<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><?xml-stylesheet href="http://www.blogger.com/styles/atom.css" type="text/css"?><feed xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom' xmlns:openSearch='http://a9.com/-/spec/opensearchrss/1.0/' xmlns:georss='http://www.georss.org/georss' xmlns:gd='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005' xmlns:thr='http://purl.org/syndication/thread/1.0'><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-884552915607297326</id><updated>2011-08-02T14:51:39.937-07:00</updated><title type='text'>WordFest</title><subtitle type='html'></subtitle><link rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#feed' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://knowltonwordfest.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/884552915607297326/posts/default?max-results=100'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://knowltonwordfest.blogspot.com/'/><link rel='hub' href='http://pubsubhubbub.appspot.com/'/><author><name>Bradford Murphy</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><generator version='7.00' uri='http://www.blogger.com'>Blogger</generator><openSearch:totalResults>2</openSearch:totalResults><openSearch:startIndex>1</openSearch:startIndex><openSearch:itemsPerPage>100</openSearch:itemsPerPage><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-884552915607297326.post-310055993886127747</id><published>2011-04-21T11:30:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2011-04-21T11:31:39.695-07:00</updated><title type='text'>WE HAVE MOVED !....like starting a new book :Knowlton Wordfest 2011</title><content type='html'>&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Please " BOOKMARK "&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; KNOWLTON WORDFEST 2011.Blogspot.com&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Thanks !&amp;nbsp; This year's event takes place&amp;nbsp; &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; from&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; July 15, 16th, 17th. See you there !&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/884552915607297326-310055993886127747?l=knowltonwordfest.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://knowltonwordfest.blogspot.com/feeds/310055993886127747/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://knowltonwordfest.blogspot.com/2011/04/we-have-moved-like-starting-new-book.html#comment-form' title='1 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/884552915607297326/posts/default/310055993886127747'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/884552915607297326/posts/default/310055993886127747'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://knowltonwordfest.blogspot.com/2011/04/we-have-moved-like-starting-new-book.html' title='WE HAVE MOVED !....like starting a new book :Knowlton Wordfest 2011'/><author><name>Bradford Murphy</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><thr:total>1</thr:total></entry><entry><id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-884552915607297326.post-2818444417128891530</id><published>2010-05-28T12:57:00.000-07:00</published><updated>2010-05-28T12:57:33.063-07:00</updated><title type='text'>John Glassco --- Wordsworth in Brome County---By Philip Lanthier</title><content type='html'>&lt;div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"&gt;&lt;a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_gtcaX-jWe8E/TAAf9C2-7tI/AAAAAAAAAE0/ePospOPqH58/s1600/DSC_3018.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"&gt;&lt;img border="0" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_gtcaX-jWe8E/TAAf9C2-7tI/AAAAAAAAAE0/ePospOPqH58/s320/DSC_3018.JPG" /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;John Glassco: Wordsworth in Brome County&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;It would seem appropriate to recall one of the area’s most creative  citizens, John (Buffy) Glassco (1909-1981). Glassco delivered the mail  during WWII along RRI just outside Knowlton. What he saw during his  rounds became material for the poems which would win him a Governor  General’s award in 1971. In the year 2009 it is unlikely that those who  deliver the mail by automobile down the back roads have the same  opportunities for turning their experience into poetry. But who knows,  they might just twitter a haiku…&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;These days, walking, jogging, cycling or driving along Brill Road which  leaves the Village of Foster and crosses through fields of wild flowers,  you gradually approach Mont Foster. This is a landscape of marvelous  vistas and prosperous looking houses, many of them second homes of  Montrealers. When the sun shines and the breeze blows in from the West,  this is a road which must have pleased the man after whom it is named,  John Brill, formerly of Fishkill, NY who arrived in the Townships in  1800 to make a new life for himself.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The road heads through West Bolton, going East then bearing South as it  rises to higher terrain on one of the approaches to Mont Foster. It then  stops abruptly without descending into the Glen, a road that looks as  if it’s going somewhere, but doesn’t. Towards the end of Brill Road you  can discover, nearly opposite each other, a ruined farm set back in the  woods and a recently constructed stone mansion of spectacular size and  elegance. The farm is straight out of Glassco’s world, a world still  evident here and there throughout the region where ruined buildings,  teetering barns, and tumbled-down stone walls running inexplicably  through forested hillsides stand in contrast to the often luxurious  homes of those who have come to the Townships seeking pastoral peace and  quiet.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Brill Road was one of the routes John Glassco traveled as a postman  during the war and which provides the title for a poem depicting the  road as a metaphor for a life moving blindly through a blizzard of  anxiety and rising to “impossible heights,” with little chance of  reaching a state of peace, at the other side of the mountain. He was not  jogging, that’s for sure, but perched on a sleigh behind a reluctant  horse who appears to doubt his master’s sanity.