Thursday, 27 October 2022

Happy Birthday to Welsh Literary genius Dylan Marlais Thomas ( 27/10/14 -9/11/53 )

 

 
Welsh playwright,Modernist poet, author, filmmaker, socialist, and opponent of war Dylan Marlais Thomas was born today on October 27th, 1914, in the Uplands suburb of Swansea, to David John (‘DJ’) Thomas, Senior English master at Swansea Grammar School, and his wife Florence Hannah Thomas (née Williams) a seamstress, the second of two children and younger brother to Nancy Marles Thomas, nine years his senior.
Dylan’s middle name, Marlais ( pronounced ‘Mar-lice’) was chosen in honour of his great-uncle, the Unitarian Minister and poet William Thomas, better know by his pseudonym or ‘bardic name’ Gwilym Marles. A combination of the words ‘mawr’ meaning big and either ‘clais’ or ‘glas’ meaning ditch, stream or blue, the name is distinctly Welsh in origin. While the name Dylan is also a strong Welsh name pronounced “Dullan”, interestingly, Dylan himself preferred to use the English pronunciation “Dillan” and during radio broadcasts was often know to correct announcers using the Welsh pronunciation.
Indeed, whilst Thomas is arguably the most well known Welsh poet of all time, paradoxically his literary work is written entirely in English. DJ and Florence were both fluent Welsh speakers (and DJ even provided extracurricular Welsh lessons from their home) but following the tradition of the time, Nancy and Dylan were not brought up to be bilingual.It was this decline of the Welsh Language during the nineteenth century that subsequently gave rise to the ‘Anglo-Welsh literature’ or as many English speaking Welsh men and women preferred, ‘Welsh writing in English’.
There was an even greater upsurge in Welsh literature written in the English language during the Great Depression of the 1930s. In the UK, heavy industry was one of the worst hit areas, and the experiences of those dependent on the Welsh coalfields inspired a plethora of writing from the many writers belonging to this Anglo-Welsh school, who were routed deeply in the working class families of South Wales and wished to share their experiences with the world outside Wales. In contrast though, Thomas hailed from a fairly middle-class background and had grown up with more rural experiences. He often holidayed in Carmarthenshire, and his home in Uplands was, and still is, one of the more affluent areas of the city.
A  blazing literary talent, who by the age of eight or nine  was writing his own poetry, even before he entered the Grammar School in 1925. A quiet and introspective student, he was a frequent contributor to the school's magazine.Many of Dylan’s poems drew from his childhood experiences of the rural Welsh countryside and he began writing of them in his notebooks at the age of 15 whilst attending Swansea Grammar School. Indeed his first and second collections of poems, entitled ’18 poems’ and ’25 poems’ respectively, drew heavily from these notebooks.
Leaving  school at sixteen he worked on the staff of the South Wales Daily Post (later the South Wales Evening Post), sometimes writing scathing reviews and critiques of local plays, concerts and writers which needed be edited to keep from offending the subjects under scrutiny. During this very productive writing period of Dylan's life, he also became known locally for the offbeat jokes, stories and obscene limericks he told in the pubs at night. He would read poems he was working on aloud to friends and relatives, not wanting them to read the work he'd done, but instead to hear it. Along with writing, Thomas was also involved with local theater, both writing and acting. A good half of his 90 collected poems were written or half-written in his bedroom at 5 Cwmdonkin Drive, Swansea before he was 20.
Following a short-lived position as a junior reporter at the South Wales Daily Post at the age of 16, Dylan left the newspaper to concentrate on his poetry, working as a freelance journalist when the need arose. Having joined the Swansea Little Theatre Company, of which his sister Nancy was also a member, Dylan began to frequent the pubs and café scene in Swansea with his artistic contemporaries. As a group they became known as the The Kardomah Gang, in honour of one of their favourite local haunt, the Kardomah Café. The café was originally located in Swansea’s Castle Street, coincidentally on the site of the former Congregational Chapel where Dylan’s parents were married in 1903.
In a January 1933 essay in the South Wales Evening Post entitled "Genius and Madness Akin in the World of Art" Thomas discussed the idea that one gifted with genius often walked a line where it was "difficult to differentiate, with any sureness, between insanity and eccentricity." He asserted that "the borderline of insanity is more difficult to trace than the majority of people, comparatively safe within the barriers of their own common-sensibility, can realise."
Dylan's first national publication was in a small literary review in the spring of 1933. Later that year his poems were published in the more prestigious Adelphi and the London newspaper The Sunday Referee.After moving to London in 1934 in pursuit of better opportunities, Dylan's writing career began to flourish. His poems, essays, articles and reviews were being published in London and Swansea magazines and newspapers. With dedication and devotion to the craft of writing his hard work paid of when his first book,18 poems  a collection of emotionally and sexually charged pieces  was published on the 18th of December 1934 when he was only 20. A second book Twenty-five poems appeared in Autumn of 1936.He would go on to become one of the greatest poets of the twentieth century.
It was in this year that Dylan would  meet one Caitlin Macnamara, and it is said that within hours of their first meeting Dylan, drunkenly insisted that she was the most beautiful woman he had ever met and that he was going to marry her, to which she offered no objections. The slightly older Caitlin,who was a physically strong, trained dancer with a fiery and unpredictable temper found the impoverished poet vulnerable and sweet, if a bit needy. They spent the next five days and nights together, going from pub to pub and hardly eating at all. Later that summer when he and Caitlin met again in Wales, Dylan had a run-in with Augustus John, a painter and friend of her parents with whom Caitlin had been having an affair. Caitlin and Dylan eventually started living together near the end of 1936.  and was to marry her in 1937. A turbulent marriage, that weathered many a storm.
In 1941 , Thomas and Caitlin moved to Plas Gelli at Talsarn in what was then known as Cardiganshire, now known as Ceredigion, keeping a studio flat in London whilst spending some of the time working on wartime propaganda films. The couple left their son Llewellyn with Caitlin's mother, where he stayed until 1949. Their second child a daughter named Aeronwy (Aeron) Bryn Thomas was born in March 1942. During his time in London Thomas would take part in more than a hundred radio programmes.Dylan and Caitlin  moved to New Quay in September,eager to escape both the war and London, moving to a little bungalow by the name of ' Majoda' before moving to South Leigh in Oxfordshire. Their final home would be the Boathouse in Laugharne, Carmarthebshire where they lived from 1949 to 1953.
The couple’s tumultuous relationship is well documented, not least in Caitlin’s own memoirs of their married life, entitled ‘Leftover Life to Kill’ and ‘Double Drink Story‘ (published posthumously), which describe the couple’s fiery partnership, exacerbated by mutual infidelities and a fondness for alcohol. Dylan himself referred to their union as “raw, red bleeding meat”. However, the couple remained together until Dylan’s death in 1953. And whilst Caitlin eventually remarried and relocated to Italy, following her own death in 1994 she was buried with Dylan in Laugharne.
Much of Dylan’s popularity both at home and abroad stemmed from his descriptive lyrical prose and his ability to depict a Wales few Welsh people in the industrial age ever got to see. Nevertheless, he portrayed an image of ‘Welshness’ that was held dear to the hearts of many Welsh men and women. Unlike many of his contemporaries, Dylan’s poetry did not focus on the bleak images of the industrial depression. Where he does refer to industrial terminology, such as in the poem’ All All And All’, he combines it with the beauty of nature.
 
All All And All
 
All all and all the dry worlds lever,
Stage of the ice, the solid ocean,
All from the oil, the pound of lava.
City of spring, the governed flower,
Turns in the earth that turns the ashen
Towns around on a wheel of fire.

How now my flesh, my naked fellow,
Dug of the sea, the glanded morrow,
Worm in the scalp, the staked and fallow.
All all and all, the corpse's lover,
Skinny as sin, the foaming marrow,
All of the flesh, the dry worlds lever.
 
 II

Fear not the waking world, my mortal,
Fear not the flat, synthetic blood,
Nor the heart in the ribbing metal.
Fear not the tread, the seeded milling,
The trigger and scythe, the bridal blade,
Nor the flint in the lover's mauling.

Man of my flesh, the jawbone riven,
Know now the flesh's lock and vice,
And the cage for the scythe-eyed raver.
Know, O my bone, the jointed lever,
Fear not the screws that turn the voice,
And the face to the driven lover.

III

All all and all the dry worlds couple,
Ghost with her ghost, contagious man
With the womb of his shapeless people.
All that shapes from the caul and suckle,
Stroke of mechanical flesh on mine,
Square in these worlds the mortal circle.

Flower, flower the people's fusion,
O light in zenith, the coupled bud,
And the flame in the flesh's vision.
Out of the sea, the drive of oil,
Socket and grave, the brassy blood,
Flower, flower, all all and all.
 
Though Thomas was known to denounce Welsh nationalism (especially of the politicised variety), elements of Wales and its literary heritage do seep into his work, and it could be argued that if anything then, Thomas’ work is emblematic of the way in which Welsh identity itself is multifarious, and difficult to define and authenticate.
Through the character Rev Eli Jenkins in one of his best-known works, the ‘play for voicesUnder Milk Wood (which was later made famous by another equally iconic Welshman, Richard Burton) Dylan taps into that collective ‘Welshness’ to which many are so fiercely loyal: 
I know there are Towns lovelier than ours, And fairer hills and loftier far…But let me choose and oh! I should Love all my life and longer To stroll among our trees and stray In Goosegog Lane, on Donkey Down, And hear the Dewi sing all day, And never, never leave the town.
 In this celebrated work, which follows the lives of those who occupy the fictional Welsh village of Llareggub, Thomas explores the mundane through his playful language and poetic script. At one particular moment, Thomas the rascal surfaces to describe the anguish of the solipsist Reverend Eli Jenkins over the death of his Father - a one-legged, alcoholic farmer: 'Poor Dad,' grieves the Reverend Eli, 'to die of drink and agriculture.' On the following page, the profound Thomas makes an appearance, as Reverent Eli recites some of his poetry:

'We are not wholly bad or good,

Who live our lives under Milk Wood,

And thou, I know, wilt be the first,

To see our best side, not our worst.'

