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Showing posts with label Mark McCawley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark McCawley. Show all posts

Saturday, 1 March 2025

Poet's first friends in rural Ontario

I recently received a request for memories of Bob and Joe Hill from a family member who is documenting Hill family history.  

 

It’s been almost 36 years since I hung out for a few months in the summer of 1989 with Joe and Bob Hill in Cordova Mines. I’m 76 now, which I believe is longer than Joe or Bob lived their hard lives in this area, so my memories are fading. It is enjoyable, though, to reminisce about their friendships.   

I bought the old (1905?) Cordova Mines house across the street from Joe and Onalee Sharpe. I believe I moved in on April 12, 1989, and there was a light snowstorm. This city boy didn’t know how to light the wood stove in the kitchen, so Joe came over and helped me stay warm that first night by showing me how. I slept on a cot in the kitchen by the woodstove for a week to keep warm!

Joe and Onalee were great neighbours. I might not have survived my first weeks and months in Cordova without their neighbourliness. Joe soon introduced me to Bob, and they had a brotherly rivalry over who could show me around their area. 

They’d take me fishing at Scott’s Dam, and I’d stuff a mickey of rum in my back pocket to impress them (and to dull the black fly and mosquito bites). I’ll never know which of their stories were about themselves, close friends and family, but told in the third person, and which were more mythical local anecdotes.

Case in point was Joe’s description of the Havelock bank robbery, which he seemed to know a lot about. Back then the roads in the area were more bush trails than roads, and there wasn’t a connecting trail across the lakes. The robbers stashed a canoe in advance of being chased by the cops down the back roads, left their (stolen?) getaway car, and paddled serenely across the lake to their second getaway car on the other side. The cops were left on the shore, scratching their helmets!   

A more minor anecdote about questionable local practices was Bob’s story of a fisherman who’d dump rusted bed springs in Scott’s Dam before bass season. All summer frustrated fishermen would snag on the springs and lose their expensive lures. In the fall the local guy would retrieve the springs with their haul of enough lures to fill his tackle box. 

Joe and Bob were about twenty+ years my senior at forty, and I soon became friends with other Cordovans closer in age, esp. Eric and Morley. Part of the local lingo were Eric’s bad puns - tackle box became tickle box ;  )-      

That first summer I’d sit with Joe and Onalee on battered lawn chairs in front of her house. I’d get a full biography of the passengers of every passing car. Eventually I realized that if Joe and Onalee didn’t know the driver, well, they’d just use their imaginations! Sitting there I learned that in rural Cordova, people mattered, even if you had to create their back story. In Toronto people were to be avoided - no eye contact on the streetcar or subway or you could be in trouble! 

Bob and I were both horse racing fans - standard breds, “the flats”, and we drove to Kawartha Downs several times. I could make small change betting at Greenwood Racetrack in Toronto, but in horse country Bob and I couldn’t outsmart the local horsemen. Not a chance ;  )- 

That’s enough scouring of my memory banks for this morning ;  )-


I moved to rural Ontario to be closer to nature. After all, I'm a haiku poet, and what the heck was I doing living in a world class city like Toronto ;  )-

Mark McCawley published a broadsheet of my haiku from that first spring and summer. Here are a few from Moon City, Greensleeve Publishing, 1989. 


on my birthday

swimming alone


big spiders

share the bathroom

cool


yellow raincoat

crazy eyes:

church recruitment


drinking rye

and writing book reviews

deep blue dusk


Chris, thank you so much, you made me laugh. I remember staying at their Cordova home a few times.  Thanks again, and if you recall anything more, I'm here.

Patrick Hill, from email

 

Thursday, 9 March 2023

most outrageous haiku poet ever (letter from Jones)

Following is a letter from Jones (Daniel Jones) which I'm sending to the Haiku Canada Archives. Among many interesting traits, Jones was a perfectionist, and in pre-computer days this letter is perfectly typed - no whiteout, no correctotape. Jones descended on the Toronto literary scene from Hamilton in the early 1980s. By 1994 he was dead at age 34 by suicide, a victim I feel of the frustrations of being an overly talented poet/writer/haikuist/publisher/editor/performer in a country which doesn't recognize such incredible talent early enough. 

I met Jones at a very informal poetry round robin reading at James Deahl's place. Jones made quite an entrance. He pulled out a bottle and spit the cork, then handed it around. When he read his first poem, I believe it was "things I have shoved in my ...", I fell over laughing. I asked if I could publish his poetry with my small Unfinished Monument Press, and quickly Jack and Jill in Toronto was printed. Soon after Wayne Ray published Jones's first and only collection of haiku, Two Cops Kissing, with his HMS Press.

Regarding his status as a unique haiku poet, Jones was known to have performed poetry readings buck naked. It is very painful reading through my correspondence file with Jones, but I hope to add more to the blog later. I've taken the liberty of highlighting Jones's paragraph about his perception of Haiku Canada.     

