CLASSIFICATION
Swallow ID:
1299
Partner Institution:
Concordia University
Source Collection Label:
SGWU Reading Series-Concordia University Department of English fonds
Series:
The Poetry Series
Sub Series:
SGWU Reading Series-Concordia University Department of English fonds
ITEM DESCRIPTION
Title:
Christopher Levenson at Sir George Williams University, The Poetry Series, 10 March 1972
Title Source:
Cataloguer
Title Note:
"CHRIS LEVINSON TAPE #1 OF 2 MASTER I006-11-104.1" written on the spine of the tape's box. CHRIS LEVINSON refers to Chris Levenson. LEVINSON is misspelled. "I006-11-104.1" written on sticker on the reel. "CHRIS LEVENSON TAPE #1 OF 2 MASTER 3-72--012-7 3 3/4 ips 1/2 track I006/SR104.1" written on the front of the tape's box.
"CHRIS LEVINSON TAPE #2 OF 2 MASTER I006-11-104.2" written on the spine of the tape's box. CHRIS LEVINSON refers to Chris Levenson. LEVINSON is misspelled. "I006-11-104.2" written on sticker on the reel. "CHRIS LEVENSON TAPE #2 OF 2 MASTER 3-72--012-7 3 3/4 ips 1/2 track I006/SR104.2" written on the front of the tape's box.
Language:
English
Production Context:
Documentary recording
Genre:
Reading: Poetry
Identifiers:
[I006-11-104.1, I006-11-104.2]
Rights
CREATORS
Name:
Levenson, Christopher
Dates:
1934-
Role:
"Author",
"Performer"
Notes:
Poet, editor and translator Christopher Levenson was born in London, England in 1934. He studied at Cambridge University, the University of Bristol and at the University of Iowa, where he received his Master’s degree in 1970. Levenson edited Poetry from Cambridge (Fortune Press) in 1958 and was a contributor to New Poets, 1959: Iain Chrichton Smith, Karen Gershon, Christopher Levenson (Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1959) for which he won an Eric Gregory Award in 1960. His first book of poetry, Cairns, was published in 1969 in England by Chatto & Windus Press, followed by Stills in 1972, published by the same press. Levenson emigrated to Canada in 1968 and taught Creative Writing and Comparative Literature at Carleton University until 1999, becoming an Adjunct Professor. He then published Into the Open (Golden Dog Press, 1977) and The Journey Back (Sesame Press, 1978) which won the Archibald Lampman Award. Levenson has spent much time living in the Netherlands and in Germany, and translated both Seeking Hearts Solace (Aliquando Press, 1981) and Light of the World (Netherlandic Press, 1982). Arc Magazine was founded in 1978 with Michael Gnarowski, and Levenson served as main editor until 1988. In 1981, Levenson founded the Arc Reading Series in Ottawa, which ran for ten years. Levenson then published Arriving at night (Mosaic Press, 1986), Half Truths (Wolsak & Wynn, 1990) and Duplicities: New and Selected Poems (Mosaic Press, 1993). Levenson co-founded and served as series editor of the Harbinger Poetry Series at Carleton University Press from 1994-1999, and was a Reviews Editor for Literary Review of Canada in 1997 and English Studies in Canada from 1998-2002. After retiring from Carleton University in 1999, he has taught at the University of St Petersburg, Russia (2002) and Kohinoor Business School in Indian (2004-2005). His most recent publications include The Bridge (Buschek Books, 2000) and Local Time (StoneFlower Press, 2006).
CONTRIBUTORS
MATERIAL DESCRIPTION
Recording Type:
Analogue
AV Type:
Audio
Material Designation:
Reel to Reel
Physical Composition:
Magnetic Tape
Extent:
1/4 inch
Playing Speed:
3 3/4 ips
Track Configuration:
Half-track
Playback Mode:
Mono
Generations:
Master
Tape Brand:
Scotch
Sound Quality:
Good
Recording Type:
Analogue
AV Type:
Audio
Material Designation:
Reel to Reel
Physical Composition:
Magnetic Tape
Extent:
1/4 inch
Playing Speed:
3 3/4 ips
Track Configuration:
Half-track
Playback Mode:
Mono
Generations:
Master
Tape Brand:
Scotch
Sound Quality:
Good
DIGITAL FILE DESCRIPTION
File Path:
files.spokenweb.ca>concordia>sgw>audio>all_mp3
Duration:
00:22:51
Size:
54.9 MB
Content:
chris_levenson_i006-11-104-2.mp3 [File 2 of 2]
Christopher Levenson
00:00:00
Resumes reading "The Facts of Life" [from Stills].
Christopher Levenson
00:00:59
And another poem that comes from the same sort of period, as I said, I like finding poems, and this one I found in the window of a pharmacy, this time they had notices saying 'watch for these danger signs', they were danger signs of cancer, and I call this little poem, which is, as I say, a political poem, so I won't explain the metaphor any further, "Introduction to Cancer Diagnosis".
