• A Diversity of Kipling, part 2 . . . 10pm – 6am

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KEY: stories/tales in bold, poems/verse in italics, R denotes a recording

1 007 • Alastair Wilson

2 The Secret of the Machines • John Walker

3 The Ballad of East and West • Chris Morrison

4 The Looking-Glass • Peter Bradbury (sung) R

5 The Beginning of the Armadillos • Bronwen Sadler R

6 How the Whale Got his Throat • John Walker

7 The Harp Song of the Dane Women • John Radcliffe R

8 The Spring Running • John Radcliffe R

9 At the Pit’s Mouth • Gary Enstone

10 The Long Trail • Chris Morrison

11 The Song of the Galley-Slaves • John Walker

12 McAndrew’s Hymn • Alastair Wilson

13 The Sing-Song of Old Man Kangaroo • Jennifer Teh R

14 The Manner of Men • Alastair Wilson

15 The Deep Sea Cables • Jennifer Teh R

16 The Eye of Allah • Amy Hogger

17 The River’s Tale • Alan Rideout

18 Sussex • Isabel Rideout

19 The Widow at Windsor • Alan Rideout

20 The Storm Cone • Chris Morrison

21 The Rout of the White Hussars • Paul Woodley

22 Buying Bateman’s (Something of Myself) • Alan Rideout.

23 A Walking Delegate • Meredith Dixon R

24 The Arrest of Lieutenant Golightly • Paul Woodley

25 A Ballade of Bad Entertainment • Alex Bubb R

26 The Dawn Wind • John Walker

27 Gethsemane • Pamela Morgan R

28 The Glory of the Garden • Chris Morrison

29 Frankie’s Trade • The Young Tradition (song) R

30 Brookland Road • John Walker

31 Dane-geld • John Walker

32 A Daughter of the Regiment • Paul Woodley

33 Akbar’s Bridge (part) • Pamela Morgan R

34 Yoked with an Unbeliever • Paul Woodley

35 Gentlemen-Rankers • Peter Bradbury R

36 The Miracle of Purun Bhagat (part) • Qing Xie (English & Mandarin) R

37 The Roman Centurion’s Song • Chris Morrison

38 The Mary Gloster • Chris Morrison

Website Editor’s Note: In abstracting these recordings from the original, I generally chose just the reading and not the preamble. The readings are in the correct order so each person’s full contribution can be quite easily tracked down on the 8-hour original, especially if you know your Kipling! The recordings were also normalised as regards volume. (iantks@icloud.com)