 |
I was born and raised in Sussex. My father was an ordained clergyman and writer, my mother once accompanied the American singer Paul Robeson, on the piano. I have two older sisters and a younger brother.
We were brought up both in a Sussex country parish and within an organisation first founded by our father in South London in the 1930’s. |
|
This was The Community of Saint Hilda, which was transplanted to Sussex before the Second World War.
When the Community was thriving most fully, there was a farm of 100 acres, run on what are now termed ‘organic’ lines, and a unique school at Gaveston Hall. |
 |
|
My secondary education was at the Durham School, where I was a King’s Scholar.
Before I took a degree, I had two spells in Africa: a year in Southern Africa, and two years in Sierra Leone, where I taught in Freetown. I took a General Batchelor of Arts Degree of the London University in English Literature, Psychology and Aesthetics. While still at college, I married. We had two children.
After a few years teaching in Colleges of Further Education - mainly in Wormwood Scrubs Prison - I became a gardener and landscape gardener.
At this time the marriage was dissolved. |
|
 |
The last thirty years have been spent on the land as a gardener, and for ten years, something of a smallholder. While I was living an increasingly simple and self-sufficient life, I pursued my interests in English poetry, with particular regard to its rhythms and performance. I also began to play a tin whistle and wrote tunes. |
|
I worked to the roots of English poetry in the earliest stuff written. I had help with the Old English at Manchester University as I sought an answer to the question: ‘What is the rhythm of Beowulf?’
I have found the key; and I have a special insight into the rhythmical nature of all English poetry which I am developing and demonstrating through performance. |
 |
|
|