Typescript of Ransoms by Leslie Norris (NLW Ex 1934)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Typescript of Ransoms by Leslie Norris (NLW Ex 1934) Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru = The National Library of Wales Cymorth chwilio | Finding Aid - Typescript of Ransoms by Leslie Norris (NLW ex 1934) Cynhyrchir gan Access to Memory (AtoM) 2.3.0 Generated by Access to Memory (AtoM) 2.3.0 Argraffwyd: Mai 20, 2017 Printed: May 20, 2017 https://archifau.llyfrgell.cymru/index.php/typescript-of-ransoms-by-leslie-norris https://archives.library.wales/index.php/typescript-of-ransoms-by-leslie-norris Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru = The National Library of Wales Allt Penglais Aberystwyth Ceredigion United Kingdom SY23 3BU 01970 632 800 01970 615 709 [email protected] www.llgc.org.uk Typescript of Ransoms by Leslie Norris Tabl cynnwys | Table of contents Gwybodaeth grynodeb | Summary information .............................................................................................. 3 Hanes gweinyddol / Braslun bywgraffyddol | Administrative history | Biographical sketch ......................... 3 Natur a chynnwys | Scope and content .......................................................................................................... 4 Nodiadau | Notes ............................................................................................................................................. 4 - Tudalen | Page 2 - NLW ex 1934 Typescript of Ransoms by Leslie Norris Gwybodaeth grynodeb | Summary information Lleoliad | Repository: Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru = The National Library of Wales Teitl | Title: Typescript of Ransoms by Leslie Norris ID: NLW ex 1934 Virtua system control vtls004029605 number [alternative]: GEAC system control (WlAbNL)0000029605 number [alternative]: Dyddiad | Date: 1960s-1970s (dyddiad creu | date of creation) Disgrifiad ffisegol | 1 File Physical description: Lleoliad ffisegol | ARCH/MSS (GB0210) Physical location: Iaith | Language: English Dyddiadau creu, golygu a dileu | Dates of creation, revision and deletion: Nodyn | Note Preferred citation: NLW ex 1934 [generalNote]: Hanes gweinyddol / Braslun bywgraffyddol | Administrative history | Biographical sketch Nodyn | Note Leslie Norris was born in Merthyr Tydfil in 1921. He served in the RAF, worked as a local government clerk, and held various teaching posts in England prior to becoming a lecturer. He was employed as Principal Lecturer in Degree Studies at the College of Education, Bognor Regis, between 1958-1973. Since then, he became a full-time writer whilst taking up residencies at various universities in Britain and the United States. He is the recipient of several awards, including the Welsh Arts Council Award, 1967 and 1968, and was awarded an Honorary D.Litt. by the University of Glamorgan in 1994. He is also a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. Several volumes of his poems, including two volumes of poetry for children, and short-stories have been published. Among his prose works is a monograph on Glyn Jones as part of the Writers of Wales series (1973 and 1997 (revised ed.)). Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru = The National Library of Wales Tudalen | Page 3 NLW ex 1934 Typescript of Ransoms by Leslie Norris Natur a chynnwys | Scope and content Typescript, 1969, of the final version of Ransoms (London, 1970), a volume of poetry by Leslie Norris, presented by him to Meic Stephens Nodiadau | Notes Nodiadau teitl | Title notes Ffynhonnell | Immediate source of acquisition Purchased from Mr Colin Huggett, Tregarth, August 1998.; B1998/26 Cyfyngiadau ar fynediad | Restrictions on access No restrictions on access Amodau rheoli defnydd | Conditions governing use Normal laws of copyright apply Nodiadau eraill | Other notes • Statws cyhoeddiad | Publication status: Published Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru = The National Library of Wales Tudalen | Page 4.
Recommended publications
  • Resourceful Disciple
    RESOURCEFUL DISCIPLE the LIFE, TIMES, & EXTENDED FAMILY of THOMAS EDWARDS BASSETT (1862-1926) by Arthur R. Bassett Prologue Purposed Audience and Prepared Authorship Part 1: For Whom the Bells Toll: Three Target Audiences It might be argued that every written composition, either by intent or subconsciously, has an intended audience to whom it is addressed; this biography, as indicated in the title, has three: 1) those interested in the facts surrounding the life of Thomas E. Bassett, 2) those interested in his times, and 3) those with an interest in his extended family. 1) Those Interested in His Life In one sense, this is the story of a single solitary life, selected and plucked from a pool of billions. It is the life of Thomas E. Bassett. He is not only my grandfather; he is also one of my heroes, so I hope that I can be forgiven if at times this biography exhibits overtones of a hagiography.1 I feel that his story deserves to be preserved, if for no other reason than his life was so extraordinary. It is truly a classic example of the America dream come true. Like most of his immediate descendants, I had heard the litany of his achievements from my very early childhood: first state senator from his county, first schoolteacher in Rexburg, first postmaster, newspaper editor, stake president, etc. However, as far as I know, no one has laid out the entire tapestry of his life in such a way that the chronological order and interrelationship of these accomplishments is demonstrated. This has been a major part of my project in this biography.