The ever-charming Under Milk Wood has the wonderful capacity to present the mundane in a paradoxically poignant yet light-hearted manner. This work allows the reader to laugh on one page and marvel in admiration on the next. Perhaps something similar could have been said about Thomas himself.
Dylan Thomas is not usually thought about as a particular political writer. For those who know his life and his work, clearly Dylan was left wing, and had various Communist and Marxist friends.Thomas was influenced, especially from 1933 onwards, by an older Marxist friend Bert Trick,  but Thomas himself was probably too unconventional and too free-spirited to conform to any particular party line.
Politics was not at the forefront of his aesthetic style though, unlike some other writers and artists of the 1930s, but nevertheless, Dylan was clearly someone affected by the politics of his age. He wrote about the great issues of his day, such as unemployment, war and the danger of atomic weapons. and was also a life-long socialist and an internationalist, in his 1934 collection New Verse he states “I take my stand with any revolutionary body that asserts it to be the right of all men to share, equally and impartially, every production of man ... from the sources of production at man’s disposal
The backdrop to Thomas’ tragically short life are some of the most pivotal events of the last century, including the Great Depression, the rise of fascism,WW2 and the coming of the cold war. There are clear references to these developments in a number of his poems and letters. As an exceptionally sensitive and reflective individual, Thomas could not fail to assimilate these momentous developments into his writings. The dominant image of his poetry as primarily bucolic, nostalgic and apolitical belies the undercurrent of radicalism and hatred of oppression that runs through a great deal of his output.   
All the evidence points to Thomas’s holding revolutionary convictions both before he moved from Wales to London in 1934 and throughout his life. Before the Second World War, Dylan was certainly a man who liked to be known as challenging fascists on his patch, in Swansea. Writing in the Swansea Guardian, he was critical of a local counciller Mainwaring Hughes, who aligned himself with the British Union of Fascists. When the BUF mounted a 3,000 strong demonstration in Swansea in 1934, Dylan felt the need to be involved to oppose such extremism. A letter he wrote to Pamela Hansford Johnson in July 1934 explained how he had recently written ‘a seditious article attacking the shirted gentleman’ – i.e. Oswald Mosely. Here, he even claimed to have been involved at a fracas when opposing fascists, resulting in him being thrown down some stairs. It seems the latter was something of an embellishment , but nonetheless such letters highlight his anti-fascist identity.
From discussing the annihilation of the ruling classes with his communist friend Bert Trick, through his work for the Ministry of Information in World War Two advocating and explaining the future welfare state; and from his lectures, free of charge to the USA’s Communist Party in his last days, Dylan always did what he thought was his bit to further the cause.
In 1944, Thomas also wanted the Communist Party cultural journal Our Time to publish Ceremony after a Fire Raid, ‘pressing’ the poem “upon Arnold Rattenbury because, he said, he wanted to advertise that he remained "a socialist” 
 
Ceremony After a Fire Road 
 
 I

Myselves
The grievers
Grieve
Among the street burned to tireless death
A child of a few hours
With its kneading mouth
Charred on the black breast of the grave
The mother dug, and its arms full of fires.

Begin
With singing
Sing
Darkness kindled back into beginning
When the caught tongue nodded blind,
A star was broken
Into the centuries of the child
Myselves grieve now, and miracles cannot atone.

Forgive
Us forgive
Us your death that myselves the believers
May hold it in a great flood
Till the blood shall spurt,
And the dust shall sing like a bird
As the grains blow, as your death grows, through our heart.

Crying
Your dying
Cry,
Child beyond cockcrow, by the fire-dwarfed
Street we chant the flying sea
In the body bereft.
Love is the last light spoken. Oh
Seed of sons in the loin of the black husk left.

II

I know not whether
Adam or Eve, the adorned holy bullock
Or the white ewe lamb
Or the chosen virgin
Laid in her snow
On the altar of London,
Was the first to die
In the cinder of the little skull,
O bride and bride groom
O Adam and Eve together
Lying in the lull
Under the sad breast of the head stone
White as the skeleton
Of the garden of Eden.

I know the legend
Of Adam and Eve is never for a second
Silent in my service
Over the dead infants
Over the one
Child who was priest and servants,
Word, singers, and tongue
In the cinder of the little skull,
Who was the serpent's
Night fall and the fruit like a sun,
Man and woman undone,
Beginning crumbled back to darkness
Bare as nurseries
Of the garden of wilderness.

III

Into the organpipes and steeples
Of the luminous cathedrals,
Into the weathercocks' molten mouths
Rippling in twelve-winded circles,
Into the dead clock burning the hour
Over the urn of sabbaths
Over the whirling ditch of daybreak
Over the sun's hovel and the slum of fire
And the golden pavements laid in requiems,
Into the bread in a wheatfield of flames,
Into the wine burning like brandy,
The masses of the sea
The masses of the sea under
The masses of the infant-bearing sea
Erupt, fountain, and enter to utter for ever
Glory glory glory
The sundering ultimate kingdom of genesis' thunder.
 
Thomas contributed not only to Our Time but to its successor Communist Party periodicals Arena and Circus. On his 1952 visit to America, he also agreed to do a poetry reading for the Socialist Party of the USA without expecting his usual fee. And, as we have seen, Thomas called himself a communist and relished opportunities for political discussion in the final days in New York city. And, as his prose writings and film scripts reveal, he understood poverty and class consciousness and could describe them as experienced in Wales and the world. Dylan developed more anti-fascist writing during the Second World War, as he worked as a writer of propaganda films. In this body of work too – which was of greater significance and impact, but once more was not his most literary writing – he could use humour to skewer a fascist leader. The funniest of these films was undoubtedly These Are the Men, which featured footage of Hitler and other leading Nazis delivering histrionic speeches, although re-dubbed with an English language voice over. The film-scripts reveal a socialist understanding of the cost to humanity of a failed economic system. Wales – Green Mountain, Black Mountain was too political for the British Council to show overseas. One memorable passage answers the early critics who said that Thomas ignored the social reality of Depression-era Wales:

Remember the procession of the old-young men
From dole queue to corner and back again,
From the pinched, packed streets to the peak of slag
In the bite of the winters with shovel and bag,
With a drooping fag and a turned up collar,
Stamping for the cold at the ill lit corner
Dragging through the squalor with their hearts like lead
Staring at the hunger and the shut pit-head
Nothing in their pockets, nothing home to eat,
Lagging from the slag heap to the pinched, packed street.
Remember the procession of the old-young men.
It shall never happen again.
 
His socialism can be seen in the two screenplays he wrote after the Second World War. He based The Doctor and The Devils on the true story of the body-snatchers Burke and Hare, using it to show there is one law for the rich and another for the poor. And in Rebecca’s Daughters he told the story of the Welsh toll gate riots of 1843, making the point that “governments only bring in reforms when they are afraid of a revolution”. Sadly, both scripts remained unperformed during his lifetime.
Even as late as the 1950's Thomas was still "very much on the Left."  In 1949 he attended an international writers' Peace Congress in Prague.  Then in 1952, when he was on tour in America, he did a poetry reading for the Socialist Party of the USA.  He declined to accept his usual fee and did it instead free of charge.
Sadly a lot of this is not as widely known as it should be. partly due to Dylan himself. He would often like to boast about his drinking and said: “An alcoholic is someone you don’t like, who drinks as much as you do.” Thomas’ health rapidly began to deteriorate as a result of his drinking; he was warned by his doctor to give up alcohol but he carried on regardless.In January 1950 Dylan engaged on a reading tour in America which was a great success. However on a further  tour in 1953, he collapsed in the Chelsea Hotel after a long drinking bout at the White Horse Tavern the result of a binge in which, as he allegedly boasted, he drank "18 straight whiskies; I think it's a record" .this has since become the stuff  of legends, but since then it has been said that he probably actually died from a blood sugar inbalance having not eaten properly for several days prior to his death, and the Doctor who treated him with both cortisone and half a grain of morphine sulphate, an abnormally high dose, and dangerous given his breathing complications,probably did not help him any further. He subsequently  died in a coma , a few days later on November 9th, at St Vincents Hospital in New York City at the age of 39. A tragic premature end nevertheless to this great Welsh poet and writer. And despite the myths that have emerged about his prodigous appetite for drinking it was certainly not alcoholism that finished him off, as his liver showed no signs of cirrhosis. The post mortem actually said that the primary cause of Thomas's death was pneumonia, with pressure on the brain and a fatty liver given as a contributing factor.Yes he had a love of alcohol, but first and foremost he was a poet the likes of which is seldom seen, and to define a man by his vices is to ignore his virtues.We should not let his reputation as a heavy drinker overshadow his great literacy legacy.
One of the most entrancing features Thomas possessed was his voice, a seductive instrument which he used to enrich his performances that still endures to this day, he remain a poet unlike any other. Dylan Thomas took the very local and very specific and made it universal. Across all of the forms that Dylan Thomas mastered, the literary landscape was made all the richer by his creative exploration of subjects that he returned to throughout his career: memory, childhood and place. He wrote about the ways in which we belong to each other and to the place that we call ‘home’.
 Dylan Thomas's expressive, highly imaginative re-creation of forms and language intimately portrays his inner self and his time, earning him renown as one of the "great individualists of modern art."A few years before his death, Dylan Thomas gave the following account of himself: ‘One: I am a Welshman; two: I am a drunkard; three: I am a lover of the human race, especially of women.’ Although Thomas put his Welshness first, his relationship with Wales was as enigmatic, and as problematic, as his relationships with women. This together with Thomas’s English upbringing has made defining, and accounting for, what it is that can be called Welsh in his work very difficult.
He is buried in Laugharne, and has a memorial plaque in Poets corner in Westminster Abbey I have long been a great admirer of his life and work and his unfailing commitment to his craft, that continues to inspire.
There are poets who speak to your soul, and then there are poets who give your soul a voice. Dylan Thomas was the latter, a flame that never stopped burning, igniting creativity across generations and continents. For me, Thomas isn’t just a poet from the past; he’s a constant companion, whispering words of rebellion, life, and death, shaping the very language I use to create.
Many have tried to imitate him. Some have got closer than others, but in my experience, Dylan’s rare talent is hard to master.His work lay not only in perfect apposite creation but also in its frugal use. He rarely ‘goes over the top’. His work is the epitome of balance, while being cleverly inventive – but only when necessary. For where Dylan Thomas felt he could improve the English language, he did so, and our beautiful language is the richer for it.
A certain Mr Robert Allen Zimmerman would arrive in New York eight years after Dylan Thomas's death, telling everyone that his name was Bob Dylan (later admitting it was his way of honoring the late poet).This influence extended beyond Dylan’s stage name though, going so far as to shape his lyrical style and even the types of songs he chose to write. That is another story I guess, but illustrates how Dylan Thomas had on many that rode on his waves later, and the poets who have followed in his footsteps who still owe a debt to his mighty mercurial talent.
While there are times when the often embellished tales of Dylan’s tempestuous relationship with both Caitlin and alcohol have threatened to overshadow the achievements of his literary work, today it is an indisputable fact that Dylan has gone into history as one of Wales’ most celebrated sons.Through writing so uniquely inventive that it alters the reader's perception of language, Thomas left us with works that are as fresh and relevant to today's world as they were at their debut.
His rich legacy lives on in his poems and plays, which are still much loved and appreciated around the world, not just in Wales and lives on in every artist, musician, or poet who refuses to be boxed in, who lets their work speak with a voice that is raw, unfiltered, and defiant.. For a poet from a small Welsh town to become one of the best known writers in the world in the 1950s was no mean feat, and so today, on what would have been Dylan Thomas’ birthday, I raise a glass in honour to one of Wales’ greatest literary heroes, Mr Dylan Thomas. Happy Birthday. Cheers.
Every year the Dylan Thomas society of Great Britain lays a wreath at Poet's Corner in Westminster Abbey on the anniversary of his death. A memorial stone to him  was unveiled in Poets' Corner in Westminster Abbey on 1st March 1982. It lies between memorials to Lord Byron and George Eliot and is made of green Penrhyn stone, sculpted by Jonah Jones.
The inscription, with a quote from his poem Fern Hill, reads: 

DYLAN THOMAS
27 October 1914 9 November 1953 
Time held me green and dying 
Though I sang in my chains like the sea 
Buried at Laugharne

I  conclude this post  with a selectionof his fine work.  Enjoy..  

