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Search - List of Books by Milton Williams

Milton Vishnu Williams was born in 1936 on Plantation Lusignan on East Coast Demerara, Guyana. His family’s orientation towards a European style of life is reflected in his poems where Africa is a past to which there are few connections.

In his youth, before the racial conflicts of the early 1960s, Africans and Indians lived side by side on the estates, amicably if without close contact. Whilst even today many Afro-Guyanese remain ignorant of all but the superficialities of Indo-Guyanese culture, Milton Williams was different. Although not specifically aware at the time of his own part-Indian ancestry (his maternal grandfather was an Indian carter called Prince) he had a keen interest in the festivals and ceremonies of the Indians on the estates, the source of one of his most luminous poems, 0 Prahalad Dedicated Day. In later life Milton Williams added the name Vishnu to honour that grandfather, and he has read widely in the classics of Indian religion and philosophy.

What propelled both the development of his poetry and his exile was the political situation in Guyana in the 1950s. Until the election in 1953 of the People’s Progressive Party led by Dr. Cheddi Jagan, British Guiana had been ruled by a repressive oligarchy of expatriate Government officials, the Sugar Producers’ Association and a few representatives of the local middle class. Poems such as The Dancers and Sometimes A Man respond to those facts of colonial life. Industrial action by workers, particularly on the sugar estates, frequently ended in the armed and bloody intervention of the police. Sent Away And Asked To Keep Quiet records one such incident. However, it was not so much the politics of the PPP which attracted Milton Williams, but the fact that amongst its leaders was the poet Martin Carter, one of those detained by the British, after Jagan’s Government was dismissed and the constitution suspended. Williams sent some of his poems to Carter and was invited to meet the remarkable circle of writers and artists which included Carter and his brother Keith, Ivan Van Sertima, Wilson Harris and Sidney Singh, a profound critic. This group was unlike any other in the English-speaking Caribbean.

The circle Williams joined combined an appetite for Hegel and Marx, European metaphysical speculation, modernist writers such as Thomas Mann and Rilke, a symbolist rather than a realist aesthetic, but also a continuing contact with the folk-culture of the African and Indian villagers.

By 1960, Williams was in England, living at first in London and then moving by a strange process of chance to Newcastle where he lived until 1984.

For much of his life in England the great possibilities inherent in his talent and his intellectual curiosity were lost in periods of mental turmoil, of delusions, of being sectioned in psychiatric hospitals. However, in the periods of lucidity Williams continued to write poems of self-insight and, in particular, love poetry of crystalline beauty. In 1979, he published a small collection, Sources of Agony, and in 1986, Peepal Tree Press collected his poems in Years of Fighting Exile: Collected Poems 1955-1985.

This author page uses material from the Wikipedia article "Milton Williams", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0
Total Books: 2
The Party Book Everything You Need to Know for Imaginative NeverFail Entertaining at Home
Moments in Time 19731993
Moments in Time 19731993 (Paperback)
ISBN-13: 9781555237011
ISBN-10: 1555237010
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