After moving to
Hornsey, Hidden founded a monthly series of pub
poetry readings at the
Lamb and Flag, Covent Garden, the first being on 9 June 1966. It ran to the early 1970s.
Eddie Linden became involved as an organiser, and a group "Workshop Two" of poets arose from these events. Of Workshop Two it was said that its "foremost raison d'être" was to provide a "remedy for what its founder diagnosed in
Labour Monthly as the real literary disease at the time, i.e. "the creative writer's lack of audience"." Hidden was Chairman of
The Poetry Society, from 1968 to 1971. One of his actions was to propose (successfully) a
Civil List pension for
Edgell Rickword.
Workshop Press Hidden set up Workshop Press, at 2 Culham Court, Granville Road in
London N4. It is known particularly for the quarterly magazine
New Poetry (its title from 1974) for which Hidden became General Editor.
New Poetry ceased publication in 1981, while the Press continued, and the run ended in 1981.
New Poetry continued a series begun in 1967 as ''Writer's Workshop
, which Hidden edited with John Pudney and the teacher Michael Johnson (1936–1972). Hidden introduced the first issue, writing that Writer's Workshop
"was formed to bring poet and audience together." Guest editors included: Ivor Cutler; G. S. Fraser; John Horder (1936–2017); Edward Lucie-Smith; Charles Osborne; William Plomer; Anthony Rudolf; Jon Stallworthy; and Philip Toynbee. In his "Kryptos" editorial in the final issue 51/52 of New Poetry
, Hidden wrote that it was "the leading British poetry magazine", with an annual sale of 11,000 copies. With many well-known contributors such as Jeni Couzyn, it continued to publish unknown poets. An anthology Hidden Talent: the Workshop poets'', edited by Dick Russell, was published in 1993. Hidden wrote the introduction to
Madonna of the Unknown Nation by
A. L. Hendriks, published by the Press in 1974. While primarily for poetry, Workshop Press published in 1971 the novel
Poilu by
Chris Searle. ==Political candidate==