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Frederick Louis Macneice - : Prayer Before Birth
Frederick Louis Macneice - : Prayer Before Birth
In early 1941, MacNeice was employed by the BBC. At the end of the year, he started a
relationship with Hedli Anderson and they were married in July 1942, three months after
the death of his father. Brigid Corinna MacNeice (known by her second name like her
parents, or as "Bimba") was born a year later.
In 1947, the BBC sent MacNeice to report on Indian independence and partition, and he
continued to produce plays for the corporation, including a six-part radio adaptation of
Goethe's Faust in 1949.
MacNeice was awarded the CBE (Order of the British Empire) in the 1958 New Year’s
Honours list.
A South African trip in 1959 was followed by the start of his final relationship, with the
actress Mary Wimbush, who had performed in his plays since the forties. Hedli asked
MacNeice to leave the family home in late 1960. In 1961 he was "living on alcohol", and
eating very little, but still writing (including a commissioned work on astrology, which he
viewed as "hack-work"). In August 1963 he went caving in Yorkshire to gather sound
effects for his final radio play, Persons from Porlock. Caught in a storm on the moors, he
did not change out of his wet clothes until he was home in Hertfordshire. Bronchitis
evolved into viral pneumonia, and he was admitted to hospital on 27 August, dying there
on 3 September, aged 55. He was buried in Carrowdore churchyard in County Down, with
his mother.
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Prayer before Birth
Let them not make me a stone and let them not spill me.
Otherwise kill me.
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Layout
The layout of this poem with its unusual line arrangement and its movement contributes to the
effectiveness of the message.
Form
Prayer before Birth is a poem in free verse because it lacks the conventional stanzaic division
and regular rhyme scheme and makes use of repetition of sounds, words, syntactic structures and
alliterations.
Sound
The poet makes an occasional use of rhymes.
Rhyme scheme: a b a / a a a a / a b c a / a b a a c a / a b c d e f a / a b a / a b c d e f g h i a / a a
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There are words which rhyme in the same line: line 2: bat, rat / line 5: tall, wall / line 7: black, rack
/ line 10: white, light / line 35: hither, thither.
Alliteration: may, me - walls, wall line 5 / with, wise - lies, lure line 6 / black, blood, baths - racks,
rack, roll line 7 / with, water - grass, grow line 9 / my, mind, me line 11 / world, word - the, that
line 13 / thoughts, think line 14 / my, me - treason, traitor line 15 / my, means, murder line 16 / my,
me line 17 / men, me, mountains line 20 / lovers, laugh, line 21 / call, calls line 22 / my, me line 24
/ make, me, machine line 31 / make, me line 38.
Assonance: mind, guide line 11 / my, by - play, take line 15 / my, life, by line 16 / death, when
line17 / gift, children, line 24.
Vowel and consonant sounds
In this poem the poet has chosen to use sounds and group them in order to produce smooth and
pleasant musical effects. He makes use of a lot of vowels (each line begins with I ), semi-vowels
“w” and “y” (the words beginning with “w” and “y” are 19) and liquids-nasals (l, m, n, r) which are
the smoothest and softest ones on the scale of increasing hardness. The words beginning with “m”
are 61; the word “me” is used 38 times; the word “my” 11 times; the word “not” 11 times.
The sound devices used by the poet in Prayer before Birth ( rhyme, alliteration, assonance,
vowel and consonant sounds) make the poem pleasant to listen to and contribute to the clearness of
the message.
Language
The title of this poem is clear, it creates curiosity in the reader inviting him to read the poem.
The language is very simple and natural since a child cannot communicate with the reader
through complicated expressions or poetic diction. In fact, the grammar and syntax of this poem
are straightforward. To this end the poet uses many deictic words such as I, me, my, hither and
thither. These words prove directly the meaning he wishes to convey, pointing out clearly the
implied context.
In the poem there are a lot of invocations and imperatives which also demonstrate the poet’s
intention to be understood. In fact, the importance of the message is such that everybody must
understand.
Each stanza begins with an anaphora and ends with an epistrophe; the combination of the two,
in the same line, creates a symploce. Then, there are seven symploces in this poem.
