Studies in the Middle Ages
1: St. Bernard by C. N. L. BROOKE
Professor of Medieval History in the University of Liverpool ' ... in the heavenly Jerusalem, and if you would know where that is, it is at Clairvaux: she herself is Jerusalem.' Bernard gives us a sense of the excitement of being at the centre of a great movement, a real renaissance. Professor-Brooke considers especially his Letters.
† Kim Borg
(bass)
ERNEST LUSH (piano)
Wolf Michelangelo Lieder
Wohl denk' ich oft
Alles endet, was entstehet
Fiihlt meine Seele das erschnte Licht?
Kilpinen Som ett blommande mandeltrad
As a blossoming almond tree
Din mun ar Ijusare an min
Your smile Is more radiant than mine
Om tiotusen ar
In ten thousand years
(Reflexer. Op. 33)
Ravel
Don Quichotte a Dulcinée
Chanson romanesque Chanson 6pique Chanson a boire
The report of a search by Ian Grimble
Archaeological Report:
DR. J. X. W. P. CORCORAN
Highland Voices:
JAMES CAMPBELL , EDITH MACKAT GEORGE MACKAY , JOSEPH MACKAT ROBERT MACKAY , ANGUS Ross
Readers:
BEATRIX LEHMANN , JOHN BADDELET JACQUES BRUNIUS DUNCAN MCINTYRE
JOHN SOUTHWORTH , DOUGLAS STORM JOHN YOUNG Produced by CHRISTOPHER HOLME
To be repeated on September 28 Today it would be called ' genocide ': during the ' clearances ' of the early nineteenth century a whole community of Highlanders in Scotland, settled for many centuries and adequately prosperous, was obliterated in the name of progress.
See page 38
OROMONTE STRING TRIO Perry Hart (violin)
Margaret Major (viola) Bruno Schrecker (cello) Second of four programmes Including chamber music by Hindemith
or Natural Theology in the Island
A dramatic monologue by ROBERT BROWNING read by Marius Goring
Symphonic poem: Tapiola played by the ROYAL PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA
Conducted by SIR THOMAS BEECHAM on a gramophone record