One evening in 1961, in the Greyhound pub in Carshalton, Surrey,
20-year-old Chris Torrance - solicitor's clerk with novelistic
ambitions — encountered a volatile Mob of nascent artists,
writers and musicians. For Torrance, this was "the most important
day of my life". Dazzled, he was soon joining in their activities:
wild weekends in the country, his first scary public readings, and,
from 1963, co-editing the poetry and jazz magazine
Origins/Diversions. In literary terms, Torrance's greatest
influence from the group was Bill Wyatt, who introduced him to
"useful short forms" like haiku, and to William Carlos Williams'
Paterson. Wyatt, later a prolific poet, translator, naturalist, and
the first Zen monk ordained in Britain, remained a life-long friend
and ally. Origins/Diversions connected Torrance to other
'underground' writers and publishers, including Tina Morris and
Dave Cunliffe in Blackburn, and, through them, Lee Harwood in
London. In June 1964 Harwood came to Carshalton for a walk around
Torrance's patch. Reciprocal visits followed, with Torrance cycling
to the East End, where Harwood was writing his long poem Cable
Street. They were very different people, Torrance focussed on his
local area and his local friends, Harwood a cool, elegant but
friendly cosmopolitan, feeding Torrance the exciting new writing
via his job at Better Books in Charing Cross Road. Torrance now
began finding his own voice as a poet, and, through Harwood's
encouragement, placed work in the Cambridge magazine, The English
Intelligencer. One of its editors, Andrew Crozier, published
Torrance's first two books. In the spring of 1965 Torrance gave up
his seven-year career in solicitors' offices, and joined the local
Parks Department as a labourer. As the title Green Orange Purple
Red implies, he wanted a more sensual take on the world via his
writing — a Keatsian ambition. About then he found a second-hand
copy of The New American Poetry, and embarked on a lifelong 'love
affair' with those writers and that energy. In particular, the
enormous presence of Charles Olson, seemed to confirm that — in
terms of big ambition and local detail — Torrance was on the
right track with his writing. Validation came in July 1966, with
'The Carshalton Steam Laundry Vision'. Torrance was cutting the
grass outside the Laundry, when his vocation was revealed to him:
'I'm going to be a poet'. It wasn't a 'vision'; it was a powerful
voice that had to be obeyed ("I accepted it completely"). As The
Voice diminished into the clatter of machinery and the chatter of
the laundry girls, the path ahead lay clear. In the autumn of 1967,
Torrance and his partner Val settled in Bristol, with Torrance
working as a Parks Dept. labourer again. His near three-year stay
in Bristol was a transitional time, with a tendency in his writing
towards psychedelia and a broader spirituality becoming more
evident. In June 1970, Torrance moved to a cottage in
pastoral/industrial South Wales, to 'chew the lotus in peace', as
John Wieners has it. He was to stay there for 50 years, increasing
the range and depth of his poetic vision, but much of the
foundations and shape of his future writing are here in this early
work: inspiration from his locality, from geology up; the prosodic
links between music and words; a positive faith that anyone —
taking himself as the model — could and should be creative; and,
importantly, the idea of larger cycles of writing — as in The
Carshalton Poems — culminating in his life's major work, The
Magic Door. (Phil Maillard)
General
Imprint: |
Shearsman Books
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Release date: |
September 2023 |
Authors: |
Chris Torrance
|
Editors: |
Ian Brinton
|
Preface by: |
Phil Maillard
|
Dimensions: |
229 x 152 x 8mm (L x W x T) |
Pages: |
130 |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-84861-909-8 |
Categories: |
Books
|
LSN: |
1-84861-909-X |
Barcode: |
9781848619098 |
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