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George Mackay Brown

George Mackay Brown (17 October 1921 – 13 April 1996) was a Scottish poet, author and dramatist with a distinctly Orcadian character. He is widely regarded as one of the great Scottish poets of the 20th century.

George Mackay Brown
Born(1921-10-17)17 October 1921
Stromness, Orkney, Scotland
Died13 April 1996(1996-04-13) (aged 74)
Stromness, Orkney, Scotland
Occupationpoet, author, dramatist
NationalityScottish
Alma materUniversity of Edinburgh

Biography edit

Early life and career edit

George Mackay Brown was born on 17 October 1921,[1] the youngest of six children. His parents were John Brown, a tailor and postman, and Mhairi Mackay, a descendant of Clan Mackay who had been brought up in Braal, a hamlet near Strathy, Sutherland, as a native speaker of the Reay Country dialect of Scottish Gaelic.[2]

Except for periods as a mature student in mainland Scotland, Brown lived all his life in the town of Stromness in the Orkney islands. One of his Stromness neighbours was his friend the artist Sylvia Wishart. Because of an illness, his father was restricted in his work and received no pension. The family had a history of depression[3] and Brown's uncle, Jimmy Brown, may have committed suicide: his body was found in Stromness harbour in 1935.[4] George Mackay Brown's youth was spent in poverty.[5] During that period he contracted tuberculosis.

Brown's illness kept him from entering the army at the start of the Second World War and affected him so badly he could not live a normal working life.[6] However, this gave him time and space in which to write. He started work in 1944 with The Orkney Herald, writing on Stromness news,[7] and soon became a prolific journalist.[8] He was encouraged in writing poetry by Francis Scarfe, who was billeted in the Browns' house for over a year from April 1944.[9] After that he was helped in developing as a writer by Ernest Marwick, whose criticism he valued, and by Robert Rendall.[10]

Brown's weekly Island Diary appeared in the Herald between 1945 and 1956. He used the pen name "Islandman" for the column. He was sometimes portrayed by "Spike" (Bob Johnston), the paper's cartoonist, wearing a prominent scarf in the regular Spotlight comic strip. The loss of the scarf on a trip to Shetland was described in 1951. The "now almost legendary scarf" was returned and put on display in a Stromness shop window. Jo Grimond, the local MP, said "the scarf should be retained as permanent inter-county trophy," but Brown complained that "they hadn't even washed it". Spike described it as "the scarf that launched 1,000 quips".[11]

In 1947, Stromness voted to allow pubs to open again, the town having been "dry" since the 1920s. When the first bar opened in 1948, Mackay Brown first tasted alcohol. He found alcoholic drinks "a revelation; they flushed my veins with happiness; they washed away all cares and shyness and worries. I remember thinking to myself 'If I could have two pints of beer every afternoon, life would be a great happiness'".[12][13] Alcohol played a considerable part in his life, but he says, "I never became an alcoholic, mainly because my guts quickly stalled."[14]

Higher education and beginnings as poet edit

Brown was a mature student at Newbattle Abbey College in the 1951–1952 session,[15] where the poet Edwin Muir, who had a great influence on his life as a writer, was warden.[16] His return for the following session was interrupted by recurrent tuberculosis.[17]

Having had poems published in several periodicals, his first volume of them, The Storm, appeared with the Orkney Press in 1954. Muir wrote in the foreword: "Grace is what I find in these poems.". Only three hundred copies were printed, and the imprint sold out within a fortnight. It was acclaimed in the local press.[18]

Brown studied English literature at the University of Edinburgh.[19] After publication of poems in a literary magazine, with the help of Muir,[20] Brown had a second volume, Loaves and Fishes, published by the Hogarth Press in 1959. It was warmly received.[21]

During this period he met many of the Scottish poets of his time – Sydney Goodsir Smith, Norman MacCaig, Hugh MacDiarmid, Tom Scott and others – with whom he often drank in Rose Street, Edinburgh.[22] Here he also met Stella Cartwright, described as "The Muse in Rose Street". Brown was briefly engaged to her and began a correspondence that continued until her death in 1985.[23]

In late 1960, Brown commenced teacher training at Moray House College of Education, but ill health prevented him remaining in Edinburgh. On his recovery in 1961, he found he was not suited to teaching and returned late in the year to his mother's house in Stromness, unemployed.[24] At this juncture he was received into the Roman Catholic Church, converting from Presbyterianism of his childhood[25][26] being baptised on 23 December and taking communion the next day. This followed about 25 years of pondering his religious beliefs. The conversion was not marked by any change in his daily habits, including his drinking.[27]

Maturity as poet edit

After a period of unemployment and rejection of a volume of his poetry by the Hogarth Press,[28] Brown did a postgraduate study on Gerard Manley Hopkins, although such work was not to his taste.[29] This provided some occupation and income until 1964, when a volume of poetry, The Year of the Whale, was accepted.[30]

Brown now found himself able to support himself financially for the first time, as he received new commissions.[31] He received a bursary from the Scottish Arts Council in December 1965[32] as he was working on the volume of short stories, A Calendar of Love, which was issued to critical acclaim in February 1967.[33] He was still troubled by excessive drinking,[34] and that of Stella Cartwright.[35] Later that year came the death of his mother, who had supported him despite disapproving of his drinking; she left an estate of £4.[36]