    [Show full text]
  • U DSG Papers of Howard Sergeant, Including [1930]-1995 the Archives of 'Outposts' Poetry Magazine
    Hull History Centre: Howard Sergeant, inc 'Outposts' poetry magazine U DSG Papers of Howard Sergeant, including [1930]-1995 the Archives of 'Outposts' poetry magazine Biographical Background: Herbert ('Howard') Sergeant was born in Hull in 1914 and qualified as an accountant. He served in the RAF and the Air Ministry during the Second World War and with the assistance of his friend Lionel Monteith, edited and published the first issue of his poetry magazine 'Outposts' in February 1944. Outposts is the longest running independent poetry magazine in Britain. Sergeant had been writing poetry since childhood and his first poem to be published was 'Thistledown magic', in 'Chambers Journal' in 1943. 'Outposts' was conceived in wartime and its early focus was on poets 'who, by reason of the particular outposts they occupy, are able to visualise the dangers which confront the individual and the whole of humanity, now and after the war' (editorial, 'Outposts', no.1). Over the decades, the magazine specialised in publishing unrecognised poets alongside the well established. Sergeant deliberately avoided favouring any particular school of poetry, and edited 'Mavericks: an anthology', with Dannie Abse, in 1957, in support of this stance. Sergeant's own poetry was included in the first issue of 'Outposts' (but rarely thereafter) and his first published collection, 'The Leavening Air', appeared in 1946. He was involved in setting up the Dulwich Group (a branch of the British Poetry Association) in 1949, and again, when it re-formed in 1960. In 1956, Sergeant published the first of the Outposts Modern Poets Series of booklets and hardbacks devoted to individual poets.
    [Show full text]
  • Leslie Norris and Exile
    Forum Leslie Norris and Exile James Prothero Santa Ana College was appalled to find that mere months after his passing on April 6th of 2006, I the Welsh poet Leslie Norris was already becoming difficult to obtain, the first step before going out of print. His poems and short stories graced major publica- tions such as The New Yorker and The Atlantic Monthly. And yet if one checks on Amazon, his Collected Poems and Collected Stories are only to be had used, and for a much higher price. One can still purchase his books from the website of his small Welsh publisher, Seren, in pounds sterling. This last fact implies that the American market for Norris has dried up. Somehow, to me this is monumentally ironic. Norris, who abandoned a stellar teaching career in Britain to become a poet and a teacher of writing in the American mountain west, is arguably one of the finest English language poets of the twentieth century on either side of the Atlantic. We gave the British Eliot, and in turn they gave us Norris. Critics and readers may debate, but I think we Americans got the better part of the bargain. But perhaps a more illuminating parallel is between Norris and a poet who had a voice in many ways similar: Robert Frost. The experience that congealed Frost’s poetic gift and gave it voice to the world was his temporary migration to England and his interchange of artistic friendship with Edward Thomas. Frost the poet achieved his full voice in exile. This is the quintessentially American experience of exile and coming home to a place you never knew existed before.
    [Show full text]
  • A Conversation with Leslie Norris
    A Conversation with Leslie Norris Jim Prothero Santa Ana College I1 JP: How do you see Wordsworth’s influence on your work? LN: Well, other people see it very markedly, but I don’t know that it’s more, really, than the general fact that Romantic poets were heavily influential on the Welsh writers in English and in Welsh, as a matter of fact; and I do see it rather like that. I think the obvious correspondence of feeling between the Lake District and Wales and Wordsworth’s great awareness of Wales, as a matter of fact, probably mean that that kind of feeling influenced us greatly. I’m not so sure that his poetry influenced me very much, but it may have influ - enced my attitude to poetry. I wouldn’t have thought so. There might be specific poems that you could find, but I’m not so sure about that either, since our experiences are completely different, you know. 1This interview occurred on May 14, 1998, via telephone. L&B 29:1&2 2009 2 / Literature and Belief JP: Yes, well, I saw similarity in characterization and not just in the poetry but in your short stories, also in the juxtaposition of the pain of life and the beauty of the land and of nature, and the enigma of those two things. LN: I think that’s probably true, but I wouldn’t have thought that was necessarily Wordsworthian. I would think almost any of the short stories—H. E. Bates, for example, in his early work—would show more Wordsworthian experience.
