Movie-Sounds.org > Old-Time Radio Quotes > The Snow Goose (1954)

Come on, lads. In you get. Don't mind getting your feet wet.

5 seconds sound clip from the The Snow Goose (1954) classic radio play.

You can hear this line at 00:21:56 in the radio play.

Quote context

[...]

- It's Old Nick himself. We must be dead and we don't know it.

- It's more like the good lord he looks to me, like the pictures in the Sunday school books: white face, dark eyes, beard and all, and his glooming boat.

- I can take seven at a time.

- Good man! The seven are the nearest. Get in. You four, you and you men over there.

- What, us, sir?

- Yes, you fool! Don't stand there staring. Get in, quick!

- Yes, sir. Come on, Lofty. This is it.

- Come on, lads. In you get. Don't mind getting your feet wet.

- Mind your heads when I swing around. In fact, keep down in the bottom of the boat, all of you.

- Blimy, look at that ruddy goose flying round and round.

- Told you it was a good omen. It's a blinking angel of mercy. That's what it is.

- When he had brought his boatload out to the Kentish Maid, Rhayader sailed back to the shore for seven more survivors, and all that day he sailed back and forth.

- A motorboat from the Thames Yacht Club had come to help in the job, and then a lifeboat from Poole, until the Kentish Maid had 700 souls aboard her.

- And when she sailed back to England, Rhayader waved from his little sailboat, and the snow goose flew circling overhead.

[...]

The Snow Goose (1954) Sound Clip

Laurence Olivier 1970s portraitListen to Laurence Olivier bring the characters of Paul Gallico's story 'The Snow Goose' to life in this rare 1954 Theatre Royal radio play, featuring sound clips on our page.

Actors: Laurence Olivier (Narrator / Philip Rhayader)

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