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Marjorie Lowry Christie Pickthall (14 September 1883, in Gunnersbury, London – 22 April 1922, in Vancouver), was a Canadian writer who was born in England but lived in Canada from the time she was seven.Barbara Godard,
Pickthall, Marjorie Lowry Christie
" Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online, Web, 1 November 2010
She was once "thought to be the best Canadian poet of her generation."Donald A. Precosky,
Marjorie Pickthall (1883–1922)
, Poetry Foundation, Web, 5 April 2011.


Life

Marjorie Pickthall was born in 1883 in the west London district of Gunnersbury, to Arthur Christie Pickthall, a surveyor and the son of a Church of England clergyman, and Elizabeth Helen Mary Pickthall (née Mallard), daughter of an officer in the Royal Navy, part Irish and part Huguenot. According to her father, Pickthall had planned her career before she was six; she would be a writer and illustrator of books. Her parents encouraged her artistic talents with lessons in drawing and music; an accomplished violinist, she continued studying the instrument until she was twenty. By 1890, Pickthall and her family had moved to Toronto, Ontario, Canada where her father initially worked at the city's waterworks before becoming an electrical draftsman. Her only brother died in 1894. Marjorie was educated at the Church of England day school on Beverley Street in Toronto, (possibly St. Mildred's College) and from 1899 at the Bishop Strachan School. She developed her skills at composition and made lasting friendships at these schools, despite poor health and suffering from headaches, dental, eye and back problems. Summers were spent walking and studying nature on the Toronto islands. As well, she read poetry: her favourite English poets were Fiona Macleod, William Morris, and Dante Gabriel Rossetti.


Canadian writing career

According to The Canadian Encyclopedia ''From an early age ickthallcontributed stories to the magazines and newspapers; and before her first book appeared, her genius was recognized.''"Pickthall, Marjorie Lowry Christie," ''Encyclopedia of Canada'' (Toronto: University Associates, 1948), V, 118, Print. She sold her first story, "Two-Ears", to the ''
Toronto Globe ''The Globe'' was a newspaper in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, founded in 1844 by George Brown as a Reform voice. It merged with ''The Mail and Empire'' in 1936 to form ''The Globe and Mail''. History ''The Globe'' is pre-dated by a title of the same ...
'' for $3 in 1898, when she was still a student at Bishop Strachan. "Two-Ears" (along with one of Pickthall's poems) would go on the next year to win ''
The Mail and Empire ''The Mail and Empire'' was formed from the 1895 merger of ''The Toronto Mail'' (owned by Charles Alfred Riordan and managed by Christopher W. Bunting) and ''Toronto Empire'' newspapers, both conservative newspapers in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It ...
s writing competition. By the age of 17 she was writing for both the ''Mail and Empire'' and the ''Globe'', contributing to their "Young People's Corner" and "Circle of Young Canada" pages. Pickthall won the ''Mail and Empire'' contest again in 1900, this time for her poem "O Keep the World For Ever At the Dawn." "With its Canadian inflection of the dream landscapes of late-19th-century aestheticism and its impassioned language and musicality," says the '' Dictionary of Canadian Biography'', "it attracted the attention of professors whose critical support would ensure Pickthall's lasting reputation." To those academics, Pickthall's "rejection of modernism ... and
futurism Futurism ( it, Futurismo, link=no) was an artistic and social movement that originated in Italy, and to a lesser extent in other countries, in the early 20th century. It emphasized dynamism, speed, technology, youth, violence, and objects such ...
's abrasive forms represented continuity with the idealism of the '
Confederation Poets ''Confederation Poets'' is the name given to a group of Canadian poets born in the decade of Canada's Confederation (the 1860s) who rose to prominence in Canada in the late 1880s and 1890s. The term was coined by Canadian professor and literary cr ...
'." In that year, she quit school and began to write full-time. In July 1903 Pickthall's short story ''The Greater Gift'' was featured in the first edition of ''East and West'' (Toronto), a church magazine for young people. She became a regular contributor. Three serials she wrote for the magazine – ''Dick's Desertion: A Boy's Adventures in Canadian Forests'' (1905), ''The Straight Road'' (1906), and ''Billy's Hero, or, The Valley of Gold'' (1908) – were published as juvenile novels, illustrated by
Charles William Jefferys Charles William Jefferys (August 25, 1869 – October 8, 1951), also known as C. W. Jefferys, was a Canadian painter, illustrator, author, and teacher, best known as a historical illustrator. Biography Jefferys was born in Rochester, Engl ...
. In 1904 her poem "The Homecomers" won third prize in a poetry contest and caught the attention of Pelham Edgar, professor of English at the University of Toronto's Victoria College. He began publishing her work regularly in the college magazine, '' Acta Victoriana''. He also introduced her to Sir Andrew Macphail, editor of the prestigious ''University Magazine'', who also began regularly printing her poetry from 1907 on. In 1905 Pickthall hired a New York agent, and soon began appearing in American magazines like the ''
Atlantic Monthly ''The Atlantic'' is an American magazine and multi-platform publisher. It features articles in the fields of politics, foreign affairs, business and the economy, culture and the arts, technology, and science. It was founded in 1857 in Boston, ...
, The Century Magazine, Harper's, McClure's'', and '' Scribner's''. "Pickthall wrote more fiction during her very productive decade after 1905. Her poetry might be highly praised, but it paid little, while stories fetched as much as $150." Pickthall was devastated by her mother's death in February 1910. With the help of poet Helena Coleman, she got a job at the Victoria College library to make ends meet. However, back problems (and possibly a nervous breakdown) caused her to take a leave of absence in spring 1912. Later that year, determined to see some of the world, Pickthall went to England. In her absence from Canada, Macphail's ''University Magazine'' published Pickthall's first collection of poetry, ''The Drift of Pinions,'' "in an edition of 1,000 boxed copies that sold out in ten days in November, 1913."


