A guest post about a recent event
The 150th Anniversary of Victoria Hall came and went. The poetry performance in the Old Bailey Courtroom also came and went. There were two sessions of readings performed by Cobourg Poet Laureate emeritus, Eric Winter, and newly appointed Cobourg Poet Laureate, Jill Battson, and Port Hope resident, Patrick Gray, author of a single book of poetry, The Grace of Light, which is a limited edition.
It was an event organized and set up by the Cobourg Poetry Workshop, largely to promote and proselytize itself and its members. That it had anything to do with Cobourg, or anything to do with Victoria Hall, was almost beside the point.
The poets chose to recite British poets, American poets, and a few Canadian poets. The only link the poems had to Cobourg/Victoria Hall was that they were written during the lifespan of Victoria Hall. How easy and lazy is that! Cobourgers would be correct to think they had been short-changed.
Why was a Port Hope resident engaged to commemorate a Cobourg event? Does Cobourg not have any poets of its own? While it is understandable that the new Poet Laureate, Jill Battson, who was never a resident of Cobourg until 6 months ago, would be ignorant of Cobourg’s literary heritage, indeed, ignorant of the heritage of Victoria Hall, as were all three poets.
It’s not difficult to find the names of Cobourg’s poets of yore who wrote and published during the 150 years of Victoria Hall’s existence.Thomas Page, the cultured editor of the Newcastle Farmer in the later half of the 1840s, blessed Cobourg with two daughters who came to prominence as poets.
It was an event organized and set up by the Cobourg Poetry Workshop, largely to promote and proselytize itself and its members. That it had anything to do with Cobourg, or anything to do with Victoria Hall, was almost beside the point.
The poets chose to recite British poets, American poets, and a few Canadian poets. The only link the poems had to Cobourg/Victoria Hall was that they were written during the lifespan of Victoria Hall. How easy and lazy is that! Cobourgers would be correct to think they had been short-changed.
Why was a Port Hope resident engaged to commemorate a Cobourg event? Does Cobourg not have any poets of its own? While it is understandable that the new Poet Laureate, Jill Battson, who was never a resident of Cobourg until 6 months ago, would be ignorant of Cobourg’s literary heritage, indeed, ignorant of the heritage of Victoria Hall, as were all three poets.
It’s not difficult to find the names of Cobourg’s poets of yore who wrote and published during the 150 years of Victoria Hall’s existence.Thomas Page, the cultured editor of the Newcastle Farmer in the later half of the 1840s, blessed Cobourg with two daughters who came to prominence as poets.
Elizabeth Agnes Page, published 36 poems in a 1850 book, Wild Notes from the Back Woods, with ironic parallels to another local poet, Susanna Moodie's, Roughing It In the Bush, which went on to inspire renown poet Margaret Atwood. Her sister, Rhoda Anne Page was well known for her poem,
Voices From The Woods:
Oh! many a voice from the sequester'd wood
May whisper to the soul in thoughtful mood,
Wisdom that comes from Heaven.
Voices From The Woods:
Oh! many a voice from the sequester'd wood
May whisper to the soul in thoughtful mood,
Wisdom that comes from Heaven.
Frederick Preston Rubidge (1806-98) was one of Cobourg's earliest poets, was also a producer and actor. He was noted for the sonnet,
`River Otonabee`
Stream of the wilderness, at whose far source
The fierce wolf lappeth, or awaits its spoil;
Through ages rolling thy ignoble course,
But now to flow with corn, with wine, and oil.
Carrie Munson Hoople was another Cobourg poet, who had published ‘Along the Way With Pen and Pencil’, New York, 1909. She was also renowned locally for her incisive parodies.
`River Otonabee`
Stream of the wilderness, at whose far source
The fierce wolf lappeth, or awaits its spoil;
Through ages rolling thy ignoble course,
But now to flow with corn, with wine, and oil.
Carrie Munson Hoople was another Cobourg poet, who had published ‘Along the Way With Pen and Pencil’, New York, 1909. She was also renowned locally for her incisive parodies.
Other poets that graced Cobourg include Stanley Howell, an insurance broker at the turn of the century who cleverly combined business and poetry, and Dorothy Herriman and Virna (Stanton) Sheard.
Let us not forget that one of Canada`s renown poets, Archibald Lampman (1861-99) was educated at Gores Landing, Cobourg Collegiate and Trinity School, Port Hope.
Cobourg also had poets during the twentieth century and they can be found published in the Cobourg Sentinel Star, especially during the era when Foster Meharry Russell was publisher and editor, as well as a poet and anthologists.
Long before the Cobourg Poetry Workshop existed, poetry was thriving in Cobourg – for five years during the late 1960s, young Cobourg poets published Refraction, containing poems written by individuals who eventually became prominent in the town.
Cobourg has a rich heritage of poetry and poets, but this virtually unknown by the Cobourg Poetry Workshop, but then again, most of the self-declared poets of that group have shallow roots in Cobourg. The Town of Cobourg asserts that the duty of the Poet Laureate is to act ``as a literary ambassador for the Town of Cobourg.
Cobourg has a rich heritage of poetry and poets, but this virtually unknown by the Cobourg Poetry Workshop, but then again, most of the self-declared poets of that group have shallow roots in Cobourg. The Town of Cobourg asserts that the duty of the Poet Laureate is to act ``as a literary ambassador for the Town of Cobourg.
Take a look at the video above and you will see that Glenda Jackson, a member of the Cobourg Poetry Workshop, was proselytizing as a literary ambassador for the group, not the Town of Cobourg
Everywhere they appear, members of the Cobourg Poetry Workshop boast that they are a MAJOR VENUE for poetry in Cobourg. It is sure that they are a known and welcome node for poetry in Canada, but the self-aggrandizement is a bit over the top, especially in light of the fact that they have made negligible inroads in the very community they take their name from: COBOURG.The Cobourg Poetry Workshop organized a greet and meet authors a few weeks back in Grafton. The result was that almost twice as many authors showed up for their kudos people who attended to meet them. Now we have the 150th Anniversary, and the Cobourg Poetry Workshop failed to arouse any interest amongst the general population of Cobourg. It would appear that the Cobourg Poetry Workshop consists largely of a snobbish crew of the Better Poems and Garden set with no other purpose than the aggrandizement of their paying members. However, I do want to thank the group for their monthly poetry readings, which includes a feature poet from outside the workshop. These `real` poets are all too often my friends and colleagues that I have known for years in the poetry circles and triangles of Canada . It is a treat to have them visit my home town and sometimes drop over to my home.
Wally Keeler
Wally Keeler

3 comments:
From the video it looks to me as if the performers outnumbered the audience. Maybe they should try music for the 150th-- "Rock the Vic"
There were seven members of the public at Session 2.
There is a regretable error in my posting. The Cobourg Poetry Workshop did NOT organize the Authors Meet & Greet in Grafton. Thanks to Poet Mark Clement for providing documentation to refute my error.
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