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William Everson (poet)

William "Bill" Everson, also known as Brother Antoninus (September 10, 1912 – June 3, 1994), was an American poet, literary critic, teacher and small press printer. He was a member of the San Francisco Renaissance.

Beginnings edit

Everson was born on September 10, 1912, in Sacramento, California. His parents, both of whom were printers, raised him on a farm outside the small fruit-growing town of Selma, California. He played football at Selma High School and attended Fresno State College (later known as California State University, Fresno).

Poet and teacher edit

Everson was an influential member of the San Francisco Renaissance in poetry and worked closely with Kenneth Rexroth during this period of his life. Throughout his life, Everson was a great admirer of the work and life of poet Robinson Jeffers. Much of his work as a critic was done on Jeffers's poetry.

Everson married his childhood sweetheart Edwa Poulson on Memorial Day weekend in 1938. Edwa worked as a school teacher and they acquired some farmland. The couple did not want children, and in February 1940 Edwa accompanied Everson when he had a vasectomy performed by the physician of a friend. [1]

Everson registered as an anarchist and a pacifist with his draft board, in compliance with the 1940 draft bill. In 1943, he was sent to a Civilian Public Service (CPS) work camp for conscientious objectors in Oregon.[2] In Camp Angel at Waldport, Oregon, with other poets, artists and actors such as Kemper Nomland, William Eshelman, Kermit Sheets, Vlad Dupre, Glen Coffield, George Woodcock and Kenneth Patchen, he founded a fine-arts program in which the CPS men staged plays and poetry-readings and learned the craft of fine printing. More on this camp experience can be found in the book "Here on the Edge" by Steve McQuiddy. During his time as a conscientious objector, Everson completed The Residual Years, a volume of poems that launched him to national fame.

During his time at Camp Angel, Everson's wife Edwa began a relationship with another man. This led to an eventual divorce, when the two could not reconcile.

Everson married poet Mary Fabilli on June 12, 1948,[3] separated from her on June 30, 1949, and divorced her years later on May 13, 1963. [4] Influenced by her religious devotion, Everson converted to Catholicism.[5] Everson joined the Catholic Church in 1951 and soon became involved with the Catholic Worker Movement in Oakland, California.

He took the name Brother Antoninus when he joined the Dominican Order in 1951 in Oakland. He joined as a donatus, a lay brother - "who is not under any particular vow and who may be asked to leave, or choose to leave, at any time; he is little more, from a theological standpoint, than a worker wearing a habit."[6] He printed the unfinished Novum Psalterium PII XII, an acknowledged masterpiece in American fine press printing. A colorful literary and counterculture figure, he was nicknamed the Beat Friar. The central motif throughout all of Antoninus' Catholic poetry is Incarnation, the central symbol of the Christian mystery.

In 1956, he met an English Dominican, Father Victor White, at St. Albert's Dominican priory. White, of the English Dominican province and a longtime friend of Carl Jung, with whom he maintained a voluminous correspondence, was resident lecturer and theologian there. It was through this relationship to Victor White that Antoninus learned to look at his dreams from an in-depth religious angle for meaning. He devoured the Collected Works of Jung and began his psychological analysis of the unconscious as well as the analysis of many individuals who came to him for counseling. Antoninus wrote the first draft of his long erotic poem River-Root / A Syzygy, which he considered to be his most prophetic work. As Everson said in an interview for Creation magazine, with its founder and editor, the theologian and (at the time) fellow Dominican Matthew Fox, he saw "River-Root" as a kind of re-writing of the Song of Songs, bringing frank Eros back into the Psalms and undoing Christianity's longstanding separation of the sexual from the spiritual.

At St Albert's, where he had practiced as a spiritual counselor, Antoninus had given counseling to a young woman named Susanna Rickson. On December 7, 1969 - the day after the disastrous Altamont Free Concert featuring the Rolling Stones - after a reading at the University of California at Davis, Antoninus removed his religious habit and announced that he was going to be married.

Susanna Rickson then became his young bride and William Everson became the stepfather of Susanna's son, Jude.

When Brother Antoninus wrote The Rose of Solitude, he saw it published in many magazines. However, when he wrote The Veritable Years under the name William Everson, having left Antoninus behind, he couldn't even get his work reviewed. He then assumed the mantle, and a buckskin vest and bear-claw necklace to signify it, of the poet-shaman to replace his religious habit. The 1974 poem Man-Fate explores this transformation from Brother Antoninus into William Everson, the West-Coast poet-shaman.

