Norman Lloyd Bright was born in 1910 and was educated at Shepton Mallet Grammar School and the University of Bristol, where he was awarded the degree of Bachelor of Arts in 1932 and a teaching diploma in 1933, though he never taught. Between the years of 1928 and 1933 he wrote poetry, though he suffered a nervous breakdown in 1933, and only started writing again in 1936. He was discharged from an Army Searchlight Unit as medically unfit in 1941, and then began a small mail-order business specialising in the sale of second-hand books.
He had some poems published during his lifetime, either in the periodical The Field, or in his pamphlet Six Poems (1938) and his collection published by Fortune Press, Time to Brood (1946). He prepared another collection, The Solitary, though this was never published. As well as poems, he kept a number of typewritten journals. He was tragically found dead on Canford Heath in October 1949.
From the guide to the Norman Lloyd Bright Papers, 1928-1949, (University of Bristol Information Services - Special Collections)