Born to Irish parents in Belfast, MacNeice was largely educated in English prep schools. He attended Oxford University, there befriending W.H. Auden.
He was part of the generation of "thirties poets" which included W. H. Auden, Stephen Spender and Cecil Day-Lewis; nicknamed "MacSpaunday" as a group — a name invented by Roy Campbell, in his Talking Bronco (1946). His body of work was widely appreciated by the public during his lifetime, due in part to his relaxed, but socially and emotionally aware style. Never as overtly (or simplistically) political as some of his contemporaries, his work shows a humane opposition to totalitarianism as well as an acute awareness of his Irish roots.
Tell me who is this Louis MacNeice? —A scholar a drinker a poet And did he capture the Golden Fleece? —You’ll have to read him to find out
And tell me who is this Louis MacNeice? —A dapper young man born in Belfast And did he wear a Golden Fleece? —He was naked from sundown to breakfast
And tell me who is this Louis MacNeice? —Born in the year nineteen-oh-seven Was that the year of the Golden Fleece? —It was a bad year to be born in
And tell me who is this Louis MacNeice? —He died in nineteen-sixty-three Chasing after the Golden Fleece? —After a ramble in the country
And tell me who is this Louis MacNeice? —Why don’t you ask one of his friends? A companion of the Golden Fleece? —MacSpaunday will answer your questions
Tell me who is this Louis MacNeice? Do people still read him today? And liken his work to a Golden Fleece? —None too many I daresay
Oh tell me who is this Louis MacNeice? —I don’t know but he wrote very well And is he worth a Golden Fleece? —That's something I really can’t tell
Do tell me who is this Louis MacNeice? —Will you stop asking that question? Don’t you care for the Golden Fleece? —I should but my name isn't Jason
Damn near 800 pages of poetry (though you can easily skip a chunk of the appendiced material on account of quality control and/or repetition) and not all of it top-flight, but enough of it hits the heights to vouchsafe MacNeice’s reputation. He’s generally at his best when he (a) uses humour and wordplay, and (b) goes on train journeys.
The mega-ass MacNeice collection that he himself oversaw. Pretty much everything that you could want out of the guy is here. All the lengthy, lovely longer poems, his short evocations of nature, towns, and gentle things. The latter is his strength: MacNeice has a fine voice for the neglected underpinnings of the world, fragile and otherwise and I tend to favor these poems over his classical/thematic works.
Dipped in and out of this book for many a month and came away very impressed with MacNeice as a poet -- it's a shame he seems to have been overshadowed by Auden (who I guess he resembles but has a less arch quality to him, in my opinion.) I also think he gets a bum rap for being remembered primarily for his poem "Bagpipe Music," which is a fine poem but certainly not his only fine poem or even his finest. He always exerts a steady control over the forms of his poems but doesn't distort his intelligence to fit into the forms -- see how deftly he ties together past, present, and future through repetition in this small poem, "Coda":
Maybe we knew each other better When the night was young and unrepeated And the moon stood still over Jericho.
So much for the past; in the present There are moments caught between heart‑beats When maybe we know each other better.
But what is that clinking in the darkness? Maybe we shall know each other better When the tunnels meet beneath the mountain.
That is very good. Seems the book might already be out-of-print in the U.S., which is a shame since I had to burrow it from the library; nevertheless, copied out a number of poems scattered across his writing life that I hope to return to in the future and ponder over some more.
I can't remember reading Louis MacNeice before diving into these Collected Poems. I was quickly in love with his poetry and never tired of reading him, though this is quite a large volume. MacNeice was a formal poet. He worked in formal structures and and meters and almost always with rhyme. Some poets find poetic formality restricting, find that it confines lyricism, but MacNeice soars. His poems ripple with energy and read so fluidly that, given the abundance of poetry he wrote, it makes me think it came naturally to him. He reminds me of Auden that way. Another reason for liking him is that his poems are verbally expansive and treat their subjects fully. There are few poems here I'd call short. My favorites are the poems of the 121-page "Autumn Sequel" containing 26 masterful cantos written in terza rima. I like Louis MacNeice, who left us, young, in 1963, as much as any new poet I've read recently.
Louis MacNeice has a lovely way with words and his themes and imagery are intellectually interesting and beautiful to read.