Everson was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 1972.

Everson spent his remaining years living near the central California coast in Swanton, California, a few miles north of Santa Cruz, in a cabin he dubbed Kingfisher Flat. He was poet-in-residence at the University of California, Santa Cruz during the 1970s and 1980s. There he founded the Lime Kiln Press, a small press through which he printed highly sought-after fine-art editions of his own poetry as well as of the works of other poets, including Robinson Jeffers and Walt Whitman.

Everson maintained his Catholic faith until his final days. In 1982, Everson wrote an introduction to Victor White's book God and the Unconscious. In the final two years of his life, Everson worked on an unfinished autobiographical work titled Dust Shall Be the Serpent's Food.

Everson died at his home on June 3, 1994, and his body was buried at the Dominican Cemetery in Benicia, California.

Everson's papers are archived at the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library at UCLA[7] and The Bancroft Library at UC Berkeley.[8]

Black Sparrow Press released a three-volume series of the collected poems of Everson, the last volume was published in 2000. In 2003, the California Legacy Project published Dark God of Eros: A William Everson Reader.

Selected bibliography edit

Poetry edit

  • There Are the Ravens (1935). San Leandro, CA: Greater Western Publishing.
  • San Joaquin (1939). Los Angeles: The Ward Ritchie Press.
  • The Masculine Dead (1942). Prairie City, Illinois: Decker Press.
  • War Elegies (1944). Waldport, Oregon: Untide Press.
  • The Residual Years (1948). New York: New Directions.
  • A Privacy of Speech (1949). Berkeley: The Equinox Press.
  • The Crooked Lines of God (1959). Detroit: University of Detroit Press.
  • The Hazards of Holiness (1962). Garden City, NY: Doubleday.
  • The Poet is Dead: a Memorial for Robinson Jeffers (1964). San Francisco: Auerhahn Press.
  • The Blowing of the Seed (1966). New Haven: Henry W. Wenning.
  • Single Source: The Early Poems of William Everson, 1934-1940 (1966). Berkeley: Oyez.
  • In the Fictive Wish (1967). Berkeley: Oyez.
  • The Rose of Solitude (1967). Garden City, NY: Doubleday.
  • The Springing of the Blade (1968) Reno, Nevada: The Black Rock Press.
  • A Canticle to the Water Birds (1968). Berkeley: Eizo.
  • The City Does Not Die (1969). Berkeley: Oyez.
  • The Last Crusade (1969). Berkeley: Oyez.
  • Who Is She That Looketh Forth as the Morning (1972). Santa Barbara: Capricorn Press.
  • Tendril in the Mesh (1973). Aromas, California: Cayucos Books.
  • Black Hills (1973). San Francisco: Didymus Press.
  • Man-Fate: The Swan Song of Brother Antoninus (1974). New York: New Directions (W.W. Norton)
  • River-Root: A Syzygy for the Bicentennial of These States (1976). Berkeley: Oyez.
  • The Veritable Years, 1949-1966 (1978). Santa Barbara: Black Sparrow Press.
  • The Masks Of Drought (1980). Santa Barbara: Black Sparrow Press.
  • Birth of a Poet (1982). Santa Barbara: Black Sparrow Press
  • The Tarantella Rose (1995). Santa Cruz: Peter and Donna Thomas.

Autobiography and interviews edit

  • William Everson: The Shaman's Call, Interviews, Introduction, and Commentaries by Steven Herrmann (2009). New York, NY: Eloquent Books. ISBN 978-1-60860-604-7
  • Prodigious Thrust (1996). Santa Rosa, California: Black Sparrow Press.
  • William Everson: The Light the Shadow Casts. Five Interviews with William Everson. Edited and introduced by Clifton Ross. (1996). Devon, England: Stride Publications.
  • Naked Heart: Talking on Poetry, Mysticism, and the Erotic (1992). Albuquerque: University of New Mexico, College of Arts and Sciences.
  • Take Hold Upon the Future: Letters on Writers and Writing, 1938-1946 (1994). Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press.
  • On Printing (1992). San Francisco: Book Club of California.
  • "William Everson: Nature Mystic and Poet Prophet," in Conversation with Matthew Fox. (1989). In Creation, Vol. 5, No. 3, September/October, 1989, pp. 10-14.

