In the early 1930s, Howells dedicated a setting of one of Walter de la Mare’s miniatures, Bunches of Grapes, to his two children. In similarly light-hearted vein, Sea Urchins with texts by Gladys Balcomb describes a seaside holiday across ten movements. Two poetic meditations on Elizabeth texts—Sweet Content by Robert Greene and To Music Bent by Campion—also come from this decade. Howells lost his nine-year-old son to polio in 1935, and Piping down the Valleys Wild—William Blake’s depiction of a divine child asking the piper to continue to play—is the bittersweet offering of a grieving parent.
Howells composed fewer upper-voices partsongs after the Second World War. Featured among these are The Key of the Kingdom, another de la Mare text adapted from an old rhyme; Pink Almond, with a text by the Irish writer Katharine Tynan, in Sarabande form; and the delightful A Christmas Carol, to a text by 17th century writer George Wither, composed on Christmas Day in 1957.

