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Author: Sebastian Hayes
Sebastian
Hayes spent an idyllic childhood in Africa where his father was a lay missionary,
and spent his early days more or less exclusively alongside black people.
The conflicting appeals of ‘primitive’ life and civilization,
likewise of religious mysticism and the life of the senses, have always
been central themes in his life and thinking.
He was eventually sent to a minor English public school and got a scholarshsip
to read English at Wadham College, Oxford. He wasted his time at Oxford — though
sometimes this can be a fruitful thing to do — and nearly didn’t
last out the course. He spent his days, or rather nights, either with a precious
group of poets and aesthetes or alternatively a dissipated set wearing their
hair long and experimenting with drugs, several of whom died young or ended up
in prison like Mr Nice. After a hilarious spell teaching ‘Liberal Studies’ to
hairdressers at the London College of Fashion, he moved over to Paris with the
vague idea of ‘becoming a writer’ and, more especially, living the
bohemian life enjoyed there in an earlier era by Hemingway, Scott Fitzgerald
and others. But at this time Paris was no longer at the forefront of the West’s
long awaited cultural revolution — the hot areas were by then California,
Amsterdam and London. Instead of living it up he got sucked into the May ’68
student revolution and became temporarily an earnest political activist — he
even at one time considered becoming a terrorist à la Meinhof and Baader
but very fortunately never made it that far. Two years later, like so many other
young French fed up with waiting for the world revolution, he moved down to the
South of France to live in a commune. The experience was a total fiasco socially
and economically and, as was typical of the time, experimenting with ‘free
love’ ended up with an acrimonious break-up with his French companion and
first wife, Hélène. However, during this period he acquired some
worthwhile manual skills, and learned the painful lesson that when people live
together without any rules or authority the result can be quite hellish. (Since
then he has been more on the Right than the Left politically inasmuch as such
terms have any meaning at all these days.)
He remained in rural France for some years, deeply impressed by the life-style
of many of the traditional paysans, but he saw that this world of economic
self-sufficiency and masculine self-confidence was doomed by the wholesale
commercialisation of life that is the main feature of the present era. He
eventually returned to England in order to study mathematics which
he had decided was essential if one wanted to understand the world. For
the next twenty or so years he earned a living doing gardening and patio
design in and around London, but his real work, as he saw it, was trying
to discover the meaning of life and this took him into theoretical physics,
meditation, mysticism and philosophy. He has come to entirely reject the
idea that mathematics is any sort of a window on ‘ultimate reality’ :
our basic instincts and trans-personal memories are probably a less fallible
guide than the meaningless formulae of higher mathematics or the glib doctrines
of contemporary rationalism (Dawkins et al.). The Romantics saw clearer and
deeper into the nature of man, and perhaps even the universe as well, than
the Enlightenment sceptics whose brainchild is the current soulless, materialistic
society.
Reflections on this and similar themes are the basis of two collections
of poems, Origins and Far Cries (available from the
author), a collection of philosophic folk-tales, The
Foundling and Other Stories (1992),
also a modern tragedy/thriller about someone who believes she has
been given a mission to change the world The
Chosen One. Sebastian
Hayes has also published two light-hearted plays for children and numerous
articles in mathematical journals. An experienced actor and storyteller,
he periodically gives performances of his folk-tales at different sites
in Dorset. In 2007 he published a new translation of Rimbaud’s “Une
Saison en Enfer”, complete with Notes and a lengthy re-evaluation
of Rimbaud Rimbaud Revisited
1968 – 2006. This year (2008) he has
brought out a volume of dramatic monologues The Portrait
Gallery (Brimstone Press 2008) which includes pieces from Alan Turing, Amy Johnson,
the last Ming Emperor and various other historical and imaginary personages.
He has written a screenplay set in Paris during the Algerian war, Footbridge
across the Seine, and is currently working on a book on the foundations
of mathematics aimed at the ‘intelligent
layman’.
On Sebastian
Hayes’ website you
will find various items of interest such as the first eight chapters
of his SF novel, The Web of Aoullnnia, some of the stories from
The Foundling, the lyrics of a couple of songs he has written,
pieces of ltierary criticism and articles on philosophic and mathematical
topics.
Publications by Sebastian Hayes • Contact
Sebastian Hayes
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