Aunt Polly

She was my mother’s sister, one of the five children born to my grandparents. Trained as a teacher via a scholarship she probably agreed with the old adage, “Spare the rod and spoil the child”. She was a competent pianist and also organist at the local Anglican church to which …

Names

A friend suggested I should type in my name on my Internet search engine. I did, hardly believing it would produce anything.   The first item it produced related to a John Finch who was a highly thought of London clockmaker in 1765, which might remotely connect, I thought, to my …

From John’s poetry collection ‘Before, During and After The War’

John joined the Merchant Navy at the age of 16 and sailed from Liverpool in 1941 North Atlantic 1942 Nothing you said As your hand lost its grip on mine And you drifted away into the cold darkness The little red light on your lifejacket Bobbing goodbye. Sharing our sixteen …

John Winant

John Winant. My life, living with the Epstein’s in Hyde Park Gate in 1946/47 when I was secretary /amenuensis to Jacob Epstein, the sculptor, acquired added interest when I met what today would be described as celebrities. They came, out of simple friendship, or in some instances to have their …

John Finch Reflects on Writing From Home at 95

At the age of 95 in the midst of the Corona-virus emergency, John reflects on ‘Working From Home’ WORK at HOME seems to be the current slogan on the television and on the media generally. In fact, for more than sixty years, I always mostly worked at home..   I work …

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