Move to England

In England, Pickthall first stayed with her uncle, Dr. Frank Reginald Mallard, in
Hammersmith Hammersmith is a district of West London, England, southwest of Charing Cross. It is the administrative centre of the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham, and identified in the London Plan as one of 35 major centres in Greater London. ...
and then began renting ''Chalke Cottage'' in
Bowerchalke Bowerchalke is a village and civil parish in Wiltshire, England, about southwest of Salisbury. It is in the south of the county, about from the boundary with Dorset and from that with Hampshire. The parish includes the hamlets of Mead End, Mi ...
, Wiltshire, with her second cousin Edith Emma Whillier. Successive summers were spent at ''Chalke Cottage''. She began writing again and in 1914 wrote the historical novel ''Poursuite Joyeuse'', which was published in 1915 as ''Little Hearts''. The book was a failure; "it earned no more than £15. Nor, despite favourable reviews, did it facilitate Pickthall's entry into the London literary world, which she felt was closed to her as a colonial.... Moreover, she was out of touch with the American market." In 1916 she published ''The Lamp of Poor Souls'', an expanded volume of poetry. During 1915 and 1916 Pickthall trained in automobile mechanics to do her part in the war effort. She was not accepted, so instead took work as a secretary and market gardener. This experience formed the basis of an essay, ''Women On the Land In England'', which was subsequently published in ''East and West''. It also led to an unsuccessful commercial venture in 1917, growing vegetables at ''Chalke Cottage'' with a woman known as ''Long-John''. In May 1918 health problems forced her to quit as assistant librarian in the South Kensington Meteorological Office, so she returned to Bowerchalke and completed 20 stories by the end of the year, "half of which were sold by January. Another creative burst between September and December 1919 produced a novel (''The Bridge: A Story of the Great Lakes''), a verse drama (''The Wood Carver's Wife''), and 16 stories."


