Born on 27 March 1865 in
Sunderland, England, Marion Angus was the third of the six children of Mary Jessie, née Watson, and Henry Angus (1833–1902), a
Presbyterian minister from North-East Scotland. Her grandfather on her mother's side was William Watson,
sheriff-substitute of Aberdeen from 1829 to 1866, who in 1841 founded there the first
industrial school for street children. Her father graduated from
Marischal College in the same city and was ordained in Sunderland in 1859. He became minister of Erskine United Free Church,
Arbroath, in 1876. He retired from the ministry in 1900. She was educated at
Arbroath High School, but did not follow her brothers into higher education. However, she may well have been to France, as she spoke the language fluently and made several references to France in her prose writings. She also visited Switzerland and left an account of it. Marion wrote fictionalized diaries anonymously for a newspaper, the
Arbroath Guide. Entitled
The Diary of Arthur Ogilvie (1897–1898) and ''Christabel's Diary'' (1899), they were also published in book form, but no copies of the former have survived. These have been taken to shed indirect light on Angus's life in early adulthood, which included abundant family and church work, and exercise in the form of walking and cycling. After the death of their father, Marion and her sister Emily ran a private school at their mother's house in
Cults, outside Aberdeen, but this was given up after the outbreak of the
First World War, during which Marion worked in an army canteen. She and her sister returned to Aberdeen in 1921. However, Emily became mentally ill in April 1930 and was admitted to the Glasgow Royal Asylum,
Gartnavel. Marion moved to various places around
Glasgow to be near the institution where her sister was. She continued to publish poetry and gave occasional lectures, but her finances deteriorated and she became subject to
depression. A fellow Scots poet,
Nan Shepherd, became a close friend in this period. The only surviving body of Marion Angus's correspondence consists of letters to Marie Campbell Ireland, a friend she made in about 1930. A selection of these has been published. They and other letters betray a vein of disrespect and impatience with conventional society: "I don't know," she wrote to Ireland in about 1930, "that I care particularly for what is usually called 'cultivated people'. I found a more delicate and refined sympathy in my charwoman in Aberdeen than I did in any of my educated acquaintance." The unconventional side of her is recalled in an article by a friend that appeared after her death: "She was nothing if not original.... Even when her wit was mordant, she had a capacious and most generous heart." Marion Angus returned to Arbroath in 1945 to be looked after by an erstwhile family servant, Williamina Sturrock Matthews. She died there on 18 August 1946. ==Poetry==