Literary criticism edit

  • Robinson Jeffers: Fragments of an Older Fury (1968) Berkeley: Oyez.
  • Archetype West: The Pacific Coast as a Literary Region (1976). Berkeley: Oyez.
  • Dionysus and the Beat: Four Letters on the Archetype (1977). Santa Barbara: Black Sparrow Press.
  • The Excesses of God: Robinson Jeffers as a Religious Figure (1988). Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.

Sources edit

  • Koch, Peter Rutledge, (Autumn 2010) 'Three Philosophical Printers William Everson, Jack Stauffacher, and Adrian Wilson', in Parenthesis; 19, p. 12-17
  • Gelpi, Albert. Dark God of Eros: A William Everson Reader. Berkeley, CA: Heyday. 2003.
  • Bartlett, Lee. William Everson: The Life of Brother Antoninus. New York: New Directions, 1988.
  • Bartlett, Lee, and Campo, Allan. "William Everson: A Descriptive Bibliography, 1934-1976". Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press. 1977.
  • Ostrom, Hans. "William Everson's `Earth Poetry' and the Progress Toward Feminism," Essays In Honor of William Everson, ed. Bill Hotchkiss. Corvalis, Oregon: Castle Peak Editions, 1993.
  • Herrmann, Steven. William Everson: The Shaman's Call, Expanded Edition. USA / Singapore: Strategic Books Rights and Publishing Co., 2016. ISBN 978-1-68181-179-6

References edit

  1. ^ Lee Bartlett, William Everson: The Life of Brother Antoninus, New York: New Directions, 1988, pp. 17-18, 111.
  2. ^ Siuslaw National Forest; History Department; Portland State University. (PDF). Center for Columbia River History. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-06-04. Retrieved 2013-08-15.
  3. ^ "Mary Fabilli". Contemporary Authors Online. Gale. 2005. Retrieved September 12, 2019.
  4. ^ Lee Bartlett, William Everson: The Life of Brother Antoninus. New York: New Directions, 1988, p. 244.
  5. ^ Ripatrazone, Nick (July 1, 2019). "The Straightforward Catholic Legacy of Poet Artist Mary Fabilli". Angelus News. Retrieved September 14, 2019.
  6. ^ Lee Bartlett, William Everson: The Life of Brother Antoninus. New York: New Directions, 1988, p. 129.
  7. ^ "Register of the William Everson Papers, 1937-1971"
  8. ^ "Guide to the William Everson Papers"

External links edit

  • William Everson at the University of Illinois' Modern American Poetry website
  • William Everson at the Beat Page
  • William Everson Papers at Washington University in St. Louis Libraries Special Collections