Return to Canada

On 22 May 1920 she sailed from Liverpool for Toronto, and then journeyed on to Lang Bay in the Sunshine Coast area of British Columbia with
Edith Joan Lyttleton Edith Joan Lyttleton (18 December 187310 March 1945) was an Australasian author, who wrote as G. B. Lancaster. Life and career Lyttleton was born on the family farm near Campbell Town, Tasmania, and brought up from 1879 in New Zealand on a ...
; then on to the Boundary Bay summer camp of
Isabel Ecclestone Mackay Isabel Ecclestone Mackay (''née'' MacPherson) (November 25, 1875 – August 15, 1928) was a Canadian novelist and poet. Biography Born in Woodstock, Ontario, she was the daughter of Donald McLeod MacPherson, an early Scottish settler of Oxford ...
where she revised ''The Bridge''. She then began a new novel, ''The Beaten Man'': "She struggled over this novel in Victoria in the winter of 1920–21 ... and rejected five drafts." 'The Wood Carver's Wife', published in the ''University Magazine'' in April 1920, "was staged at the New Empire Theatre in Montreal in March 1921 and later at Hart House Theatre in Toronto." Audiences and reviewers responded enthusiastically. In 1921 Pickthall settled in the
Clo-oose Clo-oose (Nuu-chah-nulth ''tluu7uus'') is an area adjacent to the mouth of the Cheewhat River on the west coast of southern Vancouver Island, British Columbia. Within the Pacific Rim National Park Reserve, the former steamboat stop is by road and ...
community of the Ditidaht people on the west coast of Vancouver Island (a community immortalized in her poem,
The Sailor's Grave at Clo-oose, V.I.
). Soon, though, her health failed and she was admitted to a nursing home in Victoria, British Columbia.


Death and commemoration

Pickthall was 38 years old when, 12 days after surgery, she died of an embolism in Vancouver in 1922. She is buried beside her mother in
St. James Cemetery St James's Cemetery is an urban park behind Liverpool Cathedral that is below ground level. Until 1825, the space was a stone quarry, and until 1936 it was used as the Liverpool city cemetery. It has been designated a Grade I Historic Park by H ...
. Although her father was her executor her estate was bequeathed to her aunt, Laura Mallard, in whose home she had done most of her writing. A collection of her poems and a volume of her collected short stories were both published posthumously. "Her father compiled and published her ''Collected Poems'' in 1925 and again, definitively, in 1936."Selected Poetry of Marjorie Pickthall (1883–1922)
" Representative Poetry Online, UToronto.ca, Web, 6 April 2011.


Writing

Marjorie Pickthall "stood as proof in the eyes of the next generation of female poets that women could indeed earn the respect and attention of a literary establishment dominated by men."


Poetry

"Pickthall's literary reputation rests ultimately on the ... poetry published during her lifetime." During her lifetime, that was a high reputation indeed. For John Garvin, writing in ''Canadian Poets'' in 1916, even back in Pickthall's days on the youth pages it had been "evident that a genius of a rare order had appeared in Canadian literature." Nor was he alone in thinking that. By 1913, when her first book of poetry was released: "For once the reviewers and critics generally were of one opinion that the work was the product of genius undefiled and radiant, dwelling in the realm of pure beauty and singing with perfect naturalness its divine message." John W. Garvin,

" ''Canadian Poets'' (Toronto: McClelland, Goodchild & Stewart, 1916), 306, UPenn.edu, Web, 6 April 2011.
Garvin quoted from the book review in ''
Saturday Night Saturday Night may refer to: Film, television and theatre Film * ''Saturday Night'' (1922 film), a 1922 film directed by Cecil B. DeMille * ''Saturday Nights'' (film), a 1933 Swedish film directed by Schamyl Bauman * ''Saturday Night'' (1950 fil ...
'' magazine: :"''The Drift of Pinions'' is exquisitely lyrical, with a flawless rhythm and melody.... This poet pays no heed to the headlines of to-day ... but goes her way in the world of iris-buds and golden fern, hearing and seeing only the things that are most excellent.... It is impossible in comment or quotation to give an idea of the subtle beauty of execution, the ideal spirituality of conception, which make such poems as
The Lamp of Poor Souls
and 'A Mother in Egypt' poetic achievements of the rarest kind.... The singer's gifts are splendour and tenderness of colour, sweetness of silvery phrase, and a true poet's unwavering belief in 'the subtle thing called spirit."Jean Graham in Toronto