    [Show full text]
  • Open for Shooting
    The Powys Review NUMBER TWENTY-THREE The Powys Review Editor Belinda Humfrey Reviews Editor Peter Miles Advisory Board Marius Buning, Department of English, Free University, Amsterdam, Netherlands Glen Cavaliero, St Catherine's College, Cambridge T. J. Diffey, School of Cultural and Community Studies, University of Sussex Peter Easingwood, Department of English, University of Dundee Michel Gresset, Department of English, Paris VII University, France Ian Hughes, Department of English, Normal College, Bangor, N. Wales Ben Jones, Department of English, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada Charles Lock, Department of English, University of Toronto, Canada Ned Lukacher, Department of English, University of Illinois at Chicago, U.S.A. J. Lawrence Mitchell, Department of English, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, U.S.A. Elmar Schenkel, Department of English, University of Freiburg, W. Germany Correspondence, contributions, and books for review may be addressed to the Editor, Department of English, Saint David's University College, Lampeter, Dyfed, SA48 7ED. Copyright ©, The Editor We are grateful to Mr Francis Powys and Laurence Pollinger Ltd., for permission to quote from the writings of John Cowper Powys and T. F. Powys, and to the late Mrs Evelyn Elwin for permission to quote from the writings of Llewelyn Powys. The Powys Review may be obtained from Booksellers for £3.50, or from Gomer Press, Llandysul, Dyfed, for £3.50 plus 75p postage. The Powys Review is printed by J. D. Lewis & Sons Ltd., Gomer Press, Llandysul, Dyfed. Enquiries about advertisment in The Powys Review should be made to James Dawson, 99 Corve Street, Ludlow, Shropshire. Tel. Ludlow (0584) 2274. Contents J. Lawrence Mitchell Reviews "One foot in the furrow": T.
    [Show full text]
  • Mission '77 Finishing the Work Together
    Tim AtLIAt U„. GLEANER December 28, 1976 G IE TN* 0 OC Mission '77 Finishing the Work Together By LEE KRETZ Ministerial and Lay Activities Director Atlantic Union Conference Recently a group of our ministers were asked, "How many of you believe that the church in North America is finishing God's work on earth so that in a given length of time, whatever that time may be, the work of God will actually be finished?" There was an uneasy atmosphere among the ministers, and not a single hand was raised. Then another question was asked, "How many of you believe that the church is in a 'holding pattern' and is definitely not gaining on the actual finishing of God's work in North America?" Just about every hand was raised. No doubt many of us feel the same way. We would like to see the work finished and Jesus come to take the redeemed home for all eternity. The recent Annual Council held in Washington, D.C., dealt with this very important theme, "Finishing the Work." What did our work had listed seven areas of concern: One of them leaders mean when they said, "finishing the work"? "It was the lack of concern over lost souls who live among means both an inward and an outward work, a people us. Is it possible that the majority of our church saved by grace, working to save others. It is the reach- members have come to believe that they cannot win ing of every person on earth with the claims and souls? Is it possible that in our homes there is a serious promises of God's message of love and salvation, so neglect of Bible study and an absence of morning and that this generation may have opportunity to be re- evening family worship? Is it possible that we find our- stored in His image, now and forever.
