The Selected Journals of L.M. Montgomery, Vol. V: 1935-1942
by L.M. Montgomery, Mary Henley Rubio ISBN: 0195421167
Post Your Opinion | | A Review of: The Selected Journals of L.M. Montgomery, Volume V: 1935-1942 by Clara ThomasMary Rubio and Elizabeth Waterson, the editors of the five volumes
of Montgomery's journals, deserve Medals of Valour, not only for
the impeccable editing that we have come to expect of them, but
also for their endurance in completing their task to its bitter
end. Montgomery died shortly after her final entry on March 23,
1942. From 1937 to 1942 the entries covered by this fifth volume
are a final litany of almost unrelieved misery, painful to read and
surely painful for the editors to work on. From the first volume's
publication, in 1985, we have been led to expect faultless editing,
and, in the introductions to each volume, sensitive and keenly
knowledgeable commentary. Taken altogether, the series has provided
far more than information on Montgomery's life; it has given us an
invaluable record of her times, a social history of small town
Ontario, a source of data for Women's Studies research and an
in-depth study of the dynamic of one particular family, the Ewan
Macdonalds of Leaskdale, Norval and, finally, Toronto.
Volume I covers the years from 1889, when Montgomery at fifteen
began the diaries which developed into this series, to 1910, soon
after the publication of Anne of Green Gables, the book which has
spread its endearing and important message of feisty girlhood all
over the world for every generation since. Anne's troubles and
triumphs haven't dated; recently a friend and I were remembering
her effect on us as girls, agreeing that her most important message
then and, we speculated, now, was the ideal of female friendship
exemplified by the devotion and loyalty of Anne and her "kindred
spirit" Diana. There is much more than that in Anne of course:
she was an orphan; all girls, orphaned or not, know what it is to
sometimes feel rejected and unloved, and all girls sometimes long
to break away from the binding constrictions of family and community.
Montgomery caught the dilemmas of young girls perfectly and was
deservedly rewarded in her time and ever since.
Volume II, 1910-1921, covers the early years of her marriage to
Ewan Macdonald, a Presbyterian minister, her move from Cavendish,
P.E.I. to Leaskdale, Ontario, and the birth of her sons, Chester
and Stuart as well as the death of a third baby, Hugh. The early
years of her marriage and her sons' childhood were certainly the
happiest of her married life. She was fully occupied by the writing
of the various Anne books, which were always in demand, as well as
by homemaking with its daily challenges and rewards. She had grown
up in the home of her grandparents, and being mistress of her own
household was very precious. She was also "the Minister's
wife", in that day a fulltime job in itself. The demands on
her time and energy were endless, though there was a compensating
prestige to her position, both personally and professionally. The
personal world that she inhabited was invaded, however, by the
horror of WWI, the death in the 1918-9 flu epidemic of her dearest
friend, Frede Campbell, and the periodic bouts of depression
accompanied by an overwhelming conviction of damnation suffered by
Ewan, her husband. It is painful to read of the intensity of her
anxiety about the progress of the war: hours of walking the floor
in misery and sleepless nights signal a frightening instability of
temperament. The agonizing grief about Frede and the personal anxiety
about Ewan only serve to emphasize the ominous evidence of her own
vulnerability.
Still, there was much compensating satisfaction and achievement and
the energy and efficiency of her response to her various obligations
was remarkable. Writing out her worries and frustrations was obviously
a safety valve for her, one that served her well. She had always
been totally frank about her marriage: she had wanted marriage, a
household and a family; she did not love Ewan, but she respected
him and his calling. Looking after her grandmother had been her
major responsibility and when she and Ewan were finally able to
marry she contemplated a whole new life in Leaskdale, Ontario, and
set about enthusiastically to make it work. Anne had made her famous
before her marriage and Anne's royalties had made possible her
glamorous wedding trip abroad as well as the constant presence of
a maid in the Macdonald manse. No usual minister's household this-in
fact so out of the ordinary for its time and place that the situation
must have taken its toll on Ewan's patience and pride from the
start. As time passed, the encroachments of reality, both historical
and personal, became more and more troubling, and in volumes II,
III and IV pushed their way more and more to the forefront of her
life. In volume IV, with Chester's secret marriage while still in
the early stages of his lengthy and troubled law course, they
completely overpowered her responses; from then on all through
volumes IV and V, the journals record her devastating sense of
disaster in her marriage and her sons' lives.
Rubio and Waterston have written excellent introductions to all the
volumes, but their treatment of volume V is particularly important
and mandatory for the reader. Here they are able to assess the
complete project. As early as 1919, realizing that her diary material
was publishable, Montgomery had begun to copy it, at the same time
shaping and forming it into ledger sized books, finally ten in all.
She selected and transcribed as the writer she was, always conscious
of the continuity of the whole. Looking back, when she came to write
the last volumes, she had already begun a portrait of herself as
one whose life has a tragic curve. Ewan's recurring bouts of
depression and the failures, both academic and personal in the early
adulthood of her sons, encouraged her to continue in the tragic
vein. This she does with a vengeance. The catalog of disappointments
and despair and, one is bound to feel, self-absorption and damaged
pride, seem endless. She had run, and in great measure, subsidized
the household; in return she expected to control her sons' lives
as she saw fit. Any deviation from the paths for them that she had
planned was intolerable. She required infallibility from them as,
all too often, she claimed it for herself.
In these final years, 1935-1942, Montgomery reaped many of the
benefits of her career: she was in Toronto where she could attend
meetings of the flourishing Canadian Authors' Society and the
Canadian Women's Press Club, enjoying the admiration and homage of
her associates; she was in demand for a variety of public occasions
and speaking engagements which both challenged and satisfied her
need for recognition; she could and did enjoy thoroughly a new
enthusiasm, the movies, which were in their heyday of popularity;
she received and treasured two public honours, Membership in The
Royal Society of Literature and in the Order of The British Empire
(OBE). Invariably, however, the pleasures take a minor place compared
to the records of her unhappiness and disenchantment. In the past,
the conventions of biography would have forbidden the publication
of such tirades of sorrow. Now, the honest biographer is required
above all to be truthful. We are indebted to Rubio and Waterston
that they accepted this assignment whole-heartedly, giving us the
complete picture of this woman, so gifted and at the same time so
self-tormented. Reading Volume V is not an easy or a totally
pleasurable experience, but its completion enables us to go back
to Anne, Emily, Pat, Jane and all the rest with a new respect for
Montgomery's transcendent talent and the timeless light it sheds.
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