," quoted in Garvin, ''Canadian Poets'' (Toronto: McClelland, Goodchild & Stewart, 1916), 306, UPenn.edu, Web, 6 April 2011.
At Pickthall's death, Pelham Edgar wrote: "Her talent was strong and pure and tender, and her feeling for beauty was not more remarkable than her unrivalled gift for expressing it."
Archibald MacMechan Archibald McKellar MacMechan (June 21, 1862 – 7 August 1933) was a Canadian academic at Dalhousie University and writer. His works deal mainly with Nova Scotia and its history. ''The Halifax Disaster (Explosion)'' was an official history of th ...
called her "the truest, sweetest singing voice ever praised in Canada." In his 1925 biography, ''Marjorie Pickthall: A Book of Remembrance,'' Lorne Pierce could point to ten poetic tributes from top Canadian poets. Pierce himself praised her "Colour, Cadence, Contour, Craftsmanship." Yet, as Donald A. Precosky writes in Pickthall's Poetry Foundation biography of today: "Probably no other Canadian writer has suffered such a plunge in reputation as Marjorie Pickthall.... Now her work, except for two or three anthologized pieces, goes unread.". For Precosky, the reason for that change was simple: "The fact is that her initial popularity was based upon extraliterary criteria. Her rejection of modernism in style and attitude made her the darling of conservative Canadian critics." Such an artificial popularity would be transitory almost by definition. "But she has fallen victim to time.... modernism has replaced nineteenth-century romantic verse." To a modernist like Precosky, the very things ''Saturday Night'' saw to praise in Pickthall's work a century ago – its flawless rhyme and rhythm, and that the poet does not write with an eye on the headlines – are the very things wrong with it: :The verses are gentle, dreamy, and musical yet somehow empty. She has nothing to say but she says it harmoniously. The world of her poetry, with its ivory towers, Persian lovers, and 'amber bars' of sunlight, is not drawn from life but from her reading of romantic literature." Pickthall's poetry became, to an extent, a pawn in a literary game between traditionalists and modernists. Just as traditionalists like MacPhail boosted her poetry due to their rejection of modernism, modernists deprecated it due to their rejection of traditionalism; her decline in popularity was no less based on "extraliterary criteria" than her earlier popularity. To take one notorious example: "In his ''On Canadian Poetry'' (1943), E.K. Brown ridiculed the poetry of Marjorie Pickthall with such malicious conviction that it is perhaps not surprising to find Lorne Pierce, whose loyal appreciation for Pickthall knew no bounds, rescinding his evaluation of the poet in the same year." Brown saw Pickthall as "the object of a cult" – the anti-modernist cult. To him, her verses represented "the final phase" of English Canada's tradition of Romantic poetry. Pierce subsequently tried to offer a balanced judgement of her work in his Introduction to her 1957 ''Selected Poems'', where he talked about both strengths and weaknesses. Pickthall's strengths, as he saw them, were "grace and charm, restrained Christian mysticism, and unfailing cadence;" her weaknesses, "preoccupation with the unearthly, with death and regret, with loneliness and grief, where the tendency is toward emotional interpretations of life, and rapture and intuition are substituted for the discipline of reason." For Pierce, Pickthall had already begun to repeat herself by the time of her first book: "'Bega,' 'The Little Sister of the Prophet,' and 'The Bridgegroom of Cana,' all published in 1909, ... howthe full maturity of her powers. When ''Drift of Pinions'' ... appeared in 1913, she had already written much of her best poetry, and was to continue not only the repetition of her favourite attitudes and metaphors, but even the vocabulary that included such words as gray, little, silver, rose, dreams, mist, dove, and moth." Northrop Frye, for one, found Pierce's judgement too dismissive: "The introduction is written with much sympathy, but tends to confirm the usual view of this poet as a diaphanous late
romantic Romantic may refer to: Genres and eras * The Romantic era, an artistic, literary, musical and intellectual movement of the 18th and 19th centuries ** Romantic music, of that era ** Romantic poetry, of that era ** Romanticism in science, of that e ...