Meanwhile, he had been working on An Orkney Tapestry, which includes essays on Orkney and more imaginative pieces, illustrated by Syvia Wishart.[37] The year 1968 also saw his one visit to Ireland, on a bursary from the Society of Authors. He met Seamus Heaney there, although his nervous condition reduced his ability to enjoy the visit.[38]

In 1969, his short-story collection A Time to Keep received a positive welcome. The poet Charles Causley said, "I don't know anyone writing in this particular genre today who comes within a thousand miles of him."[39] This was also the year in which he finished working on a six-part cycle of poems about Rackwick, published in 1971 as Fishermen with Ploughs.[40] Meanwhile, An Orkney Tapestry was proving to be a commercial success.[41]

By the late 1960s Brown's poetry was renowned internationally, so that the American poet Robert Lowell, for example, came to Orkney expressly to meet him.[42]

During the summer of 1970, Brown met the musician Peter Maxwell Davies in Rackwick. Subsequently, Davies, who came to live in Rackwick, based a number of his works on the poetry and prose of George Mackay Brown.[43]

Brown was now working on his first novel Greenvoe, the story of an imaginary Orkney community menaced by an undefined project called 'Operation Black Star'. The characters, with one exception, are not portrayed in any psychological depths.[44] The exception is Mrs Mckee, mother of the (alcoholic) minister; Brown had intended her to be a minor character but he said of her, "I grew to love her more and more as the novel unfolded".[45] The Dictionary of Literary Biography says that Greenvoe "ranks ... among the great prose poems of this century".[46] When the novel was published in May 1972 it appeared prophetic because of the oil exploration beginning in the Orkney area.[47] Brown found the resultant degree of celebrity a trial.[48]

The story of the life of Magnus Erlendsson, Earl of Orkney was one to which Brown frequently turned,[49] and it was the theme of his next novel, Magnus, published in 1973.[50] The story of Magnus's life is told in the Orkneyinga saga.[51] The novel examined the themes of sanctity and self-sacrifice.[50] Brown takes the theme of sacrifice into the 20th century by inserting in journalistic language an account of the death of Dietrich Bonhoeffer.[52] While some critics see the work as "disjointed",[52] Peter Maxwell Davies, for example, marks it as Brown's greatest achievement. Davies used it as the basis of his opera The Martyrdom of St Magnus.[53]

Brown was awarded an OBE in the 1974 New Year Honours List. The period after completing Magnus, however, was marked by one of Brown's acute periods of mental distress.[53] Yet he maintained a stream of writing: poetry, children's stories, and a weekly column in the local newspaper, The Orcadian, which ran from 1971 to the end of his life.[54] A first selection of them appeared as Letter from Hamnavoe in 1975.[55]

In mid-1976, Brown met Nora Kennedy, a Viennese woman jeweller and silversmith who was moving to South Ronaldsay. They had a brief affair and remained friends for the rest of his life. He said in early 1977 that this had been his most productive winter as a writer.[56]

Later life and death edit

By early 1977, he was entering a period of depression which lasted intermittently for almost a decade, but maintained his working routine throughout.[57] He also had severe bronchial problems, his condition becoming so serious that in early 1981 he was given the Last Sacraments.[58]

These years saw him working on Time in a Red Coat, a novel Brown called "more a sombre fable",[59] a meditation on the passage of time.[60] It has been called "a novel in which the poet" – Brown as poet – "assumes an undoubted authority."[61]

Two of the important women in Brown's life died about this time. Norah Smallwood, who had worked for his publishers Chatto & Windus and helped and encouraged him over the years, died in 1984.[62] The other was Stella Cartwright, who died the next year.[63] It was after her death that Brown began For the Islands I Sing, an autobiography not published until after his death.[64] where Cartwright receives more space than any other individual,[65] although he did not attend her funeral.[66]

Brown later formed an intense, platonic attachment to Kenna Crawford, to whom he dedicated The Golden Bird: Two Orkney Stories and some poems in the volume The wreck of the Archangel.[67] She bore a strong resemblance to Stella Cartwright.[68] The Golden Bird won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize.[69]

Between 1987 and 1989, Brown travelled to Nairn, including a visit to Pluscarden Abbey, to Shetland and to Oxford, making it the longest time he had left Orkney since his earlier studies in Edinburgh. The Oxford visit coincided with the centenary of the death of Gerard Manley Hopkins.[70]

Shortly afterwards, Brown was diagnosed with bowel cancer, which required two major operations in 1990 and a lengthy stay in Foresterhill Hospital, Aberdeen.[71] In his final years Brown wrote two more novels, Vinland and Beside the Ocean of Time.[72] Vinland, which won Brown a £1,000 award from the Scottish Arts Council,[73] traces the life of Ranald Sigmundson, a fictional character from the Viking era. Beside the Ocean of Time covers over 800 years of Orkney history through the dreams of an Orkney schoolboy.[72] It meditates on the nature of time.[60] It won the Saltire Scottish Book of the Year Award for 1994 and was listed for the Booker prize for fiction,[74] which caused Brown acute anxiety.[75]

During his last years Brown remained in his home, cared for by a network of friends, including Surinder Punjya[76] (later principal of The Nesbitt Centre, Hong Kong), Gunnie Moberg,[77] and Renée Simm.[78] He continued working, writing the poems of Following a Lark and preparing the book for publication. The first copies were delivered to his home on the day he died,[79] 13 April 1996, after a short illness.[80] He was buried on 16 April, the feast day of Saint Magnus, with a funeral service at the Church of Scotland's St Magnus Cathedral, presided over by Father Mario Conti, Father Michael Spencer, and his later biographer Ron Ferguson.[81] Peter Maxwell Davies played Farewell to Stromness.[82] His gravestone quotes the last two lines of his 1996 poem, "A work for poets":[83]

 
Memorial to George Mackay Brown in Kirkwall Cathedral, Orkney

    Carve the runes
    Then be content with silence.