Christopher Levenson
00:01:32
Reads "Introduction to Cancer Diagnosis" [from Stills].
Christopher Levenson
00:02:17
Another poem, "Epitaph for a Killer", I think you will probably remember the incident this starts from. Charles Whitman
going up the University library tower
in Austin
, Texas and just picking a few people off with his telescopic lens gun. And the thing that struck me when I read these reports, as it so often happened with Richard Speck
and all those other sort of, mass killers, that people said, 'oh, but he was such a nice boy, such an ordinary boy' you know, 'such a decent lad'. You know, how could anyone so ordinary, you know if he had long hair, or if he'd been a hippie, we would have expected it. But you know, because they didn't go 'round the little- labels on them, they were expected to have conformed completely, and of course they didn't. "Epitaph for a Killer".
Christopher Levenson
00:03:32
Reads "Epitaph for a Killer" [from Stills].
Christopher Levenson
00:04:49
I always forget until I finish reading that poem that that last line is not self-explanatory. It's a disease--I think it's called Sickle disease--Pardon? [audience member addresses Levenson]. Sickle Cell Disease
, okay. Which apparently affects mainly African Negroes, and this is some sort of deficiency in the blood quite simply, but something which is totally inexplicable in the genes anyway. Alright, another, one more sort of pseudo or quasi political poem, this one is called "Boreland Burlap". Again, I don't know if you know exactly what I am referring to, but I think the poem explains it sufficiently, the way you get trees transplanted whole nowadays.
Christopher Levenson
00:06:05
Reads "Boreland Burlap".
Christopher Levenson
00:07:05
And now, a section of poems, well, I've put ironically, self-ironically, "The Solution" I mean, having presented some political problems--of course, there are no solutions. What I've tried to do in some of the poems I'm going to read now is simply to capture certain textures, or to suggest certain qualities that I admire, or certain aspects of character. The first, well I think probably the only rock poem I'm going to read this evening, called "Fossil".
Christopher Levenson
00:07:57
Reads "Fossil" [from Cairns].
Christopher Levenson
00:08:50
Then, a short little poem called "Moss", I've got to find it. Well, come back to that in a minute as they say on CBC
. Oh here we are, I think, no. Yes, there we are, "Moss".
Christopher Levenson
00:09:22
Reads "Moss".
Christopher Levenson
00:09:44
And now, "Skyscraper".
Christopher Levenson
00:09:54
Reads "Skyscraper".
Christopher Levenson
00:10:22
"Mediation on Trees". This too, part of it is found, so to speak, found of all places, in 'Life’
. The magazine 'Life', an article about a Japanese wood carver, and I'll try to indicate by the tone of my voice, which are the quotations, the rest of it's me of course. "Meditation on Trees".
Christopher Levenson
00:11:03
Reads "Meditation on Trees" [published later in The Journey Back].
Christopher Levenson
00:12:57
I just realized, I mentioned to one or two people that I was going to read a poem called "Ottawa" and I haven't read it, so I'll slip it in now.
Christopher Levenson
00:13:07
Reads "Ottawa".
Christopher Levenson
00:13:41
Another poem called "The Face of Holland", again concerned with certain characteristics, here I'm trying to identify national characteristics and the various sort of puns, hereto--I think the only thing I need to explain perhaps are the polders of course the land that originally reclaimed by the sea and now enclosed by dykes. I think the rest of it's self-explanatory.
Christopher Levenson
00:14:19
Reads "The Face of Holland" [published later in The Journey Back].
Christopher Levenson
00:15:47
I think I'll read three more poems if you bear with me, these come under the general heading of 'Art', really the relationship of art to life, though this first one is at least, would-be light poem, called "The Quartet", to Carleton, where I teach now. We have a series of concerts in the winter, and most of them are pretty good but one particular one wasn't and it set me thinking about the whole marvelous artificiality of chamber music in a way.
Christopher Levenson
00:16:37
Reads "The Quartet" [from Stills].
Christopher Levenson
00:18:14
Then, a poem called "Watch the Birdie" which is about the cost of art in human terms. If you know what a sea urchin is like in its natural and in its final state, final [unintelligible] state, it'll help. You know they're all, like, sort of hedgehogs or porcupines and you have to scrape all the spines off and then gauge the insides out, but that's described in lurid detail.
Christopher Levenson
00:19:02
Reads "Watch the Birdie" [from Stills].
Christopher Levenson
00:20:18
That sounds a bit pretentious, I'm afraid, those last four words in Latin, but it means "you also", or "you likewise", and I know gulls' cries don't really sound like that but, that seemed to me the briefest most concise way of making that point at the end of the poem. Finally, a poem which attempts to link love and art. Called "Bathysphere", or rather the kind of knowledge involved in both.
Christopher Levenson
00:21:11
Reads "Bathysphere" [published later in Into The Open].
END
00:22:51
Notes:
Christopher Levenson reads from Cairns (Chatto and Windus, 1969) and Stills (Chatto and Windus, 1972), as well as poems published later in books like Into the Open (Golden Dog Press, 1977) and The Journey Back (Sesame Press, 1978).
