R. S. Thomas (1913-2000) teemed with contradictions: a passionate advocate of Welsh nationalism he wrote in English and sent his son to boarding school in England; an undemonstrative man he composed the most tender elegies for his wife; a man of devout faith who all his life experienced the elusiveness of God; a poet who hardly ever left the narrow confines of north Wales but who at his death was hailed as a major European poet. This "troubler of the Welsh conscience" (Professor M. Wynn Thomas) was born in Cardiff, the only child of Huw, a captain in the merchant navy, and Margaret. In 1918 the family moved to Holyhead for his father's work. Thomas grew up in an English-speaking household, only learning Welsh when he was thirty, a major cause of regret as he didn't feel fluent enough to write poetry in his native tongue. He studied Classics at the University College of North Wales, Bangor and then undertook his theological training at St. Michael's College, Llandaff, being ordained as a priest in the Anglican Church of Wales in 1936. From then until his retirement in 1978 Thomas's ministry took him to a number of rural parishes in North Wales: the bleak beauty of the landscape and the hard lives of the peasant farmers became abiding themes in his poems. In his first post in Y Waun, Denbighshire, he met his future wife Mildred (Elsi) Eldridge who was an English artist. Though they often seemed remote from each other (no one can recollect seeing them touch in public) their marriage proved as enduring, lasting fifty one years until Elsi's death.
Elsi had a promising career as an artist prior to her relationship with Thomas.They had one son, Gwydion, born in 1945. Thomas published three volumes of poetry before his breakthrough to a wider audience came in 1955 with the publication of Song at the Year's Turning. In his famous introduction John Betjeman wrote "the name which has the honour to introduce this fine poet to a wider public will be forgotten long before that of R. S. Thomas." Thomas wrote over 1,500 poems in his life and although there were developments in subject and style - from the early poems rooted in the physical realities of place to the more abstract and metaphysical investigations of his later work - his poetry was consistent in its seriousness of purpose. In Thomas's eyes the modern world with its technological conveniences was a dangerous distraction from our spiritual existence. Sometimes this aversion to the 20th Century could take on Luddite-like proportions - Thomas's son recalled sermons in which his father railed against fridges and washing machines - but Thomas certainly practised what he preached, living an extremely ascetic life. The language of the poems reflects this: the words are simple and spare, the lyric voice often fierce but capable of a kind of severe compassion and a prophet-like intensity. Thomas's uncompromising vision continued to attract admiration: in 1964 he won the Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry and in 1996 was a Nobel nominee (losing out to Seamus Heaney). Thomas died after suffering heart trouble at the age of 87. There was something in Thomas of the "voice crying aloud in the wilderness", the loneliness of a man socially isolated form his parishioners by his education and from the contemporary world by his temperament. But this sense of isolation is what makes his poetry "very pure, very bitter" (Al Alvarez) like the Welsh landscape he knew so well.
http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xumcj0_r-s-thomas-a-marriage_creation
I made this painting very loosely from a portrait of P.J. Ginther Harrington by Sweet MelVa (Melissa Lynn), the theme was derived from Thomas' elegy to his wife which I first heard whilst travelling from Darlington to Birmingham. I was so struck by the tenderness & brevity of his words that I had to stop the car & absorb the beauty of it & it has remained in my memory since only recently coming again to the fore whilst I worked on this painting.
I had a purge in the Batcave & wiped out all of the partially complete paintings or those that I felt did not achieve their intended purpose & since then I have tried to remove all of the layers of detail that will never be seen & concentrate only on the absolute basics of intent. Most of the new work has been characterised by the use of gold & other metallics & this is the first of that series to achieve any kind of lyricism thanks almost entirely to my memory of hearing the words of R.S.Thomas.
Derived from such tender poetry and beauty the heart stops still at the sight of her. It brings tears to my eyes, the magic you've composed here and that is no lie.
ReplyDeleteWhat can come from the ashes is a revelation. This painting is a masterful achievement and I may now read everything Thomas has ever written because of it. Thank you for bringing such beauty and lyricism to this dreary rainy morning.
I bloody replied to your comment the day after you posted it & I'm a bit irritated that it didn't stick
ReplyDeleteI know, these methods of communication can be so unpredictable, makes me miss the days of snail mail sometimes. ;)
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