Glyn Jones was born in
Merthyr Tydfil in 1905 into a Welsh-speaking household. Despite Welsh being his family language he was educated in English, as were all attending mainstream education in Wales in the first half of the 20th century. Jones gained a place at Cyfarthfa Castle Grammar School, and by the time he left secondary education, he had all but lost his ability to speak Welsh fluently. However, he re-taught himself Welsh in later life, although his literary work was always in English. After leaving Cyfarthfa Grammar, he gained a place at St Paul's College in Cheltenham. From an early age Jones was a devout Christian; his parents being Welsh Nonconformists. Jones attended Sunday School as a child and in his later life he was a member of Minny Street Congregational Chapel in Cardiff. even when many of his contemporary authors rejected religion. On leaving full-time education Jones found work as a teacher, leaving Merthyr to take up a post in
Cardiff, where the poverty of his pupils profoundly disturbed him, and informed his political position as a socialist. Although a left-wing thinker, Jones was never a member of the
Labour Party; in his later life he was sympathetic to the aims of
Plaid Cymru. In 1935, he married Phyllis Doreen Jones, to whom all his books were dedicated. His earliest poetry was published in 1933 in
The Dublin Magazine, and in 1935, on the suggestion of his friend
Dylan Thomas, he wrote a collection of short stories, entitled
The Blue Bed. The collection included tales located in undefined, almost mystical locations, and others retailing Welsh village life in a comic and highly visual way. He received a remarkable critical assessment from reviewers in London. One of the tales from
The Blue Bed, "I was Born in the Ystrad Valley", tells of an armed Communist insurrection and was born from his own experiences of life in the Cardiff slums. His initial writings were heavily influenced by the fellow Welsh author
Caradoc Evans, although
The Blue Bed did not carry the harsh tones of Evans's work. During the
Second World War Jones registered in 1940 as a
conscientious objector. This decision saw him dismissed from his teaching post by Cardiff Education Committee, although he found another teaching job in
Glamorgan soon afterwards. ==Literary career==