00:00- [Recording starts mid-sentence] Reads “Notes for Foreign Students”.
00:59- Introduces “Introduction to Cancer Diagnosis” [INDEX: found poems, ‘political poem’]
01:32- Reads “Introduction to Cancer Diagnosis”
02:17- Introduces “Epitaph for a Killer” [INDEX: Charles Whitman, Austin Texas, Richard Speck, people’s impressions of serial killers]
03:32- Reads “Epitaph for a Killer”
04:49- Explains last line of “Epitaph for a Killer”, introduces “Boreland Burlap” [INDEX: Sickle Cell disease, transplantation of trees]
06:05- Reads “Boreland Burlap”
07:05- Introduces section of poems called “The Solution” and “Fossil”
07:57- Reads “Fossil”
08:50- Introduces “Moss” [INDEX: CBC]
09:22- Reads “Moss”
09:44- Reads “Skyscraper”
10:22- Introduces “Meditation on Trees” [INDEX: found poem, Life Magazine, article on a Japanese wood carver]
11:03- Reads “Meditation on Trees”
12:57- Introduces “Ottawa”
13:07- Reads “Ottawa”
13:41- Introduces “The Face of Holland” [INDEX: national characteristics, Dutch Polders]
14:19- Reads “The Face of Holland”
15:47- Introduces “The Quartet” [INDEX: ‘Art’, Carleton University’s series of concerts in winter, chamber music]
16:37- Reads “The Quartet”
18:14- Introduces “Watch the Birdie” [INDEX: cost of art in human terms, sea urchin, hedgehogs, porcupines]
19:02- Reads “Watch the Birdie”
20:18- Explains last line of “Watch the Birdie”, introduces “Bathysphere” [INDEX: Latin definition, linking love and art]
21:11- Reads “Bathysphere”
22:51.34- END OF RECORDING
Content Type:
Sound Recording
File Path:
files.spokenweb.ca>concordia>sgw>audio>all_mp3
Duration:
00:35:25
Size:
85 MB
Content:
chris_levenson_i006-11-104-1.mp3 [File 1 of 2]
Introducer
00:00:00
About seven years ago, our lives intersected for about two years at the University of Iowa
, where Christopher
, along with two or three other poets suddenly arrived, in that middle state
in the United States
, with not just English accents, but a whole body of literatures and languages behind them. Christopher was not just in the poetry workshop, but was doing a lot of translations from German and Dutch, writing his own poetry, was a kind of formidable character with these obscure languages, at least obscure to me at the time. He has since come on, after doing his Ph.D. at Carleton
where he is an Assistant Professor of English. His third book of poems, Stills, is being published in the next few weeks by Chatto and Windus
, and should be looked for at your bookstores. He's asked for it to come but it hasn't arrived yet. So without any further delay, Christopher Levenson.
Christopher Levenson
00:01:54
Good evening. Trying to decide what I'm going to read this evening, presents the same sort of problems that it always does, when one's being asked to divide oneself up into certain sections, decide which poems you like best, and you know, you love them all, and don't want to make any choices. And to find some headings, some pigeonholes. Well, I'm not very good at this, but I'll start off with a few poems about the United States, about Canada
, starting off with places, and then move on to some slightly more personal ones, before the interval. Alright, the first poem I want to read is called "Modus Vivendi", which, it sounds a bit affected, having a foreign language titles, but I felt this said a little bit more than simply 'way of life' because ‘modus vivendi’ implies something very transitory, and that was one of the aspects of my first impressions at least of American life, that struck me very forcibly, this really came out of my very first day in the States, traveling from New York
to Chicago
by train.
Christopher Levenson
00:03:42
Reads "Modus Vivendi" [from Cairns].
Christopher Levenson
00:05:20
Then, a poem that will be in stills called "Metropolis". Well I think this is self-explanatory, and in fact one of reasons why I like reading aloud, is because a fair number of my poems are self-explanatory and don't have to say too much about them. So I won't. "Metropolis".
Christopher Levenson
00:05:49
Reads "Metropolis" [from Stills].
Christopher Levenson
00:06:57
That, I suppose, really brands me as--emotionally speaking, as a European, because it's different here in Montreal
. I've not been to Quebec
yet, it's different in one or two places, but on the whole, you know, I find myself looking in vain for this sense of a centre. Now, a poem that I wrote not too long ago in Ottawa
. Called "Office", it's a shorter one. Sort this out a bit. Last time I gave a reading, somebody knocked water all over it. Here we go.
Christopher Levenson
00:07:54
Reads "Office".
Christopher Levenson
00:08:15
And then one which is my main claim so far, I suppose, to writing a Canadian poem, "Horse Sleigh", certainly it's not one that I could have written anywhere else. One of the kids is at nursery school and they take them out each winter on a horse sleigh ride, and I went along. So, of course, it's not really about a horse sleigh. One word- half way through, the word 'revenants' these are ghosts that come back to their own--literally, their old haunts. And can't seem to keep away from the place. "Horse Sleigh".
