Some Lacquered Day in April

New at IWP Books: Phyllis McGinley, 1958, Merry Christmas, Happy New Year.

A New Year & No Resolutions

There’s this to be said for making New Year’s resolutions: it is good clean sport — one that limbers the imagination, flexes the muscles of the character, and adds a kind of rough-and-tumble zest to those dreary weeks immediately following the winter holidays.

But like most forms of exercise, it should be indulged in with moderation — particularly as one reaches the wiser, or declining, years. After all, wrestling with temptation can be as exhausting as any other sort of athletics and can result in a variety of wounds and traumas — fractured egos, tempers thrown out of joint, lumbagos of the spirit. I’m not sure anyone over forty should make a resolution.

Particularly not on the first of January. Of all the bleak, dark, unthinkable times to write out a prescription for improvement, January is the bleakest and darkest and most inauspicious. The high fever of Christmas has only just burned itself out; on its heels comes the New Year’s relapse. And it is in this invalid condition that across the length and breadth of the land people decide to remold their behavior or their careers or their figures closer to some Technicolor ideal. Is it any wonder they are foredoomed to failure? The very month conspires against them, adding the spites and angers of storm, bursting steampipes, and delinquent progeny to the misery of blessings withdrawn. Nothing can possibly get a decent start in the depths of winter except a nasty, nagging cold.

And yet the temptation to make resolutions is something I’ve not been able to overcome. “This year,” I tell myself, “no promises!” But let one wild bell ring out, let me get halfway through a chorus of “Auld Lang Syne,” and I find myself vowing that, come tomorrow, I’ll begin my program of bending from the waist fifty times, night and morning, or answering all my letters the day they reach me. And it’s sometimes as late as February before I’ve won the struggle against my Better Self. It takes strength of character not to give in to good resolves.

But one must fight off the impulse. For resolutions made under a sprig of fading mistletoe are generally the wrong type for January. I can imagine someone’s vowing to cross a desert or lead a crusade or build a rocket to the moon and managing it triumphantly. Those are active aspirations and they’d keep one’s mind off the weather. But in a season that cries out for small solaces, we keep on giving up things.

We promise to deprive ourselves of the trivial comforts that may be all that stand between us and frenzy. Coffee, for instance, or that martini before dinner. Strong with the spurious courage lent by a yet unspotted calendar, we abstain from cigarettes. Are we chatterers by nature, loving the neighborly tidbit on the tongue? Then we swear to forego gossip and be succinct on the telephone.

Or else we vow to shun the second helping of chicken with dumplings and that cream puff for dessert, to live horribly on cottage cheese and pineapple for our waistline’s sake. Somehow we persuade ourselves that, however dismal the soggy landscape and the winter afternoons, cutting down on our pleasures will bring the roses to our cheeks and the bonus to our pay envelopes.

Or else we acquire a compulsion toward Culture. We cancel our reserve copy of Murder at the Glove Counter and resolve to give War and Peace another chance. Some of us so far lose our heads as to make resolutions about how we’ll treat our children. We’ll give up scolding them, we assert; we’ll try to make friends with them instead and invite their confidences.

Folly, folly, all folly! Those promises might stand a chance of being kept in June, say, with the spirits burgeoning along with roses and summer barbecues. In spring, when the year really begins. But in winter, no.

My plan calls for giving up no luxurious bad habit. I shall try only to savor each with more contentment. That plumpness around the midriff may be insurance against nagging at the dinner table. Fortified by that extra cup of coffee in the morning, I can kiss my husband off to work serenely. And I shan’t mind which television station he insists on watching, so long as I am not going cigaretteless through the evening. Besides, how do I know — since doctors still debate the issue — that science will not some day decree there is a necessary vitamin in tobacco or something especially nutritious in caffeine? Wouldn’t I feel silly then, having spent all that anguish of mind in doing without them?

Up, then, with the guilty cup, the avoirdupois, the cigarette! My sincerest efforts shall lie in taking more pains with the percolator and improving my recipe for crepes suzette.

