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

May was at its end, and the day, too, in a long golden twilight that was giving way to the silver of the moon already hanging in the eastern sky.

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

You can hear this line at 00:16:15 in the radio play.

Quote context

[...]

- Alex Dreyer, your newsman on the go. Morgan Beatty with a roundup of world happenings, plus a staff of specialists who join Jim Fleming in bringing you the heart of the news.

- Then you'll want to pay your nightly visit to all the friendly folks at 79 Wistful Vista, the home of Thibber McGee and Molly, where you just might bump into Wallace Wimple, Doc Gamble, and the old-timer.

- Sound like some interesting listening? Always is on NBC.

- And now we continue Theater Royal with Sir Laurence Olivier.

- It was a little more than three weeks before Frith returned to the lighthouse.

- May was at its end, and the day, too, in a long golden twilight that was giving way to the silver of the moon already hanging in the eastern sky.

- She told herself, as her steps took her thither, that she must know whether the snow goose had really stayed as Rhayader had said it would. Perhaps it had flown away after all.

- But her firm tread on the seawall was full of eagerness, and sometimes unconsciously she found herself hurrying.

- As she approached the lighthouse, she saw the yellow light of Rhayader's lantern down by his little wharf.

- His sailboat was rocking gently on the flooding tide, and he was loading supplies into her, water and food and bottles of brandy, gear and a spare sail.

- Philip, you're going away?

[...]

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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