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Sigrid Undset’s Essays for our Time

Nearly a century has passed since Sigrid Undset wrote the biographical essays about holy men and women, and the letters, which eventually would be collected and published under the heading, Stages on the Road. It is a title evocative of the life of faith, wholly explored and lived-out—unpacked depot by depot, as it were—from the spiritual nursery, to precarious venturing forth, to stepping back in wonder or doubt, to the nearly inevitable and deepening darkness that, for all its pain, accesses an interior cave of Oneness, solitary yet completed in the companionship of the Christ. This last is something akin to what Saint Catherine of Siena referred to as the inner cell or the “cell of true self-knowledge.” Undset, like Catherine a Third Order Dominican, shared with that clear-eyed Doctor an impatience with the sort of illusions bred by social conventions and encouraged by trends.

Raised by progressively-minded atheists, Undset realized while still a teenager that ideologies and their accompanying “isms” gave inadequate measures of the world and humanity, always narrowing truth precisely at the point where what is required is a broadness of understanding and the oxymoronic-sounding “bold nuance” of genuinely small-c catholic thinking. Sketching her autobiography for some editors in 1940, Undset wrote, “[World War I] and the years afterwards confirmed the doubts I always had about the ideas I was brought up on—(I felt) that liberalism, feminism, nationalism, socialism, pacifism, would not work, because they refused to consider human nature as it really is.”

Sigrid Undset’s life was a heavy one, and it seems if she could not have joy, she was determined to have light; unwilling to live her life in ideological self-containment, it is not surprising that Undset would eventually come to call the Catholic church “home,” or that she would credit the saints with delivering her to its doors. Undset’s fiction is populated with vividly drawn characters—people of action whose narratives are built very precisely upon “human nature as it really is,” including the propensity for doubt and regret. To discover genuine men and women living boldly—not excused from those same propensities yet mysteriously delivered of them in the promise of a life in and with Christ, must have been for Undset a moment of staggering, irresistible illumination.


By degrees my knowledge of history convinced me that the only thoroughly sane people, of our civilization at least, seemed to be those queer men and women the Catholic Church calls Saints. They seemed to know the true explanation of man’s undying hunger for happiness—his tragically insufficient love of peace, justice, and goodwill to his fellow men, his everlasting fall from grace. Now it occurred to me that there might possibly be some truth in the original Christianity.

But if you desire to know the truth about anything, you always run the risk of finding it. And in a way we do not want to find the Truth—we prefer to seek and keep our illusions. But I had ventured too near the abode of truth in my researches about ‘God’s friends,’ as the Saints are called in the Old Norse texts of Catholic times. So I had to submit.

The essays in Stages on the Road were written while Sigrid Undset was experiencing a full flush of earthly praise and material success, and it is lovely to contemplate that while the Nobel Prize committee was honoring this woman with what is arguably the most coveted award in Literature—for her epic novels Kristin Lavransdatter and The Master of Hestviken—Undset was focusing on the martyrdoms of the cheerfully subversive Margaret Clitherow and the besieged Jesuit, Robert Southwell. So detached was she from the prize—called “an homage rendered to a poetic genius whose roots must be in a great and well-ordered spirit”—that Undset’s brief remarks at Stockholm’s banquet amounted to little more than her saying, “everyone in Norway asked me to give regards to Sweden!”

The church might call that a well-ordered spirit, indeed.

In Stages on the Road we encounter Undset writing in her prime, just a few years after her conversion to Catholicism, and putting her great gift for storytelling at the service of these “friends” who had first served her through the public living-out of their faith, and their testimonial light. Through six long-form essays, Sigrid Undset’s prose gallops so nimbly one forgets one is reading biography and surrenders as to the most compelling fiction—traveling through error and ego with Ramon Lull of Palma, sharing Angelia of Merici’s itchy sense of discontent and mission. We compare present challenges to the faith against the underground maneuverings of Southwell and Clitherow and find both instruction and perspective in their placidity, even as we revel at the terrible romance of their martyrdoms. Author Bruce Bawer called Undset, “half Viking, half Christian—torn between bold adventure and stark self-denial,” and we see that quality again where Undset writes on social issues, as she does here in an excerpted letter to a parish priest:


We must try to make this clear to ourselves—we have no right to assume that any part of European tradition, cultural values, moral ideas, emotional wealth, which has its origin in the dogmatically defined Christianity of the Catholic Church, will continue to live a “natural” life, if the people of Europe reject Christianity and refuse to accept God’s supernatural grace. One might just as well believe that a tree whose roots were severed should continue to bear leaves and blossoms and fruit . . . It must be remembered that in a democratic community the general public always lives on ideas which twenty or thirty years ago were the peculiar property of a few “advanced minds”—and which the most “advanced” people of the moment have discarded as unserviceable working hypotheses.

