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User:Neil McDermott/Thurso Berwick (Morris Blythman)

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Morris Blythman
An image of Blythman in 1960s
An image of Blythman in 1960s
BornRobert Morris Blythman
1919 (1919)
Inverkeithing, Fife, Scotland
Died6 January 1981(1981-01-06) (aged 62)
Edinburgh, Scotland
Pen nameThurso Berwick
OccupationPoet
Language
  • Scots
  • English
NationalityScottish
Literary movementScottish Renaissance
Spouse
Marion Paterson
(m. 1946)
ChildrenJoanna Blythman

Morris Blythman (1919–1981), also known by his pen name Thurso Berwick, was a poet, song maker, schoolteacher, folk revivalist, publisher and political activist. He is considered one of the architects of the Scottish Folk Revival alongside his wife Marion Blythman, Hamish Henderson and Norman and Janey Buchan. As an activist he was primarily concerned with Scottish nationalism, republicanism and the broad, unaligned, popular protest to the siting of the Polaris nuclear weapons system in the Holy Loch.

As a poet he published exclusively under his pen name, Thurso Berwick – conceived to represent his ambition for a political solidarity that would span Scotland from Thurso in the north to Berwick in the south. His published poetic output, somewhat in the "Synthetic Scots" style of Hugh MacDiarmid, was initially regarded in the mainstream of Scottish modernism alongside luminaries such as Edwin Morgan.Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page). Hamish Henderson considered Blythman a member of 'The Clyde Group' which included MacDiarmid, John Kincaid, George Todd, T. S. Law and Alexander Scott.Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page). However, like Henderson, Blythman would latterly be drawn primarily into political song-making seeing himself as participating in a "'sub-literary' tradition of partisan and often scurrilous satirical verse and song, which has enlivened every conflict and controversy in Scottish history."

Morris is the father of journalist and writer Joanna Blythman.

Early life

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Blythman was born in Inverkeithing. He married his wife Marion in Glasgow in 1946 and soon after while both were working in Aberdeenshire they met Arthur Argo.

Blythman was instrumental in organising the meeting in Glasgow commemorating the 25th anniversary of the death of the Scottish Republican leader John Maclean held on Saint Andrew's Day 1948. 'The Clyde Group', Sydney Goodsir Smith, Young Communist League Choir and Glasgow Unity Theatre.Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page). Blythman described Henderson's John Maclean March performed at the Glasgow meeting as "the first swallow of the [folk] Revival". Henderson would later repay the compliment "".

His involvement in the 1951 Edinburgh People's Festival Ceilidh was seminal in forming the Edinburgh People's Festival.

Bo'ness Rebels Literary Society

His Ballad and Blues folk club begun in 1952 or 53 and held at Allan Glen's School in Glasgow was an early example of the folk club format in Scotland.Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page).

Republican activism

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In the early 1950s, Blythman created a series richly sardonic, comic songs to celebrate the 1950 removal of the Stone of Scone. These new songs used humour and a bitingly satirical wit to construct an invective designed to ridicule his political opponents. Blythman found the songs used well-known tunes. It was a creative approach that Blythman would return to repeatedly and that would come to define him.

American folklorist Alan Lomax visited Glasgow in June 1951 to record Blythman singing many of these new songs.Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page). This visit was one leg of a much wider itinerary orgainsed by Henderson that included visits to Sorley MacLean, John D. Burgess and Flora MacNeil.Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page).

In 1952, Blythman published his new songs in a collection Sangs o’ the Stane. While the majority of the songs were Blythman's the collections also included contributions by Goodsir Smith, Henderson, MacDiarmid, Norman MacCaig, John McEvoy and T. S. Law.Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page).

The coronation of Elizabeth II provided Blythman with his next opportunity for satirical song making. His Coronation Coronach (originally titled Limey Lizzie) took issue with Queen Elizabeth adopting the royal style of Elizabeth the Second – Scotland had not previously had a monarch of that name as Elizabeth I had been Queen of England and Ireland only. The song would later become widely popular as The Scottish Breakaway and be recorded by The Dubliners, Hamish Imlach and Ray Fisher. Sky-High Joe similarly celebrated the Pillar Box War that occurred when Elizabeth's royal cypher, 'EIIR', appeared on Scottish post boxes.Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page).

Anti-polaris activism

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Blythman conceived the strongly satirical folk protest against the siting of the Polaris nuclear weapon programme in the Holy Loch. Henderson described him as ‘the unrivalled chief and brigade-major of the anti-Polaris balladeers’.Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page). The different aspects of this protest were carried out with a number of coadjutants under a range of campaigning aliases. The Glasgow Song Guild published and printed pamphlets containing the protest songs they had made, while the Anti-polaris Singers would distribute the pamphlets at the numerous protests held at Holy Loch in 1962 and lead the singing on the march. The whole, unaligned protest group would later be dubbed the Glasgow Eskimos by Blythman, reputedly referencing a quote by Captain Richard Boyer Laning (1918–2000) of the USS Proteus but more likely made up by Blythman.

The anthem of this protest was Ding Dong Dollar. Set to the tune of Ye cannae shove yer granny aff a bus with the repeated refrain "O ye canny spend a dollar when ye're deid", the song was a satire on the local community's eagerness to realise the financial benefits of having the American Navy docked nearby.

Blythman's collaborators in the songmaking and on the march included his wife Marion, singer Josh MacRae, Jim McLean, Freddie Anderson, Nigel Denver, Matt McGinn, T. S. Law, Alastair McDonald, Cilla Fisher, Hamish Henderson, his friend John Mack Smith and numerous others.

Selected outputs

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Poetry and song

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As Thurso Berwick:

  • Fowrsom Reel with John Kincaid, George Todd and F. J. Anderson, (Glasgow 1949)
  • Ballad of the four 'conspirators' (1950s)

As Scottish National Congress:

  • Sangs o’ the Stane with Hugh MacDiarmid, Sydney Goodsir Smith and others (1952)

As Glasgow Song Guild with Marion Blythman and others:

  • Ding Dong Dollar – Anti‑Polaris Songs pamphlet in 8 editions (1961–1962)
  • Ding Dong Dollar: Anti-Polaris and Scottish Republican SongsFolkways Records (1963)
  • Rebel Ceilidh Song Book '67 (1966)

Edited books

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  • Homage to John MacLean with T. S. Law (1973), The John MacLean Society
  • The Socialist Poems of Hugh MacDiarmid with T.S. Law (1978), London: Routledge & Kegan Paul

References

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