The poet uses only 151 words, 154 including the title of the poem, but the poem is actually of 326
words because of the numerous repetitions. All the words are monosyllabic, like musical notes; only
a few of them are of two or three syllables.
In the poem there are a lot of repetitions, repetitions of sentences, phrases and single words.
“I am not yet born” is repeated 7 times.
“Let them not”, “Let not the”, “O hear me”, “Come near me”, “To me”, “At me”,“A thing”,
“I must”, “Make me”, are repeated twice. The word “me” is repeated 38 times, “the” 15, “my” 11,
“not” 11, “to” 9, “and” 8, “am” 7, “born” 7, “yet” 7.
The usefulness of repetitions, in this case, is that of building up tension and stressing: a) the
extreme importance of the birth of a child; b) the musical qualities of the text which produce an
incantatory effect.
From the title and from the first line we notice that it is a case of “impossible situation” or
“semantic deviation”, that is to say a “nonsense” or “absurdity”.
The “absurdity” consists in the fact that the speaker is an unborn child and this unborn child
speaks very well, he is wise and has a voice of experience even before the event: his birth.
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It is an “absurdity” like that of Wordsworth’s “The child is father of the man” or Keat’s “Beauty
is truth, truth beauty”.
If we reason like a mathematician or a philosopher it is impossible for X to be Y’s father while X is
a child and Y is a man.
But inferred situations created by the poet are free from constraints of reality. They do not have to
obey the rules of reason or the laws of nature. The most commonplace example of impossible
situation or a semantic deviation is an apostrophe which is a rethoric figure of speech that
consists in addressing someone or something by nature or circumstances unable to hear or reply.
Sometimes a lyrical poem is entirely cast in the form of an apostrophe like in the case of Prayer
before Birth. We can find many examples of apostrophe in John Donne and Thomas Hardy.
Theme
In this poem Louis MacNiece makes his psycological exploration of identity even before birth.
The unborn child is frightened by the prospect of taking on an identity like that of the majority of
the men of the author’s time.
Each of the eight stanzas begins with an invocation demostrating his fear of coming into the
world.
Lines 2-3: he is afraid of nocturnal animals and of evil spirits because neither live in the open air
but underground; both are active during the night and fear light and freedom. In these two lines
there’s a longing for freedom and knowledge as the unborn child is afraid of being a slave of
darkness and ignorance.
Lines 5-7: there are images of imprisonment, enticement, temptation and torture. In these lines the
poet underlines his love for freedom and independence.
Lines 9-11: images of ease, pleasure, love for nature. These images contrast with the preceding
ones and describe a perfect world for the child. In fact, these are the only lines in which we find an
optimistic point of view and a feeling of hope for the future.
Lines 13-17: images of sin, betrayal, instrumentalization, being forced to act against one’s will.
These lines convey a prayer for indulgence and the need of the child to be free and not oppressed
by society or obliged to commit crimes in its name.
Lines 19-24: images of behaviour, roles, social pretence, fear and inhibition, scorn, rejection. Here
we find fear of life in general, fear of experience, fear of isolation, madness or self- destruction. But
for the poet the most atrocious thought of all is that of being cursed by his own children.
Lines 26-27: images of humanity and supreme arrogance. This stanza is much shorter than the pre-
ceding and the following ones to reach the visual effect of standing out on the page because in this
stanza there is the core of the message.
Lines 29-37: images of reaction and opposition, rejection of unwanted roles, diminuition of
identity, lack of solidity, fear of being made sensitive or being wasted. Here the child begs for
strength to fight and win against a society who would make him lose his identity.
Lines 38-39: conclusion. The unborn child concludes with the wish to be neither stone nor water.
Stone because it is lifeless and water because it is transient and inconsistent. He prefers death to
living soulless and inhumane.
The poet knows that the unborn child needs a secure world of solidity based on justice, solidarity,
freedom, knowledge, on the human values but he is afraid he will not be listened to.
The poet has nothing certain to offer and nothing certain to expect from the future. He lives
between two worlds, i.e. a world of death and an unknown new world which could arise from the
ruines of the old one.
The lyric is the first of the volume Springboard (1944) and is a protest against the social and
political oppression typical of the Age of Anxiety. Alienation, isolation and anxiety were the key
words of this age.
