Competitively minded readers and critics enjoy setting up either/or rivalries between writers. Joyce vs. Proust. Borges vs. Nabokov. Auden vs. MacNeice. There’s something simple-mindedly Manichean about this approach to literature. I prefer to think we can be selfish and enjoy the lot. Clive James talks sense in “Meeting MacNeice” (Poetry Notebook, 2014):
“As is only
proper, we go on forever hearing about W. H. Auden. But we never hear enough
about his friend Louis MacNeice, although there were things MacNeice could do
that even the prodigiously facile Auden could not. One of them was Autumn Journal, my favourite long poem
of the 1930s, an intoxicating cocktail of classical metres, conversational
rhythms and reportorial detail.”
In a century
of competing book-length poems, many of which now read like well-padded wallows
in egotism, Autumn Journal remains endlessly
rereadable. MacNeice’s voice is intelligent, even-tempered, sophisticated,
charming and tart. He is no aesthete or propagandist. MacNeice wrote it
between August and December 1938, the year of the Anschluss, annexation of the Sudetenland, Munich, Kristallnacht. Yet in Section XX he
finds room for a meditation on Christmas:
“A week to
Christmas, cards of snow and holly,
Gimcracks in
the shops,
Wishes and
memories wrapped in tissue paper,
Trinkets,
gadgets and lollipops
And as if
through coloured glasses
We remember
the childhood thrill
Waking in
the morning to the rustling of paper,
The
eiderdown heaped in a hill
Of wogs and
dogs and bears and bricks and apples
And the
feeling that Christmas Day
Was a coral
island in time where we land and eat our lotus
But where we
can never stay.
“There was a
star in the East, the magi in their turbans
Brought
their luxury toys
In homage to
a child born to capsize their values
And wreck
their equipoise.
A smell of
hay like peace in the dark stable —
Not peace
however but a sword
To cut the
Gordian knot of logical self-interest,
The
fool-proof golden cord;
For Christ
walked in where philosophers tread
But armed
with more than folly,
Making the
smooth place rough and knocking the heads
Of Church
and State together.
In honour of
whom we have taken over the pagan
Saturnalia
for our annual treat
Letting the
belly have its say, ignoring
The spirit
while we eat.
And
Conscience still goes crying through the desert
With
sackcloth round his loins:
A week to
Christmas — hark the herald angels
Beg for
copper coins.”
MacNeice balances
Christmas sentiment with Christmas dissent. He recalls the wonder of the holiday
as a child, “the feeling that Christmas Day / Was a coral island in time.” Some
of us spend the rest of our lives trying to recapture it. He evokes the
Nativity without preaching. Never devout, MacNeice can still demean a secular
society’s materialism and celebrate Christ “knocking the heads / Of Church and
State together.” He closes his 1934 poem “An Eclogue for Christmas” with these
lines:
“A. Let the
saxophones and the xylophones
And the cult
of every technical excellence, the miles of canvas in the galleries
And the
canvas of the rich man’s yacht snapping and tacking on the seas
And the
perfection of a grilled steak –
“B. Let all
these so ephemeral things
Be somehow
permanent like the swallow’s tangent wings:
Goodbye to
you, this day remember is Christmas, this morn
They say,
interpret it your own way, Christ is born.”
Thank you, Patrick, for this piece. I as not aware of MacNeice or this poem. This is something to add to my annual Christmas ritual of listening to Dylan Thomas reciting "A Child's Christmas in Wales" (available on YouTube).
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