"The English Countryside."

One of twenty essays originally broadcast as talks by their authors over the "Empire Service" of the B.B.C., for the most part in a series called "To Talk of Many Things." The talks were intended "to give listeners an occasional relaxation from news Bulletins, War Commentaries, and the like," and they were transmitted over short-wave to listeners world-wide. Other speakers included J.B. Priestley, Hugh Walpole, and W. Somerset Maugham. Bates relates a morning country walk in 1940, and reflects on various sights and sounds, wartime crops (with an indication that he is addressing above all English soldiers abroad), and mushroom picking. He closes with an anecdote about ducks and wasps, and brings together the qualities of a successful talk (in contrast to a written essay) that are delineated in the editor's introduction. In London Calling - The Overseas Journal of the BBC (August 15, 1940, no. 49),The English Spirit (ed. Anthony Weymouth, London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd., 1942, pp. 35-39).

ID: 
c104
Title: 
"The English Countryside."
Genre: 
Essay
Page Count: 
5
Word Count: 
ca. 1600
Publisher: 
London Calling
Year of Publication: 
1940
Topic: 
Rural Living
Document Type: 
Full-text Online
Nature Writing
AttachmentSize
c104.pdf810.66 KB