Christopher Levenson
00:09:07
Reads "Horse Sleigh".
Christopher Levenson
00:09:57
Then, another poem, based pretty obviously I think on personal experience, in the States. It's called "A Bad Trip", not mine, somebody else's, but this would be, this I felt was sort of enough to keep me off it. Anyway, "A Bad Trip".
Christopher Levenson
00:10:34
Reads "A Bad Trip" [from Stills].
Christopher Levenson
00:12:26
Then, one which came a long, long time after I was actually told of this incident by my wife in fact, and it must be something like 1956, actually it happened, a carnival referred to is a German carnival, and I guess things have changed quite a bit since then. "Song of the Unmarried Mother".
Christopher Levenson
00:13:00
Reads "Song of the Unmarried Mother".
Christopher Levenson
00:14:28
Then maybe have a little bit of pseudo light relief before we go on. "Ballad of the Psycho-Analyst". Which is another, sort of relic, but again not a personal one, this started off as a fine number of my poems do from things people say to me. The first two lines here, "They took me across the river, they laid me up the hill", were almost exactly what somebody said. And I took it from there. Alright, "The Ballad of the Psycho-Analyst".
Christopher Levenson
00:15:07
Reads "The Ballad of the Psycho-Analyst" [from Cairns].
Christopher Levenson
00:16:54
And, I'll read a couple more, sort of more personal ones, I guess. Well, this isn't really, this poem called "Old Friend".
Christopher Levenson
00:17:16
Reads "Old Friend" [from Stills].
Christopher Levenson
00:19:11
And, "Maps". I've always been fascinated by maps and I find looking through my poems, certain images keep on recurring. One of them is that of maps, another one, as maybe you'll see later, is of stones, [unintelligible] and so on. And what I'm referring to in the first section here are these old maps where great chunks have come true and not known and so they just put in a zephyr, a wind, you know, or a dragon, or a dolphin or something like that to make up for their ignorance. "Maps".
Christopher Levenson
00:19:58
Reads "Maps" [from Stills].
Christopher Levenson
00:21:29
Then, a thing in this first part, I'll just read. One found poem, and then two excerpts from a sort of longer work in process. The found poem, I dedicate to Howard and [Marty (?)] Fink because that's where I found it. It's called the "Bowfoot Scale". The beaufort scale is simply an explanation in terms of miles per hour, I've left that column out, and in terms of symptoms so to speak of these words that you hear on the weather reports, calm, slight breeze and so forth. "Beaufort Scale".
Christopher Levenson
00:22:21
Reads "Beaufort Scale".
Christopher Levenson
00:23:31
[Laughter]. I dare say it's a found poem. It's not really mine. I get a lot of fun out of finding poems. Now these next two excerpts are from a poem which is tentatively entitled, "Hopkins in Piccadilly", it won't be called that in the end, it's just, it started off thinking what Gerard Manley Hopkins
would think of contemporary London
, but it soon left that idea behind and what it's going to be now is a poem in several sections about various aspects of London. Trying to use as many words in my poems that I don't normally use in poems, you know, or that one does not normally see used in poems, and so a lot of, words which are not normally part of my poetic vocabulary. I'm not trying to be arch or archaic or anything like that, simply to expand my vocabulary and, hope to, therefore, I can say new things. Now the two that I've got semi finished, or at least enough to read, one's called "Charing Cross Road", if you know London, England
, you'll know that this is the road in which you find both some very good book shops and a lot of very sleazy so called hygienic stores, and it's this aspect I'm concentrating on there, and then the second one is on Hyde Park
, with the idea of the public speakers and the orators. "Charing Cross Road" then.
Christopher Levenson
00:25:25
Reads "Charing Cross Road".
Christopher Levenson
00:26:34
That's as far as I've got with that bit so far. The next one, "Hyde Park", the Hyde Park Speaker's Corner
is what I'm thinking of particularly.
Christopher Levenson
00:26:47
Reads "Hyde Park".
Christopher Levenson
00:28:41
It's not really supposed to follow quite on from that, but a little bit later. "But still at least we have our language..."
Christopher Levenson
00:28:48
Resumes reading “Hyde Park”.
Christopher Levenson
00:29:08
That's as far as I've got with that section too for the moment. And I believe the custom is, sometimes, at least, here to have a sort of five or ten minute break and then we will have about another twenty minutes afterwards, if that's alright with you.
Unknown
00:30:22
[Cut or edit made in tape. Unknown amount of time elapsed].
Christopher Levenson
00:30:23
I'll read a few so called political poems, they're not really political in the normal sense, not sort of party political or anything like that, simply concerned about relationships between people in the community or sort of national attitudes, that sort of thing, more than specific political issues. Although this first one that I'm going to read, "Terrorist", comes, I think, fairly obviously from a particular situation, with which you here are particularly well acquainted. I was thinking, particularly of the FLQ
crisis
, but it could apply to any terrorist.
