I’ve
been browsing in the early issues of PN
Review, known at first as Poetry
Nation, the journal founded in England by Michael Schmidt and others in
1973. In the “Editors’ Note” in the first issue, they speak of a “growing
consensus” among such poets as Charles Tomlinson, Geoffrey Hill, C.H. Sisson,
Philip Larkin and others. An American reader forty-three years later must
think: what a lineup. One would have worked hard to come up with a comparably
gifted quartet among American poets at the time. By 1973, Tomlinson had published
half a dozen volumes. Two years earlier, Hill had come out with Mercian Hymns, and now was writing the
poems that would appear in Tenebrae
(1978). Sisson had just retired from the Ministry of Labour and was about to
publish In the Trojan Ditch, and Larkin’s
High Windows would also come out in
1974.
In
“The Politics of Form,” an essay in that first issue, Schmidt draws a schematic
diagram of English-language poetry circa 1973. On one side, the “cultural
radicalism” of Bly, Creeley, Dorn, Duncan, Merwin & Co. On the other, the
English poets mentioned above, joined by R.S. Thomas, “shoring up a crumbling
literary edifice.” In retrospect, there was no contest. The colonials won the popular
war, of course, but sacrificed any claim to legitimacy. Today, the American
victors remain unreadable and the defeated English (and Welsh) constitute virtually
the last gasp of poetry in our language, in our time. Schmidt suggests that
acceptance of so simple a political reading of writers and their motives is foolish,
a soft-headed concession to the self-serving radicals. Schmidt sees in Sisson
and the others “an assertion of the continuity of a challenged tradition, a
persistent belief in the vitality and potential of that tradition.”
In
that first issue are four poems by Tomlinson, two by Elizabeth Jennings and
three by Sisson: “Somerton Moor,” “Sumptuary Laws” and one of his best, “The Usk,” which includes these lines:
“So
speech is treasured, for the things it gives
Which
I can not have, for I speak too plain
Yet
not so plain as to be understood.”
PN Review still publishes, six
times a year, and the current issue features a celebration of the
late Christopher Middleton, including a remembrance by Marius Kociejowski.
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