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  1. #1
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    Arrow Dylan Thomas's Boathouse Laugharne

    Dylan Thomas was born in Swansea in 1914 and died in New York in 1953. He was one of the most significant writers of the twentieth century, and his work continues to resonate in the popular imagination: fans today include Bill Clinton, Jimmy Carter, Pierce Brosnan, Catherine Zeta Jones and Michael Douglas, and Mick Jagger, whose Jagged Films is currently working on a feature film of the writer’s life. Best known for his poetry and for the ‘play for voices’, Under Milk Wood, Thomas also wrote fiction (including short stories and novels), film-scripts and various radio broadcasts. He was also a prolific letter writer and performer of other people’s work.



    His early writing shows an interest in the experimental artistic movements of the early twentieth century, with much of his poetry and prose of the 1930s manifesting surrealist and gothic elements. His middle period work of the late 1930s and early 1940s was directly influenced by crises of the Second World War, during which Thomas worked for the propaganda machine of the BBC in London. His late work engages with both the politics of the post-war period and the environment and geography of West Wales. An interest in the processes of the natural world is recurrent (if changing) throughout Thomas’s poetry and prose.

    Familiar with, and in a sense, ‘at home’ in, West Wales from early childhood (his father’s family were from Carmarthenshire), Thomas first moved to Laugharne in 1937, living in a fisherman’s cottage before moving to ‘Sea View’, and finally returning to live in ‘The Boat House’ at Laugharne in 1949. He lived there with his wife, Caitlin, and children, Colm, Aeronwy and Llewelyn until the time of his death.

    From the moment of his death, Thomas has been thought of as epitome of the self-doomed artist (an association linking with other radical figures in the arts such as Percy Shelley, Arthur Rimbaud, James Dean and Kurt Cobain) and the popularity of his work has expanded to the extent that he is now one of the most-translated English language poets of all time. From the moment he featured as John Lennon’s choice on the cover of the Beatles’ Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, Thomas has made regular re-appearances in popular culture. Recent films to have used his work include Dangerous Minds and Independence Day, and his early poem ‘The force that through the green fuse’ may have influenced George Lucas’s Star Wars series. Often Thomas the myth obscures the work of Thomas the writer.

    Dylan and Laugharne

    'And some, like myself, just came, one day, for the day, and never left; got off the bus, and forgot to get on again'.
    (Dylan Thomas on Laugharne, taken from Quite Early One Morning).

    Dylan Thomas' had a long term affinity with Laugharne ever since he visited with the poet Glyn Jones in 1934, by 1938 he lived in "Eros" in Gosport Street, then to "Sea View" until 1940. Dylan led a very peripatetic existence and urgently wished to settle down, his move to the Boathouse in 1949 was made possible by the remarkable patronage of Margaret Taylor who bought the house for the Thomases so that Dylan could once again be in his ‘beloved Wales’. It was the Boathouse 'sea shaken on a breakneck of rocks' and the unique character of Laugharne itself that combined to act as a catalyst for some of his most celebrated works. The fictitious Llareggub of Under Milk Wood. written in Laugharne was confirmed by his widow, Caitlin, in her autobiography, as being based on the Township.

















    Give me wine, I drain the dregs and toss the empty bottle at the world.

    Handsome, witty, devastatingly charming and unstoppably immoral

  2. #2
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    Default Re: Dylan Thomas's Boathouse Laugharne

    Quote Originally Posted by Mexico75 View Post
    Nice shot's, I remember visiting here with my parents when I was a kid. My dad was a fan of his work and me and my sister would be subjected to his tape of "Under Milk Wood" on long car journey's
    Under Milk Wood is just amazing Mex.
    Give me wine, I drain the dregs and toss the empty bottle at the world.

    Handsome, witty, devastatingly charming and unstoppably immoral

  3. #3
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    Thumbs up Re: Dylan Thomas's Boathouse Laugharne

    What a beautiful place and fantastic pics! I really love the first external shot and the first two internal shots, top quality!
    sqwasheress

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  4. #4
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    Default Re: Dylan Thomas's Boathouse Laugharne

    I've never been a fan since my A level days, nice relaxing looking place though and great pcitures as always.

  5. #5
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    Default Re: Dylan Thomas's Boathouse Laugharne

    Interesting wee place there SS
    The only thing to do with good advice is pass it on. It is never any use to oneself.

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