whose tradition died with her.... I have some reservations about this. She died at thirty-nine: if Yeats had died at the same age, in 1904, we should have had an overwhelming impression of the end of a road to Miltown that we now realize would have been pretty inadequate.... Pickthall was, of course, no Yeats, but her Biblical- Oriental pastiches were not so unlike the kind of thing that
Ezra Pound Ezra Weston Loomis Pound (30 October 1885 – 1 November 1972) was an expatriate American poet and critic, a major figure in the early modernist poetry movement, and a Fascism, fascist collaborator in Italy during World War II. His works ...
was producing at about the same time, and there are many signs of undeveloped possibilities in this book."Northrop Frye,
Letters in Canada – 1957
" ''The Bush Garden'' (Toronto: Anansi, 1971), 86."
The comparisons to Yeats and Pound are apt. Like Pound and his mentor Eliot, Pickthall crammed her verses with literary allusions; but while this made Pound and Eliot cutting-edge to some, all it got her was the epithet, "Pickthall the Obscure." Like Yeats, she used recurring symbols (like the rose) throughout her poems; but while Yeats's
symbol A symbol is a mark, sign, or word that indicates, signifies, or is understood as representing an idea, object, or relationship. Symbols allow people to go beyond what is known or seen by creating linkages between otherwise very different conc ...
ism has long been admired, Pickthall received only the criticism that she was repeating "even the vocabulary" of her older work. "However," as
Wanda Campbell Wanda is a female given name of Polish origin. It probably derives from the tribal name of the Wends.Campbell, Mike"Meaning, Origin, and History of the Name Wanda."''Behind the Name.'' Accessed on August 12, 2010. The name has long been popular in ...
noted in her essay on Pickthall in ''Hidden Rooms: Early Canadian Women Poets'', "an increasing number of scholars are discovering that Pickthall, once labelled 'Pickthall the Obscure,' did indeed have something to say, though it was often buried beneath traditional forms, decorative surfaces, and Pre-Raphaelite lushness. Both
Diana Relke Diana most commonly refers to: * Diana (name), a given name (including a list of people with the name) * Diana (mythology), ancient Roman goddess of the hunt and wild animals; later associated with the Moon * Diana, Princess of Wales (1961–1997) ...
and
Alex Kizuk Alex is a given name. It can refer to a shortened version of Alexander, Alexandra, Alexis. People Multiple *Alex Brown (disambiguation), multiple people *Alex Gordon (disambiguation), multiple people *Alex Harris (disambiguation), multiple peop ...
explore aspects of a feminist poetic and offer new interpretations of individual poems."Wanda Campbell,
Marjorie Pickthall
" ''Hidden Rooms: Early Canadian Women Poets'' (London, ON: Canadian Poetry Press, 2000), Canadian Poetry, UWO, Web, 6 April 2011.
Kizuk's interpretation is interesting: "Pickthall's verse achieves that quality of poetic autonomy that Roman Jakobson called 'literariness.' Her verse might best be introduced as an intense
apostrophe The apostrophe ( or ) is a punctuation mark, and sometimes a diacritical mark, in languages that use the Latin alphabet and some other alphabets. In English, the apostrophe is used for two basic purposes: * The marking of the omission of one o ...
to literary beauty: a turning away from the trial to address the judges in impassioned language that an audience may only overhear. Her poems draw upon a body of literary precedents in order to construct a coherent and fantastic defence against unsatisfied desire and what she perceived to be a fundamental incoherence in modern life." Discussing Pierce's later judgement, Sandra Campbell cautions the reader against accepting anyone's interpretations or judgements, urging him or her to read the poems instead and make a judgement of his or her own: "Sandra Campbell explains that Pierce had his own reasons for presenting Pickthall in this way, and argues for a reconsideration of her as 'A woman writer of pain and presence whom we all, male and female alike, ought to read, hear, see, and assess with new eyes.'"