Poem in October- Dylan  Thomas 
 
It was my thirtieth year to heaven
Woke to my hearing from harbour and neighbour wood
   And the mussel pooled and the heron
           Priested shore
       The morning beckon
With water praying and call of seagull and rook
And the knock of sailing boats on the net webbed wall
       Myself to set foot
           That second
In the still sleeping town and set forth.

   My birthday began with the water-
Birds and the birds of the winged trees flying my name
   Above the farms and the white horses
           And I rose
       In rainy autumn
And walked abroad in a shower of all my days.
High tide and the heron dived when I took the road
       Over the border
           And the gates
Of the town closed as the town awoke.

   A springful of larks in a rolling
Cloud and the roadside bushes brimming with whistling
   Blackbirds and the sun of October
           Summery
       On the hill's shoulder,
Here were fond climates and sweet singers suddenly
Come in the morning where I wandered and listened
       To the rain wringing
           Wind blow cold
In the wood faraway under me.

   Pale rain over the dwindling harbour
And over the sea wet church the size of a snail
   With its horns through mist and the castle
           Brown as owls
       But all the gardens
Of spring and summer were blooming in the tall tales
Beyond the border and under the lark full cloud.
       There could I marvel
           My birthday
Away but the weather turned around.

   It turned away from the blithe country
And down the other air and the blue altered sky
   Streamed again a wonder of summer
           With apples
       Pears and red currants
And I saw in the turning so clearly a child's
Forgotten mornings when he walked with his mother
       Through the parables
           Of sun light
And the legends of the green chapels

   And the twice told fields of infancy
That his tears burned my cheeks and his heart moved in mine.
   These were the woods the river and sea
           Where a boy
       In the listening
Summertime of the dead whispered the truth of his joy
To the trees and the stones and the fish in the tide.
       And the mystery
           Sang alive
Still in the water and singingbirds.

   And there could I marvel my birthday
Away but the weather turned around. And the true
   Joy of the long dead child sang burning
           In the sun.
       It was my thirtieth
Year to heaven stood there then in the summer noon
Though the town below lay leaved with October blood.
       O may my heart's truth
           Still be sung
On this high hill in a year's turning.

 1945

Do not go gentle into that good night - Dylan  Thomas


Do not go gentle into that good night,
Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

Though wise men at their end know dark is right,
Because their words had forked no lightning they
Do not go gentle into that good night.

Good men, the last wave by, crying how bright
Their frail deeds might have danced in a green bay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

Wild men who caught and sang the sun in flight,
And learn, too late, they grieved it on its way,
Do not go gentle into that good night.

Grave men, near death, who see with blinding sight
Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and be gay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

Poem on his birthday-  Dylan  Thomas

  In the mustardseed sun,
By full tilt river and switchback sea
  Where the cormorants scud,
In his house on stilts high among beaks
  And palavers of birds
This sandgrain day in the bent bay's grave
  He celebrates and spurns
His driftwood thirty-fifth wind turned age;
  Herons spire and spear.

  Under and round him go
Flounders, gulls, on their cold, dying trails,
  Doing what they are told,
Curlews aloud in the congered waves
  Work at their ways to death,
And the rhymer in the long tongued room,
  Who tolls his birthday bell,
Toesl towards the ambush of his wounds;
  Herons, stepple stemmed, bless.

  In the thistledown fall,
He sings towards anguish; finches fly
  In the claw tracks of hawks
On a seizing sky; small fishes glide
  Through wynds and shells of drowned
Ship towns to pastures of otters. He
  In his slant, racking house
And the hewn coils of his trade perceives
  Herons walk in their shroud,

  The livelong river's robe
Of minnows wreathing around their prayer;
  And far at sea he knows,
Who slaves to his crouched, eternal end
  Under a serpent cloud,
Dolphins dyive in their turnturtle dust,
  The rippled seals streak down
To kill and their own tide daubing blood
  Slides good in the sleek mouth.

  In a cavernous, swung
Wave's silence, wept white angelus knells.
  Thirty-five bells sing struck
On skull and scar where his lovews lie wrecked,
  Steered by the falling stars.
And to-morrow weeps in a blind cage
  Terror will rage apart
Before chains break to a hammer flame
  And love unbolts the dark

  And freely he goes lost
In the unknown, famous light of great
  And fabulous, dear God.
Dark is a way and light is a place,
  Heaven that never was
Nor will be ever is always true,
  And, in that brambled void,
Plenty as blackberries in the woods
  The dead grow for His joy.

  There he might wander bare
With the spirits of the horseshoe bay
  Or the stars' seashore dead,
Marrow of eagles, the roots of whales
  And wishbones of wild geese,
With blessed, unborn God and His Ghost,
  And every soul His priest,
Gulled and chanter in Young Heaven's fold
  Be at cloud quaking peace,

  But dark is a long way.
He, on the earth of the night, alone
  With all the living, prays,
Who knows the rocketing wind will blow
  The bones out of the hills,
And the scythed boulders bleed, and the last
  Rage shattered waters kick
Masts and fishes to the still quick starts,
  Faithlessly unto Him

  Who is the light of old
And air shaped Heaven where souls grow wild
  As horses in the foam:
Oh, let me midlife mourn by the shrined
  And druid herons' vows
The voyage to ruin I must run,
  Dawn ships clouted aground,
Yet, though I cry with tumbledown tongue,
  Count my blessings aloud:

  Four elements and five
Senses, and man a spirit in love
  Thangling through this spun slime
To his nimbus bell cool kingdom come
  And the lost, moonshine domes,
And the sea that hides his secret selves
  Deep in its black, base bones,
Lulling of spheres in the seashell flesh,
  And this last blessing most,

  That the closer I move
To death, one man through his sundered hulks,
  The louder the sun blooms
And the tusked, ramshackling sea exults;
  And every wave of the way
And gale I tackle, the whole world then,
  With more triumphant faith
That ever was since the world was said,
  Spins its morning of praise,

  I hear the bouncing hills
Grow larked and greener at berry brown
  Fall and the dew larks sing
Taller this thunderclap spring, and how
  More spanned with angles ride
The mansouled fiery islands! Oh,
  Holier then their eyes,
And my shining men no more alone
  As I sail out to die
 
Especially When The October Wind - Dylan  Thomas
 
 Especially when the October wind
With frosty fingers punishes my hair,
Caught by the crabbing sun I walk on fire
And cast a shadow crab upon the land,
By the sea's side, hearing the noise of birds,
Hearing the raven cough in winter sticks,
My busy heart who shudders as she talks
Sheds the syllabic blood and drains her words.

Shut, too, in a tower of words, I mark
On the horizon walking like the trees
The wordy shapes of women, and the rows
Of the star-gestured children in the park.
Some let me make you of the vowelled beeches,
Some of the oaken voices, from the roots
Of many a thorny shire tell you notes,
Some let me make you of the water's speeches.

Behind a pot of ferns the wagging clock
Tells me the hour's word, the neural meaning
Flies on the shafted disk, declaims the morning
And tells the windy weather in the cock.
Some let me make you of the meadow's signs;
The signal grass that tells me all I know
Breaks with the wormy winter through the eye.
Some let me tell you of the raven's sins.

Especially when the October wind
(Some let me make you of autumnal spells,
The spider-tongued, and the loud hill of Wales)
With fists of turnips punishes the land,
Some let me make you of the heartless words.
The heart is drained that, spelling in the scurry
Of chemic blood, warned of the coming fury.
By the sea's side hear the dark-vowelled birds.
 
The Force That Through The Green Fuse Drives The Flower - Dylan  Thomas 

The force that through the green fuse drives the flower
Drives my green age; that blasts the roots of trees
Is my destroyer.
And I am dumb to tell the crooked rose
My youth is bent by the same wintry fever.

The force that drives the water through the rocks
Drives my red blood; that dries the mouthing streams
Turns mine to wax.
And I am dumb to mouth unto my veins
How at the mountain spring the same mouth sucks.

The hand that whirls the water in the pool
Stirs the quicksand; that ropes the blowing wind
Hauls my shroud sail.
And I am dumb to tell the hanging man
How of my clay is made the hangman's lime.

The lips of time leech to the fountain head;
Love drips and gathers, but the fallen blood
Shall calm her sores.
And I am dumb to tell a weather's wind
How time has ticked a heaven round the stars.

And I am dumb to tell the lover's tomb
How at my sheet goes the same crooked worm.
 
 And Death Shall Have No Dominion - Dylan Thomas  
And death shall have no dominion.
Dead men naked they shall be one
With the man in the wind and the west moon;
When their bones are picked clean and the clean bones gone,
They shall have stars at elbow and foot;
Though they go mad they shall be sane,
Though they sink through the sea they shall rise again;
Though lovers be lost love shall not;
And death shall have no dominion.

And death shall have no dominion.
Under the windings of the sea
They lying long shall not die windily;
Twisting on racks when sinews give way,
Strapped to a wheel, yet they shall not break;
Faith in their hands shall snap in two,
And the unicorn evils run them through;
Split all ends up they shan't crack;
And death shall have no dominion.

And death shall have no dominion.
No more may gulls cry at their ears
Or waves break loud on the seashore;
Where blew a flower may a flower no more
Lift its head to the blows of the rain;
Through they be mad and dead as nails,
Heads of the characters hammer through daisies;
Break in the sun till the sun breaks down,
And death shall have no dominion.

Clown in the Moon -  Dylan Thomas

My tears are like the quiet drift 
Of petals from some magic rose 
And all my grief flows from the rift  
Of unremembered skies and snows I think, 
that if I touched the earth It would crumble 
It is so sad and beautiful 
So tremulously like a dream  __ Dylan Thomas

Selected Bibliography
Poetry

Poems (1971)
Collected Poems (1952)
In Country Sleep, And Other Poems (1952)
Deaths and Entrances (1946)
New Poems (1943)
The Map of Love (1939)
The World I Breath (1939)
Twenty-Five Poems (1936)
18 Poems (The Fortune press, 1934)

Prose

Early Prose Writings (1971)
Collected Prose (1969)
The Beach of Falesá (1964)
Letters to Vernon Watkins (1957)
Adventures in the Skin Trade, and Other Stories (1955)
A Prospect of the Sea (1955)
A Child’s Christmas in Wales (1954)
Quite Early One Morning (1954)
The Doctor and the Devils (1953)
The Portrait of the Artist as a Young Dog (1940)
Notebooks (1934)

Drama
Under Milk Wood (1954)



                        The Boathouse and Writing Shed Laugharne. Home to Dylan Thomas. 

