- 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.

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

You can hear this line at 00:22:04 in the radio play.

Quote context

[...]

- 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.

- It was four days later that a Limehouse tug was sailing back across the channel, towing four barges full of the last survivors from Dunkirk Beach.

[...]