FORTY YEARS IN PLACE


The Cut of the Light, Jeremy Hooker
[373pp, £25.00, Enitharmon Press]


The good thing about reading of a book like this one - the sub-title is Poems 1965-2005 - is that you really get the chance to see what a poet is about. I’d read a number of Hooker’s poems before, and had vaguely pigeonholed him as someone with a finely developed sense of place. Now I have to revise that slightly - reading this has convinced me that this sense is a great deal more than well developed. Indeed there is an almost pagan quality about it in the affinity with the Earth that he demonstrates on almost every page.

I suppose I should have qualified what I said at the beginning: the experience is only worthwhile if the poet is. These poems show Hooker has been from the first decade of his writing. Take these lines from ‘Strata Florida Abbey’:

                        And not a pinch of blood remains
     Except the blood-red stalks
     With which herb robert grips the corpse-grey stones
     That even tender hart’s-tongue ferns have pierced.
     I watch a wagtail’s pulsing throat;
     It’s nesting in the sacristy.
     There’s so much sky. One arch alone survives.

The ‘blood’ is that of Dafydd ap Gwilym, the fourteenth century Welsh poet. This is his traditional resting place, along with that of some of the Welsh Princes. The remains of the Abbey are in a remote location, windswept from the nearby Cambrian Mountains, and it is easy to understand how they entranced him. It is also easy to see why he returned to them poetically (and no doubt physically) in later decades.

Although Hooker is a Southern Englishman, Wales is clearly important to him and his writing. He has spent important periods of his life in the country and is currently Professor of English at the University of Glamorgan. Yet he should not be thought of merely as an incomer who has been inspired by the landscapes. One of my favourite sequences is from the 1974 collection, Soliloquies of a Chalk Giant
. This is a celebration of the priapic Cerne Abbas Giant carved in the land nearer to his birthplace. ‘The Giant’s Boast’ is that ‘I was before Christ, and I remember / The saurian head of my begetter’ and this poem ends with the memorable stanza:

     No man understood me
     Who called me brutal, and no woman
     Who called me kind.
     Mothers and daughters worshipped me.
     I worshipped with my body
     The naked ground.

A more recent (1997) collection that I found intriguing in a different way, Our Lady of Europe
, takes him firstly to the Netherlands. Two stanzas from ‘Noordpolderzijl’ are superb in the way they capture the essence of the empty flatlands clawed from the sea. Stanza three portrays:

     A sluice, a handful
     of red-brick houses -
     but the place feels like the end
     of a continent, somewhere
     to sail from, over the rim.

And then a later one tells us of the family who are the keepers of the sluice:

     What keeps them, perhaps,
     is polderlust
:
     a deep, slow rhythm
     that ebbs and flows,
     changing the sea to land,
     and the land to sea

‘Verdun’ from the same collection, finds Hooker in more sombre mood. This is hardly surprising, and most poets would become ‘poets of place’ when confronted by these ugly scars of war. The middle stanzas of this one read:

     On a bluff a machine-gun post,
     an iron mask with two eye-holes,
     looks down on new growth.

     Inside, the remains of a gun,
     rusted and twisted.

     The mask that blinded
     has survived the face. It overlooks
     slopes with harebells and young pines.

     In spiritual matters new ideas
     kill better than steel.

The difference between his earlier and his later poems is hardly one of quality, but rather that the later ones are likelier to have more severe undertones. This is not to imply in any way that he has failed to develop his poetry - the later poems certainly show more readiness to tackle difficult questions - but says much for the merit of his early work.   

Sadly, many poets seem to equate obscurity with profundity. Not this one. You have to admire the crystal clarity of his writing whether you like his poems or not. I am in no doubt as to which camp I belong.     

          © Raymond Humphreys 2006