First published in English in 1934, Undset’s Stages on the Road remains a thumping good read that is truly relevant to our era and more than validates her re-emergence in the 21st Century as an energetic, passionate and intellectual Catholic voice — one that urges the faithful onward, and onward still, through brambles of history and passing modern trends, toward a Truth that is startlingly alive.

Elizabeth Scalia is the Managing Editor of the Catholic Portal at Patheos and blogs as The Anchoress. Her previous articles for "On the Square" can be found here. This essay is adapted from the foreword to Stages on the Road, released this month as a Christian Classic from Ave Maria Press, Inc.

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Comments:

5.29.2012 | 10:05am
mcasey says:
Thanks for the great article. Unset is maybe the best writer not in the canon. One observation: reading Kristen Lavrensdatter one is struck by a deep dislike/distrust of the Swedes by the Norwegian characters, dating back beyond the middle ages. Perhaps this figured into Unset's lack of enthusiasm for the Nobel.
That being said, KL is completely addictive: rich, slow and profound, moving inexorably as a great river. If you have a spare month or two, settle in and be transported to an intricate medieval panorama the equal of any historical fiction I've ever read. Characters are so complex and real, you forget you're even reading. Thanks again.
5.29.2012 | 10:59am
The Moz says:
I always learn something new about my faith on FT.

PS If only we knew even 1/10 of what our cultural treasure chest holds our culture would probably be in much better shape and we wouldn't have to defend ourselves on every side it seems.
5.29.2012 | 12:49pm
Fr. Peter says:
Thanks or this article. She also wrote a mini-biography about Venerable Karl Schilling, Norwegian Barnabite Father who gave up a very promising career as an artist to become a religious priest. http://barnabiteholiness.blogspot.com/p/charles-h-schilling.html
5.29.2012 | 1:44pm
Viola Larson says:
I am a Presbyterian who has read Kristen Lavrensdatter and loved the Trilogy. It is rich in history and the truth f human nature as well as the grace of God. I love this quote, "But I hold on to the cross with all my strength--one must cling to it like a kitten hanging on to a plank when it falls into the sea."
Now I see there is another book I might enjoy. Thank you.
5.29.2012 | 3:41pm
I've just finished Undset's Biography of St. Catherine of Siena. Not as rich nor as deep as the novels, but stunning prose nonetheless. Kristin Lavrensdatter, thanks to my friend Webster Bull, the writer, was my introduction to Sigrid Undset. It was like finding a lasting treasure.
5.29.2012 | 7:03pm
Gil says:
Remarkable. "But if you desire to know the truth about anything, you always run the risk of finding it." Sounds like something Flannery O'Connor would have written, and certainly they have a lot in common, including saintliness.
5.30.2012 | 3:15am
Rick says:
This very fine article is my first introduction to Sigrid Undset. However, the reference to her as a Dominican caused me to think of the only two Catholic nuns I have ever known well. I am not a Catholic, so my exposure to them has been limited, but being put into proximity with two of them resulted in two of the deepest friendships I have ever had. They were both Dominicans (Second Order, of course).

The first was Sister Joan, who served with me in the Peace Corps in West Africa. She was an incredibly dynamic personality who truly embodied the principle of living boldly. She taught medical lab technology, hosted the best-stocked bar in the Peace Corp community, and said that if she hadn't become a nun, she would have been a bartender. Her compassion extended to animals, and after I was seriously injured in a motorcycle accident and evacuated to Washington, she took in my African cat and even brought him back to America years later. Joan, by the way, had little patience with "religious conversation." I finally realized that, for her, spirituality was honed on the sharp point of encounters with personalities and the challenges presented in the world, not by theologizing.

The second was Sister Dorothy, whom I met in a course on the Old Testament at San Jose State University. She was less dynamic and boisterous than Joan, but had instead a gentle depth of spirituality that marked her as a very special friend. I never missed a chance to visit with her at her school or the mother house on my trips around California.

Both these exceptional women eventually left the convent in order to marry, Joan to a childhood friend and a job running the hospital lab services on the Navajo reservation in New Mexico, with side trips to West Africa to set up family planning clinics, and Dorothy to a hedge fund manager and a job teaching religion at a Catholic high school.

But thank you for reminding me of the Dominicans, even if I have digressed from the topic of Undset. I really have to renew my contacts with both these women. Such friends are a rarity!
5.30.2012 | 10:41pm
Teri Pittman says:
I love Undset's work and had no idea there was a biography of her. Have you read Gunnar's Daughter? It's a chilling, chilling piece of work. The Master of Hestviken series is excellent too. When I read Kristen Lavarnsdatter, I really hadn't run across fiction with that depth of character. I still have bits of the story surface, when I consider the behavior of people I know. I am not a person that reads fiction often, but I would urge folks to read some of Undset's work. It's truly amazing.
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