“Desmond MacCarthy, like Dr. Johnson, was first of all a student of human nature.”
The best
writers, the ones who compel us to read their work across a lifetime, whose
thoughts become our own and who at last become teachers and companions, are
those who work in two media: words and people. They love language the way a sculptor
loves marble or bronze. In their hands, it resists and complies. They don’t
necessarily love their fellow humans (think of Swift) but find them irresistibly
interesting. Our contradictory nature and propensity for good and evil, when
observed and reflected on, compels them to craft an artful accounting, thus completing the circle.
Above, Lord
David Cecil is writing in his preface to MacCarthy’s Humanities (MacGibbon & Kee), published in 1953, a year after the
critic’s death at age seventy-five. MacCarthy is the one figure associated with
the Bloomsbury Group who remains readable. In the passage immediately preceding the excerpt cited above, Cecil writes:
“He is
usually described as a literary critic. Indeed, he was one of the best that
England ever produced. But the phrase does not portray him completely; for it
implies one primarily interested in the art of
literature . . .” Followed by: “Because he loved and appreciated good writing, he particularly enjoyed
studying men as they revealed themselves through the medium of books. But he
was just as ready to study them directly in actual persons and events and just
as equipped to record his observations in the form of a memoir or short story.”
As a literary
journalist, MacCarthy resembles V.S. Pritchett in his independence,
non-alignment with universities, vivid prose, mingling of life and work in the
profiles and reviews, and broad taste in books. None of MacCarthy’s
books appears to be in print. Here’s a sampler that might encourage you to seek
out his books:
“Sydney
Smith 1771-1845” (Humanities): “Like Voltaire he was intensely social and only lived intensely when he was busy or in
company; like the greater man he was an admirable friend. He could hardly have
been more benevolent, but he was also kinder than the prophet of eighteenth
century bourgeois morality. It did not make him chuckle to give pain, though he
loved a scrap.”
“Conrad” (Portraits, 1931): “The length of his
head from cine to crown struck me, and this was accentuated by a pointed greyish
beard, which a backward carriage of his head on high shoulders projected
forward. Black eyebrows, hooked nose, hunched shoulders gave him a more
hawk-like look than even his photograph had suggested. His eyes were very bright and dark
when he opened them wide, but unless lit
and expanded by enthusiasm or indignation, they remained half-hidden,
and as though filmed in a kind of abstruse slumberous meditation.” [Written
after meeting Conrad in 1922, two years before the novelist’s death at age
sixty-six].”
“Trollope” (Portraits): “Johnson said that no man
could be written down except by himself: he meant that no man can destroy his
literary reputation except by writing badly. But a man can also, though it
seldom happens, injure his fame by being exceptionally honest and unpretentious
about his own work.”
“Henry James”
(Portraits): “When I look up and see
the long line of his books, the thought that it will grow no longer is not so
distressing (he has expressed himself) as the thought that so many rare things
in the world must now go without an appreciator, so many fine vibrations of
life lose themselves in vacancy.”
FYI: I typed MacCarthy's name into the search bar, and the first thing that came up was Joseph Epstein's lovely and interesting 1991 piece on him for "The New Criterion."
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