Tuesday, 25 October 2022

New British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak : Arrogant and Undemocratic


Less than 200 Conservative MPs have given  ex-chancellor Rishi Sunak 42. the keys to number ten despite him losing an election race to Liz Truss the most useless Prime Minister in British History just last month.
The Tories retain a majority in parliament, meaning that as their leader, Sunak has been  named prime minister by King Charles III. Twice as rich as the King, Mr Sunak will now preside over brutal public spending cuts.
Despite no vote by Conservative members who so overwhelmingly rejected him or any of us the people getting a vote on the matter either. Rishi Sunak  this morning headed to Buckingham Palace, where the King asked him to form a government without knowing what the latest Tory Prime Minister plans for the nation are.
Economists have questioned whether Sunak can tackle the country’s finances while holding the party’s multiple warring factions together. Over the past two years Rishi Sunak stood next to Boris Johnson as the government failed to tackle the cost of living crisis, failed our country and the disaster that was Liz Truss trashed our economy.
He has sold himself as the chap who can get us out of our current mess which ought to be plausible but he is largely the chap who is responsible for getting us into this mess.
Sunak’s win on Monday came days after Truss’s resignation after her disastrous tax cuts plans and policy U-turns plunged the markets into chaos. The unprecedented economic crisis drew a rare intervention from the Bank of England.
Mr Sunak has won power without saying a single word in public about how he plans to deal with the cost of living crisis or the economic chaos caused by Liz Truss in her seven weeks in No10.
His silence has left families worried that he and Jeremy Hunt. should he be kept on as Chancellor – are about to impose a new era of austerity, slashing benefits and public services that have already been cut to the bone.
Last week, Mr Hunt warned of spending cuts and financial decisions “of eye-watering difficulty”.
Britain faces serious economic challenges and needs stability and unity, Sunak said on Monday in his first public speech since winning the contest.
“There is no doubt we face a profound economic challenge,” Sunak said. “We now need stability and unity, and I will make it my utmost priority to bring our party and our country together.”
Sunak, a former finance minister, has been left with the task of steering a deeply divided country through an economic downturn set to make millions of people poorer.
As another member of the right wing fundamentalist billionaire club.with a net worth of £730 million, how is he meant to support us out of an economic crisis which working class people are taking the shit for? How will he ever comprehend the real financial problems so many families in the uk are dealing with at this present time? 
Expect attacks on workers rights, human rights, the poor and any dissenting voice. Its about to get worse, a lot worse.Only;last year, Sunak was heavily criticised for axing a £20-a-week increase to Universal Credit that had helped some of the poorest families through the pandemic. More than 200,000 would have been pushed into poverty as a result of the cut, according to research by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation.
Just weeks before the cut was confirmed in July, the chancellor requested planning permission to build a private swimming pool, gym and tennis court at the Grade II-listed Yorkshire manor that Sunak and his wife, Akshata Murty, purchased for £1.5m in 2015. 
After several MPs from his own party spoke out against the Universal Credit cut, Sunak increased in-work benefits in his Autumn Budget – but not by enough to offset the cut.
When it comes to knowing who Sunak really is and what he believes in, I would suggest we look to comments made on a sunny lawn in Royal Tunbridge Wells in July, surrounded by Conservative members, whose votes he was desperate for.
Microphone in hand, the ex-Chancellor bragged to the crowd about how he had worked hard to divert vital funding away from areas of deprivation and towards more affluent, Tory-voting communities.
He said: "I managed to start changing the funding formulas, to make sure that areas like this are getting the funding that they deserve, because we inherited a bunch of formulas that shoved all the funding into deprived urban areas, that needed to be undone and I started the work of undoing that."
Even if you take into account his desperation for votes in what was a flailing leadership bid, this was still a moment of remarkable mask-slipping honesty - and others soon followed.
Just days later he was proudly declaring that if elected he would "govern as a Thatcherite." While this idea may appeal to large sections of Conservative members, it will strike fear into the hearts of so many communities that suffered so badly under the rule of Margaret Thatcher.he was moving funding from areas of deprivation to areas of affluence.
This pledge is particularly worrying for communities that have been torn apart by the past decade of austerity and when talk is rife in government of the need for further spending cuts to try and plug the huge black hole created by Liz Truss and Kwasi Kwarteng's disastrous economic announcements.
More evidence of the hard-lined right wing approach behind Sunak's slick and professional presentation style arrived when he promised to do "whatever it takes" to get the government's cruel plan to send desperate and vulnerable asylum seekers to Rwanda and vowed to pursue more “migration partnerships” with other countries.
As if that wasn't harsh enough, he vowed to cap the number of refugees the UK accepts each year, tighten the definition of who qualifies to claim asylum in this country and even discussed housing asylum seekers in cruise ships instead of hotels to save money.
These were of course all statements that were made in a previous leadership election (although it was only a few weeks ago) - but as we have heard absolutely nothing on policy from the man who will now become the next Prime Minister, it is probably fair to assume this is what he still believes.
Rishi Sunak may be a more polished performer than Liz Truss, he may seem more competent and even moderate compared with the bizarre, short-lived Truss experiment. But you can see from his previous promises and pledges that this is not a moderate politician we are talking about and is one who many in communities that have already suffered greatly over the past 12 years of Tory rule will be very worried about.
The 'rise of Rishi Sunak' is not a sign of how we're now some great meritocracy. It's a sign that class privilege. going to elite schools, knowing the right people and having obscene amounts of wealth work in your favour. The exact opposite of social mobility and meritocracy.
The multimillionaire former hedge fund boss. who like his own former boss was fined by the police during the partygate scandal. and was found in 2010 to have not declared his wife's financial interests. and was then revealed to have been using non- domicile status to avoid British taxes on her massive overseas earnings. and who waived his salary as chancellor so that as a US Green card holder so he could avoid paying taxes in the US is now expected to impose deep spending cuts to try to rebuild the UK’s fiscal reputation, just as the country slides into a recession, dragged down by the surging costs of energy and food. So no matter who they put into Number 10, it will mean that life will become increasingly challenging for those that need the most support. 
After 12 years of a Tory Government, people are struggling to pay their bills, their mortgages are going through the roof and waiting lists for the NHS are growing. We urgently need  to clear up the mess left behind by the Tory Party
Sunak arrogant and undemocratic with no answers or ideas has ruled out calling a General Election to try to secure his own mandate. knowing that he would lose it. It is the people of our country who should decide who they want to see in Number 10. Surely we cannot be expected to put up with Sunak telling the poorest people in the UK how much more they've got to suffer in order for him to balance the books. the books that he and his toxic party have trashed over the last 12 years.More austerity is not the answer to the problems we are currently facing.
We have had three different prime ministers over the past three months..Enough is enough. The only way off this carousel of chaos is with a General Election so that the public can have their say, and so that our country can have the fresh start that we deserve. 

Friday, 21 October 2022

Calls for a General Election Grow in the UK after Liz Truss's resignation


Thousands have signed online petitions calling for an immediate general election after a tumultuous few days in UK politics saw  Liz Truss  announce that she is standing down as Prime Minister after less than two months in office as the shortest prime minister in British history whose whole tenure has been a total disaster and a farce. She quit after a crunch meeting with Sir Graham Brady, the powerful chairman of the 1922 Committee of backbenchers. 
Liz Truss has said a leadership contest would take place within the next week and she would remain in place until a successor was chosen. In a brief statement outside 10 Downing Street on Thursday lunchtime she said she had come "into office at a time of great economic and international instability". She said: "We set out a vision for a low-tax, high-growth economy that would take advantage of the freedoms of Brexit."
While she said her administration had "delivered on energy bills and on cutting national insurance" the outgoing PM said: "I recognise... given the situation I cannot deliver the mandate on which I was elected by the Conservative Party." The short-lived premier said she had spoken to the King to notify him that she was resigning the Tory leadership with the intention that a new PM could be selected. See her full statement here.
Truss's resignation came the day after Suella Braverman resigned as Home Secretary and less than a week after former chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng was sacked.She will remain in office, not in power as a figurehead of a Zombie Government until her successor is chosen. What is truly astonishing Truss now gets £115k every year until she dies..
The Conservative Party has confirmed that it's MP's need to submit their notification by 2pm on Monday October.Only 24 candidates with more than 100 notifications from MP's will go through and if only one candidate crosses the threshold they will become the next UK Prime Minister on Monday. It is important to note the wider public and voters have no say in choosing their next primeminister, it's all a total farce. Here's Jonathan Pie's damning thoughts on the news. 
 