Fiction

Much of Pickthall's fiction is disposable. Her three juvenile novels, for instance, were magazine serials, written to a formula to meet a deadline. "In each book a boy or young man, isolated by orphanhood or financial straits, is forced to undertake a journey, during which he must solve a trying problem; its solution, through a combination of luck ('Providence'), a new spiritual and moral rectitude, and a fresh sense of duty, leads to his re-integration into the family or society." ''The Encyclopedia of Literature'' says: "Of Pickthall's adult fiction, ''Little Hearts'' (1915), set in the eighteenth-century Devonshire countryside, and ''The Bridge: A Story of the Great Lakes'' (1922), employ melodramatic incident." (''The Bridge'', like her juveniles, began as a magazine serial.) "As in most of her short stories, Pickthall in these novels fails to integrate fully descriptive detail, character, and incident." Others have had more favorable impressions. Poet and critic
Anne Compton Anne Compton (born 1947) is a Canadian poet, critic, and anthologist. Biography Compton was born and raised in the farming community of Bangor, Prince Edward Island. She received her Bachelor of Arts from the University of Prince Edward Island, h ...
wrote of Pickthall's first novel: "''Little Hearts'' (1915) reveals an
Impressionist Impressionism was a 19th-century art movement characterized by relatively small, thin, yet visible brush strokes, open composition, emphasis on accurate depiction of light in its changing qualities (often accentuating the effects of the passage ...
's awareness of light and confirms Robert Garrett's observation that ' w writers know how to paint air as she does.' Light erases outlines, turns landscapes fluid: ... 'a small wood lay, long and narrow, like a river turned to trees'.... Not only landscapes, but also characters, and their conditions, are depicted in terms of light.... As Oakshott expectantly enters the wood for a meeting, 'the world was a cool silver light that dazzled him.'"Anne Compton, "A 'Little World"' in Decadence: Marjorie Pickthall's Poems on Nature and on Religion, ''Canadian Poetry: Documents/Studies/Reviews,'' UWO, Web, 10 April 2011 In ''The Bridge,'' Pickthall "attempted a sharper psychological characterization and a realistic style culled from reading Balzac."


Drama

Because "Pickthall's reputation rests predominantly on her career as a poet," says the ''Columbia Encyclopedia of Modern Drama'', "her play ''The Wood Carver's Wife'' has only recently gained the critical attention it deserves.'"Pickthall, Marjorie (1883–1922)
" ''Columbia Encyclopedia of Modern Drama,'' (Columbia University Press, 2007), 1060. Google Books, Web, 6 April 2011
Many have expressed their surprise on reading the play. Frye, for instance, wrote: "I expected to find it Celtic twilight with a lot of early Yeats in it. It turned out to be a violent, almost brutal
melodrama A modern melodrama is a dramatic work in which the plot, typically sensationalized and for a strong emotional appeal, takes precedence over detailed characterization. Melodramas typically concentrate on dialogue that is often bombastic or exces ...
with a lot of Browning in it." Others have been surprised, considering Pickthall's reputation as the poster child for traditionalism, to find it to be a "modernist drama", "not typical of Pickthall's ... poetry." As a ''Modern Drama'' article by P. L. Badir was headlined: "'So entirely unexpected': the modernist
dramaturgy Dramaturgy is the study of dramatic composition and the Representation (arts), representation of the main elements of drama on the stage. The term first appears in the eponymous work ''Hamburg Dramaturgy'' (1767–69) by Gotthold Ephraim Lessing ...
of Marjorie Pickthall's The Wood Carver's wife." The plot, set in pre- Conquest Quebec, concerns a carver who "murders his wife's lover in order to have a model for the proper expression of grief for his wooden '' pietà''. Here Pickthall's use of
synaesthesia Synesthesia (American English) or synaesthesia (British English) is a perceptual phenomenon in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway leads to involuntary experiences in a second sensory or cognitive pathway. People who rep ...
conveys her vision of the complex web of human and natural realms, in which masculine containment contrasts with feminine intertwining. 'The cedar must have known ... I should love and carve you so,' the sculptor sang to his wife/model." "''The Wood Carver's Wife'' touches on issues of gender, race, and eroticism, all charged with violence and intensity that though not easily accessible in the 1920s ultimately became an object of great interest for modern feminist critics."


