Thursday, November 4, 2010

remembering margaret scott

This drawing of Margaret Scott is by Hobart-based artist, potter and desktop publisher, Cate Lowry
© Copyright Cate Lowry, ACYS, 2002 Source: The Write Stuff

When I was sixteen years old, my school held a kind of activity day in late October in the lead up to the end of the year and the Christmas holidays, when attention levels were drooping and we were in need of some fun, with the HSC (Oz equivalent of GCSE) exams on the horizon for most of us. The day was filled with workshops in various recreational activities designed around the theme of "Let Your Lives Speak", as per the Quaker ethos.

I signed up for the creative writing workshop which was to be run by Margaret Scott. Margaret was a poet, novelist and well known intellectual, both throughout the state and on a national scale, and at this time she was a regular on Good News Week. Students and teachers alike were abuzz with excitement about her coming to the school - I, on the other hand, almost exclusively inhabited the world of nineteenth century literature at that time (oh, how cool I was!) and didn't really know who she was. I was just interested in doing a creative writing workshop!

She gave us a topic to write on and we were given fifteen minutes to write a piece, and then we went around the room where everyone read theirs aloud. I was surrounded by students who I knew really fancied themselves as the top dogs of the arts at the school, and most of them eagerly volunteered to go first, with Margaret offering some brief comments, but nothing along the lines of "oh my goodness, that is amazing for one so young", which I think they were expecting! (I'm sure you all went to school with people like that!)

It came to my turn and I read my piece. When I finished, no one said anything.

Margaret started saying something, but then she trailed off and looked right at me. Her eyes were so perceptive I felt like she could see through me.

"Would you read that again?" she asked.

Being an insecure teenager with no confidence in my abilities, my immediate thought was "why? What's wrong with it?!" I felt very stupid! But I seem to recall the rest of the people in the room looking at me with a mixture of awe and envy. So, I read it again. Of the whole group, I was the only one asked to read again. And then the piece was discussed for almost the rest of the session, until one of the teachers supervising remembered that there were a few more people to get through! I can't even remember what it was about, but I seem to recall everyone's comments on the hidden symbolism in my piece making me sound far more in command of the craft than I actually was.

I never told anyone about it at the time, but I look back on that episode now with pride. Sometimes in my low moments I think back to it, and think that if a piece I wrote made a fine writer and scholar such as Margaret Scott have to think twice, then maybe I do have something.

It's a memory I treasure. Thank you, Margaret.

She passed away in 2005. It was only in the last few years of her life that I got to know her through her work, not just this memory. I love her poems, particularly the housework ones (which I'm trying to find a copy of) and I recommend trying to find her novel Family Album - if you're in Australia you should be able to get a copy from most libraries. It's a lovely book.

Do you have a moment like this that you look back on, to spur you forward? Please share in the comments :)

~ ~ ~ ~

CASTAWAY

Sometimes a neighbour's look, a post-card, a telephone call
will carry you up the shore of another life
and leave you gaping amazed at sudden jungle
a world away from the dolorous desk
the spruce back-yard, the brick-and-tile in Rosebud.
This glimmering shade's cacophonous with
unfamiliar names of long-dead pets and teachers,
side-streets in distant cities and faithless lovers.
The canopy's alive with flitting shapes unknown
beyond the confines of this island.
Here is the castaway's camp, his palisade,
contrivances he's fashioned year by year,
stores he saved from the wreck of his old ship
before it sank from sight beyond the reef.
Fragments of once-proud sails now patch his roof.
A saw, a pannikin hang by the bed
where every day he wakes alone at dawn
to a view of mountains. Those peaks rise
over the trees in a blue scrawl whose message
you seem to have read from a different angle
on the wall of sky to the east of your own island.


© Margaret Scott

7 comments:

  1. I love stories like this - and you never even told ME about this one!!

    It reminds me of, after all of the crap I'd been through in the three years leading up to it, I received a letter from the Royal Court saying that they liked my play!

    They didn't put it on, but for a 23 year old writer who had trouble getting out of bed in the mornings, it was a real boost.

    Admittedly, I have been too scared to write another play since!!!!!

    TS

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  2. Something I wrote once got read out in front of my class, by a teacher who had never appreciated my writing (before or after) and who didn't believe in me at all (pretty much nobody did at the time). Several times each year, we had to write a full essay in class as a form of test. We'd usually get 1.5 hrs. That time, we were writing an essay and answering a bunch of unrelated questions; it was a mock high school entry exam.

    My piece wrote itself - I just held the pen. I no longer remember what the topic/theme was, but have a pretty good recollection of how it went, and of that 'someone/something else is writing this' feeling I had. The teacher read it out and kept repeating that this had been written under mock exam stress (not that I had felt any stress). My classmates were too immature and to set on bullying me to give me any credit, but I do know that a few people were a bit stunned. My best friend: "Where did you get that from?"

    That was in year 8. This particular is fairly insignificant in itself, but it forms a link in a chain of events leading up to a grand finale in which I pretty much acted out the "You say I can't do it? WATCH ME!" saying. Now THAT was good. :)

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  3. That's such a lovely story! I'm happy for you. I think most writers have a story from their childhood that made them feel they have a special ability with words and the memory of it spurs them on.

    Your memory is extra special because you were with such a noted writer like Margaret Scott. Wow! What a wonderful moment.

    Now I want to read that piece that she asked you to read again. Do you still have it?

    Jai

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  4. what a lovely story! i felt so happy for you when i read it. i suspect your motives for going were far more likely to produce something she'd love than those who went there just because they wanted her to love them.

    I guess I dont have a major episode when i've had a big turbo-boost to my faith in myself. I tend to be sustained by the little things, i think, in almost all spheres of my life. A smile from a patient, a compliment from a friend, a grateful look from a senior doctor who i've helped which i know means they dont think i'm *totally* hopeless, a comment on my blog, a random just-because email or a text. All or any of the above can send me from doldrums to daydreams in no time. But, no, I don't have any one moment which spurs me on, which is a shame, really. I'll have to orchestrate one, ha!

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  5. Thank you all for your lovely comments!! I like the idea of having a moment that takes us from doldrums to daydreams, as Jane put it! :)

    Jai, no I don't have the piece with me - I possibly copied it into my diary at the time but they are all in a box in Australia somewhere. I don't even remember what it was about - I was reading a lot of Hardy at the time, so most likely it was some Tess inspired thing!! I would like to read it again, but am happy that the warm wonderful memory of thinking "maybe I CAN do this" is still with me :D

    xx

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  6. What a fantastic memory to have. I'm not surprised you treasure it. Thanks for sharing! I'm always surprised when people say things of mine are good and as a teenager even more so.

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  7. What a wonderful, wonderful moment. As someone who has a few favourite poets (Pablo Neruda is perhaps at the top), I'm ashamed to say I don't know much about Margaret Scott.

    Any chance you'll share your creative piece with us one day?

    ReplyDelete

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