Lewis Grassic Gibbon

Grey Granite


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       to Hugh MacDiarmid

      Contents

       Map of The Land of a Scots Quair

       Cautionary Note

       Introduction

       Note on the Text

      I Epidote

      II Sphene

      III Apatite

      IV Zircon

       Grey Granite: Curtain Raiser

       Notes

       Glossary

       Map of The Land of a Scota Quair

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       Cautionary Note

      The ‘Duncairn’ of this novel was originally ‘Dundon’. Unfortunately, several English journals in pre-publication notices of the book described my imaginary city as Dundee, two Scottish sheets identified it with Aberdeen, and at least one American newspaper went considerably astray and stated that it was Edinburgh—faintly disguised.

      Instead, it is merely the city which the inhabitants of the Mearns (not foreseeing my requirements in completing my trilogy) have hitherto failed to build.

      L. G. G.

       Introduction

      Cold and controlled he had always been, some lirk in his nature and upbringing that Chris loved, who so hated folk in a fuss. But now that quality she’d likened to grey granite itself, that something she’d seen change in Duncairn from slaty grey to a glow of fire, was transmuting again before her eyes—into something darker and coarser, in essence the same, in tint antrin queer.

      The function of the granite symbolism is to highlight Ewan’s willed transformation into the ‘more than human’: Ewan comes to be like granite just as Stalin