In 1937 Duncan met
Ezra Pound, who encouraged him to found the "little magazine"
Townsman, 1938-1945. Of the 24 issues, numbers 21-24 (1944–45) appeared as
The Scythe, a title that signalled Duncan's increasing interest in agriculture and husbandry. Duncan was also a writer of short stories and a journalist. He wrote the film script for
Girl on a Motorcycle (dir. Jack Cardiff, 1968), which starred
Marianne Faithfull. His poetry was published at
Faber and Faber by
T. S. Eliot, who became a friend. In 1950, Faber and Faber published Duncan's,
The Mongrel and Other Poems. In this volume are included his verse interpolations into his adaptation of
Jean Cocteau's The Eagle Has Two Heads. In 1960 he published
The Solitudes a collection of poems that he dedicated to his favourite horse, Dil Fareb. In 1964 Duncan published
All Men are Islands, the first of a series of lively and sometimes contentious and contradictory autobiographies.
How to Make Enemies followed in 1968, and
Obsessed in 1977. A final controversial autobiography,
Working with Britten: A Personal Memoir appeared from Duncan's own Rebel Press in 1981 after being rejected by a mainstream publisher. In the late 1960s and early 1970s he worked on a long poem about science,
Man, in five parts (1970–74), and in 1978 he co-edited a collection of essays by leading scientists
The Encyclopedia of Ignorance with Miranda Weston-Smith, grand-daughter of the cosmologist
E.A. Milne. == Dramatic works ==