Encyclopedia, Difference between revisions of "Vernon Watkins" - New World

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(early life)
(delete section: friendships with poets...)
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After Watkins' recovery, he started work again at Lloyds Bank in Cardiff and would remain there, with little responsibility, for much of his life.  He used the job for a steady basis of income while focusing on his poetry on the side, and throughout his career there, he continually dismissed the several promotions offered to him as his first priority and concern was with having enough time to work on his poems—such promotions being seen as possible intereferences.  He wrote some 1000 poems prior to publishing his first volume ''The Ballad of the Mari Lwyd and Other Poems'', and continued to publish his works, primarily under Faber & Faber, for the remainder of his life.
 
After Watkins' recovery, he started work again at Lloyds Bank in Cardiff and would remain there, with little responsibility, for much of his life.  He used the job for a steady basis of income while focusing on his poetry on the side, and throughout his career there, he continually dismissed the several promotions offered to him as his first priority and concern was with having enough time to work on his poems—such promotions being seen as possible intereferences.  He wrote some 1000 poems prior to publishing his first volume ''The Ballad of the Mari Lwyd and Other Poems'', and continued to publish his works, primarily under Faber & Faber, for the remainder of his life.
  
Throughout his pursuit of poetry, Vernon began to develop several relationships with his poetic peers of the time—some of the most significant including [[W.B. Yeats]], [[T.S. Elliot]], [[Kathleen Raine]], and [[Dylan Thomas]].  The latter was specifically one of interest as the two were in consistent consultation of each other's poetry and each held the other in high regard.  Later when Vernon met his future wife, Gwen, the two were married in 1944 with Dylan Thomas even being nominated by Watkins for best man, which was actually a position that Thomas abandoned and didn't attend to. The couple had five children: Rhiannon Mary, Gareth Vernon, William Tristran David, Dylan Valentine, and Conrad Meredith.
+
Throughout his pursuit of poetry, Vernon began to develop several relationships with his poetic peers of the time—some of the most significant including [[William Butler Yeats]], [[T.S. Eliot]], [[Philip Larkin]], [[Kathleen Raine]], and [[Dylan Thomas]].  The latter was specifically one of interest as the two were in consistent consultation of each other's poetry and each held the other in high regard.  Later when Vernon met his future wife, Gwen, the two were married in 1944 with Dylan Thomas even being nominated by Watkins for best man (a position that Thomas actually abandoned and didn't attend to). The couple had five children: Rhiannon Mary, Gareth Vernon, William Tristran David, Dylan Valentine, and Conrad Meredith.
  
 
As Watkins aged, he finally began to come out of his state as an under-appreciated poet, having written 8 published volumes of poetry, and was recognized with a few poetry prizes including the Levinson prize in 1953 and the Guinness Poetry Prize in 1957.  He was also a visiting professor of poetry at the University of Washington in 1963 and 1967, and he died while consideration for selecting him as poet laureate was pending.  He suffered a heart attack on October 8, 1967, which was the cause of his death, after playing a game of tennis.  Afterwards another volume of poetry of his was published, making a total of 9 volumes to comprise the portrayal of his poetic brilliance.
 
As Watkins aged, he finally began to come out of his state as an under-appreciated poet, having written 8 published volumes of poetry, and was recognized with a few poetry prizes including the Levinson prize in 1953 and the Guinness Poetry Prize in 1957.  He was also a visiting professor of poetry at the University of Washington in 1963 and 1967, and he died while consideration for selecting him as poet laureate was pending.  He suffered a heart attack on October 8, 1967, which was the cause of his death, after playing a game of tennis.  Afterwards another volume of poetry of his was published, making a total of 9 volumes to comprise the portrayal of his poetic brilliance.
  
 
== Poetry ==
 
== Poetry ==
His ambitions were for his poetry; in critical terms they were not to be fulfilled. On the other hand, he became a major figure for the Anglo-Welsh poetry tradition, as he utilized much of his knowledge of this tradition in his writing. During the war he was for a time associated with the New Apocalyptics group. With his first book ''Ballad of the Mari Llwyd'' (1941) accepted by Faber & Faber, he had a publisher with a policy of sticking by their authors. In his case this may be considered to have had an adverse long-term effect on his reputation, in that it is generally thought that he over-published. Vernon knew [[William Butler Yeats]], [[T.S.Eliot]] and [[Philip Larkin]]. He was awarded a degree of Doctor of Literature from Swansea University in 1966 after retiring from the Bank.
+
Although Watkins' poetry was to remain relatively unpopular through the majority of his lifetime, his particular and unique style named him easily praiseworthy by those peers who knew him, and especially notable in his commencing of Welsh legends as inspiration. His works were primarily composed using lyrical images written directed toward themes portraying paradoxical truths about life and its simple benevolences—a sharp contrast to many of his fellow writers whose poems were essentially the opposite, investigating and emphasizing life's pessimistic qualities. One of Watkins' colleagues, [[Kathleen Raine]], quoted him to be "the greatest lyric poet of [her] generation," and [[Dylan Thomas]] named him "the most profound and greatly accomplished Welshman writing poems in English."  Thomas, actually being very close to Vernon in terms of poetic consultation as well as friendship, was profoundly influenced by Watkins' writing and by his opinions of Thomas' own style.  Some other associations of which Vernon had included a short-lived inclusion in a group known as the New Apocalyptics group and another among the Kardomah boys.
 
