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Writers This is a city which is all present: It moves, but oh so slowly You would have to sleep years, Waking suddenly once in a decade To surprise it in the act of change. ‘Provincial City’, Bruce Dawe
Margaret Trist was born Margaret Beth Lucas in Dalby on 27 November 1914 and educated there at St Columba's Convent. On leaving school she moved to Sydney where, at the age of nineteen, she married Frank Trist. Trist spent most of the remainder of her life in Sydney, apart from a small period in the early years of the war when she and her husband lived in Blaxland in the Blue Mountains. Despite publishing all of her literary work while in Sydney, she deserves to be included in any account of Darling Downs writing. The key to many of the characters of her novels and short stories is often to be found in their rural past and Trist makes frequent use of her own upbringing in Dalby. " behind her lay her own town, Meredith and Marny alone in the small house on Palm-grove Street. Behind lay Land's End, where the walls still whispered old stories to those who wished to hear. Behind lay Granny and Granddad and the Sawpit tree. Behind lay Grandfather, sleeping peacefully in the grave from which one could see the blue line of hills, and over which blew the free wind from the plain. Behind lay her childhood. From now on she would cross any border which she wanted to cross." Morning
in Queensland,
Margaret Trist.
Further Reading: R. G. Geering, 'Margaret
Trist.' Southerly 46.4 (1986): 467-471 Kerryn Goldsworthy,
, 'Short Fiction.' Australian Literary Studies 13.4 (1988): 535-546. Stead, Christina. 'Tales from Down Under.' Christina Stead : Selected Fiction and Nonfiction. Ed. R. G Geering and Anita Kristina Segerberg. St Lucia: University of Queensland Press, 1994. 212-214.
Please use the link list on the left to access various featured writers Biographies and Portraits.
Submissions and suggestions for writers not yet included can be sent to leec@usq.edu.au |
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