Canadian poet Margaret Avison dies at 89
Last Updated: Friday, August 10, 2007 | 5:41 PM
ET
Canadian poet Margaret Avison, described as "one of
the great religious poets" of the 20th century, has
died at age 89.
Avison died last week in Toronto. No cause of death
has been released.
Avison won the prestigious Griffin Poetry Prize four
years ago and was twice winner of the Governor
General's Award for poetry in a literary career that
spanned 40 years.
Her first book of poetry, The Winter Sun, was
published in 1960 and she became a "committed
Christian" in 1963, often writing about her faith.
Many critics compare her work to the great
metaphysical poets of the 18th century.
"It was a private religious conviction," said Joseph
Zezulka, an English professor at the University of
Western Ontario and friend of Avison.
"She was kindliness itself. She had so much
tolerance and charity for her fellow beings, and I
think that's the important thing about her
Christianity.
"Her contribution to Canadian literature was
incalculable," he said, adding that she had an
international following.
Avison was born in Galt, Ont. in 1918 and spent her
childhood in Regina and Calgary.
She attended the University of Toronto's Victoria
College, where she studied English literature. She
went on to hold three honorary doctorates.
She also worked as a librarian, editor, teacher and
social worker. Zezulka met her in the early 1970s
while she was a writer-in-residence at Western.
The Winter Sun and 1998's No Time both
won Governor General's Awards.
After the publication of Concrete and Wild Carrot
in 2003, she won the $40,000 Griffin prize.
The judges hailed Avison for the "many decades she
has forged a way to write, against the grain, some
of the most human, sweet and profound poetry of our
time."
She also published Momentary Dark, The
Dumbfounding and Not Yet But Still.
Zezulka said reading Avison's poetry required
persistence and sometimes hard work.
"The thing with her poetry is that you must grapple
with it, it just does not open up. Its rewards come
only to those are willing to make the effort," he
said.
"Her poems were not snacks, they were full meals."
Avison was made officer of the Order of Canada in
1985.