Have some sequel and series ideas I
thought of, as I read and revised my historical novel Generations in Canada: Confluence of Civilizations in January and February, 2016, and added the
Foreword and Afterword:
1918
-Jennifer and Sean live in Lethbridge with Adeline and Henry, who wed on November 11, 1918, then move to Winnipeg;
1919
-Jennifer and Sean move to Edmonton, where they stay in the rooming house;
-a letter from an English lawyer to Ray discusses his dad's
death and invites Ray back to help his ailing mother Emily with legalities; Emily is Jennifer's second cousin, Ray discovers;
-Ray, Elise, and Emile go to England after WW1, find
Ray's mother, she dies within two months, and
they return to Canada after four;
-Ray and Elise divide Ray's inheritance between activists in
England and Canada trying to improve Home Children conditions;
-Adeline and Henry are in the Winnipeg General Strike, Adeline on mobile first aid, Henry
driving a milk truck "by permission of the strike committee" (remember that famous sign?); they face blacklisting after the strike, but
join Northern Ontario radical Finns who need a nurse and an engineer;
-Yvonne and Emile Sr die in the 1918-19 flu epidemic, Yvonne two days after signing over the rooming
house to Gisele and Louis; George, heartbroken again, burying a his second wife, and Yvonne's grandson Pierre acutely feel the loss;
-widow Marie moves
to the rooming house, perks up Pierre, and becomes like a second mother to Gisele;
1920
-Jennifer and Sean help Pat's business stay afloat in the postwar depression, until, amicably, Pat, Ray, Elise, Emile Jr., Louis, Gisele, Sandra and John acquire 50% equity among them;
-Brigid in Edmonton, from County Donegal like Pat's parents,
some of whose relatives she knows, details the ongoing Irish war of liberation
(1919-22) from letters from republicans in Ireland, the US, and Canada;
-Mary gets Brigid
a teaching job, and accepts Brigid's and
Gloria's love, both having waited so long; Brigid and Gloria share Gloria's new house near the university;
-Henry's sister
Greta, unlike her friend Rosa Luxemberg in Spartacus, part of the failed 1919
German Revolution, survives the counterrevolution and flees to Canada, joining Adeline
and Henry in Northern Ontario; Greta, with printing experience, who speaks German, Polish, Ukrainian, and English, moves among the Northern Ontario Red Finns, learns
some Finnish, and begins a German-language paper on their press, funding it by helping them print their paper and contract work;
1921
-Adeline, pregnant, and Greta go to the 1921 Guelph founding meeting of the Communist Party of Canada, but they don't join, but they meet a young Tim Buck from Alberta's Blairmore coal district, who will one day lead the Party;
-Adeline, Henry, and Greta return to Edmonton; Henry gets a city engineering job, Adeline a nursing job at the university hospital, and Greta works for university and government printing departments, and for local German and Ukrainian organizations. such as the pro-Soviet Ukrainian Farm Labor Temple;
1922
-Jennifer sees Adeline's daughter Emily born, tickled like Ray that she's named after Ray's mom, Jennifer's second cousin , but Jennifer dies eight days later; Sean moves from Mary's house to Gisele's rooming house;
-Red Scare through 1920s touches Adeline and Greta;
Gloria helps Adeline into U of A medical
school, and helps Greta keep her university printing jobs and get language teaching work; but the United Farmers of Alberta government isn't as anti-red as the federal government and keeps Greta on;
1923
-widow Marie and widowers Sean and George keep flirtatious company in Gisele's rooming house;
-Pierre with Marie when she dies, peacefully; Louis more heartbroken than when his dad
died; George and Sean great comfort to each other, like brothers now, Greta a frequent visitor jawing politics and German current events (embryonic Nazi party) with George;
1925
-Adeline graduates from medicine;
-1930s
-coal mine strikers build Miette Hot Springs Pool (when?), Pierre among them;
-coal mine strikers build Miette Hot Springs Pool (when?), Pierre among them;
1932
-Sandra and John sell equity in the business of the struggling business and emigrate to Scotland; Emile Jr sells out and moves to Wells, BC's mining boom; Ray, Elise, Pat, Mary, Louis, and Gisele own business, Pat still 50%; but Louis and Gisele buy him out through the decade, as the Victoria group bought out Sean and Jennifer; some government construction projects, but little else; rooming house busier with migrant laborers; Adeline and Henry move to Estevan, for medical and mining;
-Estevan 1932 coal strike; Dr. Adeline bandages wounded
after police charge of women and children, meets Slim Evans, CPC organizer;
-Drumheller, Evans and Dr. Adeline again, trying to get closer to Mary and Pat;
-Dustbowl; prairie shantytowns for Dustbowlers, like WW1 internment; critique of "cold hand of charity" and "mean means test" relief system, Bennett buggies;
-Calgary CCF founding meeting, Adeline and George
expelled, George dies after they meet Dorise Neilson; Gisele and Louis start soup kitchen in