Disgraced  former PM Boris Johnson is understood to be seriously considering joining the race to replace Ms Truss.This dishonest man who was dumped out of office by his own MPs just three months ago after becoming mired in a deluge of scandals, resigned, and we now hear he believes it is a matter of "national interest" that he puts his name forward to return. Even by his unabashed standards, this is quite something. Rishi Sunak and Penny Mordaunt are both also seen as contenders. Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has ruled himself out of contention.
Ms Truss said this would mean the Tories would "remain on a path to deliver our fiscal plans". Newly-installed chancellor Jeremy Hunt is due to set out a new economic programme on October 31. Sir Graham said he expected the new leader to be in place by Friday, October 28. He told reporters: “I have spoken to the party chairman Jake Berry and he has confirmed that it will be possible to conduct a ballot and conclude a leadership election by Friday, October 28. So we should have a new leader in place before the fiscal statement which will take place on the 31st.” He said there was an expectation that Tory members would be involved in the process but "I think we're deeply conscious of the imperative in the national interest of resolving this clearly and quickly".
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer demanded a general election “nowso that the nation can have “a chance at a fresh start”. Without a general election the Conservatives will be on their third prime minister on the mandate won by Boris Johnson in December 2019.
Sir Keir said: “The Conservative Party has shown it no longer has a mandate to govern. The British public deserve a proper say on the country’s future. They must have the chance to compare the Tories’ chaos with Labour’s plans to sort out their mess, grow the economy for working people, and rebuild the country for a fairer, greener future. We must have a chance at a fresh start. We need a general election – now.”
Wales' First Minister Mark Drakeford echoed those sentiments. He said: “This has been a complete and utter failure of government with everyone in this country now having to pay the price. The complete lack of leadership is preventing decisions and actions from being taken to deal with the many challenges we are facing and help people over what is going to be a very difficult winter. Unfortunately the deep and intractable divisions within the government means that any successor put forward will face the same set of challenges. A general election is now the only way to end this paralysis.
A number of petitions have since  been launched calling for a General Electopn,
The Mirror has launched its own petition on the 38degrees petitions website. It said it was time for the British people to decide who runs the country.
The petition said: "To serve this country as Prime Minister was once a great honour. Those who stepped through the famous black door of Downing Street followed in the esteemed footsteps of William Gladstone, Winston Churchill and Clement Attlee. "This Tory government has turned the centre of power into a bargain basement B&B for a succession of failed leaders. This abuse  against democracy has to stop. A few thousand Conservative Party members should not be allowed to foist on this country one dud Prime Minister after another."The petition can be found HERE.
A petition on the UK Government website, 'Call an immediate general election so that the people can decide who should lead us through the unprecedented crises threatening the UK' currently has more than 600,000 signatures and was created in July.
The Government's response to it in September was: "The UK is a Parliamentary democracy and the Conservative Party remains the majority party. The Prime Minist er has pledged to ensure opportunity and prosperity for all people and future generations."The petition is HERE.
Change.org. the petition "We Need a General Election Now" was set up by David Marley, acting editor of the Independent. At the time of writing, it has been signed by over 300,000 people. It argues: "It is time for voters to decide who should govern the country and uphold the democratic principles our governing bodies are built on. For this reason, we are calling for a general election now.' https://www.change.org/p/we-need-a-general-election-now-generalelectionnow
The Tories had their chance to deliver a competent Prime Minister. They blew it, as they led the country from crisis to crisis with stunning displays of ineptitude and sheer incompetance,combined with their shameful policies that are hitting ordinary people so hard at this present time, and making us a laughing stock to the world.They cannot be allowed a second bite of the cherry. It is simply not democratically acceptable to have three Prime Ministers in four months without a General Election.
When millions of people are skipping meals and struggling to pay their bills, we can't afford another Tory coronation.  They have no mandate to run this country and have forfeited any right to be called a serious government.If  they really care about the national interest, if they really want to 'deliver on the people's priorities" ' It is a simple and fundamental principle that the government derives its democratic legitimacy from the people. Let the people have their say by calling an immediate General Election to end this Tory shambles and misrule.
The continuity chancellor Jeremy Hunt is introducing economic plans that no one voted for, representing a party that the electorate does not want in power anymore and which if there was a general election tomorrow would be thrown out of office for a generation.
Britain's constitution currently offers no solution to this. The only possible way out would be a motion of no confidence in Parliament. but this would require two-thirds of all MPs to vote in favour a motion that would immediately trigger a general election. Tory MP's will not willingly vote themselves out of jobs.
There can be little doubt that the electorate will not forget or forgive the attempts by Liz Truss and  her cabinet  to cut taxes for the very richest individuals and companies, leaving the majority too struggle for the basics, in what was a grotesque ideological experiment. They would choose to get rid of the whole bloody rotten bunch for good.
They are a stain on our democracy who are totally unfit to govern, wreckers all, delivering serial lies, dishonesty, continuing economic vandalism,12 years of utter failure, delivering complete moral and political bankruptcy that has left us with the NHS in ruin. Food banks overflowing. U-turn after u-turn, human right removed, and an increasing hostile environment.We need the entire smug self serving Tory government to resign. Enough is enough, we cannot afford their Tory chaos any longer. We must demand a General election, while also accepting at the same time, that our current political system must change too, that  currently is not fit for purpose and does not serve the people.

Thursday, 13 October 2022

Remembering the socialist legacy of Angela Lansbury

  

As s child. I learnt two things from Bedknobs and Broomsticks: witches are good and fascists are bad. RIP to  the great Irish-British and American actress  Dame Angela Lansbury  who according to a family statement  has died aged 96  peacefully in her sleep at her home in Los Angeles at 1:30 a.m.Tuesday, October 11, 2022, just five days shy of her 97th birthday.
Angela Lansbury was one of the world's best-loved actresses with a career spanning eight decades, who  played countless theatre, TV and film roles, and  was recognized as the earliest surviving Oscar nominee, and hailed as "one of the last of the Golden Age of Hollywood stars"and a "Broadway and West End icon".
She wss born in Regent's Park, London on October 16, 1925 to the politician Edgar Lansbury and the Irish actress Moyna MacGill “within the sound of Bow bells,” Lansbury was an East London girl. 
In 1921, Edgar Lansbury was one of 30 Poplar councillors jailed as a result of the Poplar Rates Rebellion. a protest against unequal taxation in one of the poorest areas of London. led by his father George Lansbury, who was leader of the Labour Party from 1932 to 1935 when they were still considered a socialist party,who was at the van guard of a new generation of Labour leaders in London, a pacifist, socialist, pro-suffrage Labour politician, described as “the most lovable figure in modern politics” for his fierce integrity. and he paved the way in positioning Labour as the radical representatives of the working class.  
Angela previously said of her peace campaigner  father that he was her greatest inspiration: "This was the man who tried to stop the Second World War."
Angela Lansbury’s aunt, Daisy Postgate, Edgar’s sister, helped radical socialist suffragette legend Sylvia Pankhurst escape the police by dressing up as her. Daisy married Raymond Postgate, a journalist and founding member of the British Communist Party, in 1918.
Angela had an older half-sister, Isolde, and younger twin brothers Bruce and Edgar.In 1939 when other children were evacuated from London in advance of the Nazi bombings, Angela stayed to be near her mother, leaving regular schooling  and taking dancing and acting classes. The following year, Angela, her two brothers, and her mother fled England for New York. They made it, but the ship they crossed in was later sunk by U-boats . the family seemed to escape the war by a hair’s breadth.
After living briefly in New York, Angela moved to Los Angeles in 1942 and signed a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Meyer, proceeding to appear in eleven films with the studio.
After earning an Oscar nomination and a Golden Globe for her role in George Cukor’s Gaslight (1944) as a young maid named Nancy Oliver who worked in the home of the film’s protagonist Paula Alquist, played by Ingrid Bergman.
She went on to co-star in “National Velvet” (1944) alongside Elizabeth Taylor. The 1945 adaptation of Oscar Wilde’s “The Picture of Dorian Gray” earned her a second Academy Award nomination and the first of 10 Golden Globes.
The following year, she played her first American character in the Oscar-winning musical “The Harvey Girls” (1946), starring Judy Garland.
It was the Broadway musical “Mame” (1966) that moved her to the A-list, won her first Tony (of five) and brought a loyal gay following. Lansbury had actively sought the role knowing it would show her strengths. Her character, the giddy, unconventional, charismatic socialite, Mame Dennis, had 10 songs to sing and more than 20 costume changes. Lansbury was 41 years old, and it was her first starring role on Broadway.
She appeared in Bedknobs and Broomsticks in 1971 featuring Lansbury as a magic-practicing, singing, dancing, Nazi-fighting would-be witch and reluctant nanny. and on stage in productions including The King And I and Sweeney Todd before landing her most famous role as Jessica Fletcher in Murder, She Wrote in 1984.
The TV show lasted for an astonishing twelve seasons.. one of the longest TV detective shows in history, and made Angela a worldwide household name.
Angela also provided her voice for a number of projects, perhaps most famously as Mrs Potts in Disney's Beauty and the Beast.
Throughout her eight-decade career, the actress won five Tony Awards, six Golden Globes and an Olivier Award and in 2014 The Queen gave her the title of Dame Angela Lansbury.
Angela Lansbury was married twice and had three children. In 1945 she eloped and unwittingly married her first husband, gay actor Richard Cromwell, when she was 19 and he was 35.  They divorced a year later but remained good friends until his death in 1960.
She married her second husband, Peter Shaw, in 1949 and they were together 54 years before his death in 2003.
She had a step-child called David who was Peter's from a previous marriage and the couple had two children together: Anthony Peter and Deidre Ann.
Anthony, 68, is a television director who has directed 69 episodes of Murder, She Wrote and Deidre, 67, owns a restaurant in West Hollywood.
Given her family history, it comes as no surprise Angela Lansbury was also a proud lifelong socialist. "I’m an actress,” Angela Lansbury declared in east London in 2014. “But I’m also a socialist.
The Hollywood star had just received a damehood at Windsor Castle for services to arts, charity work and philanthropy.
But days later she returned to her family’s roots in Poplar.Poplar was hosting the Angela Lansbury Film Festival at Chrisp Street Market and Spotlight Community Centre.
Dame Angela told the crowds she owed her career and her humanitarianism to her rabble-rousing grandad, a Labour MP who devoted his life to helping the poor and was twice jailed for his efforts.
He was like a man of steel,” she said.
When her twin roles as star and executive producer of Murder, She Wrote made her the "richest woman in TV”, she used her position to help those in need including down-on-their-luck actors.
She hired ageing stars from Hollywood’s golden era who were now struggling to book jobs, to make sure they didn’t lose their health insurance and pensions.
She also led campaigns to tackle AIDS, supported victims of domestic violence and funded student scholarships and medical research.
An obituary for actress Madlyn Rhue, published by the Los Angeles Times in 2003, revealed Lansbury helped her during an illness. Lansbury heard Rhue was on the cusp of losing her Screen Actors Guild medical coverage because she was short of the annual earnings requirements.
As a result, Lansbury created a character for Madlyn Rhue in Murder, She Wrote. Rhue was cast as a librarian who appeared in the series every three or four episodes.
Dame Angela was made a CBE in the Queen’s 1994 birthday honours and was made a DBE in the 20141New Year Honours for services to drama, theatre and philanthropy which included her successful fundraising for HIV/AIDS research.
AIDS hit the creative community early on, including her own circle. Lansbury, with her lifelong friend Elizabeth Taylor, responded whilst President Ronald Reagan stayed silent. The two actors spoke out in support of gay men and together raised millions for AIDS research.
She appeared in a 1995 AIDS Facts for Life commercial demanding that Americans “get the facts”. In 1996, just when new life-saving drugs changed HIV to a manageable chronic condition, Lansbury was honoured for her remarkable acting career and AIDS fundraising at an event that itself raised more than a million dollars for the American Foundation for AIDS Research (AmFAR) and Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS.
She was presented with the AmFAR Award of Distinction. The inscription reads: "To Angela Lansbury, for her courageous spirit andandd selfless commitment in the fight against AIDS."
Her emotional,10-minute acceptance speech sparked a standing ovation. "Never give up on the fight until the war is won,” Lansbury told the audience. “And we will win!"
Angela Lansbury was “inordinately proud of her family’s political stance” said The Times, and politics would have been her “second choice of career” if it weren’t for acting. 
Despite her glittering career, Dame Angela insisted in one of her last interviews she said that she did not want to be remembered for her career, but revealed her last wish is to be remembered “as an OK gal"  As tributes continues to pour in, and we honor her memory lets not forget this icons continual commitment and dedication to the socialist cause and her rich contribution to to our world..

