Leslie Paul
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Leslie Allen Paul (1905, Dublin – 1985, Cheltenham) was an Anglo-Irish writer and founder of the Woodcraft Folk.[1]
Life
[edit]Early life
[edit]Born in Dublin on 30 April 1905, Leslie Paul grew up in Honor Oak, southeast London, the second child of advertising manager Frederick Paul and registered nurse, Lottie Burton. The family was fairly large, consisting of three sons and two daughters including younger siblings Joan and Douglas.[2]
During his materially poor but culturally rich childhood, Paul contributed dramatic poetry recitations to family/neighbourhood entertainments.[3] He later recalled performing a vignette called 'Two Coons', which gave a sympathetic representation of African culture.[4]
Young manhood: between the wars
[edit]By the summer of 1922, Paul was a junior ledger clerk employed in the city (near Aldgate) at the International Stores on a weekly salary of 22 s. 6 d.
In 1923 he joined his father's firm Pantlin and Paul in Fleet Street, hoping to find a way into freelance journalism. He actually succeeded in becoming editor of a magazine called 'The open Road', but the magazine failed after only six months. During that six months Paul attempted to become a freelance journalist, and wrote the unpublished 'The Journal of a Sun Worshipper'. During this period Paul came under the mentorship of Charles Watson, a retired unionist, bookseller and Swedenborgian. Watson loaned Paul books from his bookshop which were to have a major influence on Paul's political and social thinking.[5] Another influence was Harold Laski, whose powers of oratory influenced Paul's thinking and writing style.[6]
During the 1930s Paul seems to have worked as a freelance journalist.[7] He was also employed in London educational and social work, as well as working on the continent with refugees. He was a tutor with the London County Council as well as the Workers' Educational Association.
In 1932 Paul published his strongly autobiographical first novel 'Fugitive Morning'.
Paul's political views at this time were inspired by H. G. Wells, William Morris, and Edward Carpenter, while his ideas about children's education were partly drawn from Rousseau's Emile.[8] In addition, Paul was also active in the pacifist No More War Movement.[9] Paul was an outspoken critic of the Axis powers, as well as the Soviet Union following the latter nation's signing of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact.[9] After the outbreak of World War Two and the rise of fascism, Paul abandoned his pacifism and supported the British war effort.[9]
Creation of the Woodcraft Folk (1925)
[edit]After World War I Paul had become deeply involved with scouting and related youth movements. He left the Scouts to join the Kibbo Kift Kindred but after a dispute with the Kibbo Kift leader, John Hargrave in 1925, some south London co-operative groups challenged Hargrave's authoritarian tendencies. The dispute was over his refusal to recognise a local group called "The Brockley Thing". The result was that in 1925 Paul and some other members broke away to form a new group, the Woodcraft Folk (which is still active).
Although the Woodcraft Folk was the work of several people, Paul— its most eloquent member and its first leader— came to be seen as its founder and representative.[8]
World War II
[edit]During the Second World War Paul served in the Middle East with the Army Educational Corps, and also taught at Mount Carmel College. When Simone Weil died in Ashford, Kent, in August 1943 Paul paid £12 for a burial plot. This event is commemorated in his poem 'Lady Whose Grave I Own'.[10]
The war prompted Paul to return to his childhood Christian faith. He recorded his spiritual journey in his book The Annihilation of Man (1944), which received the Atlantic Award for literature in 1946. It had been nominated for the award by T. S. Eliot.
After the Second World War Paul became an active member of the Church of England. He moved away from the radically orientated Woodcraft Folk, and later became a professional clergyman. His most significant act within the Church was the production of his report on "The deployment and payment of the clergy" (1964), which led to extensive modernisation of the Church's organisational structure.
He was employed as tutor at the Ashridge College of Citizenship (1947–8), and later as Director of Studies at Brasted Place Theological College (1953–7). Paul served as lecturer in ethics and social studies at Queen's College, Birmingham (1965–70), and on the General Synod (1970–5).
Later years
[edit]During the first half of the 1980s Paul was writer in residence at the College of St Paul and St Mary, Cheltenham, occupying a basement flat (accompanied by a black and white cat) in Shurdington Road. During this time he mentored young college and local writers through organized group readings, and co-edited the college poetry magazine, Cresset, to which he contributed his poetry, including Meditations on the Four Quartets.
In 1984 Paul bequeathed or sold his personal library, and students Kim Lidstone and Angus Whitehead catalogued the library before it was moved. One memorable discovery was a paperback edition of Richard von Krafft-Ebing's "Psychopathia Sexualis".[11]
According to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography,[2] Paul spent his later years living in Madley, Herefordshire. He died in Cheltenham General Hospital on 8 July 1985, after a heart attack.
Influences
[edit]During the first half of the 1980s Paul gave a series of talks on his life and the books that had affected him most profoundly. These included:
- Charles Dickens, Great Expectations, a novel that Paul read annually. He claimed to have read every Dickens novel by the age of ten.
- Rilke, The Notebook of Malte Laurids Brigge. Rilke's Duino Elegies also had a profound effect on Paul's own poetry and thinking.[12]
- Boris Pasternak, Dr Zhivago – which Paul considered a[clarification needed] a major novel of the twentieth century, resonating with his own visit to Moscow in 1931.
- The writings of Richard Jefferies, a nineteenth-century nature essayist and mystic almost certainly inspired Paul's initial imaginings of the Woodcraft Folk.[13]
- A series of experimental novels of Henry Williamson.
- Paul was proud to consider himself a surviving contemporary of Thomas Hardy.
