English Governess (also published as Harriet Marwood, Governess; 1960)
Notable awards
Governor General's Award
John Glassco (December 15, 1909 – January 29, 1981) was a Canadian poet, memoirist and novelist. According to Stephen Scobie, "Glassco will be remembered for his brilliant autobiography, his elegant, classical poems, and for his translations".[1] He is also remembered by some for his erotica.
At the age of 17, Glassco left McGill without graduating to travel to Paris with his friend, Graeme Taylor. The two settled in the Montparnasse district of Paris, then extremely popular amongst the literary intelligentsia. Their three-year stay formed the basis of Glassco's Memoirs of Montparnasse (1970), a description of expatriate life in Paris during the 1920s.[1]
Glassco was bisexual, and, in the words of Leon Edel, "a bit frightened by certain kinds of women and nearly always delighted if he could establish a triangle."[4][5]
In 1931 Glassco contracted tuberculosis, which caused him to return home to Canada, where he was hospitalized. In 1935, after having a lung removed, he retired to the town of Foster in Quebec's Eastern Townships. He served as mayor of Foster from 1952 to 1954.[2] Glassco died on January 29, 1981, at the age of 71, in Montreal.
Writing
Poetry
Glassco went on to earn a strong reputation as a poet. His Selected Poems won Canada's top honour for poetry, the Governor General's Award, in 1971.[6] The Oxford Companion to Canadian Literature says of his poetry:
Glassco's poems — unlike his prose — are largely concerned with ... life in the Eastern Townships ... full of images of derelict farmhouses and decaying roads that peter out in the bush; but reflections on the human condition are never far away from the descriptions of the countryside, so that the life of the land and the lives of people are woven together.... But not all Glassco's poems are bucolic. Some provide a link with his prose by moving into the mythology of literature and history: 'The death of Don Quixote' and 'Brummel at Calais' show Glassco as a master of echoes, and of parody and pastiche in the best sense; they evoke the philosophy of the nineteenth-century dandy and decadent (Brummel, Baudelaire, Wilde) that is also evident in his prose writings."[2]
Translations
Glassco translated both poetry and fiction from French. He edited the 1970 anthology The Poetry of French Canada in Translation, in which he personally translated texts by 37 different poets.[7] He also translated the work of three French-Canadian novelists: Monique Bosco (Lot's wife / La femme de Loth, 1975) Jean-Yves Soucy (Creature of the chase / Un dieu chasseur, 1979), and Jean-Charles Harvey (Fear's folly / Les demi-civilisés, 1982).[2]
Glassco also edited the 1965 anthology English poetry in Quebec, which originated from a poetry conference held in Foster in 1963.[2]
Erotica
Glassco's long poem Squire Hardman, on the subject of flagellation, was privately printed in 1967. The poem was inspired by The Rodiad (1871), falsely ascribed to George Colman the Younger,[8] and Glassco continued the hoax by claiming that his own poem was a republication of an 18th-century original by Colman.[9] Glassco's The Temple of Pederasty, on the theme of sado-masochism and male homosexuality, was similarly ascribed to Ihara Saikaku with "translation" by the wholly fictitious "Hideki Okada".[10][11] Glassco also used the pseudonym "Sylvia Bayer"[10] to publish Fetish Girl,[12] on the theme of rubber fetishism.[13][14] He wrote The English Governess (Ophelia Press, 1960) and Harriet Marwood, Governess (1967)[15] under yet another pseudonym, "Miles Underwood".[16] Glassco completed the unfinished pornographic novel Under the Hill by Aubrey Beardsley,[17] in an edition published by the Olympia Press in 1959.[18]
Publications
Poetry
The Deficit Made Flesh: Poems. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1958.
Selected Poems with Three Notes on the Poetic Process. Ottawa: Golden Dog Press, 1997.
Memoirs
Memoirs of Montparnasse, Leon Edel intr. Toronto, New York: Oxford UP, 1970.[20] Louis Begley intr. New York: New York Review Books Classics, 2007 ISBN978-1-59017-184-4
Pornography
and Aubrey Beardsley. Under the Hill; or the story of Venus and Tannhauser. Paris: Olympia, 1959.[20]
The English Governess. as "Miles Underwood." Paris: Ophelia, 1960.
Harriet Marwood, Governess. New York: Grove P, 1968.[20]
Fetish Girl. New York: Venus Library, 1971.
The Fatal Woman: Three Tales. Toronto: Anansi, 1974.[20]
Translated
Complete Poems of Saint-Denys Garneau. Ottawa: Oberon, 1975.[20]
^ abcde"John Glassco", Oxford Companion to Canadian Literature, Answers.com. Web, March 22, 2011.
^A full discussion of the relationship between fact and fiction in the book is offered by Louis Begley in his introduction to the 2007 NYRB edition.
^"A Gentleman of Pleasure: One Life of John Glassco, Poet, Memoirist, Translator, and Pornographer", Brian Busby, McGill-Queen's University Press, 2011
^Sutton, Emma (2002). Aubrey Beardsley and British Wagnerism in the 1890s. Oxford University Press. p. 143. ISBN0-19-818732-7.
^Prickett, Stephen (2005). Victorian fantasy. Baylor University Press. pp. 104–107, 249. ISBN1-932792-30-9.
^"Ouvrages soumis au Grand prix littéraire". La Presse: 43. March 3, 1965.
^ abcdefSearch results: John Glassco, Open Library, Web, May 9, 2011.
References
Aldrich, Robert; Wotherspoon, Garry (2003). Who's who in gay and lesbian history: from antiquity to World War II (2nd ed.). Routledge. pp. 215–216. ISBN0-415-15983-0.
Hammill, Faye (2009). "John Glassco, Canadian erotica and the 'Lying Chronicle'". In Anctil, Pierre; Loiselle, Andre; Rolfe, Christopher (eds.). Canada exposed. Canadian Studies. Vol. 20. Peter Lang. pp. 279–296. ISBN978-90-5201-548-4.