Dylan Thomas was born in October 1914 in Uplands, Swansea, where he grew up. His father, David John Thomas, had taken his degree at University College Aberystwyth and obtained a First in English, which he taught at Swansea Grammar School. His pupils found him quick tempered and intimidating, but he had a beautiful, sonorous voice for reading aloud, which his son inherited. Thomas’ mother, Florence Hannah Williams, had been a seamstress before her marriage.
Welsh was her first tongue, but her husband – although he did speak Welsh – preferred English. He was cynical about religion, whilst she was traditional in her piety. The name ‘Dylan’ comes from a character in the Welsh Medieval Romance The Mabinogian. In Welsh it would be pronounced ‘Dullun’, which Mrs Thomas was unhappy about, preferring the English pronunciation ‘Dillan’. Thomas’ childhood summers were spent at the Carmarthenshire dairy farm of his mother’s sister, Ann Jones, and her husband, Jim. These holidays inspired the poem Fern Hill.
Before the age of 11, he was writing poetry. He was also telling lies and pinching money from his mother’s purse. In her eyes he could do no wrong, which was particularly irritating for his sister, Nancy. Thomas attended Swansea Grammar School from 1925-1931. When he started at the school he was small and pretty, so the bigger boys bullied him until they discovered he was aggressive and pugnacious and knew a prodigious number of swear-words. In 1931, he left school and became a reporter on the South Wales Evening Post.
The Term Paper on Anthony Burgess Alex Welsh English
Any Anthony Burgess Anthony Burgess: Any Old Anvil A Clockwork Orange Jacob Silverstein What makes an angry person? Start with one infant, whose mother died when he was two. Draft him into a war. Then mix with a wife who dies of alcohol cirrhosis. Finally, misdiagnose with a terminal illness. Yields one Anthony Burgess, English novelist and social critic. After years of public service and the ...
This was not a great success. He once reported on a lacrosse match that had been cancelled (he had been in the pub with his friends).
Eventually, he was sacked. He had begun drinking at about 15, sneaking into pubs with a friend. He had a poor head for drink and had to fund his new habit by petty theft from family and friends. Thomas ventured into amateur dramatics.
He appeared with his sister in Hay Fever, but missed his cue in The Merchant of Venice because he was (once again) in a nearby pub. In 1933, he began to get some of his poetry published in periodicals and he submitted a poem to a BBC competition and got it read on the air. His family life became very difficult and he became fed up with the opportunities Swansea offered. ‘This bloody country’s killing me.’ he said.
He wrote an article for the Swansea and West Wales Guardian entitled ‘Expose Humbug and Smug Respectability’. ‘The more I see of Wales,’ he wrote, ‘the more I think it’s a land entirely peopled by perverts.’ He moved to London in 1934, where he behaved, for the most part, like a drunken boor, although his first volume of verse 18 Poems (1934) had an immediate impact. He developed a particular dislike of ex-public school communists and by 1936 had acquired notoriety as a bawdy drunk rather than as a serious poet. He met (and was to marry in 1937 at Penzance Registry Office) Caitlin Mcnamara, a young dancer who was Augustus John’s model and mistress. At the wedding both bride and groom had been drinking. He was to make his first broadcast for the BBC in 1937, reading the work of other poets.
The following year he was to broadcast again, this time reading his own work in the company of other writers of the stature of Auden and Spender. Thomas and his wife visited Laugharne in Carmarthenshire in 1933. It was here that they were ultimately to settle in 1949. Here he could work whilst drying out from his London binges. At the outbreak of War, Thomas was terrified that he might be called up for military service – but he was judged medically unfit. Some of his neighbours in Laugharne suspected him of being a ‘conchie’ (conscientious objector) and he was beaten up.
The Term Paper on Eliav Feldon Utopia Thomas Work
St. Thomas More is probably one of the most respected figures of the late Renaissance era. Catholics and Non-Catholics alike look to More at least on a literary level. Therefore, what better way is there to honor his greatest work than by writing about it However, we must also keep in mind that Utopia is his (Thomas More's) most misunderstood writing (Campbell 25). Throughout this paper, I wish to ...
For a while he thought he might have to work in a munitions factory, he said, ‘deary me I’d rather be a poet any day and live on guile and beer.’ Instead, he worked in a documentary film unit under one of John Grierson’s five disciples, Donald Taylor. Thomas took this work seriously, turning up sober and smart. Outside work, he was living with various friends in London and abusing their hospitality. From 1943, he began a career in freelance broadcasting on national radio, for which his voice was perfect. He always asked for his fee or expenses in advance and, preferably, in cash. Thomas was always short of funds.
In 1946, the publication of his poems Deaths and Entrances finally rewarded his publisher J. N. Dent’s patience with his difficult author, by selling well. Thomas became famous overnight.
Within weeks he had collapsed with exhaustion and was told to moderate his life style. He continued to broadcast for the BBC, although his being drunk during one live broadcast caused the programme’s producer to be carpeted by the controller of the Third Programme. In 1950, Thomas made the first of four tours of the USA. He did this because, in spite of earning a considerable amount, he never had any money. The large audiences confirmed his reputation as a charismatic reader of poetry and as a charming, but disruptive, Bohemian.
He drank continually. In 1953, on his last visit to the USA, he made the first solo reading of his new play for voices Under Milk Wood at Harvard University. It was obvious to his hosts that Thomas was unwell and he subsequently collapsed with alcoholic poisoning, dying shortly afterwards in hospital in New York. He was buried at St Martin’s Church, Laugharne..