PODCAST · arts
Remastered
by Oxford
Remastered reimagines classic and contemporary Oxford poetry with a delicious blend of music and visual art, made purely for pleasure. Step away from your day and enjoy a moment of the sublime. It's on the House. Remastered Vignettes 1-8 are curated by the Oxford Writers' House Podcasting Fellow, Isabel Galwey.
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Vignette Eight: Sonnet, by Emily Henrietta Hickey
Emily Henrietta Hickey (1845-1924) was an Irish poet, writer, lecturer in English literature, and co-founder of the Browning Society. She developed an interest in Irish literature and poetry, leading her to connect with poets such as William Butler Yeats; she also converted to Catholicism in 1880’s and wrote much devotional or religious poetry. Sonnet is one of her works which combines classical themes with a woman’s perspective to reflect on mortality and its relationship to art.
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Vignette Seven: Growing Old, by Matthew Arnold
Matthew Arnold (1822-1888) was a British poet, educator and literary critic. He was professor of poetry at Oxford from 1857 to 1867. His poetry was famed for its sparing lucidity and approachable, direct style, as in this bleak but evocative poem “Growing Old,” a meditation on mortality and the cold comfort of legacy.
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Vignette Six: The Pavilion, by Agnes Mary Frances Robinson
Celebrate the arrival of long, bright evenings and British Summer Time with this short poem by Agnes Mary Frances Robinson, also known as Agnes Mary Frances Duclaux. Mary was also a respected literary critic, active in French and British intellectual circles through the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Though “The Pavilion” has no dedication, much of Mary’s poetry is dedicated to Vernon Lee (the pen name of Violet Paget), her lover and travelling companion for a number of years.
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Vignette Five: Shake Hands, We Shall Never Be Friends, by A.E. Housman
Today’s poem is more sombre: “Shake Hands, We Shall Never Be Friends” by AE Housman. Like much of AE Housman’s poetry, this poem was inspired by Moses Jackson, Housman’s friend and muse; he could be described as the love of Housman’s life. “Shake Hands” was written on the occasion of Jackson’s emigration to Canada. Upon Jackson’s death in 1923, Housman wrote to a friend: “Now I can die myself: I could not have borne to leave him behind me in a world where anything might happen to him.” “Shake Hands” is read by John Goold.
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Vignette Four: Rest, by Margaret Louisa Woods
In a world that rarely pauses, what does it mean to truly rest? In this episode, we turn to “Rest” by Margaret Louisa Woods (1855–1945), a poet and novelist whose work bridges Victorian intensity and a quietly modern introspection. Woods invites us to consider rest not as idleness, but as a sacred recalibration of body and spirit—a yielding that restores strength rather than surrendering it. Attentive to the hush beneath life’s noise, she captures the deep human longing to lay burdens down, if only for a moment. Gentle yet searching, “Rest” offers a timely meditation on stillness, renewal, and the courage it takes to stop.
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Vignette Three: In February, by John Addington Symonds
January isn’t the only time for new beginnings. February–which this year is packed with Lunar New Year, Imbolc, Valentine’s Day, Shrove Tuesday, and the beginning of Ramadan–can also be a time of optimism, fresh starts and a new lease on life. “In February,” a light-hearted work by the Victorian poet and literary critic John Addington Symonds (1840-1893), captures the bravery and beauty of early spring. John Addington Symonds was a bisexual man and a scholar of gay history, making his work especially timely for UK Pride month.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Remastered reimagines classic and contemporary Oxford poetry with a delicious blend of music and visual art, made purely for pleasure. Step away from your day and enjoy a moment of the sublime. It's on the House. Remastered Vignettes 1-8 are curated by the Oxford Writers' House Podcasting Fellow, Isabel Galwey.
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