 
 
<div class="notice spoilerbox">
 
<div class="notice spoilerbox">
 
{| border="0"
 
{| border="0"
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| <div class="toccolours spoilercontents">
 
| <div class="toccolours spoilercontents">
  
::That July morning when the poet's widow
+
::Here, where the earth is green,
::Stayed here, at breakfast looking through the window
+
::where heaven is true
::We saw young rabbits leap, and in a pother
+
::Opening the windows
::Frisk, dance and scurry, dodging one another,
+
::touched with earliest dawn,
::Returning always to the selfsame corner
+
::In the first frost of cool September days,
::Between low beech-trees and the grassy border.
+
::Chrysanthemum weather,
::They scattered when my children running out
+
::presaging great birth,
::Found a young Redpoll injured on the ground.
+
::Who in his heart could murmur or complain;
::This sacrifice had made the rabbits dance.
+
::'The light we look for is not in this land?'
::It had fallen from the fuschia bush or branch
+
::That light is present, and that distant time
::Of beech that shook down dewdrops on my head.
+
::Is always here, continually redeemed.
::I for a moment thought the brilliant red
+
:::Watkins, ''From Peace in the Welsh Hills''
::Of breast and crest had come from a hawk's wound,
 
::But found no blood. The heart beat faintly. Soon
 
::We had laid it in a box, propped upon silk.
 
::I touched the twig-like leg. White bread and milk
 
::We gave it, but the beak at once refused,
 
::After one drop, to drink, and the eyes closed.
 
::It woke when my warm hand, encircling, took it,
 
::Straining to perch; but whether claw was crooked
 
::Or the wing hurt, it could not fly or stand.
 
::We left it where life's ember might be fanned
 
::By sunlight through a window. It revived
 
::A little. But the warmth on which it lived
 
::Diminished then, in the late afternoon.
 
::It was so small, so quiet in my room,
 
::That when I turned to lift it from the sill
 
::And feel its weight upon my fingers, still
 
::I counted to awaken it, nor saw
 
::What breath had chilled the feathers, gripped the claw;
 
::Nor did the dainty bird with that red stain
 
::Seem dead at all, until I looked again.
 
:::Watkins, ''The Redpoll'', a later poem, never fully revised.
 
  
 
</div>
 
</div>
 
|}</div>
 
|}</div>
  
A poem by Vernon Watkins from the ''[[Anglo-Welsh Review]]''.  The widow mentioned may be [[Caitlin Thomas]].
 
 
== Friendship with Dylan Thomas and other poets==
 
He met [[Dylan Thomas]], who was to be a close friend, in 1935 when Watkins had returned to a job in a bank in Swansea. Vernon was the only person from whom Dylan took advice when writing poetry and he was invariably the first to read his finished work. They remained life-long friends, despite Thomas's failure, in the capacity of [[best man]], to turn up to the wedding of Vernon and Gwen in 1944. ''Letters to Vernon Watkins'' by Thomas was published in 1957. The 1983 book ''Portrait of a Friend'' by Watkins' wife, Gwen, deals with the relationship.
 
 
Others in the Swansea group known as the 'Kardomah boys' were the composer [[Daniel Jones (composer)|Daniel Jenkyn Jones]], writer [[Charles Fisher (poet)|Charles Fisher]] and the artists [[Alfred Janes]] and [[Ceri Richards]].
 
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
 
* Evans, Philip, A History of the Thomas family, Privately published, 1994  
 
* Evans, Philip, A History of the Thomas family, Privately published, 1994  

Revision as of 01:30, 13 June 2007

Vernon Watkins (June 27, 1906 — October 8, 1967), was a Welsh poet, commonly known for his friendship with his fellow Welsh poet, Dylan Thomas, and considered to be both a great but somewhat underexposed writer of his age. Throughout his lifetime he published 8 volumes of poetry in addition to another which was released after his death, and his lyrical writing style named him worthy of praise from peers and fame within his genre of poetry as a Welshman. Contrarily he spent much of his life working at a banking job accredited to him by his father, working on poetry all the while, but despite such distraction, Watkins' ambitions acquired him a spot among some of the most influential poetic figures of the 1900's. It wasn't until Watkins' later life, however, that he truly began to receive his share of recognition, and he died having been awarded with a few major poetry prizes as well as being considered for poet laureate.

