French Suite No. 1. in D minor French Suite No. 6, in E played by Lucille Wallace (harpsichord)
A record of a 3,000-mile journey to meet and talk with some of the forty thousand refugee intellectuals who, four years after the war's end, remain in Displaced Persons camps in Germany, Austria, and Italy, largely ignored by a world that wants muscles but not brains
Written and produced by Margaret Bucknall
Dorothy Bond (soprano)
Corinne Lacomble (piano)
London Philharmonic Orchestra
(Leader, David Wise )
Conducted by Sir Adrian Boult
Part 1
Talk by the Rt.
Rev.Monsignor Ronald Knox
Monsignor Ronald Knox was a close friend of Chesterton from his undergraduate days until Chesterton's death in 1936. In this talk, originally broadcast eight years ago, Monsignor Knox gives some personal reminiscences of his friend and an interpretation of his intellectual and spiritual passage through life.
Part 2
From the Royal Albert Hall, London
Robert Speaight discusses Louis Bonneret 's biography of the poet
Alfred Deller (counter-tenor)
Desmond Dupr6 (guitar)
Flow my tears
Can she excuse?
In darkness let me dwell Fine knacks for ladies Sorrow stay
Geoffrey Sharp describes his visit to the Festival and gives his impressions of some of the performances
String Quartet in B flat, Op. 130 with Grosse Fugue as last movement played by the Hungarian String Quartet:
Zoltan Szekely (violin)
Alexander Moskowsky (violin)
Denes Koromzay (viola)
Vllmos Palotai (cello)
Talk by Paul Sinker
The structure of both national and international society in our time calls for an unprecedented number of men and women of administrative capacity. The speaker, who is Director of Civil Service Training, H.M. Treasury, and late Fellow and Tutor of Jesus College, Cambridge, considers how this demand can be met, and the kind of qualities needed for administrative work.