Authors: Mazo de la Roche
Tags: #FIC045000 – FICTION / Sagas
During the final two decades of her life, Mazo experienced some personal troubles that marred her otherwise contented and productive life. Now and then Caroline was ill. Sometimes Mazo was ill: now the flu, now a kidney infection, eventually Parkinson’s disease and rheumatoid arthritis. Occasionally Mazo had troubles with servants. Sometimes she worried about René or clashed with Esmée.
After the family moved to Canada, Esmée and René both attended private boarding schools and summer camps, so they were never home for long. Both children married in 1953, and René was soon a father. Eventually he had three children.
René always felt close to Mazo. Yet, when he was a child he showed signs of being somewhat unhappy, for he was neither a good student nor a good mixer. And when he was a man he was rather unstable. For example, he married three times.
After René dropped out of university to get married for the first time, Mazo tried to help him find a good job. On René’s behalf, Mazo wrote to important men.
Mazo wrote to her friend and long-time editor Rache Lovat Dickson in 1954: “As for René, he is working with a Belgian engineer and a gang of French Canadians, making a road through a forest, eighty-five miles north of his home. It has been a wet cold summer and he is soaked through most of the time and is sleeping under canvas.”
Mazo asked in this letter whether Mr. Lovat Dickson, a director and the general editor of her British publisher, Macmillan, could give René a letter of introduction to take to author and scientist C.P Snow, a director of English Electric, who was visiting Canada on business. Mazo hoped Mr. Snow would give René a better job.
Mr. Snow met René. But Mr. Snow did not give René a job.
Eventually, through a contact at the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, Mazo got René a job in a cement-making firm.
Meanwhile Esmée felt alienated from Mazo and Caroline. Esmée felt the women had discarded her like an unwanted toy when she ceased to be a cute child. She thought Mazo and Caroline were too old to understand her.
Although Mazo and Caroline were generous with their money in many ways, they made Esmée wear their hand-me-down clothing. The clothing had been made over for Esmée by a seamstress, but it still looked strange. She had to go to a high-school formal looking like a Kate Greenaway character! So Esmée felt.
Esmée also saw the women’s life as too regimented. She left home when she was eighteen. She didn’t see the family much after her marriage. At Christmastime she would put in an appearance.
Mazo also had some professional troubles. Or so she felt. She often complained that her work was dismissed by her fellow countrymen while it was praised abroad, especially in England. This had been true in the case of
Delight
in 1926, but it was not true after the third Jalna novel appeared. After the publication in 1931 of
Finch’s Fortune
, reviewers in Canada did not differ from reviewers in the United States and Britain. On both sides of the Atlantic, most reviewers doubted that the quality of the series could be maintained if there were too many sequels.
Yet some intelligent, well-read Canadians were still praising Mazo’s work. For example, in 1940 novelist and critic Robertson Davies wrote that Mazo was “that rare creature in the literary world, a born storyteller.”
When
The Building of Jalna
was published in 1944, one British book critic wrote: “It does not contain a single line or a single idea to prompt any serious thought.” Other British critics made similarly disparaging remarks.
After the Second World War, most Canadian reviewers saved their highest praise for the rising stars of Canadian literature. They lauded Hugh MacLennan, whose
Two Solitudes
won the Governor General’s Award in 1945. They raved about Gabrielle Roy, whose
Tin Flute
won the Governor General’s Award in 1947.
But in 1951 Mazo received a silver medal from the University of Alberta. Mazo was the first recipient of this national award, which was established to honour Canadians whose careers had contributed greatly to literature, painting, or music. Furthermore, in 1954 Mazo received an honorary degree from the University of Toronto.
Also, Mazo’s books continued to sell well in Canada and abroad. The critics might have mocked
The Building of Jalna
, but it was on the
New York Times
bestseller list.
And Mazo continued to enjoy a satisfying relationship with her innumerable readers. She received thousands of fan letters from all over the world in countless languages from individuals with all levels of education. And she replied to many of them herself. Indeed, her own need to keep telling the story of the Whiteoaks was inspired by her fans’ need to know more about them.
After the Second World War, in France, Mazo was the most widely read author of any nationality. In communist Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Hungary, pirated editions of her novels circulated widely. In Norway, houses, dogs, and even children were named after the house Jalna or individual members of the Whiteoak family. Indeed, there were houses called “Jalna” in Greece, Australia, Egypt, and the United States! In the U.S., one could buy “Jalna” sneakers. In Canada, streets, restaurants, and schools were named after Mazo and her Jalna books.
In international popularity Mazo was rivalled only by a few female writers of the next generation. One of these rivals was English writer Daphne du Maurier, who had been born in 1907. Du Maurier was the author of
Jamaica Inn, Frenchman’s Creek
, and
Rebecca
. Another rival was American writer Margaret Mitchell, born in 1900. Mitchell was the author of
Gone with the Wind
.