Monday, 10 October 2022

World Mental Health Day 2022 : Improving the Quality of Mental Health Services throughout the World

 

Observed each year on October 10, World Mental Health Day is a global day for mental health education, awareness as well as advocacy and was first celebrated in 1992 by the World Federation for Mental Health. It calls attention to mental well being - which remains largely disregarded in national policies and inaccessible to the masses. 
The day initially did not have any specific theme and was observed with an aim for advocacy and educating people. However, as the campaign gained popularity World Mental Health Day in 1994 was observed with the theme of “Improving the Quality of Mental Health Services throughout the World.” 
For over 70 years, the World Federation has been working to make sure that mental health is treated on a par with physical health.
Mental health problems, ranging from depression to loneliness, exist in our lives, families, workplaces and communities, impacting everyone.Mental health has been an issue in society for a long time and the lack of understanding and awareness about about it has played a part in this.It’s become obvious if anyone wasn’t already aware, that we do live in a very unequal world, whether that’s access to vaccines or conditions people are living in that have made them more vulnerable. The pandemic has found those inequalities and exacerbated them.
In relation to mental health, we know the effect of the pandemic has not just been physical, there’s been a clear impact on mental health, as people have struggled with the effects of grief, isolation and fear.
For this year’s theme, we are being encouraged to think about how we can do as much as possible to prevent mental ill-health – as individuals and as a society, from calling on national and local governments to prioritise reducing known risk factors to creating the conditions needed for people to thrive. 
Mental health and wellbeing is not a ‘trend’ or a ‘fad’ – it is so important and the resources made available by the Mental Health Foundation will help you understand how to incorporate and adopt better mental health care, just like you would with your physical health.
With expert backed tips and challenges to partake in, plenty of resources can be found on their site.
This day is a prompt for us to reignite our efforts to protect and improve our mental health. It is an opportunity to talk openly about how we are feeling and a reminder to reach out if you are struggling. 
Mental health is a human right, and a rights-based approach to mental disability means domesticating treaties such as the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Using the framework of this convention and others like it, it is possible to formulate an active plan of response to the multiple inequalities and discrimination that exist in relation to mental disability within our communities. While health care professionals arguably have a role to play as advocates for equality, non-discrimination, and justice, it is persons with mental disabilities themselves who have the right to exercise agency in their own lives and who, consequently, should be at the center of advocacy movements and the setting of the advocacy agenda..
Quality, accessible primary health care is the foundation for universal health coverage and is urgently required as the world grapples with the current health emergency. We therefore need to make mental health a reality for all – for everyone, everywhere.
Good mental health is not just about being free from a mental illness. It involves the ability to better handle everything life throws at you and fulfill one’s full potential. Mental illness is now recognised as one of the biggest causes of individual distress and misery in our societies and cities, comparable to poverty and unemployment.
At least one in eight of us is affected by mental health issues. For adolescents aged 10 to 19, this rises to one in seven; people with mental health conditions often die prematurely - as much as 20 years earlier than the average person - due to preventable physical conditions, WHO figures show. In some countries, they are also more likely to suffer human rights violations, discrimination and stigma.
To combat this global issue, the United Nations’ Good Health and Well-being Sustainable Development Goal calls for 80% of nations to integrate mental health into primary healthcare by 2030.
While the uneven distribution of mental health resources both within and between countries springs to mind there are many other inequalities that I hope will be thought about on this day. These include inequalities driven by race, sexuality, gender identity, socio-economic status, access to technology and people living in challenged humanitarian settings such as displaced people, refugees, and those living in conflict/post-conflict situations are at greater risk of mental health difficulties..Due to ongoing political and social conflicts, the number of international refugees has been increasing. Refugees are exposed to severe mental challenges and potentially subject to traumatic experiences so the risk of psychiatric disorders is increased.  
Older people and immigrant groups are both thought to be more likely to experience social isolation and loneliness which can cause worse mental wellbeing. Societal discrimination is likely to have an impact on mental health. Interventions that take into account the specific mental health risks that marginalised communities face, and are designed to meet the needs of these groups, are therefore needed.
Also due to Coronavirus we have all experienced isolation, and the move towards working from home means many of us still spend time alone. We might have had other health stresses or feel anxious about the current news and climate.
Climate change, war and the pandemic have all combined to create a global crisis for mental health. Disrupted health services, rising poverty,the rising cost of living crises and crony capitalism together have waged a war against global mental health.
The rich have time, resources and access to these resources to address their mental illnesses. As a result, they disproportionately affect the poorer populations. 
There are also  significant mental health related inequalities for the UK Black community as people from Black African and Caribbean backgrounds are four times more likely to be detained under the Mental Health Act, and experience poorer treatment and recovery outcomes in comparison to other ethnic groups.
Nothing comes easy for historically-marginalised communities — not even healthcare. For instance, a study found that the Black community and other people of colour are far more likely to experience socioeconomic disparities such as exclusion from health, educational and economic resources.
“Stigma and discrimination continue to be a barrier to social inclusion and access to the right care; importantly, we can all play our part in increasing awareness about which preventive mental health interventions work and World Mental Health Day is an opportunity to do that collectively,” WHO noted.
An ill-informed and damaging attitude among some people exists around mental health that can make it difficult for some to seek help. It is estimated that only about a quarter of people with a mental health problem in the UK receive ongoing treatment, leaving the majority of people grappling with mental health issues on their own, seeking help or information, and dependent on the informal support of family, friends or colleagues.
We need to break the silence around mental health.  These are issues that all of us should have some basic exposure to.  The proportion of the population that will experience an episode of acute emotional distress is extremely high.  Those of us who have never been depressed probably know and love several people who have.It  should be no more shameful to say that one is suffering from mental illness , than to announce that one is asthmatic or has breast cancer.  Talking about these issues is part of the solution. 
Breaking the silence can be liberating. Mental health care should be part of what we demand when we think about solutions to the economic crisis, and we should keep  fighting for the best mental health care to be the  natural right of all designed to meet human needs. Until then, engaging in the struggle toward a fairer more equal society can be a source of hope. That is a world surely worth fighting for.
Mental health matters but what people suffering truly need at the end of day is well-funded good quality services that actually respond to each individual's needs, and that can be accessed immediately, and in an equal world this would actually be happening. Sadly in Britain at the moment mental services are seriously inadequate and letting  many down badly, this is the harsh and bitter reality. 
There is an urgent need to close the huge gap in access to care for people with mental health problems and psychosocial disabilities around the world, and aims to raise awareness of the inequality in access to mental health care, both locally and globally, for marginalised people, particularly for people living in poverty.The day serves to remind us that access to mental  health services remains unequal with between 75% to 95 % of people with mental  disorders in low and middle income countries unable to access mental health services at all and access in high income countries not much better. Lack of investment  in mental health disproportonate to the overall health budget contribute to the mental health treatment gap.
As the winter nears and the days get shorter, our regular routines can be disrupted, so it’s a great time to remind ourselves of the basics. On World Mental Health Day we are encouraged to take an hour out to reflect on our lives, and where we might implement some positive habits.This isn’t just for those already affected, prevention is just as important as a cure.  
The charity Mind has outlined 5 steps we can take today to begin making positive changes or creating healthy habits: 
1.Connect with other people 
2.Be physically active
3.Practice mindfulness 
4.Learn a new skill 
5.Give to others
If you are at all impacted by mental health issues remember that you are not alone, and there is no shame in reaching out for support to get through it. If you need to talk to someone, the NHS mental health helpline page includes organisations you can call for help, such as Mind, Anxiety UK https://www.anxietyuk.org.uk/ and Bipolar UK.https://www.bipolaruk.org/ or call The Samaritans on 116 123.Call your GP and ask for an emergency appointment. Call NHS 111 (England) or NHS Direct (Wales) for out-of-hours to help .Contact your mental health crisis team, if that is you have one. 
On World Mental Health Day let's continue to  fight for an NHS that guarantees universal mental health support. Let's also fight against conditions of poverty and precarity that engender stress, anxiety and depression, raise awareness of mental health and engage in conversations to break the stigmas surrounding mental health and wellbeing. Don't judge those impacted by mental health problems, recognise that urgent action is needed to prevent these people from  experiencing the potentially serious consequences of stigma and discrimination, and  re-affirm our commitment to a compassionate and caring society.

Sunday, 9 October 2022

Poem For Kate Clark-Winnell (15/11/1958 - 2/10/2022) RIP- Until We Meet Again

 

 
You came into my life 
In shimmering grace,
A wealth of wisdom
With warmth unbounded,
Pumped through a vessel 
Of pure indiscriminate love,.
Showering me with jewels 
Of epiphanous magic.
 
With candle uncaged
It's time for your flight,
I'm easing my grip
Letting you go,
My tears fall 
Your head touches the sky,
Your feet disappear 
As I whisper Goodbye.
 
When the time comes
I will tread the same path,
Our connection eternal 
So hold out your hand, 
As we dance with the stars,
Laugh at the moon 
Throw stardust in the ocean
Smile at the sun.