Christopher Levenson
00:31:31
Reads "Terrorist" [published later in The Journey Back].
Christopher Levenson
00:32:35
I suppose if I have a recurring theme in these quasi-political poems, it is that, the tyranny of the ideal if you like, the way in which we force things to become what we want them to become. Force ourselves to see things so that they fit into our pre-selected beliefs. Alright, a rather different sort of poem called "The Facts of Life". This too will be in the book.
Christopher Levenson
00:33:13
Reads "The Facts of Life" [from Stills].
END
00:35:25
Notes:
Christopher Levenson reads from Cairns (Chatto and Windus, 1969) and Stills (Chatto and Windus, 1972), as well as poems published later in books like Into the Open (Golden Dog Press, 1977) and The Journey Back (Sesame Press, 1978).
00:00- Unknown male Introduces Christopher Levenson [INDEX: University of Iowa, United States, translations from German and Dutch, Ph.D., Carleton University- Assistant Professor of English, Stills published by Chatto and Windus]
01:54- Christopher introduces “Modus Vivendi” [INDEX: selecting poems for reading, poems about United States and Canada, traveling from New York to Chicago by train]
03:42- Reads “Modus Vivendi”.
05:20- Introduces “Metropolis” [INDEX: process of reading out loud]
05:49- Reads “Metropolis”
06:57- Introduces “Office” [INDEX: European sentimentality, Montreal, Ottawa]
07:54- Reads “Office”
08:15- Introduces “Horse Sleigh” [INDEX: 'Canadian poem']
09:07- Reads “Horse Sleigh”
09:57- Introduces “A Bad Trip”
10:34- Reads “A Bad Trip”
12:26- Introduces “Song of the Unmarried Mother” [INDEX: German Carnival]
13:00- Reads “Song of the Unmarried Mother”
14:28- Introduces “The Ballad of the Psychoanalyst”
15:07- Reads “The Ballad of the Psychoanalyst”
16:54- Introduces “Old Friend”
17:16- Reads “Old Friend”
19:11- Introduces “Maps” [INDEX: images in his poetry: maps and stones]
19:58- Reads “Maps”
21:29- Introduces “Bowfoot Scale” [INDEX: found poem, Howard and Marty Fink [?], weather reports]
22:21- Reads “Bowfoot Scale”
23:31- Introduces “Charing Cross Road” [excerpts from “Hopkins in Piccadilly”] [INDEX: Gerald Manley Hopkins, London, poetic vocabulary]
25:25- Reads “Charing Cross Road”
26:34- Introduces “Hyde Park” [also excerpt from “Hopkins in Piccadilly”]
26:47- Reads “Hyde Park”
29:08- Calls a break
30:33- Resumes from break, introduces “Terrorist” [INDEX: ‘Political poems’, FLQ crisis]
31:31- Reads “Terrorist”
32:35- Introduces “The Facts of Life” [INDEX: quasi-political poems, tyranny of the ideal]
33:13- Reads “The Facts of Life”
35:25.57- END OF RECORDING
Content Type:
Sound Recording
Title:
Christopher Levenson Tape Box 1 - Back
Credit:
Drew Bernet
Content Type:
Photograph
Title:
Christopher Levenson Tape Box 1 - Front
Credit:
Drew Bernet
Content Type:
Photograph
Title:
Christopher Levenson Tape Box 1 - Spine
Credit:
Drew Bernet
Content Type:
Photograph
Title:
Christopher Levenson Tape Box 1 - Reel
Credit:
Drew Bernet
Content Type:
Photograph
Title:
Christopher Levenson Tape Box 2 - Front
Credit:
Drew Bernet
Content Type:
Photograph
Title:
Christopher Levenson Tape Box 2 - Spine
Credit:
Drew Bernet
Content Type:
Photograph
Title:
Christopher Levenson Tape Box 2 - Reel
Credit:
Drew Bernet
Content Type:
Photograph
Title:
Christopher Levenson Tape Box 2 - Back
Credit:
Drew Bernet
Content Type:
Photograph
Dates
Date:
1972 3 10
Type:
Production Date
Source:
Supplemental Material
Notes:
Date specified in written announcement "Georgian Happenings"
LOCATION
Address:
1455, Boul de Maisonneuve Ouest, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Venue:
Hall Building Room H-651
Latitude:
45.4972758
Longitude:
-73.57893043
Notes:
Location specified in written announcement "Georgian Happenings"
CONTENT
Contents:
chris_levenson_i006-11-104-1.mp3 [File 1 of 2]
Introducer
00:00:00
About seven years ago, our lives intersected for about two years at the University of Iowa
, where Christopher
, along with two or three other poets suddenly arrived, in that middle state
in the United States
, with not just English accents, but a whole body of literatures and languages behind them. Christopher was not just in the poetry workshop, but was doing a lot of translations from German and Dutch, writing his own poetry, was a kind of formidable character with these obscure languages, at least obscure to me at the time. He has since come on, after doing his Ph.D. at Carleton
where he is an Assistant Professor of English. His third book of poems, Stills, is being published in the next few weeks by Chatto and Windus
, and should be looked for at your bookstores. He's asked for it to come but it hasn't arrived yet. So without any further delay, Christopher Levenson.
