Martyn Skinner Explained

Martyn Skinner (24 August 1906 – 25 October 1993) was a British poet. He won the 1943 Hawthornden Prize for Letters to Malaya and the Heinemann Award in 1947, for the last volume of that title, or the entire collection.

Skinner was born in Fitzhead, Somerset, in southwest England. His mother was Emelie Madeline Belling while his father, Sir Sydney Skinner, was chairman of multiple businesses.[1]

Shortly after graduation Skinner, with fellow Oxford alumni Bede Griffiths and Hugh Waterman, settled in a cottage in the Cotswolds and began what they called an "experiment in common living".[2] They followed a lifestyle attuned to nature, milking cows and selling the milk to support themselves. They would read the Bible together as a form of literature. Griffiths noted a strong connection between the teachings of scripture and the rhythm of the nature around them. The experiment lasted less than a year, as one of the friends found the life too demanding.

In 1938 Martyn Skinner married Pauline Giles, with whom he had three sons and one daughter before the marriage was dissolved in 1987.[3]

According to John Clute, his "most ambitious works were two long narrative poems", or poem sequences. The Return of Arthur "is set in a Near Future England transformed into a totalitarian Dystopia; but a reborn Arthur from another Dimension returns, and the Matter of Britain is again told as the Millennium approaches". Old Rectory is set in a more distant "Ruined Earth Britain, where a hermit mage named Old Rectory decides to return to society and redeem it".

Skinner's correspondence with the novelist R. C. Hutchinson has been published as Two Men of Letters (1979), .

Poems

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Skinner, Martyn. Who Was Who. 10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U175485 . 25 June 2024.
  2. Book: Griffiths , Bede . 1954 . The Golden String: An Autobiography . Templegate Publishers .
  3. News: Ellis. Roger. Obituary: Martyn Skinner. 25 June 2024. Independent. 12 November 1993.