Actually, Mazo may have influenced Mitchell. In
Jalna
, a minor character named Miss Pink blushes and turns into “Miss Scarlet.” Miss Scarlett is the name of the main character of
Gone with the Wind
. In
Jalna
, Alayne Archer asks her beloved, Renny Whiteoak, whether the time since they last met seems long or short to him. Renny replies, “Gone like the wind.”
“Jalna, with its faded red brick, almost covered by vines, its stone porch, its five chimneys, rising from the sloping roof where pigeons eternally cooed and slid, where their droppings defaced the leaves of the Virginia creeper and the window sills, where smoke was always coming out of one or more of the chimneys and where the old wooden shingles so often managed to spring a leak.”
So the grand old home of the Whiteoak family is described in
Centenary at Jalna
. Published in 1958,
Centenary
was the fifteenth Jalna book that Mazo wrote. (The sixteenth Jalna novel and the last to be published was
Morning at Jalna
. It was not very good. )
Centenary at Jalna
was set in 1953 and 1954.
Mazo wrote
Centenary
, the proper end of the Jalna series, when she was almost eighty years old.
Centenary
is the story of how the Whiteoaks celebrate the one-hundredth anniversary of the building of their home. Mazo’s portrait of the family is sardonic and suggests that this aristocratic tribe is degenerating.
Renny, now past sixty but with few grey hairs, is still the head of the clan. Renny is scheming to celebrate the centennial by marrying his daughter Adeline to his nephew Philip, so the estate will stay in the family. Philips father Piers (Renny’s half-brother) agrees this is a good idea. But Philip’s mother, Pheasant, disagrees. So does Adeline’s mother, Alayne,
“Who do they think they are?” cries Pheasant. “Arranging other peoples lives. Pushing them about like pawns. Why – you’d think Jalna was a dukedom instead of just an Ontario farm!”
Alayne thinks a union between the first cousins would be bizarre and “dangerous.”
Heedless of the mothers’ wise counsel, the fathers push ahead with their scheme and manage to interest young Adeline and Philip in it too. This stubborn stupidity on the part of Renny and Piers is matched by that of Finch, who is now also the father of a teenager. Finch habitually neglects and even rejects the son he had by Sarah Court, who has been dead for a number of years. This son, Dennis, now thirteen, has developed serious emotional problems that eventually lead to tragedy.
Mazo’s portrait of the disturbed Dennis is brilliant, but
Centenary at Jalna
is not all about the darkness of incest and madness. The novel is also about the light of intelligence and love, as well as humour. University student Archer Whiteoak, the younger child of Renny and Alayne, is cold but witty and well able to mock the strange notions of his elders and peers. Eight-year-old Mary Whiteoak, the youngest child of Piers and Pheasant, is well-balanced, charming, and kind. Noah Binns, the ignorant hired man who is always making gloomy predictions, provides comic relief.
By the end of
Centenary at Jalna
, the Whiteoaks seem to be on the verge of disaster, but in the final scene, some hope for the future emerges. Innocent little Mary Whiteoak coos lovingly over Finch’s second child, a baby boy whom Finch also neglects. “You’re prettier than a spider, sweeter than a rose,” sings Mary. This dear little girl will perhaps give new life to the dynasty engendered by her great-grandparents.
Mazo de la Roche died quietly in the early morning of July 12, 1961 at her home in Toronto, in bed in the presence of her family. She had been bedridden and in the care of nurses for several years, but she had been working on a seventeenth Jalna novel – never completed. After Mazo passed away, Caroline immediately went into her own room and closed the door. Later that day she sent a telegram to Mazo’s publisher: “MAZO LEFT US LAST NIGHT PLEASE TELL THE OTHERS.” She burned Mazo’s diaries.
Caroline overrode Mazo’s will, which said she should be buried in Toronto. Caroline directed that Mazo be buried in St. George’s churchyard beside Sibbald Point Provincial Park on the south shore of Lake Simcoe, near Sutton.
For eleven years Caroline lived on alone in the house on Ava Crescent in Toronto. Along with her fellow executors – René, Esmée, and lawyer Daniel Lang (later Senator Lang) – Caroline dealt with requests regarding Mazo’s literary legacy.
Caroline donated most of Mazo’s papers to the University of Toronto. Today these papers are stored in boxes in the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library at the University of Toronto. The boxes take up nine metres of shelf space. The papers include personal and business letters, first editions of her books, fan letters, and original manuscripts.
Caroline also gave interviews to Mazo’s first biographer, Ronald Hambleton. And she negotiated television rights for the Jalna series with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.