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Marie
Bjelke-Petersen 1874 - 1969 novelist
Marie
Caroline Bjelke-Petersen (1874-1969), novelist, was born on 23 December
1874 at Jagtvejen near Copenhagen, only daughter of Caroline Vilhelmine
(born Hansen) and Georg Peter Bjelke-Petersen. Marie attended schools
in Denmark, Germany and London. When very young she was taken on
long walks by her father, who had spartan ideals and instructed
his children in subjects ranging from the Bible to Greek mythology
and gymnastics. The family emigrated to Tasmania in 1891 and settled
at New Town. Marie's brother Hans established the Bjelke- Petersen
Physical Culture School in Hobart; Marie joined as instructor in
charge of the women's section and also taught the subject in schools.
In 1906 she registered with the Australasian Massage Association
and next year with the Teachers and Schools Registration Board,
Tasmania. Illness forced her to abandon this career and she then
began to write seriously. She was naturalised in 1915.
Her first published stories had appeared in Sydney papers in about
1906 under a pseudonym, as her father would have objected. Her first
books, published in Hobart, were three romantic religious sketches.
The Mysterious Stranger (1913), called a classic by The
Times, was translated into Arabic and reissued by the Religious
Tract Society, London, in 1934. She was encouraged to write novels
by Will Dawson and her first, The Captive Singer (London,
1917), sold over 100,000 copies in English and 40,000 in Danish.
The story was set in the Marakoopa Caves, Tasmania, and inspired
by a guide who sang there. She was 42 at the time but her father,
on being informed, 'wasn't too pleased': he had hoped that she would
become an artist - she did continue to paint oils for many years.
Eight more novels, published in London, followed until 1937.
In 1921 the Triad (Sydney) commented that she 'was honoured
most outside (Australia). . . Her people are real . . . and their
inconsistencies are credible. She is not afraid of passion, though
her theme and treatment are entirely . . . respectable'. However,
the Bulletin gave her 'some nasty whippings . . . they loved
making fun of my lovemaking!', she recalled. The Australasian
suggested that Bjelke- Petersen should 'be persuaded to exercise
a little restraint over both her imagination and her vocabulary'.
But her style remained florid.
Never an armchair novelist, Bjelke-Petersen's excellent physique
and passion for accuracy enabled her, notebook in hand, to go on
foot, horseback, dray or bullock-wagon into remote areas. At Queenstown
in the 1920s, she was the first woman to go underground with working
miners; she mixed easily with them and with those on the Savage
River osmium fields. The latter was the setting of Jewelled Nights
(1924), which used the vernacular she had noted; it was filmed by
Louise Lovely (q.v.) Productions in 1925.
Marie Bjelke-Petersen enjoyed country painting trips with her close
friend Sylvia Mills. She frequently wintered in Brisbane, Sydney
or Melbourne, taking a flat where she would hold religious meetings
to which she attracted fans and friends, including a large following
of young women, in the manner of many female romantic novelists
of her day. She was referred to as Australia's Marie Corelli, for
her novels always contained an evangelical theme: in The Captive
Singer the hero and heroine marry and sing Nearer my God
to Thee. She felt the modern world lacked sentiment, particularly
in 'our spiritual life towards God', but she believed in the advances
women had 'made in education and in many other things in recent
years'.
She made early radio broadcasts and in 1935 received a King's Jubilee
Medal for literature. She encouraged younger writers and her experience
and practical suggestions were useful in establishing the Tasmanian
Fellowship of Australian Writers. Although steeped in mythology,
Bjelke-Petersen was a sincere Christian who never overlooked the
poor and needy. Her fondness for whimsy expressed itself through
notes to fairies in letterboxes in her garden. She continued reading
and gardening in her nineties and set some of her verses to music;
a selection was recorded in 1969. She died at Lindisfarne, Hobart
on 11 October 1969.
Maggie Weidenhofer
Maggie Weidenhofer, 'Marie Bjelke-Petersen' This Australia
Spring 1983.
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