Edwin Wilson (poet)

Edwin James ('Peter') Wilson is an Australian poet, painter, and lapsed scientist, with a strong interest in history. Born: 27 October 1942, Lismore, New South Wales

Occupations: Science teacher (1962–1965); lecturer Armidale Teachers’ College (now defunct) [1] (1968–1972); Education Officer, The Australian Museum, (1972–1980); Community Relations, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney (1980–2002); Hon. Research Associate (Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney).

Genres: Author of 27 books, including poetry, about poetry, prose (novels, science fiction), memoirs, and social history.

Notables: The Wishing Tree and Poetry of Place (social history of Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney), Falling Up Into Verse (a book about poetry), The Mullumbimby Kid, New Collected Poems, and Stardust Painter-Poet.

Publications

Articles and poems published in numerous Journals and Magazines. Published books include:

Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney (‘Guide to the Gardens’) (Ed.) 1982, Banyan, (Poetry) 1982, Drawn from Life (Ed.) (exhibition catalogue) 1983, Liberty, Egality, Fraternity! (Novel, please note ‘egality’ is derived from ‘egalitarianism’) 1984, The Dragon Tree, (Poetry) 1985, Discovering the Domain (Ed.), (Social History) 1986, Wild Tamarind, (Science fiction) 1987, Falling Up Into Verse, (Poetic Handbook) 1989, Songs of the Forest, (Rainforest Poems) 199o, The Rose Garden, (Poems) 1991, The Wishing Tree, (Social History, Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain) 1992, The Botanic Verses, (Poetry) 1993, Chaos Theory, (Poetry) 1997, Cosmos Seven, (Selected Poems) 1998, The Mullumbimby Kid: A Portrait of the Poet as a Child, (Poetic Memoirs, Book One) 2000, Cedar House, (Gothic Novel and Australian ‘Wuthering Heights’) 2001, Asteroid Belt, (Poetry) 2002, Anthology: Collected Poems 2002, Poetry of Place, (Social History, Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain) 2004, The Melancholy Dane: A Portrait of the Poet as a Young Man, (Poetic Memoirs, Book Two) 2006, My Brother Jim, (Poetry) 2009, New Selected Poems 2010, The Mullumbimby Kid (second edition) 2012, New Collected Poems 2012, Oliver Bainbridge – Lord Nelson's Great Grandson? 2013, Mullumbimby Dreaming, 2014 (exhibition catalogue), Stardust Painter-Poet, 2015, Lord Nelson, Uncle Oliver and I, 2017, Synthesis, (Poetry) 2018, and Long-Distance Poet, 2019.

Life

Edwin James (‘Peter’) Wilson (b. 1942) spent his early years in the then isolated farming community of East Wardell, in far northern coastal New South Wales, having been known as 'Peter' as a child, whose father died before he was born.

When his mother remarried Henry Forbes, cabinetmaker (in 1947), young 'Peter Wilson/Forbes' started school at Brunswick Heads. The 'boy poet' spent the formative decade (from 1948–1958) in Mullumbimby, prior to moving to Tweed Heads in 1959. At Mullumbimby he became a passionate orchid collector (from the surrounding rainforests).

Before attending Mullumbimby High School (at age 12) his mother told him that his name was Edwin and not Peter, and he would have to change for school banking, which was quite destabilising, an adjustment that was not properly made until he went to Murwillumbah High School (in 1959).

A scholarship to Armidale Teachers' College (1960–1961) provided his 'escape' from rural poverty, and was a period of aesthetic flowering. An appointment to The Forest High School, Frenchs Forest (1962) enabled him to complete a (part-time) science degree at the University of New South Wales (in Chemistry and Botany).

His first brief marriage (to Margaret Dawn Macintyre in 1968) coinciding with his appointment as a lecturer at Armidale Teachers' College, was his second age of poetic awakening. In 1972 he had returned to Sydney (into his 'garret phase' of verse), to work at The Australian Museum, quite literally the 'House of the Muses', and 'as [he] fell so painfully out of love [his] verse improved', and he has written ever since that time. When the child of that failed marriage (James Richmond Wilson, born 1970) was accidentally killed in a road accident a lot more grief was sublimated into verse.

His first significant success in Literary Journals was with Poetry Australia (with a number of poems published over a range of years). His second lasting marriage (to Cheryl Lillian Turnham in 1975), coincided with his literary hoax in opposition to quotas (in which he had a poem published under the female pseudonym of 'Eileen' in Kate Jennings' Mother I'm Rooted, an Anthology of Australian Women Poets)). As a result of this he was sin-binned in some quarters for a score of years.

In 1980 he moved to the Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, the closest thing to a rainforest in the city. Because of the 'Eileen' incident a lot of doors had closed to him, so in 1982 he set up Woodbine Press, a then subsidiary of Edwards & Shaw, with Dick Edwards (of Edwards & Shaw) as his silent partner. Banyan, his first book of poems, was printed with hot metal by Edwards & Shaw in their last year of business. Since then he has published twenty seven books, through Woodbine Press and other outlets (including Hale & Iremonger, Kangaroo Press, Rainforest Publishing, Kardoorair Press,[2] and the Royal Botanic Gardens Trust).

Edwin Wilson retired from paid work in 2003, as a Research Associate of the Gardens, working with Phil Spence on a breeding program using high altitude New Guinea Latouria-type orchid hybrids, to try to bring cold-tolerance (that is, grow at Sydney equivalent latitudes without a glasshouse) into bench quality plants. In 2014 Phil Spence registered the hybrid Dendrobium tapiniense x Dendrobium johsoniae with the Royal Horticultural Society (UK) under the Grex name of Dendrobium Edwin Wilson.

