Book description
For lovers of the often dark and troubled poetry of Louis MacNeice,
his father is a reassuring presence: solid, sober, pious yet tolerant,
a Church of Ireland clergyman who was not afraid to reject the Ulster
Covenant of 1912, denounce sectarianism, and even espouse Irish
nationalism. This book originated in the discovery of one inconvenient
fact. Frederick MacNeice (1866Â-1942) was not a Home Ruler but an
all-Ireland Unionist, who for many years was an enthusiastic Orangeman
in Dublin and then Ulster. In later life, especially as Bishop of Down
after 1934, he set aside these connections in order to pursue
intercommunal peace and tolerance in Belfast and beyond. Louis
colluded with his father in reinterpreting his earlier career, as part
of a process of personal reconciliation which profoundly affected his
later poetry and autobiographical writings. The relationship between
father and son is discussed in two chapters, and several well-known
poems are reinterpreted in the light of fresh evidence. Above all,
this is the biography of a visionary who never despaired of spreading
salvation through the often derided Church of Ireland. Using
unfamiliar archives and local newspapes as well as the writings of
both father and son, this book reconstructs the disparate worlds in
which Frederick MacNeice lived and worked. It also explores his muted
responses to the suffering of his parents and siblings, the early
death of his deeply depressed first wife, the benefits resulting from
his second marriage and its consequences for his children. The figure
that emerges is complex, guarded, astute, and remarkably effective in
using religion to spread enlightenment. His life demonstrates that
salvation deserves to be taken seriously as a motive force in modern
Irish history.