đŹ INTRO & OPENING âWelcome back to Same Crime, Different Time. Iâm Jen Chambers. Tonight, we remember Patricia âPatâ Lowtherâa rising Canadian poet cut down at 40 by the very man she trusted. Her life and voice were powerful; her death sent shockwaves through Canadaâs literary world. And it still resonates.â
đ Segment 1: Patâs Early Life & Poetry
âBorn JulyâŻ29,âŻ1935, in Vancouver, Pat published her first poem at age ten in the Vancouver Sun . She later left school at 16 and worked in an office to support herself but continued to write. In 1968, her debut This Difficult Flowering launched her literary careerâfollowed by The Age of the Bird in 1972, and Milk Stone in 1974 prabook.com+8en.wikipedia.org+8encyclopedia.com+8.â
The Cacadian Encyclopedia says:
Lowtherâs first book of poetry, This Difficult Flowering (1968), was critically praised for its precise language and themes. The book explores the tensions between creating art and creating a home life and expands the themes of motherhood and the pain and pleasure of love into universal themes. In âDamn Doom,â for instance, Lowther speaks honestly of the need to create within the chaos of family:
Damn doom to
day after daybreak our bright wisheson this work:to carve a simple beauty
out of chaos.
âDamn doom to dayâafterâday break our bright wishes on this workâŚâ From This Difficult Floweringthecanadianencyclopedia.ca.
In her second poetry collection, the Day of the Bird, she writs of a laundry near where Che Guevara was killed, and contrasts the laundry with hte brutality of his death:
A laundry at Vallegrande
a windowless shed
tiled roof
in front two openings
separated only by a pillar
⌠inside, the body
its eyes open
the head propped
in a tense posture
âShe went on to coâchair the League of Canadian Poets and taught at the University of BCâs writing departmentâas her feminist voice rose in both poetry and politics. At 40, sheâs published her first collection of poetry, and just before she was murdered, had signed with the Oxford University Press to publish a new poetry collection. It was her third book of poetry and her first book to be signed by a major press. poetryfoundation.org+14en.wikipedia.org+14evelazarus.com+14.â
đ§ď¸ Segment 2: Domestic Shadows
âMarried to Roy in 1963, she had four children. Roy was also a poet and left-wing activistâbut darker things lurked. Friends noted his increasing jealousy over Patâs growing acclaim. The University of Toronto Libraries says in a article about her that âHer domestic life, however, was complicated and weighed down by poverty and unhappiness. Friends encouraged her to leave her destructive marriage, a personal revolutionary act which she was unable to complete.â .evelazarus.com.â
âIn September 1975, Pat vanished. Sheâd missed a poetry reading at Ironworkers Hall in Vancouver. A week after she was last seen, her daughter Kathy went to the police and reported her missing. When he was questioned, Roy said that sheâd been having an affair with another writer who lived in Ontario, Canada, and directed police to find her there. Though police checked all ways of getting out of Vancouver, they didnât find any evidence of her having left the area. Three weeks later, her body was discovered, badly decomposed, lodged in Furry Creek near Britannia Beach. She had been found face down in the water and submerged underneath a log. She was identified through dental records and fingerprint data.
poetryfoundation.org+7evelazarus.com+7en.wikipedia.org+7.â
đ§ą Segment 4: The Murder & Arrest
âPolice found 117 blood spots on the East Vancouver home walls and a bloody mattress. Roy first tried to say that he came home and found his wifeâs body naked and beaten and was worried that theyâd suspect him. So he said that he then wrapped her body up and drove it to the place it was found underneath a railroad bridge, tossing it over a cliff, to get rid of it. I guess he thought it would wash out to sea and heâd be rid of the problem with her entirely.
Eventually, confronted with evidence, Roy confessed he struck Pat with a hammer and disposed of her body after wrapping it in the carabcbookworld.com+1evelazarus.com+1.â He had taken both the hammer in questionand the mattress with him to another island, where he attempted to was h the mattress on both sides, and would later tell the police th at the remaining stains wete menstrual blood.
âIn June 1977, Roy was convicted of secondâdegree murderâand sentenced to life. He died in prison in 1985 .â
đ Segment 5: Patâs Legacy
âPatâs posthumous A Stone Diary was published by Oxford in 1977 poetryinvoice.ca+4en.wikipedia.org+4thecanadianencyclopedia.ca+4. In 1980, the Pat Lowther Memorial Award was established, honoring outstanding Canadian women poets annually montrealserai.com+12en.wikipedia.org+12evelazarus.com+12.â\
BC Studies reflected:
âHer death⌠was a catalyst for that changing consciousness in our country⌠she still stands in the crucible of conflict.âcapitalcurrent.ca+2bcstudies.com+2montrealserai.com+2.
