Down the Nights and Down the Days

Quinn, by Edward L Shaughnessy Peter

Long day's journey from Rome Pawn the Nights and Down the Days Eugene O'Neill's Catholic Sensibility Edward L. Shaughnessy University of Notre Dame Press, $28.95, 220 pp. Peter Quinn In the...

...In the "Father's house are many mansions," and could it be, thanks to her prayers, there was a place for him, a stage beside the great banquet hall in which the gifted and the ordinary have equal place...
...He chose a different road for himself...
...The postfamine church was the antidote to the disorder, disruption, and dislocation that marked the Irish passage from rural serfdom to the capitalist metropolises of England and North America...
...The famine was the defining event of modern Irish history, a period of suffering and humiliation in which millions either died or were scattered to Britain, Canada, and the United States...
...What you want to believe, that's the only truth...
...There is no time with God," she wrote after his death, "and I would be sinning against hope, faith, and charity if I did not believe that my prayers, and whoever else is praying for the soul of Gene, are heard...
...The nativist hostility that the church faced reinforced its emphasis on discipline, loyalty, and obedience...
...The church in America was shaped by the Irish and reflected their experience...
...Follower of Freud and Nietzsche though he was, O'Neill didn't regard sin as a historical curiosity...
...Derisively] Shakespeare was an Irish Catholic, for example...
...Shaughnessy carefully examines the impact of O'Neill's enduring Catholic mindset on specific plays and, in so doing, enriches our understanding of these works...
...Yet, while Shaughnessy doesn't revise the standard accounts of O'Neill's loss of faith, he does far more than pay lip service to O'Neill's religious upbringing...
...Educator, disciplinarian, companion, comforter, and organizer of the Irish wherever they were, the church was an instrument of ethnic survival as well as a guarantor of personal salvation...
...How important was Catholicism to his vision...
...Many found themselves, as James Tyrone says of his family, without "clothes enough to wear, or food enough to eat...
...In Down the Nights and Down the Days: Eugene O'Neill's Catholic Sensibility, Edward Shaughnessy doesn't try to do to O'Neill what Tyrone did to Shakespeare...
...Sin separated us from one another...
...Dorothy Day traveled in the same radical circles as O'Neill in Greenwich Village during World War I. It was there in a saloon appropriately named "The Hellhole" that he recited for her Francis Thompson's poem, "The Hound of Heaven...
...In the end, they both found fame and immortality of the human sort...
...As Shaughnessy makes clear, O'Neill's Catholicism was also more than "an artifact...
...We suffered because of it, and we inflicted that suffering on others...
...He set out on his own path, despairing of any God-given answer to humanity's broken, corrupted condition...
...O'Neill was among those who rebelled...
...It is either a great irony or a mark of God's own taste for strange interludes that, though O'Neill remained an unbeliever, he was instrumental in the conversion of a saint...
...Peter Quinn In the last act of Long Day's Journey into Night, James Tyrone and his son, Edmund, go another round in their endless verbal sparring...
...The Jesus who said, 'Why hast Thou forsaken me?' must surely understand them-and love them a little, I think, and forgive them if no Savior comes today to make these blind to see who may not cure themselves...
...it led him to read the writings of the great mystics and perhaps to conceive of his own experience of language in their terms...
...Unlike Joyce, O'Neill felt more bereft than liberated by his loss of faith...
...Shaughnessy faces the harder, deeper questions: What is there in O'Neill's work that is specifically Catholic...
...What is its significance in his plays...
...For Shaughnessy, the key word is sensibility, which he defines as "a cultural imprint on memory...an individual's own psychological experience in receiving the world view and the established values of the group...
...Peter Quinn is the author of The Banished Children of Eve...
...O'Neill's mind and imagination-his sensibility- were formed in the crucible of postfa-mine Irish Catholicism of the nineteenth century...
...The proof is in his plays...
...Beyond that, Shaughnessy puts in perspective as never before the tension between O'Neill's despair and his desire to believe...
...Shaughnessy recounts that, along with reciting Thompson's poem, O'Neill urged her to read Saint Augustine's Confessions...
...Dorothy Day continued to pray for him...
...That they search-and not without knowing a black despair that believers never know-that is their justification and pride as they stare blindly at the blind sky...
...Although, as Shaughnessy points out, this "created a climate unpropitious to the free expression of opinion," it was "not against the will of the faithful...
...Describing another famous artist-apostate possessed of a Catholic sensibility, the literary scholar Beryl Schlossman writes of James Joyce that his "Catholicism, often dismissed as an artifact, is at the source of his symbolic vision and its imaginative constructs...
...Who knows what he found beyond...
...Edward Shaughnessy's achievement is to give us an eloquent, insightful, sympathetic perspective on O'Neill's relationship to the Catholic faith that is utterly free of academic polemicizing or sectarian axe-grinding...
...Even in a world without God, the old religious definitions held true...
...Tyrone stands his ground...
...The intent of this probing and incisive book isn't to claim that the greatest American playwright was a closet Catholic whose faith is encrypted in his plays...
...Acting as God's mastiff perhaps, the playwright nudged the pilgrim forward on her journey to Rome...
...In the wake of this trauma, the Catholic church was confirmed as the repository of Irish identity...
...Edmund mocks the old man's Irish-Catholic chauvinism: "Yes, facts don't mean a thing, do they...
...In all my plays," O'Neill said, "sin is punished and redemption takes place...
...He searched the labyrinthine ways of his family's past-addiction, guilt, unspoken love, articulated disdain, the buried wound of Irish dispossession and defeat, the war of fathers and sons, and husbands and wives, black legacies of greed and desire, long day's agony turning into barren, bitter years...
...So he was," he tells his son...
...His discovery of his mother's morphine addiction was a shattering experience, and he found little solace in the harsh, unyielding regime of the Christian Brothers, his teachers at the time...
...He wrote to Sister Mary Leo Tierney, in 1928, of the blend of emptiness and longing that had replaced his belief in God: "Perhaps they also serve who only search in vain...
...This is a book that will be of enduring interest to readers and scholars of O'Neill, to students of the theater, and to pilgrim souls of every kind...
...Never a cynic in the purest sense-a critic who sees self-interest lurking behind every human act-O'Neill played, in the case of Dorothy Day, a cynic in the original meaning of its Greek root: kyon, or hound...

Vol. 124 • October 1997 • No. 18


 
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