Raymond G. Taylor
Bio
Author living in Kent, England. Writer of short stories and poems in a wide range of genres, forms and styles. A non-fiction writer for 40+ years. Subjects include art, history, science, business, law, and the human condition.
Stories (623)
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Stranger on the shore. Content Warning.
It started out as a barely-remembered, hazy and confused dream about standing in front of a canvass, painting a seascape at night. The painting was very much a vague outline and I completely forgot about the dream as soon as I got up in the morning and drank my first cup of strong black coffee. It wasn't until about two weeks later that I had a second dream.
By Raymond G. Taylor2 years ago in Fiction
If music be... study notes
Students of English literature, Scottish dialect or Gaelic language should recognise the quotes from Robert Burns and William Shakespeare in my wee poem If music be the feud. For anyone finding the language and allusions obscure, these notes may help.
By Raymond G. Taylor2 years ago in Poets
Behold the member. Content Warning.
So, Sir Anthony Blair thinks "a woman has a vagina and a man has a penis" does he (Daily Telegraph, 17 June 2024)? I make no comment about the implications of this remark to the current heated transgender debates and online noise, nor about the former UK Premier's views generally. I make no political comment about these issues as I tend not to discuss politics and religion online.
By Raymond G. Taylor2 years ago in Men
Tea set by a suffragette . Top Story - June 2024.
Pankhurst is a name well known to the history of women’s suffrage. Who hasn't heard the name Emmeline Pankhurst, founder of the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU), an all-women organisation campaigning for the right to vote? The group that helped to achieve the right to vote for women in Great Britain and Ireland in 1918. Some know of her daughter Christabel, both being honoured by the Pankhurst memorial in Victoria Palace Gardens, London, right next to the UK Parliament buildings. Sylvia Pankhurst is notably not included in the monument. Why? Because she split with the WSPU to campaign against Britain's entry into First World War.
By Raymond G. Taylor2 years ago in Art