The same goes for the other indulgences. Give up gossip? Why, it’s the very stuff that talk is made on. What is any conversation worth that doesn’t include it? Even the dictionary bears me out. Its lovely derivation is “God-sib” and it refers to a godparent who, it is to be supposed, once brought into the welcoming house his own brand of ineffable tattle. Gossip isn’t scandal and it’s not merely malicious. It’s chatter about the human race by lovers of the same. Gossip is the tool of the poet, the shoptalk of the scientist, the consolation of housewife, wit, tycoon, and intellectual. It begins in the nursery and ends when speech is past. Who am I to fly in the face of nature? Besides, consider the mischief-makers of the universe. They are not the gossips, but the reformers and the puritans and the witch-burners and the keepers of resolutions. They do things. They drop bombs and search out heretics. Untobaccoed, coffeeless, and without humor, they start the wars or set the juggernauts rolling. But the gossips, happily employed with discussing Mrs. Lilywhite’s peculiar behavior at the club dance or whether young Jones is serious about that girl in Tallahassee, are having too pleasant a time to upset the status quo.

Perhaps the word has fallen into disrepute because it’s so often linked with “idle.” But what, I ask myself again, is wrong with a bit of idleness? To waste a little time, to stop one’s customary busyness and look around at the world in which one holds so brief a tenure — these are not unadmirable occupations. The Devil finds work for idle hands, says the old saw. But you notice that it’s the work that’s castigated, not the contemplation. When I recall all the sunsets I’ve missed, all the glimpses of apple trees and feathery snowstorms and faces of passers-by, lost because some commonplace task was too absorbing to put off, I’ve sworn to be more idle rather than less in the new year. Let meals be half an hour late or a table go undusted. When there’s sun, I’ll sit in it. When the spring rain is particularly appealing, I’ll walk in it. I’ll put second-class mail straight in the wastebasket without reading it and stop scouring corners except on days when nothing worthier calls. If I find it rewarding to sit down in the middle of a cluttered morning and read a book, I’Il do that too.

But I shan’t make any promises about the importance of my reading. At my time of life — at anybody’s time of life — reading shouldn’t be for duty only, even if duty consists merely in keeping up with the best sellers. Otherwise one of the great consolations of existence grows tarnished. I’ll read as I please — a spot of science fiction, a taste of Jane Austen. Mark Twain and Keats and Agatha Christie shall sit cheek by jowl on my night table. And I’ll make it a point of honor to finish no book I’m not enjoying, also to skip as much and as often as I like. If I want to peek to see how a novel comes out, I’ll feel perfectly justified. I’ll go to Plato when I’m in the mood and the newest thriller when I’m not. For again, the little vices bring relaxation; and a bit of trash now and then is good for the severest reader. It provides that necessary roughage in the literary diet.

As to improving my footing with the children, I’ll shun that trap altogether. The flaw in too many “child-parent relationships” (to quote the current jargon) is the amount of fussing about it that mothers and fathers do. Children from ten to twenty don’t want to be understood. Their whole ambition is to feel strange and alien and misinterpreted so that they can live austerely in some stone tower of adolescence, their privacies unviolated. There’s nothing they resent more than their elders’ feebleminded attempts to make friends. To them that’s not comradeship, but prying. Authority they will accept. It’s something to complain about and to rest against. But their confidences come only when they’re not applied for.

And while I’m about it, let me add a word of counsel. Parents ought to thank providence when their children don’t constantly confide in them. Hearing the confidences of the young can be as wearying as it is flattering and is chiefly required at eleven-fifty-five on Sunday night just when one is most comfortably in bed, set about with pillows, and eager to find out who killed the blonde in Lord Stanhope’s library.

To ignore my progeny, then; to skimp the housework, to gossip over cups of coffee and cigarettes, to let the pounds and the great books fall where they will; are those reputable goals for a human being and a citizen? I think perhaps they are. At least in January. They are the lesser lapses I shall cultivate to combat the larger ones of greed, ambition, faultfinding, spite, and envy. If I let myself have my head on the small vices, maybe I’ll have time to encourage the small benignities like admiring my husband’s jokes or my friend’s hairdo. I’ll keep blithe enough to give a compliment when it’s needed, listen to Bach done to “Lute, Harpsichord, and Consort of Viols,” and see the winter through without an ulcer.

If I ever feel myself genuinely on fire for a fling at heroism or sainthood, I’ll choose a different time. There’ll be sun beaming away like a rich uncle and dogwood budding and the earth spicy with flowers and fertilizer.

