Paul Potts (writer)


Paul Hugh Howard Potts, a British-born poet who lived in British Columbia in his youth, was the author of Dante Called You Beatrice, a memoir of unrequited love. One of the women treated in the memoir was Jean Hore, who married the writer Philip O'Connor but ended up confined as a schizophrenic for over fifty years until her death.
Potts was born in Datchet, Berkshire to Howard Potts, who had emigrated to Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, where he was a partner in a bakery and confectionery business, and his Irish wife Julia Helen Kavanagh. Arthur Potts's father, Dr Walter Jeffery Potts, had married Julia, daughter of Sir Thomas Branthwaite Beevor, 3rd Baronet; many descendants with the name 'Beevor-Potts' live in Canada.
He was educated in Canada, England and Italy, but from the early 1930s he lived in London. He frequented the Soho-Fitzrovia area where he would sell broadsheet copies of his poetry in the streets and pubs.
Among Potts's literary friends were George Orwell and the English poet George Barker. Potts's memoir of Orwell, "Don Quixote on a Bicycle", appeared in The London Magazine in 1957 and became a chapter of Dante Called You Beatrice. His 1948 essay “The World of George Barker” appeared in Poetry Quarterly.
In late middle-age, Potts was '...balding' with 'a stutter that he mixed with rapid blinking and an amused chuckle as he started a sentence', eventually becoming a dissolute figure 'barred from Soho pubs'. Potts died in 1990 of smoke inhalation from a fire in his bedroom; he had been house-bound for some years.