                                                             ~    ~    ~     

PO Box 794
Station P
Toronto,  Canada
M5S 2Z1

25 September 1989



Chris,

Thanks for the letter and for the haiku pamphlet. Apart from the spelling, McCawley did quite a nice job on it. Good news about the reading.

So thanks for the lead, I think. I sent this Mark McCawley 8 pieces from The Brave, and he took them all and made the same offer about the chaplbook. Now I'm a little dubious about the whole project. He seems earnest, if a little too much so. He sent me a long letter about "the spirit" of small press and his publication "credits", including such highlights as The Poetry Alberta Yearbook. Well, as you paraphrase Shaunt, "What the hey!" I guess.

I keep making these vague offers to visit via letter, and I'm wondering if I can hold up to them. I've never been so busy in my life. I mean it's been really insane. I haven't been able to visit Kevin Connolly since he moved 2 months ago, and he only moved to Queen and Woodbine. A visit does sound good, but I better not make any promises.

I had a letter from Tom Wayman who fled the city life and moved to the Slocan Valley.

Haiku Canada always makes me think of Team Canada in hockey. I passed Keith Southward on the street the other day, and he snubbed me as usual.


It seems I'm going to be organizing the Toronto Small Press Book Fair in the spring. That seems like a long time away, but  I have to start on it already. Stuart and Nick needed a rest, and no one else wanted to do  it, so I bit the bullet. I'm sharing the chores with someone named Glenn Gustafson, whom I've never met and is only 22. I really think I could do without this.

What's happening with UnfinMon? I seem to recall there were some problems with Shaunt and Jim I can't recall the details and don't really care. I guess in a few months I'l have to send out the stuff for the Book Fair. Should I send it to you? Ask Shaunt? Or just not bother? Just for my own interest, though, I am curious what's happening.

I hope you've got lots of wood for the stove. It's getting bloody cold already.

Best,

Jones

Friday, 27 September 2019

chapbooks and emails to new Canadian poetry bookstore, The Printed Word


The Printed Word (bookstore)
Dundas, Ontario


Hi James,

I'm so pleased to learn that there's a new generation of booksellers which is enthused about Canadian poetry and also the hippie era  :  )   I'm both things, in spades!

Today I mailed you a small (free) sample of the chapbooks I published from the mid-1970s thru the 1990s, just to pique your interest. Also it's fascinating that you know of jones (Daniel). I published his first chapbook, "Jack & Jill in Toronto", most of which was then included in his poetry collection with Coach House Press.

The chapbooks I mailed today are "Last Minutes Instructions" by Mark McCawley (he was also a small press publisher - he died a few years ago in his 50s), "Qaani Lore" by jw curry, who is a mainstay on the micro press scene, "Poets Who Don't Dance" by Shaunt Basmajian (he died over 30 years ago - stabbed and robbed while driving cab in TO), and "Dear Little Old Lady" by Helen Costain. This is just a random sampling of Unfinished Monument Press chapbooks, of which I had a few extra copies available.

Hopefully the hot link in my email below to Chris H is still live, and it'll fill you in on the list of readers and musicians I featured at the Main Street Library Poetry Series from 1979 to 1985.

Assuming the link is live, it will take you to my blog, riffs and ripples from zenriver gardens, where there's a lot of other info on my involvement with CanPo.

Great to get in touch (thanks to Chris H. for making the connection) -

Best wishes with the bookstore - it's a hard grind making a living in the Canadian cultural field.


peace & poetry power!

Chris (Faiers)

here's the link to the Idden Brook Press edition of "Eel Pie Island Dharma":

http://www.hiddenbrookpress.com/Book-NS-ChrisFairs-EelPie.html

                                                              ~   ~   ~   ~

 reply from James, owner of The Hidden Word bookstore

Hi Chris:

The package of Unfinished Monument arrived a few days ago and -- tho I looked at them immediately excitedly noting titles and authors and the fact that Jones edited Shaunt Basmajian's Poets Who Don't Dance which sounds like a Jones title (and the poems are closer to Jones than other Basmajian I've seen - admittedly mostly visual/concrete stuff) -- I've only now had a chance to sit down with them and type out my appreciation and say thank you for reaching out to me and sending a lovely sampling of your press.  I would definitely like to see more of what you have and discuss a purchase of valuables in your collection.  For example, any Jones that you have would be of interest.  I started collecting Jones a few years ago when I first acquired some of his chapbooks from Nelson Ball, and recently a friend traded in Jones' copy of Layton's Balls for a One-Armed Juggler with a stamp that has "Jones" in the middle, "My Book"  along the top and "Fuck Off" at the bottom.. this copy also Rochdale ex-libris). 

I'd love to have a copy or copies of your hippy poet memoir.  I'm sure of at least one buyer, and I would like read it myself.

I've got customers in front of me and work piling up so I will sign off.

thanks for the books!

James




photo from Google