But that will be some lacquered day in April, at the genuine beginning of the year.

I Shall Nod and Yawn

From Phyllis McGinley’s A Pocketful of Wry.

Millennium

Some day,
Some blank, odd, pallid, immemorial day,
Some curious Monday,
Some Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday,
Or even Sunday,
I shall arise dishevelled and a gaper,
To scan the paper
And stare thereon, thumb through, search it for clues,
Peruse and re-peruse,
And find no news.

Nothing to heat the blood or race the pulse,
Nothing at all —
No six-inch headlines screaming a war’s results
Or a city’s fall.
No threats, no bombs, no air-raids, no alarms,
No feats of arms,
No foe at any gate,
No politics, no shouting candidate;
Nothing exclusive, not a censored phrase,
No Scoops, no Exposés;
No crisis either foreign or domestic,
Nothing wild, urgent, imminent or drastic
Happening on the earth.

Only reports of weather and the birth
Of triplets to a lioness at the Zoo,
(Printed within a box)
And yesterday’s sermons seeming scarcely new
And something about the White-or-Sundry-Sox;
An actress married or divorced or dead,
Who led
The golfing in some tournament or other.

Oh, I shall smother
In ennui, I shall nod and yawn
And fling the dull sheets down upon the lawn,
Bored near to death by what they have to say
On that strange, beautiful day.

Half an Hour After

From Phyllis McGinley’s On the Contrary.

Melancholy Reflections After a Lost Argument

I always pay the verbal score
 With wit, concise, selective.
I have an apt and ample store
 Of ladylike invective.

My mots, retorts, and quips of speech,
 Hilarious or solemn,
Placed end to end, no doubt, would reach
 To any gossip column.

But what avails the epigram,
 The clever and the clear shot,
Invented chiefly when I am
 The only one in earshot?

And where’s the good of repartee
 To quell a hostile laughter,
That tardily occurs to me
 A half an hour after?

God rest you merry, gentlemen,
 Who nastily have caught
The art of always striking when
 The irony is hot.

A Love That’s Reckless

From Phyllis McGinley’s A Short Walk to the Station.

One Crowded Hour of Glorious Strife

I love my daughters with a love unfailing,
I love them healthy and I love them ailing.
I love them as sheep are loved by the shepherd,
With a fiery love like a lion or a leopard.
I love them gentle or inclined to mayhem —
But I love them warmest after eight-thirty A.M.

Oh, the peace like heaven
 That wraps me around,
Say, at eight-thirty-seven,
 When they’re schoolroom-bound,
With the last glove mated
 And the last scarf tied,
With the pigtail plaited,
 With the pincurl dried,
And the egg disparaged,
 And the porridge sneered at,
And last night’s comics furtively peered at,
The coat apprehended
 On its ultimate hook,
And the cover mended
 On the history book!

How affection swells, how my heart leaps up
As I sip my coffee from a lonely cup!
For placid as the purling of woodland waters
Is a house divested of its morning daughters.
Sweeter than the song of the lark in the sky
Are my darlings’ voices as they shriek good-by —

With the last shoe burnished
 And the last pen filled,
And the bus fare furnished
 And the radio stilled;
When I’ve signed the excuses
 And written the notes,
And poured fresh juices
 Down ritual throats,
And rummaged for umbrellas
 Lest the day grow damper,
And rescued homework from an upstairs hamper,
And stripped my wallet
 In the daily shakedown,
And tottered to my pallet
 For a nervous breakdown.

Oh, I love my daughters with a love that’s reckless
As Cornelia’s for the jewels in her fabled necklace.
But Cornelia, even, must have raised three cheers
At the front door closing on her school-bent dears.

Destruction Straight Ahead

From Phyllis McGinley’s A Short Walk to the Station.

Mourning’s at Eight-Thirty

(Or, a headline a day keeps euphoria away)

‘Tis day. I waken, full of cheer,
 And cast the nightmare’s shackle.
Hark, hark! the sanguine lark I hear
 Or possibly the grackle,

Phoebus arises. So do I;
 Then, tuneful from the shower,
Descend with head and courage high
 To greet the breakfast hour.

