Introducer- Stanton Hoffman
00:00:00.00
On behalf of the Poetry Reading Committee of Sir George Williams University I wish to welcome you to this, the fifth, in a series of poetry readings, given at this University during 1966-67. Tonight there will be readings by two poets living in Montreal, and members of the faculty of this University. There will be a fifteen minute intermission in between each reading. Roy Kiyooka was born in Moose Jaw Saskatchewan, he studied at the Provincial Institute of Technology and Art, the Instituto Allende in Mexico, and the University of Saskatchewan Emma Lake Workshops. He has had one-man exhibitions in Edmonton, Calgary, San Miguel D'Allende, Saskatoon, Regina, Toronto, Vancouver, Victoria, New York City and Montreal. He exhibited at the Sao Paulo Biennial, where he was one of four painters representing Canada, and where he received honourable mention and a Silver Medal. His most recent show was held last month at the Lane/Ling [spelling?] Galleries in Toronto. In 1964, his first volume of poems, Kiyoto Airs, was published by the Periwinkle Press in Vancouver. His second volume, Nevertheless, These Eyes is being published this month, in Montreal by Bev Leech. Ladies and Gentlemen, Mr. Roy Kiyooka.
Roy Kiyooka
00:01:25.58
[CUT.].start off this evening by reading a few poems from my earlier book, the one that Stan mentioned. These poems were written as a result of a summer in Japan, and they are very much occasional poems, they address themselves to the particular occasion of having been there, and they were meant in part to account for that experience of having been there, to my numerable friends in Vancouver. I'll begin by reading three very short little poems, they all relate to what should we call it, the various contexts in which I saw the sculptured image of the Buddha. The first one is called "Waiting Out the Rain".
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00:02:51.26
Reads "Waiting Out the Rain".
Roy Kiyooka
00:03:13.65
This is "Buddha in the Garden". Again, very brief.
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00:03:23.43
Reads "Buddha in the Garden".
Roy Kiyooka
00:03:47.99
This is "Sunday at the Temple".
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00:03:53.40
Reads "Sunday at the Temple".
Roy Kiyooka
00:04:20.22
And this is the image of a Buddha seen in the Kiyoto Museum, a reclining figure.
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00:04:30.24
Reads first line "Hovering, he is hovering, his eyes closed..."
Roy Kiyooka
00:05:01.82
Now the next is a sequence of four little poems, very much like the traditional Japanese poems called the Haiku. This is a sequence, the title of which is "The Stone Garden of Ryoanji". The first one goes like this:
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00:05:27.51
Reads first line "1. They whisper..."
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00:05:45.13
Reads first line "2. The boards..."
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00:06:07.54
Reads first line "3. White sand..."
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00:06:24.62
Reads first line "4. When each stone..."
Roy Kiyooka
00:06:49.49
Now this one is called "Children's Shrine", throughout most of the cities and towns and villages all over Japan you'll find way-side shrines, they're frequently just built into the wall in a very narrow street and people on whatever religious occasion come to worship there, this is a shrine particularly for children. And it goes like this:
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00:07:24.19
Reads "Children's Shrine".
Roy Kiyooka
00:08:41.94
Well this is rather a long sequence, once more very short poems, there are eleven of them, and the title of the sequence is simply "Higashiyama", now 'higashiyama' means, in English, 'east mountain'.
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00:09:22.00
Reads "1. Kneeling, she brought..."
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00:09:39.23
Reads "2. Oh the white pigeon..."
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00:10:04.28
Reads "3. You rise up..."
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00:10:20.97
Reads "4. She called Higashiyama..."
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00:10:38.58
Reads "5. Small comfort..."
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00:10:54.39
Reads "6. On Higashiyama..."
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00:11:13.54
Reads "7. Tonight, Higashiyama..."
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00:11:38.93
Reads "8. Beyond Higashiyama..."
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00:11:55.45
Reads "9. Put stone upon stone..."
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00:12:17.77
Reads "10. Tell me, Cid..."
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00:12:43.47
Reads "11. I have left..."
Roy Kiyooka
00:13:01.00
Well I'll go on to the last poem in the book, this is an attempt, as it were, to sum up the varied experiences that I had there. The poem is called "Itinerary of a View".
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00:13:29.91
Reads "Itinerary of a View".
Roy Kiyooka
00:17:07.19
I think I need to say a few words about this next group of poems, they were, they're from the book that I am having done at the moment, I started these poems in June 1965 in Montreal when I first came here, I don't know how to tell you this, except that at the time I came, I stayed with Alfred Pinsky, or rather I stayed at his home, at his invitation, while I was looking for a place to live. Now, this took me about two weeks, it was very hot, and in the evenings I used to go through his library and pick up things and scanned them. One evening I came across this book, which was a biography of the English painter, Stanley Spencer. Spencer, we could say is perhaps the co-partner in the origin and the form and the content of this book. The book is in three parts, the first part is called the mirror, "The Song the Mirror Sang at Midnight", and it is prefaced by a quotation from Spencer, which goes like this: "I am meeting you all the time, and sending my longing for you into chaos, into the darkness, beyond these walls". I may add that these poems, likewise, are on the whole, very brief, though some are longer.