Christopher Levenson
00:01:54
Good evening. Trying to decide what I'm going to read this evening, presents the same sort of problems that it always does, when one's being asked to divide oneself up into certain sections, decide which poems you like best, and you know, you love them all, and don't want to make any choices. And to find some headings, some pigeonholes. Well, I'm not very good at this, but I'll start off with a few poems about the United States, about Canada
, starting off with places, and then move on to some slightly more personal ones, before the interval. Alright, the first poem I want to read is called "Modus Vivendi", which, it sounds a bit affected, having a foreign language titles, but I felt this said a little bit more than simply 'way of life' because ‘modus vivendi’ implies something very transitory, and that was one of the aspects of my first impressions at least of American life, that struck me very forcibly, this really came out of my very first day in the States, traveling from New York
to Chicago
by train.
Christopher Levenson
00:03:42
Reads "Modus Vivendi" [from Cairns].
Christopher Levenson
00:05:20
Then, a poem that will be in stills called "Metropolis". Well I think this is self-explanatory, and in fact one of reasons why I like reading aloud, is because a fair number of my poems are self-explanatory and don't have to say too much about them. So I won't. "Metropolis".
Christopher Levenson
00:05:49
Reads "Metropolis" [from Stills].
Christopher Levenson
00:06:57
That, I suppose, really brands me as--emotionally speaking, as a European, because it's different here in Montreal
. I've not been to Quebec
yet, it's different in one or two places, but on the whole, you know, I find myself looking in vain for this sense of a centre. Now, a poem that I wrote not too long ago in Ottawa
. Called "Office", it's a shorter one. Sort this out a bit. Last time I gave a reading, somebody knocked water all over it. Here we go.
Christopher Levenson
00:07:54
Reads "Office".
Christopher Levenson
00:08:15
And then one which is my main claim so far, I suppose, to writing a Canadian poem, "Horse Sleigh", certainly it's not one that I could have written anywhere else. One of the kids is at nursery school and they take them out each winter on a horse sleigh ride, and I went along. So, of course, it's not really about a horse sleigh. One word- half way through, the word 'revenants' these are ghosts that come back to their own--literally, their old haunts. And can't seem to keep away from the place. "Horse Sleigh".
Christopher Levenson
00:09:07
Reads "Horse Sleigh".
Christopher Levenson
00:09:57
Then, another poem, based pretty obviously I think on personal experience, in the States. It's called "A Bad Trip", not mine, somebody else's, but this would be, this I felt was sort of enough to keep me off it. Anyway, "A Bad Trip".
Christopher Levenson
00:10:34
Reads "A Bad Trip" [from Stills].
Christopher Levenson
00:12:26
Then, one which came a long, long time after I was actually told of this incident by my wife in fact, and it must be something like 1956, actually it happened, a carnival referred to is a German carnival, and I guess things have changed quite a bit since then. "Song of the Unmarried Mother".
Christopher Levenson
00:13:00
Reads "Song of the Unmarried Mother".
Christopher Levenson
00:14:28
Then maybe have a little bit of pseudo light relief before we go on. "Ballad of the Psycho-Analyst". Which is another, sort of relic, but again not a personal one, this started off as a fine number of my poems do from things people say to me. The first two lines here, "They took me across the river, they laid me up the hill", were almost exactly what somebody said. And I took it from there. Alright, "The Ballad of the Psycho-Analyst".
Christopher Levenson
00:15:07
Reads "The Ballad of the Psycho-Analyst" [from Cairns].
Christopher Levenson
00:16:54
And, I'll read a couple more, sort of more personal ones, I guess. Well, this isn't really, this poem called "Old Friend".
Christopher Levenson
00:17:16
Reads "Old Friend" [from Stills].
Christopher Levenson
00:19:11
And, "Maps". I've always been fascinated by maps and I find looking through my poems, certain images keep on recurring. One of them is that of maps, another one, as maybe you'll see later, is of stones, [unintelligible] and so on. And what I'm referring to in the first section here are these old maps where great chunks have come true and not known and so they just put in a zephyr, a wind, you know, or a dragon, or a dolphin or something like that to make up for their ignorance. "Maps".
Christopher Levenson
00:19:58
Reads "Maps" [from Stills].
Christopher Levenson
00:21:29
Then, a thing in this first part, I'll just read. One found poem, and then two excerpts from a sort of longer work in process. The found poem, I dedicate to Howard and [Marty (?)] Fink because that's where I found it. It's called the "Bowfoot Scale". The beaufort scale is simply an explanation in terms of miles per hour, I've left that column out, and in terms of symptoms so to speak of these words that you hear on the weather reports, calm, slight breeze and so forth. "Beaufort Scale".