All’s well with all my world. I seem
 A mover and a shaper
Till from the doorstep with the cream
 I fetch the morning paper —

Till I fetch in the paper and my hopes begin to bleed.
There’s a famine on the Danube, there’s a crisis on the Tweed,
And the foes of peace are clever,
And my bonds no good whatever,
And I wish I had never
Learned to read.

The coffee curdling in my cup
 Turns bitterer than tonic,
For stocks are down and steaks are up
 And planes are supersonic.

Crops fail. Trains crash. The outlook’s bright
 For none except the coffiner,
While empires topple left and right,
 Though Leftward rather oftener,

And Russia will not come to terms,
 And Sikhs are full of passion,
And each advertisement affirms
 My wardrobe’s out of fashion.

Oh, I see by the papers we are dying by degrees.
There’s a war upon our border, there’s a blight upon our trees;
And to match each Wonder Drug up
That our scientists have dug up,
They have also turned the bug up
Of a painful new disease.

At eventide the journals face
 In happier directions.
They like a juicy murder case,
 They dote on comic sections.

But in the morning even “Books”
 Sends shudders coursing through me.
The outlook for the Drama looks
 Intolerably gloomy,

And though the sun with all his heart
 Is shining round my shoulder,
I notice by the weather chart
 Tomorrow will be colder.

Oh, I wake in the dawning and my dreams are rosy-red,
But the papers all assure me there’s destruction straight ahead,
If the present’s pretty dismal,
Why, the future’s quite abysmal,
And I think that I’ll just
  crawl
    back
      to
       bed.

Consider the Price

From Phyllis McGinley’s Stones from a Glass House.

Admonition

(To the Chicago Daily Times, which is advocating a one-day smokers’ fast to relieve the cigarette shortage)

O Times, O reckless journal,
O sheet unblest!
What is this mischief, this design infernal
That you suggest?
Let smokers for one dreary day and night
Absent themselves, you say, from all delight.
Then we might see the secret stores unlocked,
The Luckies back, the shelves with Camels stocked.
Perhaps. I merely tender this advice:
Consider the Price.

Consider a nation
Biting its nails and wrestling with temptation
For twenty-four desperate hours.
Think of the tempers poised on murder’s brink,
Of men at morning fainting in their showers,
Or driven, at eve, to drink.

Think, think
Of the vast quarrels let loose, the evil forces,
The words across the tables, the divorces,
Tots scurrying from the path
Of strange parental wrath,
Bosses, for once unwary,
Firing the blond and guiltless secretary,
Collaborations coming to an end,
Friend bickering with friend,
The innocent delivered to the furies
Of untobaccoed juries,
Deals lost, wives beaten, relatives told off,
And all for lack of a carload and a cough.

Through the small haze which wreathes about me yet
(From what now passes for a cigarette),
I conjure up the horrors of that day,
And, gentlemen, I say,
Resign your scheme. Quick, take your project back.
Better the lack,
The scramble, the shortage, the barley-flavored brand
Than anarchy across this smiling land.
Better, I cry, a bottleneck met head on
Than Armageddon.

A Pang Well Known

From The Love Letters of Phyllis McGinley.

Lines Scribbled on a Program

Whenever public speakers rise
 To dazzle hearers and beholders,
A film comes over both my eyes.
 Inevitably, toward my shoulders
I feel my head begin to sink.
It is an allergy, I think.

No matter what the time or place,
 No matter how adroit the speaker
Or rich the tone or famed the face,
 I feel my life force ebbing weaker.
Even the chairman, lauding him,
Can make the room about me swim.

The room swims. And my palms are wet.
 Languor and lassitude undo me.
I fumble with a cigarette
 For ashtrays never handy to me,
Lift chin, grit teeth, shift in my chair,
But nothing helps — not even prayer.

From all who Talk, I dream away —
 From statesmen heavy with their travels,
From presidents of P.T.A.
 Exchanging honorary gavels;
From prelate, pedant, wit, and clown,
Club treasurer, John Mason Brown;

From lecturers on the ductless gland,
 Ex-Communists, ex-dukes, exhorters,
Poets with poems done by hand,
 Political ladies, lady reporters,
Professors armed with bell and book,
Mimes, magnates, mayors, Alistair Cooke.

The hot, the fluent, and the wise,
 The dull, the quick-upon-the-trigger —
Alike, alike they close my eyes.
 Alike they rob me of my vigor.
For me Demosthenes, with pain,
Had mouthed his Attic stones in vain.

