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Wales Celebrates Its Poet Laureate
Dylan Thomas
By Valerie Summers
What do Bill Clinton, Pierce Brosnan, Jimmy Carter and
Paul McCartney have in common? I discovered the answer on my recent journey
to the United Kingdom. They all share a passionate admiration for Dylan
Thomas, the Poet Laureate of Wales. This year, on the 50th anniversary of
his death, commemorations for this unique and colorful cultural icon are in
the offing in the land of his birth. Among these, a film depicting his life
is in production. Map of Love, the name of one of his collections of
poetry, has also been chosen as the film’s title.
“Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night” is perhaps the
most oft quoted of his works. Born and raised in Swansea, which he referred
to as “an ugly, lovely town,” the headstrong young Thomas, son of an
educator, was forbidden to speak in his native tongue. In those days, the
lyrical language was deemed low class. This seemed certainly to be a factor
in his frustration as it is said that “he wrote passionately in Welsh
through the medium of English.”
Since
my mother shares the same birthplace as Thomas, my interest in this
enchanting area of the world, as part of my heritage, has become intense. I
began my quest at the newly opened (1998) Dylan Thomas Centre, formerly the
Guildhall, situated in Swansea’s Maritime Cultural Quarter. The attractive,
modern building houses the Dylan Thomas – Word and Image exhibition, paying
homage to the gifted, but tormented poet. His life story, with pictures,
both moving and still, and his rich, melodious voice fill the exhibition
space. As I wandered through, I was moved by this tormented, talented
soul’s life. I learned of his tumultuous and reckless marriage to Caitlin,
his children, and his alcoholism. The exhibition includes unique archive
material, manuscripts, artwork, books and original sound recordings. There
are also touch-screen computers, listening posts and a “spelling wall” with
magnetic words taken from Dylan’s poems. I followed his life from childhood
in Swansea to his untimely death in New York. It became apparent that his
great love for his native Wales inspired his writings as he wandered along
what are now known as the Dylan Thomas Trails.
Throughout this year of commemoration, the Centre will
host an exhibition by artist Ceri Richards who made a succession of works on
the theme of the cycle of nature connected with the poetry of Thomas. A
production of Noel Coward’s Hay Fever, which Thomas starred in back in 1932,
and a performance of Under Milk Wood, among other events are also
scheduled. Throughout Wales, special commemorative events and festivals are
being held.
Just around the block from the Dylan Thomas Centre, one
evening, I was enchanted with Dylan Thomas readings by the vivacious Pat
Hughes of the Merlyn Theatre at Morgan’s, a posh, newly opened Swansea
hotel. She was accompanied by a talented harpist who offered a taste of the
extraordinary singing talents which the Welsh are noted for.
Thomas
was born in his parent’s home at 5 Cwmdonkin Drive. Growing up, he spent
many hours in his small bedroom overlooking the “long and splendidly curving
shore” of Swansea Bay, filling his notebook with poetry. This past
December, I was sent a Christmas card from a Welsh friend with the beginning
of Thomas’s A Child’s Christmas in Wales, picturing a young boy, looking
very much like the poet, sitting by a window, probably in his bedroom,
writing. During the year 2003, special talks will be offered at this
venue.
Armed with a set of booklets on the Dylan Thomas
Trails, I set out on my venture down memory lane at The Mumbles, a colorful
seaside resort where the youthful poet spent too many hours at the local
pub. I made my way down the Gower Peninsula to Rhossili’s headland and long
beach, beloved by Thomas, with the wild and wonderful seascape of crashing
waves edged by limestone cliffs, rolling hills and dramatic threatening gray
clouds above.
I ambled through Uplands Walk, which included his
childhood haunts of Cwmdonkin Park with its formal flower beds and a large
memorial stone bearing his name. I passed the site of the Old Grammar
School, now part of the Swansea Institute of Higher Education, which Dylan
attended from 1925-1931. Here the young writer contributed to and
eventually edited the school magazine and participated in several school
plays. He once humorously wrote “If I had been born and brought up in an
igloo and lived on whales, not in it…it would have been unlikely…I become a
writer.”
I
ventured down Wind Street, the focal point of Dylan’s brief career on the
local paper and one of the few areas which escaped the 1941 blitz. The
newspaper offices, at the top of the street, also housed the mortuary which
the young reporter frequented for copy. Lining the street were several pubs
and cafes where reporters regularly hung out and where Thomas might have
begun his love affair with the bottle.
 My
adventure continued as I enjoyed the scenic drive to the township of
Laugharne. I stopped to admire its seaside castle where Thomas often visited
with owner, Richard Hughes, sometimes using the gazebo on the castle grounds
as a writing perch. I wandered along a narrow, earthen path to visit the
site of Dylan’s final home both in life and death. After a short walk, I
came upon a small unpretentious building known as The Boathouse perched on
the side of the cliff and close by, his writing shed. Upon entering, I
found modestly furnished rooms of original furniture, memorabilia,
literature and recording by and about the poet. It was here that Dylan
ostensibly spent his last years with his wife and three children although he
was probably found more often in the pub up the road at Brown’s Hotel.
Later, I visited the cozy pub, sat at his special corner table and lifted a
pint in his honor. It was probably here that he was inspired to write his
play for voices, Under Milk Wood, portraying the various village characters
who came and went.
Dylan Thomas tragically died at the age of 39 while
visiting New York. He and wife Caitlin are buried together the small
cemetery in Laugharne’s St Martins Churchyard, marked by a single white
cross.
American Airlines
1-800 433-7300
http://www.aa.com
Wales Tourist Board
1-877-872-1133
http://www.visitwales.com
BritRail provided a comfortable and relaxing
train trip from London to Wales. They offer a rull range of bargain train
travel products designed for visitors to Great Britain.
1-877-677-1066
http://www.britrail.net
Swansea Marriott Hotel is located in the
picturesque Maritime Quarter minutes from city center with views of Swansea
Bay.
Maritime Quarter
Swansea SA 1 3 SS Wales
01792 642 020
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