For William Hawkins, chronicler of King Kong
A King Kong of a weed has arrived in Bruce County
along the banks of Catfish Creek
looks like Queen Anne's lace
but taller, its common names
giant hogweed
giant cow parsley
native to the Caucasus and central Asia
spread in giant leaps into western Europe
imported as an ornamental
to northern United States
into southern Ontario, flourishing
along roadsides and streams
in bush and wasteland,
perennial, living several years
it forms a leafy canopy five feet tall
flowers once in its lifetime
the flower-bearing stems commonly ten feet tall
up to sixteen feet in Ontario Weeds
the juice of this plant brings
skin blisters and blindness
township workers encircle clusters
with rope, cautionary tape, and warning signs.
Nelson Ball’s most recent poetry book is Some Mornings (Mansfield Press, 2014). An online chapbook of his poems, A Rattle of Spring Frogs, appears on the website of Hamilton Arts & Letters. Chapbooks in 2015 include Small Waterways (Apt. 9 Press), All and Everything (Laurel Reed Books) and This Close to Being a Tree (Stone The Crows! Press). Nelson and his late wife and soulmate, artist and writer Barbara Caruso, are the subjects of Nelson Ball & Barbara Caruso / Home Project / A Photo Documentary, a video created by Catherine Stevenson. The video can be viewed on YouTube.
photo credit: Catherine Stevenson
the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan
Showing posts with label William Hawkins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label William Hawkins. Show all posts
Tuesday, February 16, 2016
Tuesday, April 07, 2015
Tuesday poem #105 : William Hawkins : Untitled
There really is a secret success to life
Things
live that are simply called poems
It
appears that the whole thing
is
just talking and listening
on
a number of levels
I
just now referred to them all as
confusing
and
I cannot
comprehend
it
* * * * * *
I want to write the poem again
I
want to hear the song in my ear
I
don’t really think
I’ll
ever get what I want, just yet,
But
I can’t help stop my wanting
William Hawkins was born in Ottawa in 1940. After side trips to the West Coast and Mexico, he resides in the capital, pursuing enlightenment or a reasonable alternative thereto. Hawkins worked as a truck driver, cook, journalist and musician before settling on the taxi profession as a means of preserving integrity and ensuring near-poverty. He is now retired. His work appeared in the seminal anthology New Wave Canada: The New Explosion in Canadian Poetry (Toronto: Contact Press, 1966) edited by Raymond Souster and Modern Canadian Verse (Toronto: Oxford, 1967) edited by A.J.M. Smith. His books include Ottawa Poems (Kitchener: Weed/Flower Press, 1966) and The Madman’s War (Ottawa: S.A.W. Publications, 1974). Broken Jaw Press published his Dancing Alone: Selected Poems in 2005. Also an acclaimed songwriter, a tribute CD (Dancing Alone: The Songs of William Hawkins) was released in 2008. In 2013, he was inducted into the VerseOttawa Hall of Honour. The Collected Poems of William Hawkins is forthcoming in 2015 from Chaudiere Books (Ottawa).
the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan
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