In 1944, Watson Taylor inherited £2,000 from an uncle, which prompted him to consider the possibility of producing a
surrealist review. His planned title for it was
Free Unions/Union Libres, in homage to the love poem
libre Union libre by
André Breton, the
French writer and poet, and co-founder of surrealism. Watson Taylor hoped that he would be able to obtain help from
Express Printers. Its help could be invaluable because it could obtain the high-quality paper that he wanted which otherwise would have been extremely difficult for him to procure. And of course it could print the review. By the end of 1944, Watson Taylor had collated all the contents that he needed for the review, including prose text, poems and illustrations. All that remained was to receive the design for the cover that
Birmingham-based surrealist painter
Conroy Maddox had promised. However, then two unexpected related events occurred. First, early one Sunday morning,
policemen from the
Special Branch of
Scotland Yard raided Watson Taylor's flat. Watson Taylor recounted that they were not interested in him but in
John Olday, who had written a
Freedom Press Forces Letter which was sent to the subscribers of the anarchist journal
War Commentary. The policemen didn't find Olday in the flat. Instead they found a mass of typescripts, photographs and artwork that Watson Taylor had been assembling for
Free Unions/Union Libres that was on his desk which they took away for further inspection as 'potentially subversive anarchist propaganda' and which were later declared to be 'coded messages and as such not to be released'. Second, at the end of the year, the editors of
War Commentary: Richards, Berneri, Sansom and
John Hewetson, were arrested by police officers from the Special Branch on a charge of ‘incitement to disaffection’, ostensibly for distributing ant-war leaflets to soldiers at
Waterloo Station who were about to entrain for embarkation to the
Middle East. Watson Taylor stood bail for Sansom. All the editors apart from Berneri were jailed for nine months, despite the valiant attempts that Watson Taylor made in his capacity as the
treasurer of the
Freedom Press Defence Committee. In July 1946, a policeman returned to Watson Taylor his typescripts, photographs and artwork. Richards and Sansom had been released. And Watson Taylor had edited
Free Unions/Unions Libres. Consequently, the review was finally printed with the technical assistance of Sansom and Berneri. It was a 48-page bilingual publication which comprised forty-eight contributions from various authors.
Marcel Jean, the French surrealist, described it as follows: Michael Remy (2019) observed: 'the review can be seen as a manifesto, produced in a communal spirit, and gathering anarchists (most of Taylor's friends, such as F.J. Brown and Philip Sansom) together with Trotskyists (Benjamin Péret, for example), so that it should constitute a conduit for surrealist tenets.' However, the review turned out to be its sole issue. Remy commented that it 'strikes a strangely unachieved, unfinished note.' Watson Taylor sent a copy of
Free Unions/Unions Libres to Breton, in
Paris. Breton was delighted with it. Consequently, Watson Taylor went to Paris to meet him, his friends and the members of the French surrealist group. However, a
power struggle arose in Paris between two factions of the movement there, from which Watson Taylor disassociated himself. Shortly afterwards in 1947,
The International Surrealist Exhibition was held in Paris, which was the last occasion for an appearance of the English group of surrealists. The appearance of the group comprised its contribution to a published work on surrealism which was entitled
Déclaration du groupe surrréaliste en Angleterre. The Declaration was written by
E.L.T. Mesens and
Roland Penrose, and was signed by, among others, Sansom and Watson Taylor. American
academic Paul C. Ray (1971) observed that the declaration was 'a tacit admission of the failure of the English surrealists to maintain any kind of productive cohesiveness', which he attributed to 'the individualism, the eccentricity even, of the English ... one of the reasons given eleven years later for the failure of the movement in England.' Ray also observed that the declaration concludes 'with a re-affirmation of devotion to surrealist principles as stated by Breton in his interview in
View, his prolegomena to a third manifesto, his "Position of Surrealism between the Wars", and in Benjamin Péret's
Le Déshonneur des poètes.' ==Pataphysics==