Favourite poems: **Nature Notes **Sleeping Winds **The Snow man *To Mary - Forgive what I give you. *Mutations -Yet each of us has known mutations in the mind/When the world jumped and what had been a plan/Dissolved and rivers gushed from what had seemed a pool.' 'For every static world that you and I impose upont he real one must crack at times and new patterns from new disorders open like a rose' *Precursors - one or two who carry an emerald lamp behind their faces and - during thunderstorms - the light comes shining through **Prayer before birth **Cradlesong for Eleanor Plain speaking - the only decent definition is tautology The Return - the harlequinade of water through a sluice The Park Evening in Connecticut Conversation Round the Corner When we were children - Babel Nostalgia - homesick for the hollow heart of the Milky Way the soundless clapper calls and we would follow but earth and will are stronger and we stay Brother Fire
To the public - Why hold that poets are so sensitive?'; 'will continue/Throwing our dreams and guts in people's faces' To posterity April Fool - Here come I, my hair on fire, Between the devil and dthe deep. Fool me over, fool me down, Sea shall dry and devil shall drown. Dreams in Middle Age - 'Sooner let nightmares whinny'; 'Our lives are bursting at the seams with petty detail' 'sooner let the dark engulf us. Sooner/Let the black horses, spluttering fire, stamped ... Unless we can be ourselves - ourselves or more.' Sailing Orders - white horses, amber lights - towards coral islands of first love; every ocean ends in port - And yet beliefs are still to make Notes for a biography (I) - An oranges (sweet) and lemons (bitter) childhood; oh catnap-happy, catacomb-haunted childhood
Hard to be objective about this one. "Cradle song for Eleanor" was one of the first poems I memorized, way back when dinosaurs still roamed the earth, and the second verse remains a standard against which other poems can be sometimes measured, as does the brilliant opening line of 'Meeting Point'. So the point of reading the collected is to read the longer poems especially the two Autumn Journals and see if they can possibly live up to the shorter ones, as well as investigating the standard critical line that in his middle years MacNeice "lost it"...
First and last verse of "Meeting point"
Time was away and somewhere else, There were two glasses and two chairs And two people with the one pulse (Somebody stopped the moving stairs) Time was away and somewhere else. ...
Time was away and she was here And life no longer what it was, The bell was silent in the air And all the room one glow because Time was away and she was here. -- Louis MacNeice
If I could give a book, or at least a writer, 6 stars, I'd give them to Mr. MacNeice. Hell, I'd give him 10. He's definitely my favorite author in any form of literature.
I remember seeing Louis MacNeices Snow at Barter Books in Alnwick and being touched by the 'incorrigably plural'. A good reason to dip a bit deeper for the Sealey Challenge.
Turf-Stacks Here is no mass-production of neat thoughts No canvas shrouds for the mind
The Creditor
The quietude of a soft wind Will not rescind My debts to God, but gentle-skinned His finger probes. I lull myself In quiet in diet in riot in dreams, In dopes in drams in drums in dreams Till God retire and the door shut. But Now I am left in the fire-blaze The peacefulness of the fire-blaze Will not erase My debts to God for His mind strays Over and under and all ways All days and always.
Sunday Morning Down the road someone is practising scales, The notes like little fishes vanish with a wink of tails, Man’s heart expands to tinker with his car For this is Sunday morning, Fate’s great bazaar; Regard these means as ends, concentrate on this Now, And you may grow to music or drive beyond Hindhead anyhow
Intimations of mortality All is above board, order is restored, Time on horseback under a Roman arch.
Snow
The room was suddenly rich and the great bay-window was Spawning snow and pink roses against it Soundlessly collateral and incompatible: World is suddener than we fancy it.
World is crazier and more of it than we think, Incorrigibly plural. I peel and portion A tangerine and spit the pips and feel The drunkenness of things being various.
An April Manifesto
Our April must replenish the delightful wells, Bucket’s lip dipping, light on the sleeping cells, Man from his vigil in the wintry chapel Will card his skin with accurate strigil. O frivolous and astringent spring We never come full circle, never remember Self behind self years without number, A series of dwindling mirrors, but take a tangent line And start again. Our April must replenish Our bank-account of vanity and give our doors a coat of varnish
Wolves The tide comes in and goes out again, I do not want To be always stressing either its flux or its permanence Come then all of you, come closer, form a circle, Join hands and make believe that joined Hands will keep away the wolves of water Who howl along our coast.
August
The shutter of time darkening ceaselessly Has whisked away the foam of may and elder And I realise how now, as every year before, Once again the gay months have eluded me. (..) Time’s face is not stone nor still his wings; Our mind, being dead, wishes to have time die For we, being ghosts, cannot catch hold of things
Museums
Museums offer us, running from among the buses, A centrally heated refuge, parquet floors and sarcophaguses, Into whose tall fake porches we hurry without a sound Like a beetle under a brick that lies, useless, on the ground. (..) And then returns to the street, his mind an arena where sprawls Any number of consumptive Keatses and dying Gauls.
A fantastic collected poems in terms of breadth and scope. The reader can get a unique perspective on a poet's rise in technique and quality of subject, his subsequent loss of focus and long night of the soul, and eventual recapturing of vision and ability in later works. MacNeice, as represented here, becomes a great 20th century poet.
