The captivity : for mixed chorus and piano,
- C12/11.
- File
- 1976
Part of The Tŷ Cerdd Archive,
Ink score, dated April-June 1976.
words by Alun Lewis.
The captivity : for mixed chorus and piano,
Part of The Tŷ Cerdd Archive,
Ink score, dated April-June 1976.
words by Alun Lewis.
Proof copies of Alun Lewis, In the Green Tree (London, 1948), containing illustrations by John Petts, and of John Ryder (ed.), Typographical Notebooks. I: John Petts (privately printed, London, 1948). [Papers of John Petts, see NLW MSS 23207-13].
Lewis, Alun, 1915-1944
Poem by Alun Lewis beginning 'It seemed to me Truth lay at rest'.
Lewis, Alun, 1915-1944
Letters from Alun Lewis to Richard Mills,
Letters, 1938-1944, from Alun Lewis, the Anglo-Welsh writer, to Richard (Dick) Mills.
Lewis, Alun, 1915-1944
Part of Welsh Arts Council Manuscripts
Twenty-eight letters written by Alun Lewis to Brenda Chamberlain, published, but not all in their entirety, by Brenda Chamberlain in Alun Lewis and the Making of the Caseg Broadsheets (London, 1970) (ff. 1-50). The editing of this volume was careless. Apart from minor inaccuracies and omissions, there is confusion of matter from different letters, indication of omitted matter where no omission exists and vice versa. Omitted matter amounts to about a quarter of the total. It may be classified thus: comment on Brenda Chamberlain's work mostly her poetry; trivial business concerning the broadsheets, trivial (not uninteresting) details about Alun Lewis's life; comment on Gweno. A number of omissions in the last category are of some significance; one in the letter of 3 Oct. 1943 deplorably obfuscates the meaning: '... the deep happiness of body and brain [that Gweno brought with her when at last she came to me]'. Also included are letters to Brenda Chamberlain from Vernon Watkins, 1942 (f. 51; Appendix II in the above volume), Gweno Lewis, 1944 (ff. 52-53), and John Rolph, 1956 (f. 54).
Lewis, Alun, 1915-1944
A song of sleep : for soprano solo, chorus and piano,
Part of The Tŷ Cerdd Archive,
Bound ink score, dated Spring 1974.
words by Alun Lewis.