In 2005, a memorial plaque to Brown was unveiled at the Writers' Museum in the Royal Mile, Edinburgh.[84] It bears a quotation from his best-known poem, "Hamnavoe":

    In the fire of images
    Gladly I put my hand.'

Legacy edit

The 2021 centenary of Brown's birth was marked by various events in Orkney and elsewhere in Scotland.[85] In October, the Orkney Museum held an exhibition in Kirkwall marking Brown's life and work. It was called "Beside the Ocean of Time", after his last novel.[86][87] The University of the Highlands and Islands created a collection of texts displayed as a digital 'wondrous scarf' during Book Week Scotland. The idea was inspired by Brown's colourful scarf.[88][89]

Work edit

Brown's poetry and prose have been seen as characterised by "the absence of frills and decoration; the lean simplicity of description, colour, shape and action reduced to essentials, which heightens the reality of the thing observed,"[90] while "his poems became informed by a unique voice that was his alone, controlled and dispassionate, which allowed every word to play its part in the narrative scheme of the unfolding poem."[91]

Brown gained most inspiration from his native islands, for poems, stories and novels that ranged over time. He drew on the Icelandic Orkneyinga Saga, especially in his novel Magnus. Seamus Heaney said Brown's works transformed life by "passing everything through the eye of the needle of Orkney".[92]

Biographies edit

His autobiography, For the Islands I Sing, appeared shortly after his death.[93] A literary biography, Interrogation of Silence by Rowena Murray and Brian Murray, ensued in 2004, George Mackay Brown: The Life, a more personal biography by Maggie Fergusson, in 2006, and George Mackay Brown: The Wound and the Gift by Ron Ferguson, a study of Brown's spiritual journey including his controversial move from Presbyterianism to Roman Catholicism, in 2011. The Seed Beneath the Snow by Joanna Ramsey, a personal memoir by a friend, was published in 2015.

Selected works edit

Poetry collections edit

  • The Storm (1954)
  • Loaves and Fishes (1959)
  • The Year of the Whale (1965)
  • Fishermen with Ploughs (1971)
  • Poems New and Selected (1971)
  • Winterfold (1976)
  • Voyages (1983)
  • The Wreck of the Archangel (1989)
  • Tryst on Egilsay (1989)
  • Brodgar Poems (1992)
  • Foresterhill (1992)
  • Following a Lark (1996)
  • Water (1996)
  • Travellers: poems (2001)
  • Collected Poems (2005)

Short story collections edit

  • A Calendar of Love (1967)
  • A Time to Keep (1969)
  • Hawkfall (1974)
  • The Sun's Net (1976)
  • Andrina and Other Stories (1983)
  • The Masked Fisherman and Other Stories (1989)
  • The Sea-King's Daughter (1991)
  • Winter Tales (1995)
  • The Island of the Women and Other Stories (1998)
  • Simple Fire (2021)

Plays edit

  • A Spell for Green Corn (1970)
  • Three Plays: The Loom of Light, The Well and The Voyage of Saint Brandon (1984)

Novels edit

Essays collections and autobiography edit

  • An Orkney Tapestry (1969)
  • Letters from Hamnavoe (1975)
  • Under Brinkie's Brae (1979)
  • Portrait of Orkney (1981)
  • Rockpools and Daffodils: An Orcadian Diary, 1979–91 (1992)
  • For the Islands I Sing: An Autobiography (1997)
  • Stained Glass Windows (1998)
  • Northern Lights (1999) (Includes Poetry)
  • The First Wash of Spring (2006)

Children's story collection edit

  • The Two Fiddlers (1974)
  • Pictures in the Cave (1977)
  • Six Lives of Fankle the Cat (1980)