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Literary background
Louis MacNiece attended Merton College, Oxford and worked as a lecturer at Birmingham
University, Bedford College in London and at the University of New York. From 1941 to 1949 he
was a producer for the BBC, wrote various plays for radio including The Dark Tower (1947). By
the end of the war MacNeice had written well over sixty scripts for the BBC. The radio play
Christopher Columbus, produced in 1942 and later published as a book, featured music by William
Walton, conducted by Adrian Boult, and starred Laurence Olivier. His works include Letters from
Iceland (1937) which he wrote with W.H.Auden, Modern Poetry: A Personal Essay (1938),
Autumn Journal (1939), Springboard (1944), Holes in the Sky (1948), Visitations (1958).
In 1950 he was given eighteen months’ leave to become Director of the British Institute in Athens,
run by the British Council.
He belonged to the Auden Group (or The Oxford Group or the Pylon Group) whose members
were: W.H.Auden (1907-73), Stephen Spender (1909-1995), Cecil Day-Lewis (1904-72).
It was not really a homogeneous group and they always refused to be considered a new poetic
school or movement.
In the thirties they used poetry to discuss ideas and to try to improve the world they live in.
They believed that poetry should be topical, comprehensible and political; that the poet’s role was
a public one, his task was to show man what is and what should become.
Unlike The Georgians (1911-1922) who were inspired by rural life and purposely avoided
contemporary problems, the Auden Group needed to communicate with their fellow-men and to
participate actively in public life in order to better human conditions. Because of the brutal facts of
the day, such as: unemployment, the economic crisis, Nazism and Fascism, the approach of war and
the encouragement given them by their Oxford teachers to develop a social conscience, they
concerned themselves with social and political aspects of human life.
They went to fight for the Republicans in the Spanish civil war embracing the Republican and the
Communist cause for they were strongly anti-fascist and believed that communism and democracy
were the same thing.
They used slang and jazz rhythms in poetry and drew their images from the world of technology.
Spender, especially, was attracted by pylons and railway engines in which he saw the energy
society had to absorb.
Louis MacNiece stands somewhat apart from the Auden Group, he was never doctrinaire in his
approach and his poetry was not propagandist. He was wary both of parties and systems. He was
never a Party member and “his political colour was deep pink/liberal”, “he thought of the great
issues of the day - the raise of Hitler, mass unemployment, the Spanish war - as Auden, Day lewis
and Spender thought of them. The subjects of his poetry were similar and so was his notion of the
right poetic methods. The poet’s first business is mentioning things. Whatever musical or other
harmonies he may incidentally evoke the fact, will remain that such and such things and not others
have been mentioned in his poem”1.
“... he rejected all current dogmas, he insisted at the same time that ‘to shun dogma does not mean
to renounce belief’ and held strenuously to the end by his faith in the present of transcendent
ultimates that reveal themselves in phenomenal experience in a consistent, but constantly changing
pattern. Out of this arose, almost as a tenet of faith, his abhorrence of static pattern, his insistence
on the absolute necessity for renewal - in life as in poetry - but renewal within a shapely, and
consciously shaped, pattern”2 .
1
D.E.S. Maxwell, Poets of the Thirties, Routledge and Keagan Paul, 1969
2
W.T. McKinnon, Apollo’s Blended Dream, Oxford University Press, 1971
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How to teach this poem
The teacher will deal with this poem when the students are studying The Age of Anxiety and the
Oxford Group. If the poem is not already been inserted in a module or a teaching unit the teacher
should prepare a teaching unit consisting of three or four lessons foreseeing a lot of activities and
tasks for his/her students. Each lesson plan must be complete, from the warm up activity to the
rounding off and must comprise the pre-listening, listening, while-listening, post-listening, pre-
reading, listening-reading comprehension, speaking and writing activities.
This poem may be exploited for a debate on themes such as life, death, tyranny, freedom,
alienation, politics, capitalism, communism, population increase, abortion.
Furthermore it lends itself perfectly to be used for a theatrical performance. An unseen speaker
(voice over) recites the poem while on a darkened stage the students mime the scenes portrayed in
the poem.