Dylan Thomas
Dylan Marlais Thomas (27 October 1914 – 9 November 1953) was a Welsh poet and writer whose oeuvre features densely lyrical verse and prose marked by rhythmic cadence, surreal imagery, and explorations of mortality, nature, and the human condition.[1][2] Born in Swansea to a middle-class family, Thomas left school at 18 without formal higher education and began publishing poetry in local journals before issuing his debut collection, 18 Poems, in 1934, which established his reputation for innovative, emotionally charged work.[3][2] His most celebrated pieces include the villanelle "Do not go gentle into that good night," urging resistance against death, and the radio play Under Milk Wood (1954, posthumous publication), a dreamlike portrait of a fictional Welsh village that showcased his dramatic talents and drew from his broadcasting experience with the BBC.[4][5] Thomas's career involved extensive reading tours, particularly in the United States, where his charismatic recitations of works like "Fern Hill" captivated audiences, though these trips exacerbated his chronic alcoholism and financial woes.[2][3] He died in New York at age 39 from pneumonia-induced cerebral edema, compounded by fatty liver disease linked to long-term heavy alcohol consumption, amid debates over whether medical interventions, including morphine administrations, hastened his decline.[6][7]Early Life
Childhood and Family Background
Dylan Marlais Thomas was born on 27 October 1914 at 5 Cwmdonkin Drive in the Uplands district of Swansea, Wales.[8] His father, David John Thomas (known as D.J.), born on 8 April 1876 and died on 16 December 1952, served as the senior English master at Swansea Grammar School, where he taught literature with passion and composed poetry himself.[9][8] D.J. Thomas, an atheist of Anglicized background, introduced his son to English poetry through recitations and readings at home, fostering an early appreciation for literature.[10] Thomas's mother, Florence Hannah Williams, born on 16 August 1882 and died in 1958, came from a Welsh-speaking family originating in the Llansteffan peninsula of Carmarthenshire.[11][12] The youngest daughter of George Williams, a railway inspector for the Great Western Railway, she married D.J. Thomas on 30 December 1903 and provided a protective, nurturing presence in the household.[13] Both parents maintained ties to Welsh culture, speaking the language, though the family resided in Swansea's primarily Anglophone Uplands suburb after relocating from rural areas.[14][15] Thomas had one sibling, an older sister named Nancy Marles Thomas, born on 2 September 1906, eight years his senior.[16] The family lived at 5 Cwmdonkin Drive, a semi-detached Edwardian house overlooking Cwmdonkin Park, from before Thomas's birth until he left at age 23.[14] In the 1921 census, both Thomas and his sister were recorded as bilingual in Welsh and English, reflecting the bilingual environment of their upbringing despite the English-dominant home.