Discography edit

  • For the Islands I Sing

Notes edit

  1. ^ Maggie Fergusson, George Mackay Brown: The Life, John Murray, 2006, ISBN 0-7195-5659-7 p. 8.
  2. ^ George Mackay Brown, For the Islands I Sing, John Murray, 1997, ISBN 0-7195-5628-7 p. 25.
  3. ^ Maggie Fergusson, p. 22.
  4. ^ Maggie Fergusson, p. 36.
  5. ^ George Mackay Brown, p. 16.
  6. ^ George Mackay Brown, p. 57.
  7. ^ Rowena Murray and Brian Murray, Interrogation of Silence, John Murray, 2004, ISBN 0-7195-5929-4 p. 13.
  8. ^ Rowena Murray and Brian Murray p. 30.
  9. ^ Rowena Murray and Brian Murray, p. 39.
  10. ^ Rowena Murray and Brian Murray, pp. 39 and 40.
  11. ^ Spike (1951) Spotlight cartoon, Orkney Herald, 28 August, p 4. Cited in https://gmbbibliography.wordpress.com/2019/04/01/spike-spotlight-28-august-1951/
  12. ^ George Mackay Brown, p. 67.
  13. ^ Maggie Fergusson p. 89.
  14. ^ George Mackay Brown, p. 70.
  15. ^ Maggie Fergusson, p. 100.
  16. ^ George Mackay Brown, p. 92.
  17. ^ Maggie Fergusson, p. 122.
  18. ^ Maggie Fergusson, pp. 119 and 128.
  19. ^ George Mackay Brown, p. 114.
  20. ^ Maggie Fergusson p. 134.
  21. ^ Maggie Fergusson, p. 156.
  22. ^ George Mackay Brown, p. 122.
  23. ^ George Mackay Brown, pp. 136 and 139.
  24. ^ Maggie Fergusson, pp. 164 and 168.
  25. ^ "George Mackay Brown & the Wellspring of True Culture". 12 May 2016.
  26. ^ Russell, Richard Rankin (31 May 2016). "Studies in Scottish Literature". Retrieved 29 April 2023.
  27. ^ Maggie Fergusson, pp. 168 and 170.
  28. ^ Maggie Fergusson, p. 170.
  29. ^ George Mackay Brown, p. 173.
  30. ^ Maggie Fergusson, pp. 173 and 179.
  31. ^ Maggie Fergusson p. 181.
  32. ^ Maggie Fergusson p. 184.
  33. ^ Maggie Fergusson p. 185.
  34. ^ Maggie Fergusson, p. 186.
  35. ^ Maggie Fergusson p. 188.
  36. ^ Ron Ferguson, George Mackay Brown: The Wound and the Gift, Saint Andrew Press, 2011, ISBN 978 0 7152 0935 6 pp. 265–267.
  37. ^ Maggie Fergusson, pp. 199 and 205.
  38. ^ Maggie Fergusson, pp. 201–203.
  39. ^ Maggie Fergusson, p. 194.
  40. ^ Maggie Fergusson, p. 210.
  41. ^ Maggie Fergusson, p. 212.
  42. ^ S. R. Green, A Clamjamfray of Poets, The Saltire Society, 2007, ISBN 978-0-85411-098-8 p. 77–78.
  43. ^ Maggie Fergusson, pp. 213–216, etc.
  44. ^ Maggie Fergusson p. 217.
  45. ^ Ron Ferguson, p. 297.
  46. ^ Ron Ferguson p. 193.
  47. ^ Maggie Fergusson p. 221–222
  48. ^ Maggie Fergusson pp. 225–229.
  49. ^ Ron Ferguson p. 18.
  50. ^ a b Maggie Fergusson p. 229.
  51. ^ Anonymous, Orkneyinga Saga, Penguin, 1978, p. 76-97.
  52. ^ a b Ron Ferguson, p. 241.
  53. ^ a b Maggie Fergusson, p. 232.
  54. ^ Maggie Fergusson, p. 234.
  55. ^ Ron Ferguson, p. xvi.
  56. ^ Maggie Fergusson, pp. 238–242.
  57. ^ Maggie Fergusson, pp. 242-244
  58. ^ Maggie Fergusson, p. 245.
  59. ^ Maggie Fergusson, pp. 247–248.
  60. ^ a b Ron Ferguson p. 36.
  61. ^ "London Review of Books".
  62. ^ Maggie Fergusson, pp. 251 and 268.
  63. ^ Maggie Fergusson p. 257.
  64. ^ Maggie Fergusson, p. 258,
  65. ^ Maggie Fergusson, p. 259.
  66. ^ Ron Ferguson p. 298.
  67. ^ Ron Ferguson, pp. 264 and 298.
  68. ^ Ron Ferguson p. 283.
  69. ^ Ron Ferguson, p. 298.
  70. ^ Maggie Fergusson, p. 265, 271 and 273.
  71. ^ Maggie Fergusson, pp. 275 and 276.
  72. ^ a b Maggie Fergusson, pp. 278 and 280.
  73. ^ Ron Ferguson, p. 358.
  74. ^ Maggie Fergusson, p. 283.
  75. ^ Ron Ferguson p. 345.
  76. ^ Maggie Fergusson, p. 278.
  77. ^ "Gunnie Moberg". The Independent. 6 November 2007.
  78. ^ "Renee Simm". The Independent. 18 November 2005.
  79. ^ Maggie Fergusson, pp. 285 and 287.
  80. ^ "Obituary: George Mackay Brown". The Independent. 15 April 1996.
  81. ^ Ron Ferguson p. 363.
  82. ^ Maggie Fergusson, p. 289.
  83. ^ Maggie Fergusson p. 288.
  84. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 October 2006.
  85. ^ "GMB Centenary 2021". 18 February 2021.
  86. ^ "Beside the Ocean of Time: The Centenary of George Mackay Brown". 14 July 2021.
  87. ^ "Exhibition: 'Beside the Ocean of Time'". 18 June 2021.
  88. ^ Greg Russell (2021) "George Mackay Brown remembered in 'wondrous scarf'", 12 November. https://www.thenational.scot/news/19713223.george-mackay-brown-remembered-wondrous-scarf/
  89. ^ Anon (2021) "Celebrating George Mackay Brown", Orkney News, November 15. https://theorkneynews.scot/2021/11/15/celebrating-george-mackay-brown-bookweekscotland/
  90. ^ S. R. Green, p. 84.
  91. ^ S. R. Green, p. 85.
  92. ^ Rowena Murray and Brian Murray, p. 168.
  93. ^ Rowena Murray and Brian Murray, p. 266.

