George Benson Johnston (October 7, 1913 – August 2004) was a Canadian poet, translator, and academic "best known for lyric poetry that delineates with good-humoured wisdom the pleasures and pains of suburban family life."[1] He also had an international reputation as a scholar and translator of the Icelandic Sagas.[citation needed]
Life
Johnston was born in Hamilton, Ontario, in 1913, the son of Margaret Black and Benson Johnston, an insurance agent.[2] The family moved to the Toronto suburbs in 1923. Johnston knew in high school that he wanted to be a writer.[3]
Johnston received his B.A. in 1936, and went to Europe. He stayed in England, continuing to write. He published a story in the London Mercury in 1937. He soon returned to Canada, but continued to send his work to British magazines.[3]
After the war Johnston returned to the University of Toronto, receiving his M.A. in 1946 under the direction of Northrop Frye.[3] He taught at Mount Allison University from 1947 to 1949.[4]
In 1950 Johnston joined the English department at Carleton College in Ottawa (now Carleton University),[4] where he taught until retirement in 1979.[1]
Johnston learned Old Norse from Peter Foote of the University of London, and in 1957 began translating Norse sagas. His first effort, The Saga of Gisli, appeared in 1963; it is still in print. Seven of its poems were included in The Oxford Book of Verse in English Translation, edited by Charles Tomlinson.[3]
Johnston has made a dozen translations from Old and Modern Icelandic, Danish, Norwegian, and Faeroese.[2] He has translated two books of poetry by Norwegian poet Knut Ødegård.[citation needed]
In 1959 Johnston published his first book of his own poetry, The Cruising Auk, which was favourably reviewed by Eric Nicol and Northrop Frye, and by the American magazine Alphabet. Alphabet, Chicago's Poetry magazine, and Canada's Tamarack Review, all became regular outlets for Johnson's new work.[3]
After retiring, Johnston moved to Athelstan, in South-western Quebec
, to raise bees and continue to write.[4]
Writing
The Canadian Encyclopedia calls Johnston "best known for lyric poetry that delineates with good-humoured wisdom the pleasures and pains of suburban family life."[1] The Encyclopedia of Literature in Canada says that his books "contain witty and domestic satires" which "hint at uncertainty and vulnerability as well."[2]
Northrop Frye called The Cruising Auk "a beautifully unified book, the apparently casual poems carrying the reader along from the first poem to the last in a voyage of self-discovery." He added :"Johnston is an irresistibly readable and quotable poet. His finest technical achievement, I think, apart from his faultless sense of timing, is his ability to incorporate the language of the suburbs into his own diction."[5]
Johnston's work features a recurring persona, Edward, forever on the verge of drowning.[2]
Recognition
Johnston has received honorary degrees from Queen's University and Carleton University.[4]
An issue of Malahat Review (78, March 1987) was devoted to him.[citation needed]
Writing in Canadian Poetry in 1992, W.J. Keith called "attention to the unfortunate — one is tempted to say scandalous — neglect" of Johnston's poetry by critics and anthologists "in the last twenty years or so."[6]
A festschrift, The Old Enchanter: A Portrait of George Johnston, was published in 1999.[4]
^ abcdefWilliam H. New, "Johnston, George Benson," Encyclopedia of Literature in Canada (Toronto: U of Toronto P, 2002), 555-556. Google Books, Web, May 4, 2011.