around the Lakeland retreat of William and Dorothy Wordsmith.
The Wordsmiths of Gorsemere.
Is this Lord Byron or, some foreign castel guard like @wyleu is ?
It’s the magnificent Sue Limb, spoofing the English Lake Poets, mixed with some of the finest radio actors the UK has produced.
Denise Coffey is a delight, Tim Curry, Miriam Margolyes is as she does like no other, Eugene Fraser as the perfect BBC announcer…
English Audio, and apologies for the cod Italian…
and don’t mention France.
Dont work!!
I would offer this up as a direct reply to Prisencolinensinainciusol . . .
English at it’s most intentionally gibberish.
The sound effects alone are a work of art and the singing!
Nurse, nurse, the heavier straps, if you will!
IS THAT ANY BETTER !?!?!?!?! (I’ve edited the link, try again)
I had an audio player with start and end times 0:00 / 0:00 that didn’t work either. If I right click and Copy audio address I got:
//archive.org/details/WordsmithsatGorsemereBBCr4/101+26th+June+1799.mp3
which with the // removed takes you to a good archive page.
And the link is now fixed also.
The Internet as patch panel…
I didn’t understand a single word…
In Italy, comedians have always made fun of the English (and not only) who try to speak Italian. I think they make people laugh as much as Italians who try to speak English (or something else). But above all, Italians laugh (kindly) at English self-control. We use our hands a lot to speak… Italian is a body language.
But it makes a nice noise nevertheless…?
Absolutely yes.
I’ve unleashed my daughter on it.
She has requested it in Latin.