william, everson, poet, this, article, written, like, personal, reflection, personal, essay, argumentative, essay, that, states, wikipedia, editor, personal, feelings, presents, original, argument, about, topic, please, help, improve, rewriting, encyclopedic, . This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style February 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message William Bill Everson also known as Brother Antoninus September 10 1912 June 3 1994 was an American poet literary critic teacher and small press printer He was a member of the San Francisco Renaissance Contents 1 Beginnings 2 Poet and teacher 3 Selected bibliography 3 1 Poetry 3 2 Autobiography and interviews 3 3 Literary criticism 4 Sources 5 References 6 External linksBeginnings editEverson was born on September 10 1912 in Sacramento California His parents both of whom were printers raised him on a farm outside the small fruit growing town of Selma California He played football at Selma High School and attended Fresno State College later known as California State University Fresno Poet and teacher editEverson was an influential member of the San Francisco Renaissance in poetry and worked closely with Kenneth Rexroth during this period of his life Throughout his life Everson was a great admirer of the work and life of poet Robinson Jeffers Much of his work as a critic was done on Jeffers s poetry Everson married his childhood sweetheart Edwa Poulson on Memorial Day weekend in 1938 Edwa worked as a school teacher and they acquired some farmland The couple did not want children and in February 1940 Edwa accompanied Everson when he had a vasectomy performed by the physician of a friend 1 Everson registered as an anarchist and a pacifist with his draft board in compliance with the 1940 draft bill In 1943 he was sent to a Civilian Public Service CPS work camp for conscientious objectors in Oregon 2 In Camp Angel at Waldport Oregon with other poets artists and actors such as Kemper Nomland William Eshelman Kermit Sheets Vlad Dupre Glen Coffield George Woodcock and Kenneth Patchen he founded a fine arts program in which the CPS men staged plays and poetry readings and learned the craft of fine printing More on this camp experience can be found in the book Here on the Edge by Steve McQuiddy During his time as a conscientious objector Everson completed The Residual Years a volume of poems that launched him to national fame During his time at Camp Angel Everson s wife Edwa began a relationship with another man This led to an eventual divorce when the two could not reconcile Everson married poet Mary Fabilli on June 12 1948 3 separated from her on June 30 1949 and divorced her years later on May 13 1963 4 Influenced by her religious devotion Everson converted to Catholicism 5 Everson joined the Catholic Church in 1951 and soon became involved with the Catholic Worker Movement in Oakland California He took the name Brother Antoninus when he joined the Dominican Order in 1951 in Oakland He joined as a donatus a lay brother who is not under any particular vow and who may be asked to leave or choose to leave at any time he is little more from a theological standpoint than a worker wearing a habit 6 He printed the unfinished Novum Psalterium PII XII an acknowledged masterpiece in American fine press printing A colorful literary and counterculture figure he was nicknamed the Beat Friar The central motif throughout all of Antoninus Catholic poetry is Incarnation the central symbol of the Christian mystery In 1956 he met an English Dominican Father Victor White at St Albert s Dominican priory White of the English Dominican province and a longtime friend of Carl Jung with whom he maintained a voluminous correspondence was resident lecturer and theologian there It was through this relationship to Victor White that Antoninus learned to look at his dreams from an in depth religious angle for meaning He devoured the Collected Works of Jung and began his psychological analysis of the unconscious as well as the analysis of many individuals who came to him for counseling Antoninus wrote the first draft of his long erotic poem River Root A Syzygy which he considered to be his most prophetic work As Everson said in an interview for Creation magazine with its founder and editor the theologian and at the time fellow Dominican Matthew Fox he saw River Root as a kind of re writing of the Song of Songs bringing frank Eros back into the Psalms and undoing Christianity s longstanding separation of the sexual from the spiritual At St Albert s where he had practiced as a spiritual counselor Antoninus had given counseling to a young woman named Susanna Rickson On December 7 1969 the day after the disastrous Altamont Free Concert featuring the Rolling Stones after a reading at the University of California at Davis Antoninus removed his religious habit and announced that he was going to be married Susanna Rickson then became his young bride and William Everson became the stepfather of Susanna s son Jude When Brother Antoninus wrote The Rose of Solitude he saw it published in many magazines However when he wrote The Veritable Years under the name William Everson having left Antoninus behind he couldn t even get his work reviewed He then assumed the mantle and a buckskin vest and bear claw necklace to signify it of the poet shaman to replace his religious habit The 1974 poem Man Fate explores this transformation from Brother Antoninus into William Everson the West Coast poet shaman Everson was diagnosed with Parkinson s disease in 1972 Everson spent his remaining years living near the central California coast in Swanton California a few miles north of Santa Cruz in a cabin he dubbed Kingfisher Flat He was poet in residence at the University of California Santa Cruz during