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    GRIFFIN POETRY PRIZE 2003

    Canadian Winner

    Click here to purchase Concrete and Wild Carrot 

    Book: Concrete and Wild Carrot
    Poet: Margaret Avison
    Publisher: Brick Books

    Click the book cover or title to purchase Concrete and Wild Carrot online.

    Click here to read and listen to an excerpt.

     

    Biography

    Margaret Avison

    Margaret Avison was born in 1918 in Galt, Ontario, raised in Regina, Calgary and Toronto, where she completed high school in 1936. She continued her studies at University of Toronto earning a B.A. in 1940 and an M.A. in 1963. Her work has been recognized with two Governor General’s Awards for Poetry (Winter and Sun and No Time), by three honorary doctorates and by an officership in the Order of Canada. One of the poems in Concrete and Wild Carrot (“Prospecting,” retitled from “An-astronomy”) was awarded first place in the category of the Canadian Church Press Awards for 2000. Her other publications include The Dumbfounding, sunblue, Selected Poems, A Kind of Perseverance (prose) and Not Yet but Still. She was most recently honoured with the the Leslie K. Tarr Award for outstanding contribution to Christian writing and publishing in Canada.

    The Porcupine’s Quill has published a collection of Margaret Avison’s in three volumes under the title Always Now. Volume One appeared in fall, 2003, Volume Two was released in fall, 2004 and Volume Three came out in February, 2005. Read more about the collection on the Porcupine’s Quill Web site. Avison’s most recent work is a new collection entitled Momentary Dark, published in early 2006.

    Margaret Avison died in July, 2007. Numerous moving tributes to her and her work have been published, including ones in the Vancouver Sun and the Globe and Mail.

    Judges’ Citation

    “If beauty, as Alfred North Whitehead defines it, is ‘a quality which finds its exemplification in actual occasions,’ and if beauty is more completely exemplified in ‘imperfection and discord’ than in the ‘perfection of harmony,’ then Margaret Avison’s Concrete and Wild Carrot is an occasion of beauty. Avison’s poetry is also alive in its sublimity and its humility: ‘wonder, readiness, simplicity’ – the gifts of perception Avison attributes to her Christian faith – imbue every poem in this book with a rare spirit of disorderly love. Margaret Avison is a national treasure. For many decades she has forged a way to write, against the grain, some of the most humane, sweet and profound poetry of our time.”

    Rising Dust

    The physiologist says I am well over
    half water.
    I feel, look, solid; am
    though leaky firm.
    Yet I am composed
    largely of water.
    How the composer turned us out
    this way, even the learned few do not
    explain. That’s life.

    And we’re in need of
    more water, over and over, repeatedly
    thirsty, and unclean.

    The body of this earth
    has water under it and
    over, from
    where the long winds sough
    tirelessly over water, or shriek around
    curved distances of ice.

    Sky and earth invisibly
    breathe skyfuls of
    water, visible when it
    finds its own level.

    Even in me?
    Kin to waterfalls
    and glacial lakes and sloughs
    and all that flows and surges,
    yet I go steadily,
    or without distillation climb at will
    (until a dissolution
    nobody anticipates).

    I’m something else besides.
    The biochemist does not
    concern himself with this.
    It too seems substance,
    A vital bond threaded on an
    as-if loom out there.
    The strand within
    thrums and shudders and twists.
    It cleaves to this
    colour or texture and
    singles out to a rhythm
    almost its own, again,
    anticipating design.

    But never any of us
    physiologist or fisherman
    or I
    quite makes sense of it. We
    find our own level

    as prairie, auburn or
    snow-streaming, sounds forever
    the almost limitless.

    From Concrete and Wild Carrot, by Margaret Avison
    Copyright © Margaret Avison, 2002

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    More about Margaret Avison

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    Photo credit: Joan Eichner

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