Publications

Pickthall published over 200 stories and approximately 100 poems, plus numerous articles. She was published in ''
Atlantic Monthly ''The Atlantic'' is an American magazine and multi-platform publisher. It features articles in the fields of politics, foreign affairs, business and the economy, culture and the arts, technology, and science. It was founded in 1857 in Boston, ...
, The Century Magazine, Harper's, McClure's, Scribner's'', plus many other journals and young people's magazines.


Poetry

* "The Homecomers" (1904) and other successive poems in the periodical journal '' Acta Victoriana'' * 1907 onwards – poems featured in ''University Magazine'' of McGill University in Montreal and were published as a collection ''The drift of pinions'' (1913) *
The Drift of Pinions
' (Montreal: University Magazine, 1913) *

'. (New York: Lane, 1916) – includes poems published in the earlier volume (reprinted 1972) * ''The Wood Carver's wife'', a verse-drama, begun in England in 1919 and finished in Victoria in 1920, first presented by the Community Players of Montreal at the New Empire Theatre. *

'. Toronto: McClelland, 1922. * ''Mary Tired''. (London: Stonebridge Press, 1922) * ''Two Poems'' (Toronto: Ryerson, 1923) *

' (McClelland, 1925) * ''The Complete Poems of Marjorie Pickthall'' (Toronto: McClelland, 1925) – compiled by her father, including 'fugitive and hitherto unpublished poems' (2nd edition 1936) *

' (Toronto: Ryerson, 1931) *

', Ed. Lorne Pierce (Toronto: McClelland, 1957)


Stories

* "Two Ears" (1898) story, published in the ''
Toronto Globe ''The Globe'' was a newspaper in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, founded in 1844 by George Brown as a Reform voice. It merged with ''The Mail and Empire'' in 1936 to form ''The Globe and Mail''. History ''The Globe'' is pre-dated by a title of the same ...
'' * "The Greater Gift" (July 1903), in the first issue of ''East and West'' (Toronto) * ''Angels' Shoes'' (London: Hodder, 1923) anthology of 24 short stories – Pickthall's proposed title was ''Devices and desires''


Novels

* ''Poursuite Joyeuse'' (1914) – historical novel. published as ''Little Hearts'' (London: Methuen, 1915) * ''The Bridge: a Story of the Great Lakes'' (London: Hodder, 1922) ** novel, serialised in 1919 in '' Everybody's Magazine'' (New York) for $1,000 and '' The Sphere'' (London) * ''The Beaten Man'' (1921) – unpublished novel, redrafted throughout 1920–21


Children's novels

* ''Dick's Desertion'' Toronto: Musson, 1905. * ''The Straight Road'' Toronto: Musson, 1906. * ''Billy's Hero'', or, ''The Valley of Gold'' Toronto: Musson, 1908. ''Except where noted, bibliographic information courtesy Brock University.''


References


External links


Selected Poetry of Marjorie Pickthall (1883–1922)
– Biography and 14 poems (Adam and Eve, Daisy Time, Exile, Finis, Kwannon, The Lamp of Poor Souls, Marching Men, The Sailor's Grave at Clo-oose V.I., A Saxon Epitaph, Song, Stars, Thoughts, V.I., Vision, The Wife)

– Biography and 5 poems (The Lamp of Poor Souls, The Pool, The Shepherd Boy, The Bridegroom of Cana, A Mother in Egypt) * * * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Pickthall, Marjorie 1883 births 1922 deaths 20th-century Canadian poets 20th-century Canadian novelists Canadian women dramatists and playwrights Canadian women novelists English emigrants to Canada Canadian women poets 20th-century Canadian dramatists and playwrights Canadian women short story writers 20th-century Canadian women writers 20th-century Canadian short story writers Burials at St. James Cemetery, Toronto