References edit

External links edit

  Media related to George Mackay Brown at Wikimedia Commons

  • "Not just Orkney's greatest poet, but Britain's" 14 December 2007 Guardian
  • BBC Scotland personal profile BBC Scotland Mackay works profile
  • Profile and poems at the Poetry Foundation

george, mackay, brown, october, 1921, april, 1996, scottish, poet, author, dramatist, with, distinctly, orcadian, character, widely, regarded, great, scottish, poets, 20th, century, born, 1921, october, 1921stromness, orkney, scotlanddied13, april, 1996, 1996,. George Mackay Brown 17 October 1921 13 April 1996 was a Scottish poet author and dramatist with a distinctly Orcadian character He is widely regarded as one of the great Scottish poets of the 20th century George Mackay BrownBorn 1921 10 17 17 October 1921Stromness Orkney ScotlandDied13 April 1996 1996 04 13 aged 74 Stromness Orkney ScotlandOccupationpoet author dramatistNationalityScottishAlma materUniversity of Edinburgh Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and career 1 2 Higher education and beginnings as poet 1 3 Maturity as poet 1 4 Later life and death 2 Legacy 3 Work 4 Biographies 5 Selected works 5 1 Poetry collections 5 2 Short story collections 5 3 Plays 5 4 Novels 5 5 Essays collections and autobiography 5 6 Children s story collection 5 7 Discography 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBiography editEarly life and career edit George Mackay Brown was born on 17 October 1921 1 the youngest of six children His parents were John Brown a tailor and postman and Mhairi Mackay a descendant of Clan Mackay who had been brought up in Braal a hamlet near Strathy Sutherland as a native speaker of the Reay Country dialect of Scottish Gaelic 2 Except for periods as a mature student in mainland Scotland Brown lived all his life in the town of Stromness in the Orkney islands One of his Stromness neighbours was his friend the artist Sylvia Wishart Because of an illness his father was restricted in his work and received no pension The family had a history of depression 3 and Brown s uncle Jimmy Brown may have committed suicide his body was found in Stromness harbour in 1935 4 George Mackay Brown s youth was spent in poverty 5 During that period he contracted tuberculosis Brown s illness kept him from entering the army at the start of the Second World War and affected him so badly he could not live a normal working life 6 However this gave him time and space in which to write He started work in 1944 with The Orkney Herald writing on Stromness news 7 and soon became a prolific journalist 8 He was encouraged in writing poetry by Francis Scarfe who was billeted in the Browns house for over a year from April 1944 9 After that he was helped in developing as a writer by Ernest Marwick whose criticism he valued and by Robert Rendall 10 Brown s weekly Island Diary appeared in the Herald between 1945 and 1956 He used the pen name Islandman for the column He was sometimes portrayed by Spike Bob Johnston the paper s cartoonist wearing a prominent scarf in the regular Spotlight comic strip The loss of the scarf on a trip to Shetland was described in 1951 The now almost legendary scarf was returned and put on display in a Stromness shop window Jo Grimond the local MP said the scarf should be retained as permanent inter county trophy but Brown complained that they hadn t even washed it Spike described it as the scarf that launched 1 000 quips 11 In 1947 Stromness voted to allow pubs to open again the town having been dry since the 1920s When the first bar opened in 1948 Mackay Brown first tasted alcohol He found alcoholic drinks a revelation they flushed my veins with happiness they washed away all cares and shyness and worries I remember thinking to myself If I could have two pints of beer every afternoon life would be a great happiness 12 13 Alcohol played a considerable part in his life but he says I never became an alcoholic mainly because my guts quickly stalled 14 Higher education and beginnings as poet edit Brown was a mature student at Newbattle Abbey College in the 1951 1952 session 15 where the poet Edwin Muir who had a great influence on his life as a writer was warden 16 His return for the following session was interrupted by recurrent tuberculosis 17 Having had poems published in several periodicals his first volume of them The Storm appeared with the Orkney Press in 1954 Muir wrote in the foreword Grace is what I find in these poems Only three hundred copies were printed and the imprint sold out within a fortnight It was acclaimed in the local press 18 Brown studied English literature at the University of Edinburgh 19 After publication of poems in a literary magazine with the help of Muir 20 Brown had a second volume Loaves and Fishes published by the Hogarth Press in 1959 It was warmly received 21 During this period he met many of the Scottish poets of his time Sydney Goodsir Smith Norman MacCaig Hugh MacDiarmid Tom Scott and others with whom he often drank in Rose Street Edinburgh 22 Here he also met Stella Cartwright described as The Muse in Rose Street Brown was briefly engaged to her and began a correspondence that continued until her death in 1985 23 In late 1960 Brown commenced teacher training at Moray House College of