title: The Angry Summer : A Poem of 1926 author: Davies, Idris.; Conran, Anthony. publisher: University of Wales isbn10 | asin: 0708310907 print isbn13: 9780708310908 ebook isbn13: 9780585261539 language: English subject General Strike, Great Britain, 1926--Poetry. publication date: 1993 lcc: PR6007.A72A75 1993eb ddc: 821/.912 subject: General Strike, Great Britain, 1926--Poetry. Page iii The Angry Summer A poem of 1926 Idris Davies Introduction and notes by Tony Conran CARDIFF UNIVERSITY OF WALES PRESS 1993 Page iv © The Angry Summer, the Estate of Idris Davies © Preface, Introduction and Notes, Tony Conran, 1993 All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without clearance from the University of Wales Press, 6 Gwennyth Street, Cardiff CF2 4YD. The right of Anthony Conran to be identified as author of the Preface, Introduction and Notes to this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988. British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN 0-7083-1090-7 hardback 0-7083-1080-X paperback Typeset by Alden Multimedia, Northampton Printed in England by the Cromwell Press, Melksham, Wiltshire Page v Contents Preface vii A Note on Illustrative Material xi Acknowledgements xi Introduction xiii A Note on the Text xxxiii The Angry Summer 1 Notes 67 Reading List 73 Page vii Preface The root idea of this book goes back to a multi-media event in Bangor as long ago as 1973, produced by Lesley Bowen and myself. A group of students and others, who were interested in acting The Angry Summer as a dramatic poem, used to meet every week in my house. We read and mulled over it, sorted out the various voices in it, and thought which of the lyrics ought to be sung. This 'academic' processwhich is part of rehearsing any performancegave us all a powerful sense of the integrity and value of the poem, and the close- knit inter-relationship of its parts, particularly as a dramatic whole. It certainly felt more of a drama than Under Milk Wood, for example, with more sense of interpersonal conflict and resolution as well as considerably more social insight; it shares with Dylan Thomas's work an ambiguous position between play and poem so that the term 'play for voices' is probably not inappropriate for bothalthough they can, of course, both be staged. What seems prima facie a collection of lyrics is an unexpected form for drama; but one recalls, for instance, how Greek tragedy arose from choral lyrics called dithyrambs, and (in the Middle Ages) Adam de la Haille developed a kind of lyric drama, Robin and Marion from trouvère songs; and of course the later development of opera from the Italian madrigal. If the Welsh were ever to take drama seriously, this poem by Idris Davies is one of the places they could start. But of course we weren't only interested in it as drama. The long struggle of the Welsh miners to maintain their communities, in the face of the British state's hostility and the savage vagaries of 'market forces', is a major part of our history. It is a struggle that is even now not quite over. Many of us who gathered every week to read the poem were from the Valleys, or at any rate south Wales, and one was an ex- miner. The poem spoke directly to themand Page viii to all of us in varying degreesof the web of aspiration and suffering out of which their generation had emerged. We entrusted the music to a local folk group called Yggdrasil; and we decided to set the performance of the poem in a documentary context. I suppose the not-too-conscious models for our project were the radio ballads of Charles Parker and Ewan MacColl: 'Singing the Fishing', for example, where actual voices of working-class fishermen were collaged with songs and commentary. The radio ballad had been too hot for radio to handle in the fifties and Charles Parker had been dismissed. Even so, the type of documentary we had in mind was not common anywhere except on wireless and television. Lesley and I enlisted the help of Jim Davies from Pontypool and we all descended on the Rhymney Valley, interviewing old miners, shopkeepers and teachers about what happened in 1926, the year of the General Strike. We met friends of Idris Davies, took photographs of mines, pit-ponies, chapels, what have you, and spent a whole day in Cardiff Library, reading and making slides of contemporary press reports. It was an exhausting and exhilarating few days, and we enjoyed it immensely. I had never been in a mining community before and the friendliness and humanity we found there has stayed clear in my memory ever since. I can well understand how writers from the Valleys can spend their lives trying to recreate them, hardly able to talk of anything outside that magical, exasperating and tragic world. We were very bad at it. Apart from Jim as a photographer, we lacked all the professional skills and resources needed for such a project. Our interviewing technique was pretty abysmal. The soundtrack we made was littered with the extraneous noise. Our biggest lack was time: we were trying to create a new, multi-media art-form in four days! Still, we did it. The miners were incredibly helpful and very willing to tell their story. Our show worked. The poem was given its first dramatic première in the drama studio of the College. The poet's sister actually came to it, with other people Page ix from Rhymney. One of the highlights of the performance was when we flashed on to the screen a tattered photograph of a soup-kitchen, given to us by an old miner. Our visitors could not contain themselves. 'There's old so-and-so,' they called out, and 'Look, there's . . .' You could hardly have had a more telling intersection of art and life: we sensed in that moment how terrible it was that Idris Davies, because of the cultural stranglehold of capitalism on us all, never reached his natural audience in the Valleys, but only a small left-wing élite catered for by Faber and Faber poetry books at six shillings a timethat's perhaps five pounds at today's prices. Terrible for Rhymney; but terrible also for Idris Davies. The Angry Summer should have been the beginning of his work as a dramatic poet; but the cultural starvation he endured, and his growing uncertainty about whom he was writing for, made that impossible and his later work lapsed into self-doubt and mediocre elegizing. To compare The Angry Summer with his last published sequence, 'Tonypandy', written a couple of years later, is to see cultural deprivation at work. Obviously, we should have toured around the Valleys with our show. That we did not was due partly to our own amateurishnesswe hadn't done any of the groundwork necessary to such an enterprise, and now the moment had passed; but partly also to an Arts Council system which sets no store by spontaneity or the demands of the topical, but treats all art as if it were already in a museum, bespoken for eighteen months ahead. Well, we all know about that! But the opportunity went by, and has haunted me ever since. This book is partly an attempt to assuage that ghostit won't of course, nothing now willand at least to try and show The Angry Summer in the sort of context we found for it in 1973. In a book, of course, not a performance: but a book has virtues of relative permanence that make it good as a memorial. While we were doing our show, we met several people who certainly qualified as
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