    [Show full text]
  • Opens on a Singularly Apologetic Note: "I About the World in Which He Lived
    The Powys Review NUMBER TWENTY * • . The Powys Review Editor Belinda Humfrey Reviews Editor Peter Miles Advisory Board Glen Cavaliero Ben Jones Ned Lukacher Correspondence, contributions, and books for review may be addressed to the Editor, Department of English, Saint David's University College, Lampeter, Dyfed, SA48 7ED. Copyright ©, The Editor The Powys Review is published with the financial support of the Welsh Arts Council. We are grateful to Mr Francis Powys and Laurence Pollinger Ltd., for permission to quote from the writings of John Cowper Powys and T. F. Powys, and to the late Mrs Evelyn Elwin for permission to quote from the writings of Llewelyn Powys. The Powys Review may be obtained from Booksellers for £3.00, or from Gomer Press, Llandysul, Dyfed, for £3.00 plus 75p postage. The Powys Review is printed by J. D. Lewis & Sons Ltd., Gomer Press, Llandysul, Dyfed. Enquiries about advertisment in The Powys Review should be made to James Dawson, 99 Corve Street, Ludlow, Shropshire. Tel. Ludlow (0584) 2274. Cover photo: Glastonbury Tor Photograph by Ian Sumner of Wells. Contents T. F. Powys Reviews This Is Thyself Introduced and annotated by T. J. Diffey J. Lawrence Mitchell 5 The Ecstatic World of John Cowper Powys H. W. FAWKNER Susan Rands 71 Aspects of the Topography of Barbara Dennis A Glastonbury Romance 27 The Art of Autobiography A. O. J. COCKSHUT 74 Margaret Woolf J. C. Powys's Autobiography Jeremy Hooker in the light of The Letters T F. Powys: A Modern to His Brother Llewelyn 41 Allegorist MARIUS BUNING 76 Frederick Davies Recollections of John Cowper Ian Hughes Three Fantasies Powys and Phyllis Playter: JOHN COWPER POWYS 78 Part Two 47 Helen Wilcox Glen Cavaliero, Gordon Wynne, George Herbert and Margaret Woolf Henry Vaughan Lucy Amelia Penny LOUIS L.
    [Show full text]
  • An Interview with Leslie Norris1
    An Interview with Leslie Norris1 Gene Pack Salt Lake City LN: “Autumn Elegy” I’m going to read first. GP: Why? LN: I’m going to read it because it’s the first poem in my Selected Poems (1986), and also because I wanted for a long time to write this poem. I was in World War II. I was a very young man and came out of it, and lots of people I knew didn’t. I’d always felt that a poem existed to keep alive what was important to the poet. As long as his language was viable and living, it was a kind of defeat of time in many ways, and because it was a duty I felt to remember those young men, and because autumn is indeed a very unhappy time for me. I like winter. The poem says it. May I just read it? GP: Please. 1This interview aired in 1999 on KUER; at the time Gene Pack was the station’s Classical Music Director. L&B 29 2009 and 30.1 2010 286 / Literature and Belief LN: September. The small Summer hangs its suns On the chestnuts, and the world bends slowly Out of the year. On tiles of the low barns The lingering swallows rest in this timely Warmth, collecting it. Standing in the garden, I too feel its generosity but would not leave. Time, time to lock the heart. Nothing is sudden In Autumn, yet the long, ceremonial passion of The year’s death comes quickly enough As firm veins shut on the sluggish blood And the numberless protestations of the leaf Are mapped on the air.
    [Show full text]
  • Opened School
    The Powys Review NUMBER NINETEEN The Powys Review Editor Belinda Humfrey Reviews Editor Peter Miles Advisory Board Glen Cavaliero Ben Jones Ned Lukacher Correspondence, contributions, and books for review may be addressed to the Editor, Department of English, Saint David's University College, Lampeter, Dyfed, SA48 7ED. Copyright ©, The Editor The Powys Review is published with the financial support of the Welsh Arts Council. We are grateful to Mr Francis Powys and Laurence Pollinger Ltd., for permission to quote from the writings of John Cowper Powys and T. F. Powys, and to the late Mrs Evelyn Elwin for permission to quote from the writings of Llewelyn Powys. The Powys Review may be obtained from Booksellers for £2.50, or from Gomer Press, Llandysul, Dyfed, for £2.50 plus 60p postage. The Powys Review is printed by J. D. Lewis & Sons Ltd., Gomer Press, Llandysul, Dyfed. Enquiries about advertisment in The Powys Review should be made to James Dawson, 99 Corve Street, Ludlow, Shropshire. Tel. Ludlow (0584) 2274. Contents J. Lawrence Mitchell Reviews The Education of T. F. Powys 3 T. F. Powys Michael Ballin Mr Weston's Good Wine John Cowper Powys's Porius MARTIN STEINMANN 67 and the Dialectic of History 20 Roy Fisher A Furnace Dorothee von Huene Greenberg JEREMY HOOKER 71 Stone Worship and the Search for Community in John Cowper Powys's Edward Larrissy A Glastonbury Romance 36 William Blake DESIREE HIRST 73 Oliver Marlow Wilkinson The Letters of Frances and Jack 43 David Punter The Hidden Script: Frederick Davies Writing and the Unconscious LAWRENCE NORMAND 76 Recollections of John Cowper Powys and Phyllis Playter: Part One 58 Raymond H.
    [Show full text]