Page 28 of The Stone Angel


  The fate of “Hagar,” as Margaret was to show quite literally, was still up in the air when she and the children stopped over with us in Winnipeg, on their way to England well into 1962. She was terribly worried about the practical things attendant on the move. Her baggage, for instance, was overweight, and she could not afford to pay a surcharge on the further flight. So she packed a big carton with some of her children’s toys and other gear, including, I recall, her son David’s running shoes, threw in the manuscript of “Hagar,” which I had spent the night reading, and addressed the parcel to her forwarding address in London. Then she invited my mother to go for a walk with her to the post office on Selkirk Avenue, and consigned the only copy of the novel to chance and the postal service. In later years she was to remember that gesture with rueful laughter. Not until she returned from that walk did she even realize what she had done. Luckily for her readers, fate spun the coin in our favour. When the package did finally arrive she was ready for it.

  From London, 25 November, 1962:

  “… By the way, the parcel from Wpg arrived, with my novel manuscript. I don’t think it reads too badly. It’s kind of an offbeat story, in a way – which really means that I personally find it very interesting but I have grave doubts that many people would share my point of view. But basically, Adele… it is written as I wanted to do it.… I had begun to try to make it into something that it was not intended to be – in order to widen its appeal. I only succeeded in turning it into something bloody awful. I threw away, the other day, all the re-written parts and will stick to the first draft, come hell or high water. The old lady knew what she was doing when she told me her life story – at least, that is what I feel now, anyway. We will see.”

  Margaret’s letters for the next month or so are filled with normal writerly concerns. The crisis of confidence is over. Though her claims for what she is doing are modest still, she states them with a new-found forcefulness and the exuberance of one whose work is going well. Most important, she has taken her stand. She will often again have doubts about her writing, but they will never again be such paralysing doubts imposed from without.

  “If one is misled… into following advice, however well meant, which conflicts with the true basic concept of the thing itself, then that is a kind of betrayal of oneself.… I guess, Adele, the whole absurd thing was that for a whole year I was making some kind of lunatic attempt to convince myself that I must be wrong about that novel. This novel means such a hell of a lot to me, simply because it is me. One wants it to be read with comprehension. I don’t mean the characters are me, naturally, although some of them are, in some ways, as must surely always be the case.… I finished the revisions on New Year’s Eve, which I took to be a good omen. I am now in an agony of apprehension about it is it too obvious, or is it not clearly enough stated, etc. But there comes a time when you have to let it go.… You know, Adele, it is written so much in Hagar’s voice that sometimes I think it needs to be read aloud. That was another insane thing I considered doing, months ago when I was in the depths – re-writing it in the 3rd person. Impossible, however she is speaking; that is simply a fact.… Anyway, the way I feel about Hagar at the moment is that if Macmillan’s thinks it is unpublishable, I will feel damn disappointed, but I will still disagree with them. ‘Here stand I; God help me, I can do no other.’ I have always been very drawn to those words of Martin Luther’s. Imagine what it must have taken, to say that in the face of the whole Establishment of the western world, when it is so difficult to say it even of issues on an infinitely smaller scale (however, not smaller to me). So – we will see.” [2 January, 1963]

  And, on another day of good omen:

  “14 February – VALENTINE’S DAY

  Dear Adele:

  ALAN MACLEAN (MACMILLAN’S) LIKES HAGAR! HE LIKES IT! CAN IT BE TRUE? He has just phoned, and I am in something like a state of shock.”

  Having myself gone through something similar, I find it interesting that after being unable to touch the book for a full year, when she went back to work on it Margaret took only a little over a month to complete a manuscript that was immediately acceptable to her publishers. One thing they all objected to, however, was her protem title, “Hagar.” She herself wished she could find a title that would more adequately express her theme. “I may have to tackle the entire Old Testament.” [18 February, 1963]

  Finally, on 20 September, 1963:

  “They (Knopf) don’t like ‘Hagar’ either, and have suggested either ‘Mrs. Shipley’ or ‘Old Lady Shipley,’ both of which are so terrible, in my opinion, that they don’t bear thinking about. Macmillan had felt some doubt about ‘Hagar,’ too, so when this letter arrived with Knopf’s suggestions, I brooded violently over the whole thing, and was suddenly struck by the obviously right title, and I now prefer it to ‘Hagar,’ and am astonished that it did not occur to me six months ago, as it is an image which occurs in the first sentence of the novel and recurs throughout the book, and it is completely suitable, etc. ‘The Stone Angel’ – do you think it okay?”

  The Author

  MARGARET LAURENCE was born in Neepawa, Manitoba, in 1926. Upon graduation from Winnipeg’s United College in 1947, she took a job as a reporter for the Winnipeg Citizen.

  From 1950 until 1957 Laurence lived in Africa, the first two years in Somalia, the next five in Ghana, where her husband, a civil engineer, was working. She translated Somali poetry and prose during this time, and began her career as a fiction writer with stories set in Africa.

  When Laurence returned to Canada in 1957, she settled in Vancouver, where she devoted herself to fiction with a Ghanaian setting: in her first novel, This Side Jordan, and in her first collection of short fiction, The Tomorrow-Tamer. Her two years in Somalia were the subject of her memoir, The Prophet’s Camel Bell.