In talks Paul recalled burning a large collection of his poetry as a young man, to his later regret, and he noted that, at almost eighty, he was able to recall minute details from the first twenty years of his life but almost nothing from the years between 1925 and 1945. He recalled T. S. Eliot's friendship and support, and fiercely disputed David Miall's suggestion that Eliot was sympathetic with fascism .
Works
[edit]- "Pipes of Pan; Poems" (1927)
- "The Ashen Stave, Songs etc" (1928)
- "The Folk Trail; An Outline of the Philosophy and Activities of Woodcraft Fellowships" – Woodcraft Folk leaders manual (Noel Douglas, 1929); on the title page Leslie is described as "Little Otter; Headman of the Woodcraft Folk."
- "The Green Company" (The C. W. Daniel Co., 1931)
- "A Green Love, and Other Poems" (1931)
- "Fugitive Morning" (Dennis Archer, 1932) – early novel
- "Two One-Act Plays: 'Augustus Intervenes'; 'The Picnic Party'" (1933)
- "Periwale: His Odyssey" (Dennis Archer, 1934) – early novel
- "Co-operation with the USSR; A Study of the Consumers' Movement" (1934)
- "Story Without End; The Junior Book of Co-operation" (1935)
- "The Training of Pioneers: The Educational Programme of the Woodcraft Folk" (1936)
- "Men in May" (1936) – early novel based on the events of the 1926 General Strike
- "The Republic of Children; A Handbook for Teachers of Working Class Children" (Allen & Unwin, 1938)
- "The Annihilation of Man" (1945)
- "The Living Hedge" (1946)
- "Heron Lake" (1948) – diary of a year spent in the Norfolk countryside.
- "The Soviet Union" (1948)
- "The Meaning of Human Existence" (1949)
- "Portrait of an Angry Saint; The Poet Peguy" (1949)
- "The Age of Terror" (1950) – on Stalinist Russia.
- "Angry Young Man" (1951)[14] – autobiography. The title, pluralised, subsequently became a label for a generation of 1950s British writers, including Kingsley Amis and Colin Wilson, and (over-broadly) applied to authors of "kitchen sink dramas".
- "Exile and Other Poems" (1951)
- "Sir Thomas More" (1953)
- "The English Philosophers" (1953)
- "The Adventure of Man, Geographies" (1954)
- "The Jealous God; Three Meditations on Christian Discipline" (1955)
- "The Boy Down Kitchener Street" (Faber & Faber, 1957) – a novel based on Leslie's childhood in London. Jacket design by Edward Ardizzone.
- "Nature into History" (1957)
- "Persons and Perception" (1961)
- "Son of Man; The Life of Christ" (1961)
- "Hot House" (1961)
- "Values in Modern Society" (1962)
- "The Transition from School to Work; a Report Made to King George's Jubilee Trust and Industrial Welfare Society" (1962)
- "Traveller on Sacred Ground" (1963) – journal of his field trip to the Middle East to research 'Son of Man'.
- "The Deployment and Payment of Clergy" (1964)
- "Alternatives to Christian Belief" (1967)
- "The Death and Resurrection of the Church" (1968)
- "Coming to Terms with Sex" (1969)
- "Eros Rediscovered; Restoring Sex to Humanity" (1970)
- "Man's Understanding of Himself" (Hale Memorial Sermon) (1971)
- "Journey to Connemara and Other Poems" (1972)
- "A Church by Daylight; A Reappraisement of the Church of England and its Future" (1973)
- "The Waters and the Wild" (1975) – novel set during the Second World War about two young boys in an East Anglian village.
- "First Love; A Journey" (1977)
- "Rural Society and the Church; the Herford Consultation" (1977) [with Anthony Russell, Laurence Reading, eds.]
- "O Pioneers" (1978) – poetry inspired by time spent in America
- "Bulgarian Horse" (1978) – a Cold War thriller.
- "Springs of Good and Evil; Biblical Themes in Literature" (1979)
- "The Early Days of the Woodcraft Folk" – a historical pamphlet (undated, believed written between 1975 and 1980)
- "The Secret War Against Hitler" (1984)
References
[edit]- ^ Labour and the Countryside: the Politics of Rural Britain, 1918–1939 by Clare V. J. Griffiths. Oxford University Press, 2007 (pgs. 98-9)
- ^ a b *W. H. Saumarez Smith, 'Paul, Leslie Allen (1905–1985)’, rev., Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
- ^ Kitchener Street, 15.
- ^ Angry Young Man, 15.
- ^ The books that Paul read during this period include Mark Rutherford's 'The Revolution in Tanner's Lane', Barbellion's The Journal of a Disappointed Man and Hale White's The Autobiography of Mark Rutherford.
- ^ Paul met James Ramsay MacDonald and Harold Laski while working as a canvasser in the 1923 elections in Tottenham.
- ^ In 1984 he recalled being one of the journalists caught up in the Kitchener coffin hoax.
- ^ a b Derek Wall, Green History : A Reader in Environmental Literature, Philosophy and Politics Routledge, 1993. ISBN 041507925X (pp. 228–229 232–34)
- ^ a b c Martin Ceadel, Pacifism in Britain, 1914–1945 : the defining of a faith. Oxford : Clarendon Press ; 1980.ISBN 0198218826 (p. 294, 303)
- ^ Later, in 1958, he also arranged for a tombstone and memorial.
- ^ Angus Whitehead, Personal recollections of Leslie Paul, Cheltenham, 1983-5.
- ^ For an earlier reference to Rilke's novel, see Angry Young Man, 13.
- ^ For earlier references to Jefferies writings, see "Angry Young Man", 12–13.
- ^ "Angry young man – Leslie Paul".