Saturday, 8 October 2022

John Cowper Powys ( 8 October 1872 - 17 June 1963 ) - A Complex Wonderful Vision



John Cowper Powys novelist, poet and philosopher was born on 8 October 1872 at Shirley Vicarage in Derbyshire, the eldest of eleven children born to the Rev. Charles Francis Powys (1843–1923) and Mary Cowper Powys (1849–1914). A brief biography of John Cowper Powys can hardly be ‘brief’.
His father's ancestry can be traced back some six centuries to Powyses of Montgomery, and to, more recently, the first Sir Thomas Powys of Lilford (died 1719). From his mother, Mary Cowper-Johnson, he derived the more literary blood of the poets John Donne and William Cowper. He came from a family of eleven children, many of whom were also talented. His two younger brothers Llewelyn Powys (1884–1939) and Theodore Francis Powys were well-known writers, while his sister Philippa published a novel and some poetry. Another sister Marian Powys was an authority on lace and lace-making and published a book on this subject. His brother A. R. Powys, was Secretary of the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings, and published a number of books on architectural subjects. 
Like his father and brothers, he was educated at the ancient and prestigious Sherborne School in Dorset, where he succeeded in keeping bullies at bay by aggressively playing the fool, a skill he honed by practicing on his younger brothers. After Sherborne, still in the family footsteps, he went to Corpus Christi College at Cambridge University. There he associated with few, bar one or two fellow misfits; he kept a revolver in his rooms as a deterrent to excessive socializing. 
After graduating with a second-class degree in History, on 6 April 1896 he married Margaret Lyon. They had a son, Littleton Alfred, in 1902. The marriage was though unsatisfactory and Powys eventually lived a large part of each year in the USA and had relationships with various women. In 1921 he met Phyllis Playter the twenty-six year old daughter of industrialist and business man Franklin Playter. Eventually they established a permanent relationship, though he was unable to divorce his wife Margaret, who was a Catholic. However, he diligently supported Margaret and the education of their son.  Margaret Powys died in 1947, and his son Littleton Alfred in 1954.
Powys's first employment was teaching at several girls' schools at Hove, Sussex.  He then worked as an Extension lecturer throughout England, for both Oxford and Cambridge Universities. Then in 1905 he began lecturing in the USA for The American Society for the Extension of University Teaching. He worked as an itinerant lecturer until the early 1930s, gaining a reputation as a charismatic speaker. However, he usually spent the Summer in England. During this time he travelled the length and breadth of the USA, as well as into Canada. He engaged in public debate with the philosopher Bertrand Russell on marriage, as well as with the philosopher and historian Will Durant; he was also a witness in the obscenity trial of James Joyce's novel, Ulysses..
He met a great variety of people: Charlie Chaplin, Emma Goldman, Paul Robeson, the dancer Isadora Duncan, Theodore Dreiser who became a close friend. But also humble folk: the black porters on the trains, the farmer next door or the poor immigrants who came to his lectures to improve their education.
His first published works were  Odes and other Poems (1896) and Poems (1899).In the summer of 1905 Powys composed "The Death of God" an epic poem modelled on the blank verse of Milton, Keats, and Tennyson that was published as Lucifer in 1956. There was then a gap in publications due to his lecturing commitments, but from 1916 onwards his essays, criticism and philosophical works appeared at regular intervals.No prodigy, Powys had published his first novel, Wood and Stone,dedicated to Thomas Hardy, at 43 in 1915, and four more had followed. All sank into the swamp of critical indifference. A collection of literary essays Visions and Revisions in 1915 and his first full length work of popular philosophy, A Complex Vision, in 1920.
 As an author, Powys was inspired by many other authors including George Eliot, Dostoyevsky and Rabelais.He first came to wide public prominence for four books published between 1929 and 1936, collectively called The Wessex Novels after their geographic setting in England’s South West. The name also alludes to Thomas Hardy, a major influence on Powys.
It was with Wolf Solent,the first of his Wessex novels, written when he was 57 and still making a part-time living from his mobile lecture show the first of his Wessex novels  that Powys achieved any real critical, and financial success. This novel was reprinted several times in both the USA and Britain and translated into German in 1930 and French in 1931. In the Preface he wrote for the 1961 Macdonald edition of the novel Powys states: "Wolf Solent is a book of Nostalgia, written in a foreign country with the pen of a traveller and the ink-blood of his home". Wolf Solent is set in Ramsgard, based on Sherborne, Dorset, where Powys attended school  as well as Blacksod, modelled on Yeovil, Somerset, and Dorchester and Weymouth, both in Dorset, all places full of memories for him. In the same year The Meaning of Culture was published and it, too, was frequently reprinted. In Defence of Sensuality, published at the end of the following year, was yet another best seller. First published in 1933, A Philosophy of Solitude was another best seller for Powys in the USA.
A Glastonbury Romance, one of Powys’s most admired novels, published in 1932, also sold well. According to Powys this novel's "heroine is the Grail", and its central concern is with the various myths, legends and history associated with Glastonbury. Not only is A Glastonbury Romance concerned with the legend that Joseph of Arimathea brought the Grail, a vessel containing the blood of Christ, to the town, but the further tradition that King Arthur was buried there. In addition, one of the novel's main characters, the Welshman Owen Evans, introduces the idea that the Grail has a Welsh (Celtic), pagan, pre-Christian origin. The main sources for Powys's ideas on mythology and the Grail legend are Sir John Rhys's Studies in the Arthurian Legend, R. S. Loomis's Celtic Myth and Arthurian Romance, and the works of Jessie L. Weston, including From Ritual to Romance. T. S. Eliot's The Wasteland is another possible influence. A central aspect of A Glastonbury Romance is the attempt by John Geard, ex-minister now the mayor of Glastonbury, to restore Glastonbury to its medieval glory as a place of religious pilgrimage. On the other hand, the Glastonbury industrialist Philip Crow, along with John and Mary Crow and Tom Barter, who are, like him, from Norfolk, view the myths and legends of the town with contempt. Philip's vision is of a future with more mines and more factories. John Crow, however, as he is penniless, takes on the task of organising a pageant for Geard. At the same time an alliance of Anarchists, Marxists, and Jacobins try to turn Glastonbury into a commune.
Another important work, Autobiography, was published in 1934, in which he describes his first 60 years. While he sets out to be totally frank about himself, and especially his sexual peculiarities and perversions, he largely excludes any substantial discussion of the women in his life. The reason for this is now much clearer because we now know that it was written while he was still married to Margaret, though he was living in a permanent relationship with Phyllis Playter.
Powys openly admits, again and again, in his autobiography, in letters and, by implication, in his fiction, that he found the notion and practice of normal penetrative sexual intercourse deeply repugnant, and could not understand how his brother Llewellyn could go in for that kind of thing. ("I have a horror of 'fucking' as it is called" was one of his many comments on this matter.) He insists that he is not a "homosexualist", though he has no objection to those who are. He liked girls of the demi-monde, and prostitutes, and slim young women in men's clothing.
His notions of sexual satisfaction centred around masturbation, voyeurism and fondling. He liked girls to sit on his knee, and he also got sexual satisfaction from reciting poetry at them. The comic aspect of this was apparent to him, and it bothered him not at all. There is a grandeur in his indifference to the norm. His appetite for food was as unusual as his appetite for sex: he became, nominally, a vegetarian, but eschewed most vegetables, surviving for years, he claimed, on a diet of eggs, bread and milk, with occasional treats of guava jelly. This gave him severe gastric trouble, and he had to endure a painful form of surgery that he labels "gasterenterostomy". In his later years, he depended for bowel function entirely on enemas, a procedure of which he highly approved, as it facilitated meditation.
We would not have known about all of this if he had not told us about it, but he recites his woes with such relish that his prose becomes charged with rapture. During a sojourn in hospital he says that he invented the trick of concentrating on variously coloured angels - "purple ones let us say ... vermeil-tinctured ones perhaps" - which he would direct towards his fellow sufferers, and "in this way, as I lay in the great White Ship of Suffering, I felt that I was not altogether wasting my time". Convalescing in his garden at home, he at last found relief in vomiting a "whole bucketful - forgive me, dear reader! - of the foulest excremental stuff possible to be conceived ... of a dusky sepia tint, a colour I had not so far hit upon for any of my tutelary angels". Reality, in his own phrase, lies "between the urinal and the stars".
It is one of his most important works and writer J. B. Priestley suggests that, even if Powys had not written a single novel, "this one book alone would have proved him to be a writer of genius." By his own admission, John Cowper Powys was mentally abnormal. His eccentricity showed itself most clearly in his relationship with the natural world: for him everything in nature pulsated with life,not only plants and animals but rivers, rocks, clouds. He found ecstasy in landscapes and a sublime significance in the smallest twig. And he believed that his sensitivity to the life force of inanimate objects gave him access to a larger cosmic meaning, one that connected humans with their environment and filled the universe with rapturous energy. In short, Powys was not your average man. There are not many geniuses in the literary canon, but one can argue fairly that Powys is among them.
The memoirs of Casanova and Jean-Jacques Rousseau were his models, and Powys rivals them in his sometimes hilarious descriptions of his own follies. These outbursts of frankness are intended to distract from his evasions, his inconsistency, and emotional intensity. But as we read further, and encounter prostitutes, fishermen, priests, ticket collectors, publishers, poets, and all the hoi polloi from a thousand railway journeys and lecture halls and bars and ocean voyages, we begin to appreciate the underlying generosity and life-democracy (to coin a Powysian term) of this book and its author. We are never manipulated toward a social or political message. Powys sees relationships as meetings of solitudes; he has no interest in social hierarchies, politics, worldliness, or ambition. He never moralizes about sex. And he has no time for religions and creeds that lack aesthetic qualities; to him, religion is art, or it is nothing.
In 1929 Powys and Phyllis  had moved from Greenwich Village in New York City to rural, upstate New York. Then in June 1934 John Cowper Powys and Phyllis Playter left America and moved to England, living first in Dorchester, 
Weymouth Sands ( 1934 ) the third of his so-called Wessex novels was a celebration of the seaside town Jack had loved as a child, but its tone is far from innocent. The novel features a sinister clown figure and Punch and Judy shows: Powys was not one to shy away from the suggestions of violence and child sex abuse that are now routinely associated with such entertainments.
He moved to Corwen, Denbighshire North Wales, in July 1935, with the help of the novelist James Hanley, who lived nearby. Corwen was historically part of Edeirnion or Edeyrnion and an ancient commote of medieval Wales, once a part of the Kingdom of Powys, Here Powys immersed himself in Welsh literature, mythology and culture, including learning to read Welsh. Here he could also satisfy his lifelong mystical delight in landscape and country walking.
The move inspired two major novels with Welsh settings, Owen Glendower [1941] and Porius (1951). They are considered to be his greatest masterpieces. It is not surprising that John Cowper Powys should, after he moved to Corwen, decide to begin a novel about legendary national hero, Welsh Prince Owen Glendower (A.D.1400–16),who, like King Arthur, will one day come again.  because it was in Corwen that Owen's rebellion against Henry IV began on 16 September 1400, when he formally assumed the ancestral title of Prince of Powys at his manor house of Glyndyfrdwy, then in the parish of Corwen.
An important aspect of Owen Glendower are historical parallels between the beginning of the fifteenth century and the late 1930s and early 1940s: "A sense of contemporataneousness is ever present in Owen Glendower. We are in a world of change like our own". The novel was conceived at a time when the Spanish Civil War was a major topic of public debate and completed on 24 December 1939, a few months after World War II had begun. 
While Porius takes place in the same  time of the mythic King Arthur,  set in October in 499 AD, it is more like a mountain landscape or an epic poem than a novel. Its characters include King Arthur, a Pelagian monk, a Roman matron, a Jewish doctor, the shape-shifting Myrddin Wyllt (otherwise known as Merlin), the bard Taliessin and a family of completely convincing aboriginal giants, who live on the slopes of Snowdon. We also meet the Three Aunties, grey-haired princess survivors of the old race. In this twilight of the gods, the cult of Mithras, the old faith of the Druids, the fading power of Rome and the rising force of Christianity do battle for a week beneath a waxing moon, while Powys's characters intermittently find time to reflect on past times, and congratulate themselves on being so modern.
In both works, but especially Porius, Powys makes use of the mythology found in the Welsh classic The Mabinogion. Porius is, for some, the crowning achievement of Powys's maturity, but others are repelled by its obscurity. It was originally severely cut for publication, but in recent years two attempts have been made to recreate Powys's original intent.
Cowper Powys is a somewhat controversial writer who evokes both massive contempt and near idolatry. His work is marked by depth of ideas, and for their massive sized and much complexity of character but with much humor. In addition to their scope Powys’ books can be difficult because of their many obscure references to Welsh culture and mythology. Other sources of difficulty for the contemporary reader are Powys’ obsession with the occult and an animist world view which, among other things, endowed inanimate objects like the sun in A Glastonbury Romance with souls and points of view.The realm of John Cowper Powys is dangerous. The reader may wander for years in this parallel universe, entrapped and bewitched, and never reach its end. There is always another book to discover, another work to reread. Like Tolkien, Powys has invented another country, densely peopled, thickly forested, mountainous, erudite, strangely self-sufficient. This country is less visited than Tolkien's, but it is as compelling, and it has more air. 
The appeal of Powys eludes some readers, while others are deeply moved. Reading a novel by John Cowper Powys requires stamina, but is well worth it because they offer great rewards. And though his challenging works have never been fashionable,  they have won a loyal following nevertheless, and what is noteworthy is that throughout his career he consistently gained the admiration of novelists as diverse as Theodore Dreiser, Henry Miller, Iris Murdoch, Margaret Drabble, and James Purdy, as well as the academic critics George Painter, G. Wilson Knight, George Steiner, Harald Fawkner, and Jerome McGann.. 
Powys was also one of the twentieth century’s greatest literary letter writers: his correspondence bears comparison with that of Charles Olson in its immediacy and intellectual scope. A collection of his letters to his lifelong friend and biographer Louis Wilkinson (himself best known for his close connection with Aleister Crowley) was published during his lifetime: further volumes have been issued posthumously.
More minor in scale, the novels that followed Porius are characterized by an element of fantasy. The Inmates (1952) is set in a madhouse and explores Powys's interest in mental illness. But it is a work on which Powys failed to bestow sufficient "time and care". Glen Cavaliero, in John Cowper Powys: Novelist, describes the novels written after Porius as "the spontaneous fairy tales of Rabelaisian surrealist enchanted with life", and finds Atlantis (1954) "the richest and most sustained" of them. Atlantis is set in the Homeric world and the protagonist is Nisos the young son of Odysseus who plans to voyage west from Ithaca over the drowned Atlantis. Powys final fiction, such as Up and Out (1957) and All or Nothing (1960) "use the mode of science fiction, although science has no part in them".
He and Phyllis  later moved, a final time, in May 1955, to Blaenau Ffestiniog in North Wales. He corresponded with many distinguished Welshmen of letters;and his non-fictional writings about Wales and the Welsh were collected in Obstinate Cymric (1947).
A convert to anarchism, he strongly supported the anarchist side in the Spanish Revolution and corresponded with Emma  Goldman whom he referred to as his “chief Political Philosopher
Here is a  letter to his sister (24 September 1938), published in The Letters of John Cowper Powys to Philippa Powys (1996), edited by Anthony Head :„I have been reading of late, most carefully, oh such an exciting mass of Anarchist Literature sent to me by old Emma Goldman who is my Prime Minister & chief Political Philosopher! and every week I get the anarchist paper from Avenue A New York City and also the ‘Bulletin of Information’ from the Anarchists of Barcelona. This latter pamphlet I am carefully keeping; because it is not so much concerned with the war as with their experiment in Catalonia of organizing their life on Anarchist lines and getting rid of all Dictatorship & of the ‘Sovereign State’.“