Education but ill health prevented him remaining in Edinburgh On his recovery in 1961 he found he was not suited to teaching and returned late in the year to his mother s house in Stromness unemployed 24 At this juncture he was received into the Roman Catholic Church converting from Presbyterianism of his childhood 25 26 being baptised on 23 December and taking communion the next day This followed about 25 years of pondering his religious beliefs The conversion was not marked by any change in his daily habits including his drinking 27 Maturity as poet edit After a period of unemployment and rejection of a volume of his poetry by the Hogarth Press 28 Brown did a postgraduate study on Gerard Manley Hopkins although such work was not to his taste 29 This provided some occupation and income until 1964 when a volume of poetry The Year of the Whale was accepted 30 Brown now found himself able to support himself financially for the first time as he received new commissions 31 He received a bursary from the Scottish Arts Council in December 1965 32 as he was working on the volume of short stories A Calendar of Love which was issued to critical acclaim in February 1967 33 He was still troubled by excessive drinking 34 and that of Stella Cartwright 35 Later that year came the death of his mother who had supported him despite disapproving of his drinking she left an estate of 4 36 Meanwhile he had been working on An Orkney Tapestry which includes essays on Orkney and more imaginative pieces illustrated by Syvia Wishart 37 The year 1968 also saw his one visit to Ireland on a bursary from the Society of Authors He met Seamus Heaney there although his nervous condition reduced his ability to enjoy the visit 38 In 1969 his short story collection A Time to Keep received a positive welcome The poet Charles Causley said I don t know anyone writing in this particular genre today who comes within a thousand miles of him 39 This was also the year in which he finished working on a six part cycle of poems about Rackwick published in 1971 as Fishermen with Ploughs 40 Meanwhile An Orkney Tapestry was proving to be a commercial success 41 By the late 1960s Brown s poetry was renowned internationally so that the American poet Robert Lowell for example came to Orkney expressly to meet him 42 During the summer of 1970 Brown met the musician Peter Maxwell Davies in Rackwick Subsequently Davies who came to live in Rackwick based a number of his works on the poetry and prose of George Mackay Brown 43 Brown was now working on his first novel Greenvoe the story of an imaginary Orkney community menaced by an undefined project called Operation Black Star The characters with one exception are not portrayed in any psychological depths 44 The exception is Mrs Mckee mother of the alcoholic minister Brown had intended her to be a minor character but he said of her I grew to love her more and more as the novel unfolded 45 The Dictionary of Literary Biography says that Greenvoe ranks among the great prose poems of this century 46 When the novel was published in May 1972 it appeared prophetic because of the oil exploration beginning in the Orkney area 47 Brown found the resultant degree of celebrity a trial 48 The story of the life of Magnus Erlendsson Earl of Orkney was one to which Brown frequently turned 49 and it was the theme of his next novel Magnus published in 1973 50 The story of Magnus s life is told in the Orkneyinga saga 51 The novel examined the themes of sanctity and self sacrifice 50 Brown takes the theme of sacrifice into the 20th century by inserting in journalistic language an account of the death of Dietrich Bonhoeffer 52 While some critics see the work as disjointed 52 Peter Maxwell Davies for example marks it as Brown s greatest achievement Davies used it as the basis of his opera The Martyrdom of St Magnus 53 Brown was awarded an OBE in the 1974 New Year Honours List The period after completing Magnus however was marked by one of Brown s acute periods of mental distress 53 Yet he maintained a stream of writing poetry children s stories and a weekly column in the local newspaper The Orcadian which ran from 1971 to the end of his life 54 A first selection of them appeared as Letter from Hamnavoe in 1975 55 In mid 1976 Brown met Nora Kennedy a Viennese woman jeweller and silversmith who was moving to South Ronaldsay They had a brief affair and remained friends for the rest of his life He said in early 1977 that this had been his most productive winter as a writer 56 Later life and death edit By early 1977 he was entering a period of depression which lasted intermittently for almost a decade but maintained his working routine throughout 57 He also had severe bronchial problems his condition becoming so serious that in early 1981 he was given the Last Sacraments 58 These years saw him working on Time in a Red Coat a novel Brown called more a sombre fable 59 a meditation on the passage of time 60 It has been called a novel in which the poet Brown as poet assumes an undoubted authority 61 Two of the important women in Brown s life died about this time Norah Smallwood who had worked for his publishers Chatto amp Windus and helped and encouraged him over the years died in 1984 62 The other was Stella Cartwright who died the