Journey by Moonlight (28 page)

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Authors: Antal Szerb

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BOOK: Journey by Moonlight
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I
N
1991 a friend placed in my hand a slim novel entitled
Utas és Holdvilág
. “You must read this,” he insisted. “This is the novel we all read as students. Every educated Hungarian knows and loves this book.” I too fell under its spell. The gently ironical tone, the deceptive casualness with which the story unfolds, the amused scepticism playing on every variety of pretension, inspired an immediate trust. That trust deepened as the quality of the
writing
became apparent. The opening scene, moving between the Grand Canal of Venice and its seedy back-alleys with their
melancholy
view of the Island of the Dead, typifies Antal Szerb’s gift for loading details with an almost symbolic resonance. Mihály’s little escapade neatly prefigures the larger action that will follow, defines the terms of the conflict, and establishes the faintly surreal tone with its constant hint of irony.

This irony, distinctively Middle-European in character, operates on every level. First, as with Jane Austen at her most sly, Szerb’s authorial voice constantly mingles with that of his hero,
repeatedly
wrong-footing the reader to leave him peculiarly vulnerable to events. Then there are the ironic perspectives imposed by the neatly symmetrical plot, with its parallels and contrasts, each a logical consequence of Mihály and Erzsi’s deeply paradoxical marriage. Such irony goes beyond mere technique, investing
everything
with a disturbing ambiguity. Mihály is both anti-hero (as often noted) and hero. His actions are immoral, absurd, farcical, yet somehow our sympathies are never quite alienated. Some
principle
at the core of his being calls to us. His progress is both a collapse into adolescent disarray and, in its own way, a genuine spiritual journey, though pursued ‘by moonlight’ and leading to inevitable defeat. However daft his actions, he has an attractive intelligence, a surprising capacity for self-honesty, a certain
reckless
courage in pursuing his wild quest. Its predictably wry
conclusion
discredits an entire social structure, that of “the fathers, the Zoltáns, the whole punitive middle-class establishment”. Mihály is truly one of those “failures and misfits of a civilisation by which we best understand its weaknesses”.

This is novelistic art of a high order. The man who produced it was no less remarkable. Born in Budapest in 1901, he lived through perhaps the most traumatic years of Hungarian, indeed European, history. Just seventeen when the Empire collapsed in military defeat, his student years saw the bloody communist revolution of 1919, foreign occupation, the ‘white terror’ and the Second World War. His technically Jewish ancestry and his lifelong stance against fascism attracted mounting official persecution from the age of thirty-seven, and he died horribly, at forty-three, in the forced-labour camp at Balf. Yet little of this is reflected in his major writings, or indeed the man himself: life-loving,
playful
, a brilliantly ironical but never cynical mind, more in keeping with the eighteenth than the twentieth century. A cradle Catholic (the family were, like most Budapest Jews, entirely assimilated), educated in a Piarist seminary, he became the quintessential
Hungarian
man of letters, not just admired but widely loved. The
narrative
of
Journey by Moonlight
coincides with rising fascism at home and abroad, and probes the national obsession with suicide, yet the touch is ever light, the focus personal and psychological. All his literary connections reveal a cast of mind humane rather than ideological, mystical rather than political, scholarly but boldly original in its interests and methods.

Those interests were wide-ranging. Antal Szerb was a lifelong Anglophile, an authority on the German, Italian, French and English traditions, and his enduring monument is, besides the fiction, a ground-breaking
History of World Literature
. As a
despairing
colleague wrote: “He knew everything”. The intelligence that pervades
Journey by Moonlight
is of an exceptional order: an
intelligence
not just of the head, but of the heart.

LEN RIX

March 2001

Translated by Len Rix

ISBN 978–1–901285–89–5

At an end-of-London-season soirée, the young Hungarian
scholar
dilettante Janos Bátky is introduced to the Earl of Gwynedd, a reclusive eccentric who is the subject of strange rumours. Invited to the family seat, Pendragon Castle in North Wales, Bátky
receives
a mysterious phone call warning him not to go …

Set in Wales,
The Pendragon Legend
is a gently satirical blend of gothic and romantic genres, crossed with the murder mystery format to produce a fast-moving and often hilarious romp. But, beneath the surface, the reader becomes aware of a steely
intelligence
probing moral, psychological and religious questions.

 

Szerb was fluent in German and English and greatly interested in unusual religious beliefs. His knowledge of Rosicrucianism and the occult informs this often very funny book, which takes potshots at the period’s popular fiction.

Paul Bailey
The Independent
 

 

Szerb is a master novelist, a comedian whose powers transcend time and
language
, and a playful, sophisticated intellect. This book is an absolute treat, deliciously ludic, to be read with a big smile on your face throughout.

Nicholas Lezard
The Guardian

OLIVER VII

Antal Szerb

 Translated by Len Rix

ISBN 978–1–901285–90–1

The restless ruler of an obscure Central European state plots a coup against himself and moves to Venice in search of ‘real’ experience. There he falls in with a team of con-men and ends up, to his own surprise, impersonating himself. His journey through successive levels of illusion and reality teaches him much about the world, about his own nature and the paradoxes of the human condition.

 

A writer of immense subtlety and generosity, with an uncommonly light touch which masks its own artistry. His novels transform farce into poetry, comic melancholy into a kind of self-effacing grace … Antal Szerb is one of the great European writers.

Ali Smith

 

Antal Szerb belongs with the master novelists of the twentieth century.

Paul Bailey
The Independent
 

 

Szerb is a master novelist, a comedian whose powers transcend time and language, and a playful, sophisticated intellect.

Nicholas Lezard
The Guardian

The Pendragon Legend

 

Oliver VII

Translated from the Hungarian
by Len Rix

Translation copyright © L B Rix 2000

First published as
Utas és Holdvilág
, Budapest, 1937
© Estate of Antal Szerb

First published in 2001 by

Pushkin Press
12 Chester Terrace
London NW1 4ND

This ebook edition published in 2011

ISBN 978 1 906548 50 6

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior permission in writing from Pushkin Press

Cover:
Emotional Postcards  The Venice Series
  La Fenice
© Alessandro Belgiojoso
Frontispiece:
Antal Szerb

Set in 10 on 12 Baskerville Monotype

www.pushkinpress.com

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