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Delivering mail gave Glassco a chance to observe the rural landmarks,  recall their stories, and begin to formulate his meditative poems on the  ravages of time and circumstance. On one level he was performing a  public service by keeping the rural population in touch with the  perilous outer world. Patricia Whitney, who studied Glassco’s life and  work, says that he not only delivered the mail but also milk from his  farm and catalogues for farmer’s wives which he hid in roadside hedges  lest their tyrannical husbands would find out what they planned to do  with their egg money. On another level, he was transforming what he saw  into poems of sad beauty, creating a poetic record of the farms  scattered throughout the countryside.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;This John Glassco is a far cry from the young man who set out for Paris  from Montreal in 1928 where he lived a life he later described as one of  “greed, sloth and sensuality.” His adventures among such literary  figures as Gertrude Stein, Ernest Hemingway, Morley Callaghan, Kay Boyle  and Robert McAlmon would eventually lead him to write his most  celebrated, entertaining and controversial book, Memoirs of  Montparnasse, part personal memoir, part fiction. It was in Paris that  he began his career as a writer of what he came to call “aphrodisiac  romances,” stories usually of dominant women and submissive young men.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;When he published a series of such narratives in the 1960s and 70s under  his own name, his notoriety was established. He was characterized as an  “elegant pornographer’ in a Weekend article by David Cobb, accompanied  by a full page colour photograph of Glassco in a black smoking jacket,  ascot tie, martini glass in hand, regarding the photographer with a sad,  worldly gaze. His interest in pornography as creator and collector  continued through his years in the Townships and got him into trouble  from time to time with Canadian authorities. His attempt to import  Richard Burton’s translation of The Arabian Nights was refused in 1946  because it was on a list of prohibited books. When he tried to import a  book entitled The Temple of Pederasty which pretended to be a  translation from the Japanese but which Glassco himself had written and  had published in California, the Excise Office in Granby refused to  allow it over the border because it deemed the book “immoral.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Glassco returned to Canada in 1932 suffering from a severe case of  tuberculosis. He survived a three stage thoracoplasty and in January of  1937 moved with his close friend Graeme Taylor to a white mansion just  outside of Knowlton, an edifice which he personified in a bleak poem as  the “scourge of hope,” “the sink of wealth,” and “the tomb of love.” The  poem reflects the childhood demons which haunted him for much of his  life. His father had beaten and sexually abused him and his brother  during their years growing up in Montreal. When his father died in 1945,  Glassco went through years of deep psychological distress and removed  himself for a while from social contact. His friend Taylor would later  drink himself to death in 1957, and the woman Glassco married in 1963,  Elma von Colman, a former ballerina with the Estonian National Ballet,  would eventually suffer from schizophrenia, starve herself down to 50  pounds and die miserably in a mental hospital.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Not until his marriage to Marion McCormick in 1974 did Glassco’s  personal life achieve a degree of equilibrium. In a poem dedicated to  her on the occasion of their marriage, Glassco writes of the journey  they would now take through a “transfigured landscape…where everything  is new.” By this time he had achieved distinction as a translator of  Québécois poetry and was hailed by poet Gérald Godin as “ministre  plénipotentaire de la poésie québécoise auprès le monde anglophone.” In  fact, Glassco was instrumental in helping Quebec emerge from what he  describes in an early poem (“Quebec Farmhouse”) as the “airless dark” of  a “race so conquered it has made/Perpetual conquest of itself.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Glassco’s view of Brome County was hardly that of a resident who had  found a slice of terrestrial paradise. As Fraser Sutherland remarked in  an essay on Glassco, if Paris had been paradise, the Townships were  somewhere East of Eden. Everywhere his horse took him, he saw signs of  personal tragedy and pain, either narratives which the ruined structures  evoke or his own personal troubles imposed subjectively on the passing  scene. Like those of us who seek the views afforded by mountain and  valley, Glassco too sought the high points in the landscape where he  could collect his thoughts and review his life as he does in his  meditative and elegiac poem, “Luce’s Notch.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The poems can be read as the biography of a man wracked by the terrors  of having lost his way in life, and that is the way most commentators  have approached his work. But they can also be read as something of a  documentary on the region during the war and shortly after. There is  little evidence that farming in the area suffered during those years or  that the landscape was as cluttered with ruins as a reading of Glassco’s  poetry might suggest. If anything, the war proved profitable to  farmers. It is simply that farms and farm buildings do indeed come and  go; houses in the country seem particularly susceptible to the ravages  of time and nature. But like so many rural communities, the personal  stories of the inhabitants are often ones of frustration and failure.  