... he arrived in malmesbury when i was about twelve
he was a full-time controversialist and a part-time egoist who annoyed and upset quite a few people
but wherever i was concerned he was unsparingly generous and tolerant
... and i must surely have annoyed and upset him a few times
best of all, whilst my educators were numbing me with everything anodyne,
he introduced me at an early age to the appreciation of such things as ...
brecht and john osborne
richard avedon and bill brandt
hans coper and ben nicolson
ben shahn and jackson pollock
walking the hills and valleys with maps and marching with protestors
alan ginsberg and walt whitman
the civic trust and john betjeman
stanley kubrick and francois truffaut
... and the notion that anyone, however high and mighty, might occasionally be persuaded to listen to reason, or poetry
http://whitmanarchive.org/published/LG/1855/images/index.html
later ... i discovered his touchstones were Rousseau, and David Holbrook
http://www.guardian.co.uk/culture/2011/sep/01/david-holbrook-obituary