T S Eliot called Louis MacNeice 'a poet of genius', a poet's poet,
one 'whose virtuosity can be fully appreciated only by other
poets'. As his publisher, however, Eliot knew that MacNeice's work
could speak to a much larger public. His Autumn Journal, published
in May 1939, went through five printings during the war years, and
it was to become one of the definitive poems of the 1930s. 'I would
have a poet,' wrote MacNeice, 'able-bodied, fond of talking, a
reader of the newspapers, capable of pity and laughter, informed in
economics, appreciative of women, involved in personal
relationships, actively interested in politics, susceptible to
physical impressions.' Knowing himself to be all of those things,
modesty and a desire to demystify his calling led him to make no
mention of the one all-important characteristic that distinguishes
a poet: a mastery of the music and magic of language. MacNeice's
mother died when he was seven, and Jon Stallworthy shows how his
imagination transmuted her ghostly presence, and the powerful
presence of his father, into an elemental opposition structuring
most of what he would write - from anguished indictments of his
native Ireland to poignant love poems. Drawing on the testimony of
MacNeice's family, friends and lovers, and his extensive
correspondence, Stallworthy has produced a remarkable portrait of a
poet of rare energy and integrity who was also a brilliant scholar,
critic, autobiographer, playwright and translator. 'Jon
Stallworthy's Louis MacNeice is the indispensable guide to the
poetry and is written with great verve, generosity and brilliance.
A moving and eloquent account of the life of the poet, as well as a
superb analysis of the relationship between the life and the work,
this is surely one of the great literary biographies of our time.'
Jonathan Allison, editor of The Selected Letters of Louis MacNeice
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