Her children are Christine Lowther (also a poet), Beth Lowther, and Kathy Lyons (died in 2015). Her son is Alan Domphousse.
The Canadian Poetry Online service from The University of Toronto sais of her legacy that:
âThe loss to her family and friends is immeasurable, and the loss to Canadian literature was widely acknowledged. In The Dictionary of Canadian Biographies, Hilda Thomas suggests that Pat Lowther's death "robbed Canadian poetry of one of its most vital and visionary poets."
An excellent work about Pat Lowther, the Half-Lives of Pat Lowther by Christine Wiesenthal, talks about how her sory is now an iconic one of spousal abuse in Canada. She was also one of the most iconic and catalyst-producing writers of the 1970âs, in that she wrote about feminine desire, feminine rage, and feminine power. She also was emblematic because she chased those things as a high school dropout who gained traction to be one of the most celebrated female poets in Canada.
Wisenthal says the real mystery is how she became involved with Roy Lowther in the first place? Roy lowther was a literary emerging giant in the time of Patâs emergence as well, but he was dismissed from his university and was eclipsed neatly by his wife. Itâs hard not to believe that his jealousy didnât contribute to the murder. In a review of Wisenthalâs book about Pat, Linda Rogers said about the nature of the gender politics of her work:
âThe third mystery is whether we would still be hearing of Pat Lowther as a poet had her husband not bashed her head in and left her broken and bleeding on a beach where he had once made love to her. The sad poignancy of her death has made Lowther a martyr for women who look, as she did, for a voice to lead them out of the wilderness.â
Pat Lowther left an indelible legacy and a vulnerable reminder that women sometimes have to be on guard from the ones they love best. âThis wasnât just personalâit mirrored national shifts around womenâs voices, ambitions, and safety.â âPat Lowtherâs life was fullâpoems, politics, parenting. Her death was brutal, at the hands of someone she loved. But her words endureâand so does her memory. If youâre moved, read her work. Share her story. Support feminist poets. There are links to Pat Lowtherâs books in the show notes. Iâm excited to get back into poetry. One of my other favoite female poets, is Mary Oliver, whoâs transcendent Wild Geese might be the most beautiful poem Iâve ever read. It begins:
You do not have to walk on your knees
for a hundred miles through the desert repenting.
You only have to let the soft animal of your body
So to end each episode, I thought Iâd share my wins or the books Iâve been reading, and invite you guys to share your books youâve been reading, the music or podcasts youâve been listening to, or your wins lately too so I can spotlight you and give you a listener shout out in the next episode. Gotta close out with wins.
Listener Dana Hunter Fradella wrote in with a book recommendation from a speaker she went to see recently, who recommended to her a book by Delores Cannon called Between Life and Death. âIâve never read anything like it, and Iâm here for it 100%. Sheâs talking to people who are hypnotized, and theyâre talking about their past lives and the possibility that we choose our own deaths.â So interesting! Thank you, Dana! Go check out her podcast, Girls Who Recover; thatâs Dana Hunter Fradella. And the book she mentioned is Between Life and Death by Delores Cannon.
My win is that my book came out early! The Murder of Sheriff W. W. Winters and Other Eugene Cases is out now by Arcadia Press! I went to my local Barnes & Noble just to browse, and I was going to visit my books like I always do. Thatâs my secret thing: visiting my books at any bookstore I see them in. I saw that not only did they get it out early, they made it the Pick of the Month! So check out my books on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, or your favorite bookstore. Iâm going to fill you in on all my book tour stuff this summer; you probably will want me to shut up about it, but it was such a nice surprise. Let me know your wins by DM on Instagram @jennifer_chambers_ or on my Substack or Facebook. I would love to hear them and give you a shout-out too. âIâm Jen Chambers. Thanks for listening to Same Crime, Different Time. Letâs keep Patâs voice alive.â
đ SOURCES
* Cold Case Canada & Vancouver Sun poetryfoundation.org+11evelazarus.com+11capitalcurrent.ca+11
* Wikipedia, Canadian Encyclopedia, ABC BookWorld en.wikipedia.org+1abcbookworld.com+1
* Centretown News quotes en.wikipedia.org+3capitalcurrent.ca+3abcbookworld.com+3
* Pat Lowther Award detailspoetryinvoice.ca+4en.wikipedia.org+4patlowther.ca+4
* https://canpoetry.library.utoronto.ca/canpoetry/lowther/index.htm