Glassco’s poems record the various rural figures: the stud groom who  would be a professional horseman, a screaming child in the arms of its  mother, a furtive bearded man glimpsed from the road, Corby the Trader  “happy collector of objects,” and the long gone Aaron Luce whose farm is  reduced to its stone foundations. When he imagines the voice of a dead  farmer in “Needham Cemetery what he hears is the platitudinous communal  “wisdom” to be passed on to the young: “All flesh is grass: so keep the  meadows up, /The hired man down, the women in their place.” And so the  poem goes on for five stanzas.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Caring for horses and delivering milk grounded Glassco in the region and  gave him a chance to observe the inexorable action of social and  environmental forces on human habitation. When he became a mailman and  made his rounds riding on a two-wheeled cart in summer, a cutter in  winter (automobiles and gasoline were hard to come by during the war),  he observed a rural landscape where decay, ruin, and narrowness of mind  prevailed. In “The Rural Mail,” he describes a “slow-motion world” cut  off from the “makers and masters of nations” where, as a farmer says,  “Far as I’m concerned, the war can go on forever!/A man can make a  dollar, with hens.” Ironically, as the poem concludes, the green valleys  are also filled with slaughter not only of calves and chickens, but of  the farmer’s children. Anything can happen in a world where the weather  replaces God in the lives of people.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;. Yet Glassco did involve himself in the community. When he was  nominated to the Foster Town Council in July of 1949, the minutes  identify him simply as “farmer.” He and Taylor had moved to Foster from  Knowlton and occupied a stone cottage with enough land for them to keep  horses. Glassco recalled how one day in the late forties he, Taylor and a  neighbour were exercising their horses in a field beside the  Waterloo-Knowlton highway when a group of riders from Waterloo arrived  and began to put on a performance which stopped traffic. Donations were  offered by the spectators (all of $9.41!) and were turned over to a  local church. Thus was born the Foster Horse Show with which Glassco was  associated throughout the 1950s.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;An authoritative biography of John Glassco has yet to be written, but  when it is it will have to take into account the intense and intimate  interaction between the rural world and poetic temperament. Like William  Wordsworth, Glassco sought meaning and consolation in the world of  nature, even though the meaning constantly eluded him. In “Luce’s  Notch,” a poem which first appeared in 1964, Glassco recalls a time 15  years past when he walked beside his straining horse up what is now  Paramount Road, then over the western shoulder of Foster Mountain and  down into St. Etienne de Bolton. From the height of land in the notch  above the Glen, he sees that beauty persists, but that he will not, that  his life, measured by “old Foster’s blind, tree-sprinkled head,” is “a  mere breath, a nothing, an illusion.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The inexorable action of time, decay were his great poetic subjects and  he saw in the Townships landscape abundant evidence to demonstrate how  easily human aspirations fall victim to pride, greed, incompetence and  misfortune. This is an occasion for sadness, or rage, or even satire,  and for wonderment too. Despite the silent ruins of deserted buildings  under Shefford Mountain sinking into the soil, tossed “Between God and  absurdity,” he loves them anyway, “ragged” though they may be. Nature,  for Glassco, did not offer an easy remedy for the pain of living; rather  it accentuated his “transient vision” and the frailty of all human  endeavor. His sense of place was profound and troubled, and nature  resisted his desire to possess it. Yet none of the poems could have been  written had Glassco not also been aware of the “mute, breathing beauty  of the world.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Like Brill Road, even now, the other side may not be accessible. There  are ruins and there are mansions, “the grandiose design /Must marry the  ragged thing,” the ultimate vision follows a wavering line through  extremes of creation and destruction.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;When he died, his ashes were cast over a stream in Foster. He could  never possess nature, but in the end nature possessed him.&lt;div class="blogger-post-footer"&gt;&lt;img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/884552915607297326-2818444417128891530?l=knowltonwordfest.blogspot.com' alt='' /&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</content><link rel='replies' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://knowltonwordfest.blogspot.com/feeds/2818444417128891530/comments/default' title='Post Comments'/><link rel='replies' type='text/html' href='http://knowltonwordfest.blogspot.com/2010/05/john-glassco-wordsworth-in-brome-county.html#comment-form' title='0 Comments'/><link rel='edit' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/884552915607297326/posts/default/2818444417128891530'/><link rel='self' type='application/atom+xml' href='http://www.blogger.com/feeds/884552915607297326/posts/default/2818444417128891530'/><link rel='alternate' type='text/html' href='http://knowltonwordfest.blogspot.com/2010/05/john-glassco-wordsworth-in-brome-county.html' title='John Glassco --- Wordsworth in Brome County---By Philip Lanthier'/><author><name>Bradford Murphy</name><email>noreply@blogger.com</email><gd:image rel='http://schemas.google.com/g/2005#thumbnail' width='16' height='16' src='http://img2.blogblog.com/img/b16-rounded.gif'/></author><media:thumbnail xmlns:media='http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/' url='http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_gtcaX-jWe8E/TAAf9C2-7tI/AAAAAAAAAE0/ePospOPqH58/s72-c/DSC_3018.JPG' height='72' width='72'/><thr:total>0</thr:total></entry></feed>
