Following Flannery O`Connor`s spiritual journey in The Abbess of
Transcription
Following Flannery O`Connor`s spiritual journey in The Abbess of
Thursday, November 5, 2009 Feature Southern Cross, Page 5 Following Flannery O’Connor’s spiritual journey in The Abbess of Andalusia N one of my usual late-night reading was available. All I had was a review copy of The Abbess of Andalusia by Lorraine V. Murray (Saint Benedict Press, 2009). Although O’Connor’s works— bizarre, thought-provoking, humorous—might have kept me awake, a book with the title of The Abbess of Andalusia threatened to be a “dozer”, but not to worry. Mary Flannery O’Connor, whose spiriant peacocks that strutted about the property, tual travels are chronicled in The Abbess of O’Connor also perfected the twisted, allegorical Andalusia, entered this world on March 25, works for which she would be remembered. 1925. The only child of Edward and Regina It was also at Andalusia that the increasing Cline O’Connor, she was born in Savannah and debility and fatigue caused by lupus perfected attended local Catholic schools. A perky girl in O’Connor—a devout Catholic—an accepwho taught her pet chicken to walk backwards, tance of her affliction, although she neither as recorded by Pathé News, she little realized welcomed it nor gave in to it. Her letters to that a disease named lupus would be her close friends incrementally reveal her sufinheritance as well as a wealth of talent. fering and her acknowledgement of it as When a new job took Edward her personal Way of the Cross. Early O’Connor to Atlanta, Flannery and her on, she had decided she didn’t want to mother accompanied him. Neither liked live in Georgia. That dream died with the city. Flannery and Regina Cline the onset of lupus. Diagnosed with a O’Connor settled in Milledgeville, the degenerative hip bone, she accepted havCline family’s ancestral home. Edward ing to use a cane (and, later, crutches) Rita H. DeLorme as gracefully and humorously as she O’Connor commuted from Atlanta on weekends until he became ill with might have accepted being given a set lupus and rejoined his family in Milledgeville. of wings. When medications made eating difDaughter Flannery was in her teens when her ficult or caused her face to become round and father died in 1941. She went on to attend her hair to fall out, O’Connor joked about it. Peabody High School and to graduate in 1945 She wrote her way through these trials, beginfrom Georgia State College for Women (now ning and ending each day with prayer, often Georgia College and State University), majorrelying on readings from A Short Breviary for ing in social science. the Religious and the Laity. O’Connor wrote A casual artist, but a better writer, O’Connor in the mornings (her best time of day energywon a scholarship to the State University wise). She read works by contemporary and of Iowa where she enrolled in the Writers’ earlier theologians in a bedroom as spare as the Workshop. After achieving a Master of Fine cell of a religious. This austere regime paid off. Arts degree in 1947, she won entrée to the Her novel, Wise Blood, was published in 1952. Yaddo artists’ colony in New York. O’Connor Then came a book of short fiction, A Good lived in New York City for a time, later staying Man is Hard to Find and other Stories (1955). in Connecticut in a garage apartment owned by Another novel, The Violent Bear It Away, was friends, Robert and Sally Fitzgerald. In 1951, published in 1960. A collection of short stories, when disseminated lupus—the O’Connor famEverything That Rises Must Converge, was ily demon—caught up with her, she returned published posthumously in 1965. to Milledgeville to live with her mother on the Between times, Flannery O’Connor wrote Cline family’s farm, “Andalusia.” book reviews for The Bulletin of the Catholic Besides her writing, O’Connor’s life in this Laymen’s Association of Georgia and its setting included lecturing widely at colleges successor, the Southern Cross—not for The and conducting a prolific correspondence with Georgia Bulletin, as mentioned in The Abbess friends, including Sally Fitzgerald. This corof Andalusia. O’Connor was successively, as respondence forms the backbone of The Abbess diocesan logistics changed, a member of the of Andalusia. Ill or not, Flannery O’Connor Catholic Diocese of Savannah, the Diocese of functioned as advisor for friends who wrote Savannah-Atlanta and the Diocese/Archdiocese her and for writers wanting advice. While conof Atlanta. In 1964, her death from lupusvalescing at Andalusia and raising flamboyrelated problems deprived the literary world of TV Mass Schedule Augusta Sunday, 10:00 a.m. WAGT-TV Savannah Saturday, 6:00 p.m. Cable 7 Sunday, 5:30 a.m. WTOC-TV The cover of The Abbess of Andalusia. a writer whose fictional characters found grace in the grotesque even as O’Connor found it in her suffering. Lacking the genius, grace and perceptiveness of a Flannery O’Connor, I’ve read her short stories but can’t go the distance with her novels. Years ago, The Habit of Being by her friend, Sally Fitzgerald, helped me appreciate Flannery O’Connor through her letters. The Abbess of Andalusia, Flannery O’Connor’s Spiritual Journey, has succeeded in doing the same thing, turning out to be not a “dozer”, but a “dazzler”, as I’ve read it with pleasure every night. Columnist Rita H. DeLorme is a volunteer in the Diocesan Archives. She can be reached at rhdelorme@diosav.org.