Christopher Levenson
00:22:21
Reads "Beaufort Scale".
Christopher Levenson
00:23:31
[Laughter]. I dare say it's a found poem. It's not really mine. I get a lot of fun out of finding poems. Now these next two excerpts are from a poem which is tentatively entitled, "Hopkins in Piccadilly", it won't be called that in the end, it's just, it started off thinking what Gerard Manley Hopkins
would think of contemporary London
, but it soon left that idea behind and what it's going to be now is a poem in several sections about various aspects of London. Trying to use as many words in my poems that I don't normally use in poems, you know, or that one does not normally see used in poems, and so a lot of, words which are not normally part of my poetic vocabulary. I'm not trying to be arch or archaic or anything like that, simply to expand my vocabulary and, hope to, therefore, I can say new things. Now the two that I've got semi finished, or at least enough to read, one's called "Charing Cross Road", if you know London, England
, you'll know that this is the road in which you find both some very good book shops and a lot of very sleazy so called hygienic stores, and it's this aspect I'm concentrating on there, and then the second one is on Hyde Park
, with the idea of the public speakers and the orators. "Charing Cross Road" then.
Christopher Levenson
00:25:25
Reads "Charing Cross Road".
Christopher Levenson
00:26:34
That's as far as I've got with that bit so far. The next one, "Hyde Park", the Hyde Park Speaker's Corner
is what I'm thinking of particularly.
Christopher Levenson
00:26:47
Reads "Hyde Park".
Christopher Levenson
00:28:41
It's not really supposed to follow quite on from that, but a little bit later. "But still at least we have our language..."
Christopher Levenson
00:28:48
Resumes reading “Hyde Park”.
Christopher Levenson
00:29:08
That's as far as I've got with that section too for the moment. And I believe the custom is, sometimes, at least, here to have a sort of five or ten minute break and then we will have about another twenty minutes afterwards, if that's alright with you.
Unknown
00:30:22
[Cut or edit made in tape. Unknown amount of time elapsed].
Christopher Levenson
00:30:23
I'll read a few so called political poems, they're not really political in the normal sense, not sort of party political or anything like that, simply concerned about relationships between people in the community or sort of national attitudes, that sort of thing, more than specific political issues. Although this first one that I'm going to read, "Terrorist", comes, I think, fairly obviously from a particular situation, with which you here are particularly well acquainted. I was thinking, particularly of the FLQ
crisis
, but it could apply to any terrorist.
Christopher Levenson
00:31:31
Reads "Terrorist" [published later in The Journey Back].
Christopher Levenson
00:32:35
I suppose if I have a recurring theme in these quasi-political poems, it is that, the tyranny of the ideal if you like, the way in which we force things to become what we want them to become. Force ourselves to see things so that they fit into our pre-selected beliefs. Alright, a rather different sort of poem called "The Facts of Life". This too will be in the book.
Christopher Levenson
00:33:13
Reads "The Facts of Life" [from Stills].
END
00:35:25
chris_levenson_i006-11-104-2.mp3 [File 2 of 2]
Christopher Levenson
00:00:00
Resumes reading "The Facts of Life" [from Stills].
Christopher Levenson
00:00:59
And another poem that comes from the same sort of period, as I said, I like finding poems, and this one I found in the window of a pharmacy, this time they had notices saying 'watch for these danger signs', they were danger signs of cancer, and I call this little poem, which is, as I say, a political poem, so I won't explain the metaphor any further, "Introduction to Cancer Diagnosis".
Christopher Levenson
00:01:32
Reads "Introduction to Cancer Diagnosis" [from Stills].
Christopher Levenson
00:02:17
Another poem, "Epitaph for a Killer", I think you will probably remember the incident this starts from. Charles Whitman
going up the University library tower
in Austin
, Texas and just picking a few people off with his telescopic lens gun. And the thing that struck me when I read these reports, as it so often happened with Richard Speck
and all those other sort of, mass killers, that people said, 'oh, but he was such a nice boy, such an ordinary boy' you know, 'such a decent lad'. You know, how could anyone so ordinary, you know if he had long hair, or if he'd been a hippie, we would have expected it. But you know, because they didn't go 'round the little- labels on them, they were expected to have conformed completely, and of course they didn't. "Epitaph for a Killer".
Christopher Levenson
00:03:32
Reads "Epitaph for a Killer" [from Stills].
Christopher Levenson
00:04:49
I always forget until I finish reading that poem that that last line is not self-explanatory. It's a disease--I think it's called Sickle disease--Pardon? [audience member addresses Levenson]. Sickle Cell Disease
, okay. Which apparently affects mainly African Negroes, and this is some sort of deficiency in the blood quite simply, but something which is totally inexplicable in the genes anyway. Alright, another, one more sort of pseudo or quasi political poem, this one is called "Boreland Burlap". Again, I don't know if you know exactly what I am referring to, but I think the poem explains it sufficiently, the way you get trees transplanted whole nowadays.