rooming house;
1933-34
-northward migration off prairies continues; rooming house busy; construction company ekes along;
-Adeline and Henry move to Calgary;
1935
- BC internment camps, On to Ottawa Trek; Mary and Adeline feed and treat trekkers in Calgary, Emily in tow, eager and insightful like young Adeline was; all move back to Edmonton that fall;
-Alberta elects Aberhart's Social Credit;
1936-37
-Social Credit fascist, anti-semitic tendencies surface; Emily and Pierre heckle Major Douglas, get roughed up, give it back; Louis versus church over fascist collaboration in Spanish Civil War;
1938
- Edmonton Hunger March:
bystander Pat killed by horse in police
charge; Emile Jr assumes more of shrinking business duties as older generation semi-retires; meets and weds Quebec refugee from Adrian Arcand's fascists, Madeleine, with tales to tell; Elise and Madeleine soon fast friends, shun Alberta Socred Francophones as too much like Arcand; Adeline and Madeline prickly at first, but get on later, refereed by Gisele, chip off old Yvonne block of inclusiveness and feminist solidarity;
-Pierre joins CPC, sneaks to Spain to join Republicans, fights in Catalonia, retreats across Pyranees; stays on in French underground during war; some narrow escapes; decorated after war by British on way home;
1939
- war; Henry avoids internment;
-war-induced boom, including construction, money to fund dying that couldn't fund living for the past several years;
-Molotov-Ribbentrop pact great source of debate among Adeline, Henry, Emily, and Greta;
-Molotov-Ribbentrop pact great source of debate among Adeline, Henry, Emily, and Greta;
1940
-Adeline and Emily help Dorise Neilson win federal election in Saskatchewan, Emily goes to Ottawa as her assistant, stays on after Neilson comes out as CPC, disillusioning Emily, who trains as nurse aid and joins WRENS in Halifax and England for the war; rattled by disfigured and shell-shocked soldiers; Neilson will lose 1945 election, despite CPC-Liberal alliance against CCF;
-Battle of Britain, John killed in air attack of Glasgow shipyard, where he was retired from, but visiting that day; Sandra returns to Edmonton and lives with Brigid and Gloria;
1941
-Operation Barbarosa pits Germany against Russia, which makes Russia switch to Allied side, much mental gymnastics among CPC, CCF, and debate among characters;
1942
- Japanese internment; Ray dies in Elise's arms by Lac Ste. Anne, visiting homestead; Elise alone in Edmonton house until Sandra, Greta and Gloria move in due to wartime housing shortage, barracks and training and Alaska Highway people taking up university and city space; Emile Jr plans postwar construction while very busy with wartime construction, and rationing challenges;
1943
-Henry, Adeline, and widow Mary, company sold to Emile Jr and Madeleine, return to Lethbridge
1945
-Adeline welcomes Emily, under cloud for CPC associations, vilified by CCF; Henry and Adeline stare down Red-baiting and arm twist Emily a nursing job in hospital; Emily starts postwar unionization drive in anti-labor Alberta in anti-labor Canada, helps pension off Louis, Elise, and Gisele; but public pension advocacy rising, too;
-Adeline, Henry, Emily, and Mary, they help interned Japanese
resettle in Lethbridge after war, after BC government refuses to have them back on coast;
1946
-Pierre returns to Emile Jr. and Madeleine in company; Pierre's war hero status dissuades RCMP and CCF from vilifying Pierre for Spanish war service; Pierre leaves CPC after Igor Gouzenko fiasco;
1947
-Imperial Leduc Number 1 oil well gushes, changing some things but not everything; Emile, Madeleine, and Pierre frozen out of oilfield construction, beset by arrogant Yanks and comprador Alberta elite and toadying government; but find governmental and cultural welcome in Gravelbourg area of CCF Saskatchewan; wrangle with reactionary Catholic Athol Murray during construction job at his Notre Dame school; Madeleine sees another Arcand in Murray;
-Mary dies in
sleep on bench amid the flowers in Lethbridge Japanese garden, the day Elise dies in sleep visiting in Morinville, church bells ringing, while children play around the statue on main street;
-Emile Jr. and Adeline walk along Lac Ste. Anne shore, by Elise's
and Ray's graves, looking to past and future, discussing how their lives might have been had they married, but their times and places did not fit that; end glad they found wonderful mates, both of whom are refugees from tyranny
Perhaps these notes would make more than one book. The novel whose sequel's notes these are spanned 1871-1917. These sequel notes span about 30 years. Each of the six novels in Howard Fast's "Immigrant" series spans fewer than 20 years and is at least twice the size of my first novel. James Joyce's Ulysses and Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway each span a day, and Joyce's book is more than three times longer than Woolf's, implying that there is not a direct link between the length of a novel and the length of time the novel spans. Ponder the length of Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace and the time period it covers.