next year 63 It was after her death that Brown began For the Islands I Sing an autobiography not published until after his death 64 where Cartwright receives more space than any other individual 65 although he did not attend her funeral 66 Brown later formed an intense platonic attachment to Kenna Crawford to whom he dedicated The Golden Bird Two Orkney Stories and some poems in the volume The wreck of the Archangel 67 She bore a strong resemblance to Stella Cartwright 68 The Golden Bird won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize 69 Between 1987 and 1989 Brown travelled to Nairn including a visit to Pluscarden Abbey to Shetland and to Oxford making it the longest time he had left Orkney since his earlier studies in Edinburgh The Oxford visit coincided with the centenary of the death of Gerard Manley Hopkins 70 Shortly afterwards Brown was diagnosed with bowel cancer which required two major operations in 1990 and a lengthy stay in Foresterhill Hospital Aberdeen 71 In his final years Brown wrote two more novels Vinland and Beside the Ocean of Time 72 Vinland which won Brown a 1 000 award from the Scottish Arts Council 73 traces the life of Ranald Sigmundson a fictional character from the Viking era Beside the Ocean of Time covers over 800 years of Orkney history through the dreams of an Orkney schoolboy 72 It meditates on the nature of time 60 It won the Saltire Scottish Book of the Year Award for 1994 and was listed for the Booker prize for fiction 74 which caused Brown acute anxiety 75 During his last years Brown remained in his home cared for by a network of friends including Surinder Punjya 76 later principal of The Nesbitt Centre Hong Kong Gunnie Moberg 77 and Renee Simm 78 He continued working writing the poems of Following a Lark and preparing the book for publication The first copies were delivered to his home on the day he died 79 13 April 1996 after a short illness 80 He was buried on 16 April the feast day of Saint Magnus with a funeral service at the Church of Scotland s St Magnus Cathedral presided over by Father Mario Conti Father Michael Spencer and his later biographer Ron Ferguson 81 Peter Maxwell Davies played Farewell to Stromness 82 His gravestone quotes the last two lines of his 1996 poem A work for poets 83 nbsp Memorial to George Mackay Brown in Kirkwall Cathedral Orkney Carve the runes Then be content with silence In 2005 a memorial plaque to Brown was unveiled at the Writers Museum in the Royal Mile Edinburgh 84 It bears a quotation from his best known poem Hamnavoe In the fire of images Gladly I put my hand Legacy editThe 2021 centenary of Brown s birth was marked by various events in Orkney and elsewhere in Scotland 85 In October the Orkney Museum held an exhibition in Kirkwall marking Brown s life and work It was called Beside the Ocean of Time after his last novel 86 87 The University of the Highlands and Islands created a collection of texts displayed as a digital wondrous scarf during Book Week Scotland The idea was inspired by Brown s colourful scarf 88 89 Work editBrown s poetry and prose have been seen as characterised by the absence of frills and decoration the lean simplicity of description colour shape and action reduced to essentials which heightens the reality of the thing observed 90 while his poems became informed by a unique voice that was his alone controlled and dispassionate which allowed every word to play its part in the narrative scheme of the unfolding poem 91 Brown gained most inspiration from his native islands for poems stories and novels that ranged over time He drew on the Icelandic Orkneyinga Saga especially in his novel Magnus Seamus Heaney said Brown s works transformed life by passing everything through the eye of the needle of Orkney 92 Biographies editHis autobiography For the Islands I Sing appeared shortly after his death 93 A literary biography Interrogation of Silence by Rowena Murray and Brian Murray ensued in 2004 George Mackay Brown The Life a more personal biography by Maggie Fergusson in 2006 and George Mackay Brown The Wound and the Gift by Ron Ferguson a study of Brown s spiritual journey including his controversial move from Presbyterianism to Roman Catholicism in 2011 The Seed Beneath the Snow by Joanna Ramsey a personal memoir by a friend was published in 2015 Selected works editPoetry collections edit The Storm 1954 Loaves and Fishes 1959 The Year of the Whale 1965 Fishermen with Ploughs 1971 Poems New and Selected 1971 Winterfold 1976 Voyages 1983 The Wreck of the Archangel 1989 Tryst on Egilsay 1989 Brodgar Poems 1992 Foresterhill 1992 Following a Lark 1996 Water 1996 Travellers poems 2001 Collected Poems 2005 Short story collections edit A Calendar of Love 1967 A Time to Keep 1969 Hawkfall 1974 The Sun s Net 1976 Andrina and Other Stories 1983 The Masked Fisherman and Other Stories 1989 The Sea King s Daughter 1991 Winter Tales 1995 The Island of the Women and Other Stories 1998 Simple Fire 2021 Plays edit A Spell for Green Corn 1970 Three Plays The Loom of Light The Well and The Voyage of Saint Brandon 1984 Novels edit Greenvoe 1972 Magnus 1973 Time in a Red Coat 1984 The Golden Bird Two Orkney Stories 1987 won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction Vinland 1992 Beside the Ocean of