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00:19:31.74
Reads first line "1. Climbing into the mirror..."
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00:20:34.97
Reads first line "2. Behind my eyes..."
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00:21:55.13
Reads first line "3. The image of her..."
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00:22:49.36
Reads first line "4. At least the shape of it..."
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00:23:23.50
Reads first line "5. Since you asked me..."
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00:24:18.59
Reads first line "6. The distance between..."
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00:24:46.28
Reads first line "7. Munch, stuffed her scream..."
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00:25:24.56
Reads first line "8. My hand covets..."
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00:25:51.06
Reads first line "9. The other face..."
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00:26:27.82
Reads first line "10. Turning away from the mirror..."
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00:27:02.17
Reads first line "11. The mirror that once reflected..."
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00:27:26.07
Reads first line "12. In all this space..."
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00:28:06.11
Reads first line "13. In a room..."
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00:28:36.89
Reads first line "14. It is the vision of her..."
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00:29:21.70
Reads first line "15. Now, other faces appear..."
Roy Kiyooka
00:30:05.51
The last one in this section.
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00:30:11.71
Reads first line "Who, among you, can say what..."
Roy Kiyooka
00:30:53.57
There's a terrible draft coming in from the back, I think you're right Dick, we're going to end up with arthritic ankles. Well, this is the second section, and it is called "The Proposal". Once more, prefaced with a remark from Stanley Spencer, a very beautiful one. They are set down, as I found them in the book, I have used them in the context of this section of the book and these four poems, taken from his writings are meant to define certain of her attributes. Now I have given a title to each one of these four poems, and I hope they will clarify the context in which they belong here. "Portrait of the Beloved".
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00:32:06.87
Reads "Portrait of the Beloved".
Roy Kiyooka
00:32:56.83
This I called "The Marriage".
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00:33:05.68
Reads "The Marriage".
Roy Kiyooka
00:33:37.13
This is called "The Separation".
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00:33:45.27
Reads "The Separation".
Roy Kiyooka
00:34:07.38
And this, is "Her Apotheosis".
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00:34:17.98
Reads "Her Apotheosis".
Roy Kiyooka
00:35:23.32
That incidentally, is a description he wrote to a friend about a painting that he in fact had made. From your response, I gathered, it has a comic element, but I don't think that he himself made it that way. [laughs.]
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00:36:05.44
Reads first line "The grotesque flash..."
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00:38:04.73
Reads first line "The beloved is resilient..."
Roy Kiyooka
00:38:36.97
The first stanza of this two-stanza poem is from Spencer, once again.
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00:38:43.51
Reads first line "The women say what I like..."
Roy Kiyooka
00:39:34.05
The reference in this poem is to an exemplary sculptor who died many years ago, who obsessionally sculpted the human female form, his name is Gaston Lachaise.
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00:40:02.45
Reads first line "Gaston Lachaise..."
Roy Kiyooka
00:40:59.50
The title of this poem is the same as the title of the second section, it's "The Proposal".
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00:41:14.81
Reads "The Proposal".
Roy Kiyooka
00:42:27.18
This one is called "The Dance".
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00:42:33.70
Reads "The Dance".
Roy Kiyooka
00:43:59.93
The title of this poem is called "Her Admonition".
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00:44:06.26
Reads "Her Admonition".
Roy Kiyooka
00:45:28.00
Now the following five poems are called "Poems of Resurrection".
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00:45:46.13
Reads first line "The way they lie there..."
Roy Kiyooka
00:47:27.24
Second "Resurrection" poem.
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00:47:28.96
Reads first line "The fallen have risen..."
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00:48:33.17
Reads first line "Number 3. The moon raises tides..."
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00:49:07.02
Reads first line "4. Stanley Spencer painted..."
Roy Kiyooka
00:49:49.28
The last Resurrection poem, which concludes with a very brief, two-line coda.
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00:50:01.31
Reads first line "The resurrected flesh..."
Roy Kiyooka
00:50:51.38
Now, the second to last poem is called "The Visitation".
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00:51:16.11
Reads "The Visitation".
Roy Kiyooka
00:53:14.24
And finally,
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00:53:22.15
Reads first line "What the beloved said..."
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00:53:56.30
Well, this is the final section. This is called "Nevertheless, These Eyes" and briefly, and again from Spencer, a preface that goes like this: "I am on this side of angels and dirt".
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00:55:25.80
Reads "Nevertheless, These Eyes".
Roy Kiyooka
01:00:20.34
And finally, by way of acknowledging the nature of this book.
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01:00:31.31
Reads first line "The figure in the poems are his..."
Roy Kiyooka
01:00:57.76
Thank you very much...[CUT.].. and I were reading together, decided we should write one for the occasion, so we have each come up with a haiku. This is my haiku, it's especially for Dick. I have in brackets here, "A gentle admonition to the audience following my reading, and preceding his" and it goes like this: "Let the stone tell how /snow-covered in whiteness, /these words, when his words come."
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01:01:42.65
END OF RECORDING.