  Separating from her husband in 1962, Laurence moved to England, which became her home for a decade, the time she devoted to the creation of five books about the fictional town of Manawaka, patterned after her birthplace, and its people: The Stone Angel, A Jest of God, The Fire-Dwellers, A Bird in the House, and The Diviners.

  Laurence settled in Lakefield, Ontario, in 1974. She complemented her fiction with essays, book reviews, and four children’s books. Her many honours include two Governor General’s Awards for Fiction and more than a dozen honorary degrees.

  Margaret Laurence died in Lakefield, Ontario, in 1987.

  Hubert Aquin

  Next Episode

  Margaret Atwood

  The Edible Woman

  Good Bones

  Murder in the Dark

  Surfacing

  Yves Beauchemin

  The Alley Cat

  Earle Birney

  Turvey

  Neil Bissoondath

  Digging Up the Mountains

  Marie-Claire Blais

  Mad Shadows

  A Season in the Life of Emmanuel

  Fred Bodsworth

  Last of the Curlews

  Frances Brooke

  The History of Emily Montague

  Ernest Buckler

  The Mountain and the Valley

  Morley Callaghan

  More Joy in Heaven

  Such Is My Beloved

  They Shall Inherit the Earth

  Canadian Poetry

  From the Beginnings Throug the First World War

  Leonard Cohen

  Beautiful Losers

  The Favourite Game

  Ralph Connor

  Glengarry School Days

  The Man from Glengarry

  Sara Jeannette Duncan

  The Imperialist

  George Elliott

  The Kissing Man

  Marian Engel

  Bear

  Sylvia Fraser

  Pandora

  Mavis Gallant

  Across the Bridge

  The Moslem Wife and Other Stories

  Graeme Gibson

  Perpetual Motion

  M. Allerdale Grainger


  Woodsmen of the West

  Frederick Philip Grove

  Fruits of the Earth

  Over Prairie Trails

  A Search for America

  Settlers of the Marsh

  T.C. Haliburton

  The Clockmaker

  Paul Hiebert

  Sarah Binks

  Jack Hodgins

  The Invention of the World

  The Resurrection of Joseph Bourne

  Spit Delaney’s Island

  Hugh Hood

  Light Shining Out of Darkness and Other Stories

  Anna Brownell Jameson

  Winter Studies and Summer Rambles in Canada

  A.M. Klein

  The Second Scroll

  Raymond Knister

  White Narcissus

  Margaret Laurence

  A Bird in the House

  The Diviners

  The Fire-Dwellers

  A Jest of God

  The Prophet’s Camel Bell

  The Stone Angel

  This Side Jordan

  The Tomorrow-Tamer

  Stephen Leacock

  Arcadian Adventures with the Idle Rich

  Literary Lapses

  My Financial Career and Other Follies

  My Remarkable Uncle

  Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town

  Rosanna Leprohon

  Antoinette de Mirecourt

  Hugh MacLennan

  Barometer Rising

  Each Man’s Son

  Two Solitudes

  Alistair MacLeod

  As Birds Bring Forth the Sun and Other Stories

  The Lost Salt Gift of Blood

  John Marlyn

  Under the Ribs of Death

  Joyce Marshall

  Any Time at All and Other Stories

  Rohinton Mistry

  A Fine Balance

  Such a Long Journey

  Tales from Firozsha Baag

  W.O. Mitchell

  Who Has Seen the Wind

  L.M. Montgomery

  Anne of Green Gables

  Emily Climbs

  Emily of New Moon

  Emily’s Quest

  Susanna Moodie

  Life in the Clearings versus the Bush

  Roughing It in the Bush

  Brian Moore

  The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne

  The Luck of Ginger Coffey

  Alice Munro

  No Love Lost

  Howard O’Hagan

  Tay John

  Michael Ondaatje

  Running in the Family

  Martha Ostenso

  Wild Geese

  David Adams Richards

  Blood Ties

  The Coming of Winter

  Evening Snow Will Bring Such Peace

  For Those Who Hunt the Wounded Down

  Lives of Short Duration

  Nights Below Station Street

  John Richardson

  Wacousta

  Mordecai Richler

  The Acrobats

  The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz

  A Choice of Enemies

  Cocksure

  The Incomparable Atuk

  Joshua Then and Now

  St Urbains Horseman

  Son of a Smaller Hero

  The Street

  Ringuet

  Thirty Acres

  Sinclair Ross

  As For Me and My House

  The Lamp at Noon and Other Stories

  Gabrielle Roy

  The Cashier

  Garden in the Wind

  The Road Past Altamont

  Street of Riches

  The Tin Flute

  Where Nests the Water Hen

  Windflower

  Duncan Campbell Scott

  In the Village of Viger

  Ernest Thompson Seton

  Wild Animals I Have Known

  Robert Stead

  Grain

  John Steffler

  The Afterlife of George Cartwright

  Catherine Parr Traill

  The Backwoods of Canada

  Jane Urquhart

  The Whirlpool

  Sheila Watson

  Deep Hollow Creek

  The Double Hook

  A Father’s Kingdom

  Rudy Wiebe

  The Blue Mountains of China

  The Temptations of Big Bear

  Ethel Wilson

  The Equations of Love

  Hetty Dorval

  The Innocent Traveller

  Love and Salt Water

  Mrs. Golightly and Other Stories

  Swamp Angel

  Adele Wiseman

  Crackpot

  The Sacrifice

 


 

  Margaret Laurence, The Stone Angel

 


 

 
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