Time 1994 shortlisted for Booker Prize and judged Scottish Book of the Year by the Saltire SocietyEssays collections and autobiography edit An Orkney Tapestry 1969 Letters from Hamnavoe 1975 Under Brinkie s Brae 1979 Portrait of Orkney 1981 Rockpools and Daffodils An Orcadian Diary 1979 91 1992 For the Islands I Sing An Autobiography 1997 Stained Glass Windows 1998 Northern Lights 1999 Includes Poetry The First Wash of Spring 2006 Children s story collection edit The Two Fiddlers 1974 Pictures in the Cave 1977 Six Lives of Fankle the Cat 1980 Discography edit For the Islands I SingNotes edit Maggie Fergusson George Mackay Brown The Life John Murray 2006 ISBN 0 7195 5659 7 p 8 George Mackay Brown For the Islands I Sing John Murray 1997 ISBN 0 7195 5628 7 p 25 Maggie Fergusson p 22 Maggie Fergusson p 36 George Mackay Brown p 16 George Mackay Brown p 57 Rowena Murray and Brian Murray Interrogation of Silence John Murray 2004 ISBN 0 7195 5929 4 p 13 Rowena Murray and Brian Murray p 30 Rowena Murray and Brian Murray p 39 Rowena Murray and Brian Murray pp 39 and 40 Spike 1951 Spotlight cartoon Orkney Herald 28 August p 4 Cited in https gmbbibliography wordpress com 2019 04 01 spike spotlight 28 august 1951 George Mackay Brown p 67 Maggie Fergusson p 89 George Mackay Brown p 70 Maggie Fergusson p 100 George Mackay Brown p 92 Maggie Fergusson p 122 Maggie Fergusson pp 119 and 128 George Mackay Brown p 114 Maggie Fergusson p 134 Maggie Fergusson p 156 George Mackay Brown p 122 George Mackay Brown pp 136 and 139 Maggie Fergusson pp 164 and 168 George Mackay Brown amp the Wellspring of True Culture 12 May 2016 Russell Richard Rankin 31 May 2016 Studies in Scottish Literature Retrieved 29 April 2023 Maggie Fergusson pp 168 and 170 Maggie Fergusson p 170 George Mackay Brown p 173 Maggie Fergusson pp 173 and 179 Maggie Fergusson p 181 Maggie Fergusson p 184 Maggie Fergusson p 185 Maggie Fergusson p 186 Maggie Fergusson p 188 Ron Ferguson George Mackay Brown The Wound and the Gift Saint Andrew Press 2011 ISBN 978 0 7152 0935 6 pp 265 267 Maggie Fergusson pp 199 and 205 Maggie Fergusson pp 201 203 Maggie Fergusson p 194 Maggie Fergusson p 210 Maggie Fergusson p 212 S R Green A Clamjamfray of Poets The Saltire Society 2007 ISBN 978 0 85411 098 8 p 77 78 Maggie Fergusson pp 213 216 etc Maggie Fergusson p 217 Ron Ferguson p 297 Ron Ferguson p 193 Maggie Fergusson p 221 222 Maggie Fergusson pp 225 229 Ron Ferguson p 18 a b Maggie Fergusson p 229 Anonymous Orkneyinga Saga Penguin 1978 p 76 97 a b Ron Ferguson p 241 a b Maggie Fergusson p 232 Maggie Fergusson p 234 Ron Ferguson p xvi Maggie Fergusson pp 238 242 Maggie Fergusson pp 242 244 Maggie Fergusson p 245 Maggie Fergusson pp 247 248 a b Ron Ferguson p 36 London Review of Books Maggie Fergusson pp 251 and 268 Maggie Fergusson p 257 Maggie Fergusson p 258 Maggie Fergusson p 259 Ron Ferguson p 298 Ron Ferguson pp 264 and 298 Ron Ferguson p 283 Ron Ferguson p 298 Maggie Fergusson p 265 271 and 273 Maggie Fergusson pp 275 and 276 a b Maggie Fergusson pp 278 and 280 Ron Ferguson p 358 Maggie Fergusson p 283 Ron Ferguson p 345 Maggie Fergusson p 278 Gunnie Moberg The Independent 6 November 2007 Renee Simm The Independent 18 November 2005 Maggie Fergusson pp 285 and 287 Obituary George Mackay Brown The Independent 15 April 1996 Ron Ferguson p 363 Maggie Fergusson p 289 Maggie Fergusson p 288 Timeline of George Mackay Brown Archived from the original on 8 October 2006 GMB Centenary 2021 18 February 2021 Beside the Ocean of Time The Centenary of George Mackay Brown 14 July 2021 Exhibition Beside the Ocean of Time 18 June 2021 Greg Russell 2021 George Mackay Brown remembered in wondrous scarf 12 November https www thenational scot news 19713223 george mackay brown remembered wondrous scarf Anon 2021 Celebrating George Mackay Brown Orkney News November 15 https theorkneynews scot 2021 11 15 celebrating george mackay brown bookweekscotland S R Green p 84 S R Green p 85 Rowena Murray and Brian Murray p 168 Rowena Murray and Brian Murray p 266 References editBold Alan 1978 George Mackay Brown The Modern Writers Series Barnes amp Noble ISBN 0 06 490569 1 Ferguson Maggie 2006 George Mackay Brown The Life John Murray ISBN 0 7195 5659 7 Murray Rowena Murray Brian 2004 Interrogation of Silence The Writings of George Mackay Brown John Murray ISBN 0 7195 5929 4 Ferguson Ron 2011 George Mackay Brown The Wound and the Gift Saint Andrew Press ISBN 978 0 7152 0935 6 Rt Revd Professor the Lord Harries Light from the Orkneys Edwin Muir and George Mackay Brown Public Lecture given at Gresham College 5 February 2009 nbsp Poetry portal nbsp Biography portalExternal links edit nbsp Media related to George Mackay Brown at Wikimedia Commons Article Douglas Dunn Finished Fragrance The Poems of George Mackay Brown Poetry Nation No 2 1974 Not just Orkney s greatest poet but Britain s 14 December 2007 Guardian Profile and poems written and audio at Poetry Archive BBC Scotland personal profile BBC Scotland Mackay works profile Profile and poems at the Poetry Foundation Portraits at Scottish National Galleries Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Mackay Brown amp oldid 1174419647, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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