Life

Early Life

Vernon was born in the Welsh town, Maesteg, Glamorgan, and raised in that same county, which would remain to be his preferred area of residence for much of his life. His parents were William and Sarah Watkins, and they raised Vernon as well as his two sisters, Marjorie and Dorothy in a Welsh cultural context as that was the background that the couple had come from. Their home was located in Redcliffe, Caswell Bay, which was a few miles from one of the county's largest cites, Swansea. For his earlier years, Vernon was educated at a preparatory school in Sussex and later at Repton School in Derbyshire which would account for his primary schooling. He then attended Magdalene College, Cambridge from 1924 to 1925 where he studied modern languages, leaving before having acquired a degree as that time was the start of a troubled period in his life. He was said to have been unable to manage a self-sufficiency as a university student and at the time was still somewhat immature in that regard. Ensuingly, he took a job under his father, who was the manager of Lloyds Bank. His family had urged him to do so, as they were concerned with his well-being while at college, and they felt that the job might serve as a better environment for him. Around that time, Vernon suffered a nervous breakdown, coming to the conclusion that he could control time and destiny after observing a motorcyclist crash in his front yard, claiming it to have been due to his own accord.

Career and Later Life

After Watkins' recovery, he started work again at Lloyds Bank in Cardiff and would remain there, with little responsibility, for much of his life. He used the job for a steady basis of income while focusing on his poetry on the side, and throughout his career there, he continually dismissed the several promotions offered to him as his first priority and concern was with having enough time to work on his poems—such promotions being seen as possible intereferences. He wrote some 1000 poems prior to publishing his first volume The Ballad of the Mari Lwyd and Other Poems, and continued to publish his works, primarily under Faber & Faber, for the remainder of his life.

Throughout his pursuit of poetry, Vernon began to develop several relationships with his poetic peers of the time—some of the most significant including William Butler Yeats, T.S. Eliot, Philip Larkin, Kathleen Raine, and Dylan Thomas. The latter was specifically one of interest as the two were in consistent consultation of each other's poetry and each held the other in high regard. Later when Vernon met his future wife, Gwen, the two were married in 1944 with Dylan Thomas even being nominated by Watkins for best man (a position that Thomas actually abandoned and didn't attend to). The couple had five children: Rhiannon Mary, Gareth Vernon, William Tristran David, Dylan Valentine, and Conrad Meredith.

As Watkins aged, he finally began to come out of his state as an under-appreciated poet, having written 8 published volumes of poetry, and was recognized with a few poetry prizes including the Levinson prize in 1953 and the Guinness Poetry Prize in 1957. He was also a visiting professor of poetry at the University of Washington in 1963 and 1967, and he died while consideration for selecting him as poet laureate was pending. He suffered a heart attack on October 8, 1967, which was the cause of his death, after playing a game of tennis. Afterwards another volume of poetry of his was published, making a total of 9 volumes to comprise the portrayal of his poetic brilliance.

Poetry

Although Watkins' poetry was to remain relatively unpopular through the majority of his lifetime, his particular and unique style named him easily praiseworthy by those peers who knew him, and especially notable in his commencing of Welsh legends as inspiration. His works were primarily composed using lyrical images written directed toward themes portraying paradoxical truths about life and its simple benevolences—a sharp contrast to many of his fellow writers whose poems were essentially the opposite, investigating and emphasizing life's pessimistic qualities. One of Watkins' colleagues, Kathleen Raine, quoted him to be "the greatest lyric poet of [her] generation," and Dylan Thomas named him "the most profound and greatly accomplished Welshman writing poems in English." Thomas, actually being very close to Vernon in terms of poetic consultation as well as friendship, was profoundly influenced by Watkins' writing and by his opinions of Thomas' own style. Some other associations of which Vernon had included a short-lived inclusion in a group known as the New Apocalyptics group and another among the Kardomah boys.

Here, where the earth is green,
where heaven is true
Opening the windows
touched with earliest dawn,
In the first frost of cool September days,
Chrysanthemum weather,
presaging great birth,
Who in his heart could murmur or complain;
'The light we look for is not in this land?'
That light is present, and that distant time
Is always here, continually redeemed.
Watkins, From Peace in the Welsh Hills

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Evans, Philip, A History of the Thomas family, Privately published, 1994
  • Fitzgibbon, Constantine, The Life of Dylan Thomas, Boston, Readers Union, 1965, OCLC 367245
  • Watkins, Vernon, The Anglo-Welsh Review, Unpublished

External links

cy:Vernon Watkins

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