Thomson studied Classics at
King's College, Cambridge, where he attained First Class Honours in the
Classical Tripos and subsequently won a scholarship to
Trinity College, Dublin. At TCD he worked on his first book,
Greek Lyric Metre, and began visiting
Na Blascaodaí in the early nineteen-twenties. He became a lecturer and then Professor of Greek at
University College Galway. He moved back to England in 1934, when he returned to King's College, Cambridge, to lecture in Greek. He became a professor at
Birmingham University in 1936, the year he joined the
Communist Party of Great Britain. Thomson pioneered a Marxist interpretation of
Greek drama. His
Aeschylus and Athens (1941) and
Marxism and Poetry (1945) won him international attention. In the latter book, he argued a connection between the
work song and
poetry; and that pre-industrial songs were connected to
ritual.
Richard Seaford has written that Thomson was 'the greatest Hellenist of his generation'. Thomson befriended and was an important influence on
Alfred Sohn-Rethel and his theory of the genesis of occidental thought in
Ancient Greece through the invention of
coining. He was also a friend of
Ludwig Wittgenstein's. ==Connections with the Blasket Islands==