The aforementioned being clear
 Concerning speech, concerning speaker,
Alas, what am I doing here,
 Facing my empty plate and beaker,
And watching with a wild unrest
The rising of the evening’s Guest?
Ah, was it mine, this monstrous choice?
Whose accents these? And whose the voice
That wakes in me a pang well known?

Good God, it is my own, my own!

Brave and Lovely Syllable

New at IWP Books: Phyllis McGinley, 1937, One More Manhattan.

Lend Me Five Till Saturday?

Of all the words of tongue or pen,
Intoned by mice, proclaimed by men,
 Engraved on stone or snow —
All mottoes framed in prose or rhyme
To echo down the vaults of time —
 Most excellent is “No.”
Oh, brave and lovely syllable,
Heart-lifting and mouth-fillable!

Compact of artistry and wit,
Two letters form the whole of it,
 An N, a rolling zero;
A brace of simple characters
Whose utterance alone confers
 The accent of the hero.
Come, lift in swelling chorus,
The negative sonorous.

Down with the meek and yielding “yea.”
Teach the imperious tongue to say
“No” to your friends and “No” to strangers,
To eager meddlers and arrangers,
To bellboys, beggars, wishful waiters,
To vacuum-cleaning demonstrators;
To grimy boys inquiring “Shine?”;
To invitations out to dine
Where all the guests are put to shame
Unless they love the Parlor Game;
To hairdressers who drop you hints
About a vegetable rinse;
To friends of friends of friends from Reno
Who yearn to see the French Casino;
To hostesses who’d show you views
They took upon their Southern Cruise;
Chain letters; histrionic pleas
For sweet but dubious charities;
Insurance agents under full sail,
And people who can get it “whulsale.”

Say “No” to them (and do not budge)
Who’d make you Honorary Judge.
 Cry “No” from dusk till dawn —
Of all glad words pronounced or printed,
The noblest phrase that ever glinted
 In youth’s bright lexicon.
And when your tongue can turn it,
I wish you’d help me learn it.

If I were in the Mountains

New at IWP Books: Phyllis McGinley, 1934, On the Contrary.

Song From Town

If I were in the mountains, now,
 That bred and nourished me,
The wind would tease the aspen bough
 To cool hilarity.

In colored canyons, I could learn
 Steadfastness from a pine,
And fill my hands with leaves and fern
 And roving columbine.

I’d have no need to shut the sun
 From windows facing south.
Down every slope would coolness run
 To kiss me on the mouth.

O, hills desired! But this is how
 Perverse I am, and queer.
If I were in the mountains, now,
 I’d wish that I were here.

“Athletes of the Spirit”

New at IWP Books: Phyllis McGinley, 1969, Saint-Watching.

“History must always be taken with a grain of salt. It is, after all, not a science but an art, as the Greeks knew; so that when they were parceling out the deities, they gave history a Muse of her own just as they assigned one each to poetry and playwriting and music and other explosions of the imagination. I was reminded of this truth only yesterday morning. I had picked up for an hour’s refreshment that exquisite but perverse essay of Virginia Woolf’s, ‘A Room of One’s Own.’ One bleak sentence caught my skeptical eye. ‘Nothing,’ it said flatly, ‘is known about women before the eighteenth century.’ Now Mrs. Woolf the novelist is a delight. Mrs. Woolf the historian is something else again. If I put my trust in her I must believe that until recently women had been a voiceless, hopeless multitude, without power or influence in the world. I must take for granted the odd idea that we moderns who write and paint and manage corporations and elect Presidents sprang full-panoplied from the forehead of the Nineteenth Amendment. I am perfectly willing to grant my sex an astonishing adaptability, but I cannot give such a theory as Mrs. Woolf’s a full assent. Naturally I’m grateful for the ballot and my Rights just as I’m grateful for automatic dish-washers, air-conditioning, penicillin, and other latter-day luxuries. But I doubt that, even unenfranchised, our ancestresses were so underprivileged a group as feminist history makes them out. They did not lash themselves to railings in their drive toward equality with men, or go on hunger strikes. But in that they admitted no impediment to their abilities, they were, in a way, the first feminists. And anyone who contends that there were no great women before the eighteenth century has not read history with any care.”