Christopher Levenson
00:06:05
Reads "Boreland Burlap".
Christopher Levenson
00:07:05
And now, a section of poems, well, I've put ironically, self-ironically, "The Solution" I mean, having presented some political problems--of course, there are no solutions. What I've tried to do in some of the poems I'm going to read now is simply to capture certain textures, or to suggest certain qualities that I admire, or certain aspects of character. The first, well I think probably the only rock poem I'm going to read this evening, called "Fossil".
Christopher Levenson
00:07:57
Reads "Fossil" [from Cairns].
Christopher Levenson
00:08:50
Then, a short little poem called "Moss", I've got to find it. Well, come back to that in a minute as they say on CBC
. Oh here we are, I think, no. Yes, there we are, "Moss".
Christopher Levenson
00:09:22
Reads "Moss".
Christopher Levenson
00:09:44
And now, "Skyscraper".
Christopher Levenson
00:09:54
Reads "Skyscraper".
Christopher Levenson
00:10:22
"Mediation on Trees". This too, part of it is found, so to speak, found of all places, in 'Life’
. The magazine 'Life', an article about a Japanese wood carver, and I'll try to indicate by the tone of my voice, which are the quotations, the rest of it's me of course. "Meditation on Trees".
Christopher Levenson
00:11:03
Reads "Meditation on Trees" [published later in The Journey Back].
Christopher Levenson
00:12:57
I just realized, I mentioned to one or two people that I was going to read a poem called "Ottawa" and I haven't read it, so I'll slip it in now.
Christopher Levenson
00:13:07
Reads "Ottawa".
Christopher Levenson
00:13:41
Another poem called "The Face of Holland", again concerned with certain characteristics, here I'm trying to identify national characteristics and the various sort of puns, hereto--I think the only thing I need to explain perhaps are the polders of course the land that originally reclaimed by the sea and now enclosed by dykes. I think the rest of it's self-explanatory.
Christopher Levenson
00:14:19
Reads "The Face of Holland" [published later in The Journey Back].
Christopher Levenson
00:15:47
I think I'll read three more poems if you bear with me, these come under the general heading of 'Art', really the relationship of art to life, though this first one is at least, would-be light poem, called "The Quartet", to Carleton, where I teach now. We have a series of concerts in the winter, and most of them are pretty good but one particular one wasn't and it set me thinking about the whole marvelous artificiality of chamber music in a way.
Christopher Levenson
00:16:37
Reads "The Quartet" [from Stills].
Christopher Levenson
00:18:14
Then, a poem called "Watch the Birdie" which is about the cost of art in human terms. If you know what a sea urchin is like in its natural and in its final state, final [unintelligible] state, it'll help. You know they're all, like, sort of hedgehogs or porcupines and you have to scrape all the spines off and then gauge the insides out, but that's described in lurid detail.
Christopher Levenson
00:19:02
Reads "Watch the Birdie" [from Stills].
Christopher Levenson
00:20:18
That sounds a bit pretentious, I'm afraid, those last four words in Latin, but it means "you also", or "you likewise", and I know gulls' cries don't really sound like that but, that seemed to me the briefest most concise way of making that point at the end of the poem. Finally, a poem which attempts to link love and art. Called "Bathysphere", or rather the kind of knowledge involved in both.
Christopher Levenson
00:21:11
Reads "Bathysphere" [published later in Into The Open].
END
00:22:51
Notes:
Christopher Levenson reads from Cairns (Chatto and Windus, 1969) and Stills (Chatto and Windus, 1972), as well as poems published later in books like Into the Open (Golden Dog Press, 1977) and The Journey Back (Sesame Press, 1978).
NOTES
Type:
General
Note:
Local connections:
According to the transcript, Levenson and Fink met at the University of Iowa. Since moving to Canada, Levenson’s primary focus has been on the promotion and study of Canadian literature, and he has served on many editorial boards and organized reading series to strengthen the Canadian literary community.
Type:
Cataloguer
Note:
Original transcript, research, introduction and edits by Celyn Harding-Jones
Additional research and edits by Sarah MacDonell & Ali Barillaro
Type:
Preservation
Note:
2 reel-to-reel tapes>CD>2 digital files
RELATED WORKS
Citation:
“Christopher Levenson”. The Writer’s Union of Canada, Members’ Pages. September 16, 2009.
Citation:
“Georgian Happenings”. The Georgian. Montreal: Sir George Williams University, 10 March 1972.
Citation:
Levenson, Christopher. Cairns. London: Chatto and Windus, 1969.
Citation:
Levenson, Christopher. Into the Open. Ottawa: Golden Dog Press, 1977.
Citation:
Levenson, Christopher. Stills. London: Chatto and Windus, 1972.
Citation:
Levenson, Christopher. The Journey Back. Windsor: Sesame Press, 1978.
Citation:
Stevens, Peter. "Levenson, Christopher". The Oxford Companion to Canadian Literature.
Citation:
"Christopher Levenson." Contemporary Authors Online; Detroit: Gale, 2001.