Source: https://quotepark.com/quotes/1784075-john-cowper-powys-i-have-been-reading-of-late-most-carefully-oh-su/

Source: https://quotepark.com/authors/john-cowper-powys/
Letter to his sister (24 September 1938), published in The Letters of John Cowper Powys to Philippa Powys (1996), edited by Anthony Head p. 106

Source: https://quotepark.com/authors/john-cowper-powys/
 Powys wrote of having forged his own worldview in reaction to capitalist society: “I would convert my malicious hatred of the commercial hurly-burly into a passionate eulogy of the saints and mystics of the past”.
He professed to having a mania “for every sort of metaphysical system”,  wrote of “the organic link that binds together the human generations”and thirsted for a current of thinking “that, in its historic continuity, links the religion of the cave-man with the religion of the philosopher”.
Powys often expressed his disdain for what he termed “the various mechanical inventions of our western world”.
He wrote: “There is no escape from machinery and modern inventions; no escape from city-vulgarity and money-power, no escape from the dictatorship of the uncultured
 “Money and machines between them dominate the civilized world. Between them, the power of money and the power of the machine have distracted the minds of our western nations from those eternal aspects of life and nature the contemplation of which engenders all noble and subtle thoughts”. His critique of modernity went further than a dislike for the physical mechanisms of its society and embraced its cultural essence.
In common with the likes of Ruskin,William Morris,Herbert Read and Henry Miller, Powys felt a profound aesthetic loathing for the base culture of contemporary commercial society and the “crudest superficiality” which prevailed there.
 Powys was at heart a primitivist, for whom virtually every modern invention was anathema. In Wolf Solent he referred to airplanes as "spying down upon every retreat like ubiquitous vultures." He never drove a car and never used a typewriter. He thought television was pernicious. He didn't like talking on the telephone, because he didn't want his words violated by a tangle of wires.He was suspicious of science, which man has the means to use wrongly. He fought all his life against the practice of vivisection, “a wickedness” which, as he said, “contradicts and cancels the one single advantage that our race has got from what is called evolution, namely the development of our sense of right and wrong” (Powys, Autobiography, 639).
A passionate and clear-sighted ecologist, long before our times, he was deeply conscious that there is a necessary link, a mysterious and compelling harmony to respect between a blade of grass, the humblest insect, man and the cosmos, which entails that we respect life under all its forms. 
"A really lonely spirit can gradually come to feel itself just as much a plant, a tree, a sea-gull, a whale, a badger, a woodchuck, a goblin, an elf, a rhinoceros, a demigod, a moss-covered rock, a planetary demiurge, as a man or a woman. Such a spirit can gaze at the great sun, as he shines through the morning mist, and feel itself to be one magnetic Power contemplating another magnetic Power. Such a spirit can stand on the edge of the vast sea and feel within itself a turbulence and a calm that belong to an æon of time far earlier than the first appearance of man upon earth. It is only out of the depths of an absolute loneliness that a man can strip away all the problematical ideals of his race and all the idols of his human ambitions, and look dispassionately about him, saying to himself, “Here am I, an ichthyosaurus-ego, with atavistic reminiscences that go back to the vegetable-world and the rock-world, and with prophetic premonitions in me that go forward to the super-men of the future!” (Powys, In Defence of Sensuality, 100) 
For Powys the greatest achievement possible is to feel an “unearthly exultation”, an ecstatic state, provoked by a deep and willed mental concentration. In these moments of ecstasy our vision becomes the “eternal vision”. He had one rule in his life and never tired of repeating it in his books: “Enjoy, defy, forget!
Powys, was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1958, 1959 and 1962.In 1958, he was awarded the plaque of the Hamburg Free Academy of Arts  in recognition of his outstanding services to literature and philosophy.Then on 23 July 1962, Powys, who was 90, was awarded the honorary degree of Doctor of Letters in absentia, by the University of Wales at Swansea, where he was described as "patriarch of the literature of these islands"
Throughout his life, Powys never willingly compromised: he saw several of his novels published with huge chunks of text removed and their overall impact accordingly reduced, but the manuscripts as he wrote them never offered anything less than the all-encompassing world he envisioned. This insistence on his own style contributed to the incomprehension that frequently met his work, but it also produced unparalleled literary achievements. 
The world as seen by Powys is his own. It was painfully won out of his battles with his own complex, protean personality, and its varied layers of manias, fears, frustrations, strange obsessions, his challenge to fate and to the Deity he named “the First Cause”. Powys is not a ‘literary’ author, he is not concerned with formal perfection. He was a writer by inner necessity and therefore never attached much importance to his style, which can sometimes be extravagant, he never considered himself an ‘artist’. Throughout his novels, the oblique effects of the action count more than the action itself. Great importance is given to mental states, to thoughts going on inside the minds of the characters, more than to their actions. He is intent on recording everything related to each of them, their sensations, their habits, their obsessions, even some irrelevant thought, such as we all sometimes have. The reader is never sure how the characters are going to evolve. Powys had a rare openness of mind and showed far more advanced ideas than D.H. Lawrence, to take a famous example, in matters of sexuality. He describes its shades and complexities, its ambiguities. Except for sadism which Powys hates and condemns, he included homosexuality, onanism, fetishism and incest in his novels. He wrote that “no religion that doesn’t deal with sex-longing in some kind of way is much use to us” 
 As he became older, he got into the habit of praying to many different gods, to the Earth-Spirit, to the spirits inhabiting woods, trees, rocks. Describing his rituals in Autobiography, he writes that he had “a mania for endowing every form of the Inanimate with life, and then worshipping it as some kind of a little god” (Powys, Autobiography 629). He held special worship for trees and recommends, when we feel weary, to embrace one with our arms around it, for then: “you can transfer by a touch to its earth-bound trunk all your most neurotic troubles! These troubles of yours the tree accepts, and absorbs them into its own magnetic life; so that henceforth they lose their devilish power of tormenting you” (Powys, Autobiography 650) 
In 1955 John and Phyllis moved to a tiny house in the slate-quarrying town of Blaenau Ffestiniog, high in the mountains of Snowdonia. John was living mainly on raw eggs and two bottles of milk a day. He worked on what he called a Freudian paraphrase of the Iliad and various short works that Richard Perceval Graves, the Powys brothers’ biographer, called bizarre fantasies. He grew gradually weaker, stopped writing and died quietly in the local hospital, aged 90. He was cremated and his ashes were scattered according to his wishes in the sea at Chesil Beach in Dorset. 
Though sadly neglected,and with  few of his books currently in print. he remains nevertheless one of the giants of twentieth century British Literature. long has his rich imagination stirred me, and  left a deep impression.There is a spell that weaves its magic in the pages of Powys’s words and contained within his novels, that continues to be cast to this day. Revealing a mystical sense of history and a complex but wonderful vision that combined a philosophy of defiance of the pressures of the modern world that was in tune with mother nature. that is more important than ever. 
Numerous books, by, or about Powys, can be read online at "John Cowper Powys" Internet Archive  and his memory is kept live by the Powys Society https://powys-society.org/ To mark the 150th anniversary of his birth, in the following programme Matthew Sweet discusses his life and writing with Margaret Drabble, John Gray, Iain Sinclair and Kevan Mainwaring.

Wood and Stones -  John Cowper Powys

THE silent trees above my head
The silent pathway at my feet
Shame me when here I dare to tread
Accompanied by thoughts unmeet.

"Alas!" they seem to say " have we
In speechless patience travailed long
Only at last to bring forth thee,
A creature void of speech or song ?

"Only in thee can Nature know
Herself, find utterance and a tongue
To tell her rapture and her woe,
And yet of her thou hast not sung.

Thy mind with trivial notions rife
Beholds the pomp of night and day,
The winds and clouds and seas at strife,
Uncaring, and hath naught to say."

O Man, with destiny so great,
With years so few to make it good,
Such fooling in the eyes of fate
May well give speech to stones and wood!