“Poetry gives us a way of reading the world. Through its cadences, through its different ways of simultaneously conveying reason and feeling and the human senses, poetry makes it possible for people to express thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears.”
Almost a decade has passed
since the death of Geoffrey Hill. The Age of Hill is over, assuming it ever
started. He was the dominant English poet after the deaths of Auden and Larkin.
He died June 30, 2016, at age eighty-four. For his final twenty years,
a prolific time for Hill, I read him expectantly, waiting for his next volume. He
was never a member of the Mary Oliver School of Poetry Niceness and possessed
an Old Testament ferocity. The words
above were spoken by his widow, Alice Goodman, a librettist and Anglican priest,
months after her husband’s death. She writes:
“‘How does this line
sound?’ ‘Have a look at this,’ we said to each other over and over again. We
played with words. We argued accents and stresses, and the dovetailed
enjambments of line-breaks. We scribbled on paper napkins at the dinner table.
‘You can’t do that!’ ‘Why can’t I?’ ‘It doesn’t work.’ ‘Oh, that’s lovely. I
wish I’d written that.’ ‘If you’re going to write in bed, please use a pencil.’”
I return periodically to
all of his books but find The Triumph of Love (1998) most rewarding. An excerpt from CXLVIII:
“I ask
you:
what are poems for? They
are to console us
with their own gift, which
is like perfect pitch.
Let us commit that to our
dust. What
ought a poem to be?
Answer, a sad
and angry consolation. What is
the poem? What figures?
Say,
a sad and angry
consolation.
That’s
beautiful. Once more? A
sad and angry
consolation.”
Collected in Without
Title (2006) is an elegy—perhaps Hill’s defining mode—“Offertorium:
December 2002”:
“For rain-sprigged yew
trees, blockish as they guard
admonitory sparse berries,
atrorubent
stone holt of darkness,
no, of claustral light:
“for late distortions
lodged by first mistakes;
for all departing, as our
selves, from time;
for random justice held
with things half-known,
“with restitution if things come to that.”
An elegy—for the departing
year, for the self and its failings—and a prayer of thanks in a time of
darkness. The yew berry is toxic and medicinal. “Atrorubent” means dark red.
Darkness mingles with light. “Claustral” is cloistered, with a suggestion of monasticism
(and of Dickinson: “There’s a certain slant of light / On winter afternoons”).
The poem comes as close to conventional consolation as Hill ever gets, and the
descent of the conclusion into the colloquial is typical of Hill. The rare
appearance of the demotic in his poetry usually signifies the comic, however
mirthless it may seem. In 2009 I reviewed Hill’s Selected Poems for the
now-defunct Quarterly Conversation and concluded:
“Hill is not for the
faint-of-heart. His rudeness is often savage, and he is seldom afraid to skirt
absurdity. He once wrote: ‘An achieved poem is always beautiful in its own way,
though such a way will many times strike people as harsh and repellent.’”

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