Fine and crafted poems by one of Ireland's greatest poets. From Nelson watching his world collapse around a hungry door to the last embarkation of feckless men, this anthology collects his greatest writings. Absolutely brilliant poetry
From 16 August to 22 December, this has been a four month journey. And a bit of a slog (610 pages). The first 1/3 was by far the most interesting:
- Poems (1935) - from: Out of the Picture (1937) - from: Letters from Iceland (1937) - The Earth Compels (1938) - Autumn Journal (1939)
From here – almost half the book – until the final 1/6, there was little of interest and very little memorable. Coincidentally, this coincides with MacNeice joining the BBC.
- Plant and Phantom (1941) - Springboard (1944) - Holes in the Sky (1948) - from: Collected Poems (1949) - Ten Burnt Offerings (1952) - Autumn Sequel (1954) - Visitations (1957)
The final part (1/6) see him regain his voice:
- Solstices (1961) - The Burning Perch (1963)
(There are an additional two hundred pages of appendices: poems from pre-university and undergraduate days, plus some others, a some textual notes.)
The early poems benefit from his early life experiences, WWII, and the breakdown of his marriage as source material. He's also experimenting with forms. Thereafter, he doesn't seem to develop much, and he becomes stuck in this Oxford classics world – a problem that recurs today with a certain element of society.
I was surprised at MacNeice's seeming inability to extend his interests, even to explore – a kind of absence of curiosity. The poems are mainly descriptions of what surrounds him and, frankly, not very poetic.
This is clearly a solid collection of MacNeice's poems, so five stars for that. In terms of quality and content, I found little of interest or particularly memorable; so two stars. Overall, three stars.
This is a man who wrote comic, tragic and melancholy verse. He wrote with rhyme and without it. One of his last poems...
" Maybe we knew each other better When the night was young and unrepeated And the moon stood still over Jericho.
So much for the past; in the present There are moments caught between heart-beats When maybe we know each other better.
But what is that clinking in the darkness? Maybe we shall know each other better When the tunnels meet beneath the mountain."
One of his most famous ones. Bagpipe Music...
"It's no go the picture palace, it's no go the stadium, It's no go the country cot with a pot of pink geraniums, It's no go the Government grants, it's no go the elections, Sit on your arse for fifty years and hang your hat on a pension.
It's no go my honey love, it's no go my poppet; Work your hands from day to day, the winds will blow the profit. The glass is falling hour by hour, the glass will fall for ever, But if you break the bloody glass you won't hold up the weather.”
The reviews of Macneice's intense lyrical and philosophical poetry are quite accurate, having read many of his poems but not the collected I was aware of this, as well as his being lumped in with the Auden Generation. He does dive into classical literature and his adept handling of both meter, poetic techniques, and the wide breath of knowledge that comes out of his poems is outstanding. It may be harder reading to modern readers as some of Macneice's longer poems are dense in the best sense of the word, a journey into some kind of classical forest. As a big fan of his Oxford friends Stephen Spender & W H Auden this was worth reading.
Skimmed through this because I really have too much reading to do. Some of it is really beautiful -- some though -- on first read -- a little draggy -- excessively philosophical. But I might change my mind. I'm definitely going to re-read it when I'm more free.
I didn’t read every single word of this book, but what I did read was very impressive. I stumbled upon this poet in the prologue of a novel I never finished, but I am eternally grateful to that author for bringing macneice to my attention.
This man is unbelievably beautiful. His poems are heavy in content but light and deft in form; it's as if Rilke was writing with Auden's pen. Wonderful; I'm incredibly happy I discovered him.
Get the 2013 Wake Forest edition edited by Peter McDonald. MacNeice was a contemporary of Auden and Spender, and deserves wider reading. My Greek professor Peter Green introduced us to MacNeice with a lengthy recital by heart from Autumn Journal. MacNiece wrote of the ancient world:
The Glory that was Greece: put it in a syllabus, grade it Page by page To train the mind or even to point a moral For the present age: Models of logic and lucidity, dignity, sanity, The golden mean between opposing ills Though there were exceptions of course but only exceptions - The bloody Bacchanals on the Thracian hills. So the humanist in his room with Jacobean panels Chewing his pipe and looking on a lazy quad Chops the Ancient World to turn a sermon To the greater glory of God. But I can do nothing so useful or so simple; These dead are dead And when I think I should remember the paragons of Hellas I think instead Of the crooks, the adventurers, the opportunists, The careless athletes and the fancy boys, The hair-splitters, the pedants, the hard-boiled sceptics And the Agora, and the noise Of the demagogues and the quacks; and the women pouring Libations over graves And the trimmers at Delphi and the dummies at Sparta, and lastly I think of the slaves. And how anyone can imagine oneself among them I do not know; It was all so unimaginably different And all so long ago.