the 1970s and 1980s There he founded the Lime Kiln Press a small press through which he printed highly sought after fine art editions of his own poetry as well as of the works of other poets including Robinson Jeffers and Walt Whitman Everson maintained his Catholic faith until his final days In 1982 Everson wrote an introduction to Victor White s book God and the Unconscious In the final two years of his life Everson worked on an unfinished autobiographical work titled Dust Shall Be the Serpent s Food Everson died at his home on June 3 1994 and his body was buried at the Dominican Cemetery in Benicia California Everson s papers are archived at the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library at UCLA 7 and The Bancroft Library at UC Berkeley 8 Black Sparrow Press released a three volume series of the collected poems of Everson the last volume was published in 2000 In 2003 the California Legacy Project published Dark God of Eros A William Everson Reader Selected bibliography editPoetry edit There Are the Ravens 1935 San Leandro CA Greater Western Publishing San Joaquin 1939 Los Angeles The Ward Ritchie Press The Masculine Dead 1942 Prairie City Illinois Decker Press War Elegies 1944 Waldport Oregon Untide Press The Residual Years 1948 New York New Directions A Privacy of Speech 1949 Berkeley The Equinox Press The Crooked Lines of God 1959 Detroit University of Detroit Press The Hazards of Holiness 1962 Garden City NY Doubleday The Poet is Dead a Memorial for Robinson Jeffers 1964 San Francisco Auerhahn Press The Blowing of the Seed 1966 New Haven Henry W Wenning Single Source The Early Poems of William Everson 1934 1940 1966 Berkeley Oyez In the Fictive Wish 1967 Berkeley Oyez The Rose of Solitude 1967 Garden City NY Doubleday The Springing of the Blade 1968 Reno Nevada The Black Rock Press A Canticle to the Water Birds 1968 Berkeley Eizo The City Does Not Die 1969 Berkeley Oyez The Last Crusade 1969 Berkeley Oyez Who Is She That Looketh Forth as the Morning 1972 Santa Barbara Capricorn Press Tendril in the Mesh 1973 Aromas California Cayucos Books Black Hills 1973 San Francisco Didymus Press Man Fate The Swan Song of Brother Antoninus 1974 New York New Directions W W Norton River Root A Syzygy for the Bicentennial of These States 1976 Berkeley Oyez The Veritable Years 1949 1966 1978 Santa Barbara Black Sparrow Press The Masks Of Drought 1980 Santa Barbara Black Sparrow Press Birth of a Poet 1982 Santa Barbara Black Sparrow Press The Tarantella Rose 1995 Santa Cruz Peter and Donna Thomas Autobiography and interviews edit William Everson The Shaman s Call Interviews Introduction and Commentariesby Steven Herrmann 2009 New York NY Eloquent Books ISBN 978 1 60860 604 7 Prodigious Thrust 1996 Santa Rosa California Black Sparrow Press William Everson The Light the Shadow Casts Five Interviews with William Everson Edited and introduced by Clifton Ross 1996 Devon England Stride Publications Naked Heart Talking on Poetry Mysticism and the Erotic 1992 Albuquerque University of New Mexico College of Arts and Sciences Take Hold Upon the Future Letters on Writers and Writing 1938 1946 1994 Metuchen NJ Scarecrow Press On Printing 1992 San Francisco Book Club of California William Everson Nature Mystic and Poet Prophet in Conversation with Matthew Fox 1989 In Creation Vol 5 No 3 September October 1989 pp 10 14 Literary criticism edit Robinson Jeffers Fragments of an Older Fury 1968 Berkeley Oyez Archetype West The Pacific Coast as a Literary Region 1976 Berkeley Oyez Dionysus and the Beat Four Letters on the Archetype 1977 Santa Barbara Black Sparrow Press The Excesses of God Robinson Jeffers as a Religious Figure 1988 Stanford California Stanford University Press Sources editKoch Peter Rutledge Autumn 2010 Three Philosophical Printers William Everson Jack Stauffacher and Adrian Wilson in Parenthesis 19 p 12 17 Gelpi Albert Dark God of Eros A William Everson Reader Berkeley CA Heyday 2003 Bartlett Lee William Everson The Life of Brother Antoninus New York New Directions 1988 Bartlett Lee and Campo Allan William Everson A Descriptive Bibliography 1934 1976 Metuchen NJ Scarecrow Press 1977 Ostrom Hans William Everson s Earth Poetry and the Progress Toward Feminism Essays In Honor of William Everson ed Bill Hotchkiss Corvalis Oregon Castle Peak Editions 1993 Herrmann Steven William Everson The Shaman s Call Expanded Edition USA Singapore Strategic Books Rights and Publishing Co 2016 ISBN 978 1 68181 179 6References edit Lee Bartlett William Everson The Life of Brother Antoninus New York New Directions 1988 pp 17 18 111 Siuslaw National Forest History Department Portland State University Camp 56 An Oral History Project World War II Conscientious Objectors and the Waldport Oregon Civilian Public Service Camp PDF Center for Columbia River History Archived from the original PDF on 2013 06 04 Retrieved 2013 08 15 Mary Fabilli Contemporary Authors Online Gale 2005 Retrieved September 12 2019 Lee Bartlett William Everson The Life of Brother Antoninus New York New Directions 1988 p 244 Ripatrazone Nick July 1 2019 The Straightforward Catholic Legacy of Poet Artist Mary Fabilli Angelus News Retrieved September 14 2019 Lee Bartlett William Everson The Life of Brother Antoninus New York New Directions 1988 p 129 Register of the William Everson Papers 1937 1971 Guide to the William Everson Papers External links edit nbsp San Francisco Bay Area portalWilliam Everson at the University of Illinois Modern American Poetry website William Everson at the Beat Page William Everson Papers at Washington University in St Louis Libraries Special Collections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Everson poet amp oldid 1205566440, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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