You have endured many of my words, and the time theme in that last paragraph reminded me of lines from William Blake (1757-1827). One might also recall the metaphysical poets of the mid-1600s, and their "conceits," that is, metaphors or similes spun into whole poems; but let's conclude with Blake's
Auguries of Innocence
TO see a world in a grain of sand, | |
And a heaven in a wild flower, | |
Hold infinity in the palm of your hand, | |
And eternity in an hour. | |
A robin redbreast in a cage | 5 |
Puts all heaven in a rage. | |
A dove-house fill’d with doves and pigeons | |
Shudders hell thro’ all its regions. | |
A dog starv’d at his master’s gate | |
Predicts the ruin of the state. | 10 |
A horse misused upon the road | |
Calls to heaven for human blood. | |
Each outcry of the hunted hare | |
A fibre from the brain does tear. | |
A skylark wounded in the wing, | 15 |
A cherubim does cease to sing. | |
The game-cock clipt and arm’d for fight | |
Does the rising sun affright. | |
Every wolf’s and lion’s howl | |
Raises from hell a human soul. | 20 |
The wild deer, wand’ring here and there, | |
Keeps the human soul from care. | |
The lamb misus’d breeds public strife, | |
And yet forgives the butcher’s knife. | |
The bat that flits at close of eve | 25 |
Has left the brain that won’t believe. | |
The owl that calls upon the night | |
Speaks the unbeliever’s fright. | |
He who shall hurt the little wren | |
Shall never be belov’d by men. | 30 |
He who the ox to wrath has mov’d | |
Shall never be by woman lov’d. | |
The wanton boy that kills the fly | |
Shall feel the spider’s enmity. | |
He who torments the chafer’s sprite | 35 |
Weaves a bower in endless night. | |
The caterpillar on the leaf | |
Repeats to thee thy mother’s grief. | |
Kill not the moth nor butterfly, | |
For the last judgment draweth nigh. | 40 |
He who shall train the horse to war | |
Shall never pass the polar bar. | |
The beggar’s dog and widow’s cat, | |
Feed them and thou wilt grow fat. | |
The gnat that sings his summer’s song | 45 |
Poison gets from slander’s tongue. | |
The poison of the snake and newt | |
Is the sweat of envy’s foot. | |
The poison of the honey bee | |
Is the artist’s jealousy. | 50 |
The prince’s robes and beggar’s rags | |
Are toadstools on the miser’s bags. | |
A truth that’s told with bad intent | |
Beats all the lies you can invent. | |
It is right it should be so; | 55 |
Man was made for joy and woe; | |
And when this we rightly know, | |
Thro’ the world we safely go. | |
Joy and woe are woven fine, | |
A clothing for the soul divine. | 60 |
Under every grief and pine | |
Runs a joy with silken twine. | |
The babe is more than swaddling bands; | |
Throughout all these human lands | |
Tools were made, and born were hands, | 65 |
Every farmer understands. | |
Every tear from every eye | |
Becomes a babe in eternity; | |
This is caught by females bright, | |
And return’d to its own delight. | 70 |
The bleat, the bark, bellow, and roar, | |
Are waves that beat on heaven’s shore. | |
The babe that weeps the rod beneath | |
Writes revenge in realms of death. | |
The beggar’s rags, fluttering in air, | 75 |
Does to rags the heavens tear. | |
The soldier, arm’d with sword and gun, | |
Palsied strikes the summer’s sun. | |
The poor man’s farthing is worth more | |
Than all the gold on Afric’s shore. | 80 |
One mite wrung from the lab’rer’s hands | |
Shall buy and sell the miser’s lands; | |
Or, if protected from on high, | |
Does that whole nation sell and buy. | |
He who mocks the infant’s faith | 85 |
Shall be mock’d in age and death. | |
He who shall teach the child to doubt | |
The rotting grave shall ne’er get out. | |
He who respects the infant’s faith | |
Triumphs over hell and death. | 90 |
The child’s toys and the old man’s reasons | |
Are the fruits of the two seasons. | |
The questioner, who sits so sly, | |
Shall never know how to reply. | |
He who replies to words of doubt | 95 |
Doth put the light of knowledge out. | |
The strongest poison ever known | |
Came from Caesar’s laurel crown. | |
Nought can deform the human race | |
Like to the armour’s iron brace. | 100 |
When gold and gems adorn the plow, | |
To peaceful arts shall envy bow. | |
A riddle, or the cricket’s cry, | |
Is to doubt a fit reply. | |
The emmet’s inch and eagle’s mile | 105 |
Make lame philosophy to smile. | |
He who doubts from what he sees | |
Will ne’er believe, do what you please. | |
If the sun and moon should doubt, | |
They’d immediately go out. | 110 |
To be in a passion you good may do, | |
But no good if a passion is in you. | |
The whore and gambler, by the state | |
Licensed, build that nation’s fate. | |
The harlot’s cry from street to street | 115 |
Shall weave old England’s winding-sheet. | |
The winner’s shout, the loser’s curse, | |
Dance before dead England’s hearse. | |
Every night and every morn | |
Some to misery are born, | 120 |
Every morn and every night | |
Some are born to sweet delight. | |
Some are born to sweet delight, | |
Some are born to endless night. | |
We are led to believe a lie | 125 |
When we see not thro’ the eye, | |
Which was born in a night to perish in a night, | |
When the soul slept in beams of light. | |
God appears, and God is light, | |
To those poor souls who dwell in night; | 130 |
But does a human form display | |
To those who dwell in realms of day. | |
Couldn't say it better myself.
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