In 2003 he had started art classes at the Lavender Bay Gallery, and was elected as an Exhibiting Member of the Royal Art Society of New South Wales (in 2008), and won the Medal of Distinction at the 2010 RAS Spring Show, with a joint exhibition in 2011 (with Bruce Herps, at Artarmon Galleries, Sydney), and a Mullumbimby-themed exhibition at the Tweed River Gallery (Murwillumbah) in 2014.[3]

After an article on the centenary of ‘Tidge’ Wilson’s birth in the local paper at Lismore, New South Wales, at ‘the ripe old age of sixty one’ he was ‘discovered’ by his brother Jim, then retired, who had worked as a carpenter/builder in his life, and died in 2008.

Wilson’s twentieth book, and tenth book of poetry, My Brother Jim (2009), was dedicated to Edwin James (Jim) Onslow/Wilson, 1939–2008. His New Collected Poems came out in 2012. Stardust Painter-Poet (2015) is a glossy art catalogue with paintings linked to some of his thematic poems and poem fragments.

Edwin and Cheryl have three adult children, and live at Crows Nest, a suburb of Sydney.

Wilson's literary papers are held in the Mitchell Library at the State Library of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia.

Included In:

Who’s Who of Australian Writers, D.W. Thorpe, 1st and 2nd editions.

Thylazine (electronic) database (incomplete)

  • The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature, William Wilde, Joy Hooton and Barry Andrews, Oxford University Press, Australia, 2nd edition, 1994.

Australian Poets and Their Works, William Wilde, Joy Hooton and Barry Andrews, Oxford University Press Australia, 1996.

The MUP Encyclopaedia of Australian Science Fiction & Fantasy, Paul Collins, Melbourne University Press, 1998.

The Bibliography of Australian Literature P-Z, John Arnold and John Hay, University of Queensland Press, 2008.

References

  1. Centre, The University of Melbourne eScholarship Research. "Armidale Teachers' College - Corporate entry". Encyclopedia of Australian Science.
  2. "Kardoorair Press". Archived from the original on 29 September 2017.
  3. "Edwin Wilson FRAS". Royal Art Society of NSW. Retrieved 26 July 2019.

Further reading

Dan Byrnes, review of Liberty, Egality, Fraternity!, ‘It just had to be written’, The Northern Daily Leader, 6 November 1984.

John Ryan, review of Liberty, Egality, Fraternity! in The Armidale Express, 18 April 1986.

Edwin Wilson, ‘The Botanic Verses – and Problems of Sexual Tolerance, 1789 to the present (from the problems of Erasmus Darwin and The Love of the Plants through the Romantic tradition, God’s curators, The Botanic Verses, forbidden words, and the ‘Eileen’ incident), Australian Folklore (University of New England), No. 10, 1995.

Edwin Wilson, ‘From the Barn on the Hill to Edwards & Shaw’ (memoir of the publishing firm of Edwards & Shaw adapted from a limited edition book of the same name by the late Harry Stein, published by the State Library of New South Wales Press and launched by the Library Society on 2 April 1996), Biblionews (University of Sydney), 313th Issue, Vol. 22, No. 1, March 1997, pp. 3 – 10.

Joe Weston, ‘Radiant Harmonic Verse’, review of Cosmos Seven in Education (Journal of the New South Wales Teachers’ Federation), 31 August 1998.

Edwin Wilson and Sister Mary Joseph (Patricia Wightley), ‘Oliver Bainbridge: An Unacknowledged Casualty of the Death of Empire’ (the story of our writer ancestor), Australian Folklore, No. 13, September 1998, pp. 77 – 93.

Edwin Wilson, ‘A Passion for the Epiphyte Transferred: The Genesis of Woodbine Press’, Biblionews (University of Sydney), 319th Issue, Vol. 23, No. 3, September 1998, pp. 85 – 112.

Edwin Wilson, ‘Poetry of Place: Poetic Foci in the Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain’ (a list of significant poetic references in the Sydney Gardens and Domain), Australian Folklore (University of New England), No. 15, 2000, pp. 123 – 132.

Jennifer Somerville, ‘Edwin’s poetic journey’, a review of The Mullumbimby Kid in Saturday Review, The Northern Star, 23 September 2000.

Susan Mason and John Ryan, review of Cedar House – ‘If You Were a Carpenter and I Were a Lady’, Australian Folklore (University of New England), No 17, 2002.

J.S. Ryan, "Introduction", pp. xi–xix, Anthology:Collected Poems, Armidale: Kardoorair Press, Armidale, 2002.

Edwin Wilson, ‘Mullum Dreaming: Life of a Young Poet’, as posted electronically on Thylazine: Australian Arts and Literature on Landscape and Animals, 2002.

New York based Sharon Olinka, review of Collected Poems, as published (electronically) in Australian Poetry Book Reviews, March 2004.

Radio National, Poetica, ‘A Stroll Through the Gardens’ (adapted from Australian Folklore No 15 article), played 3 December 2005, repeated 26 January 2008.

Nikki Barrowclough, ‘Two of Us: Edwin Wilson & ‘Jim’ Onslow, ‘Good Weekend’, Sydney Morning Herald, 26 August 2006, p22.

John Ryan, review of The Melancholy Dane, ‘Poems, Plants and Post-modern Australian Men and Women: or ‘The Boy from the Bush’ in Sydney Town, Australian Folklore (University of New England, NSW), No. 23, 2008.

Edwin Wilson, ‘Poetry and Art: An Evolutionary Biologist’s Take of Selection Pressures in the Arts’, Five Bells (Journal of the Poets Union), autumn/winter 2009.

Asteroid Belt: Poems

Anthology: Collected Poems of Edwin Wilson 1967-2002

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