Long Shadows
J. C. Hall
‘Wake up, Hall! There’ll be plenty of time
After this lesson for your poetry stuff.’
Sniggerings from the back. An urgent rhyme
Jumps on my mind and drives old Euclid off.
Those are the opening lines from one of J. C. Hall’s later poems,
Curriculum Vitae
,
recalling his boyhood stirrings as a poet. His first published outing could hardly have been more auspicious, it was in a volume he shared with Keith Douglas and Norman Nicholson. Those two poets have long been on the Faber list: after all these years it a pleasure to welcome J. C. Hall to the fold.
Long Shadows: Poems 1938-2002
, in the author’s words, ‘is not a collected poems in the sense of containing everything I’ve written and published, but a comprehensive selection of poems which seem, in their various ways, worth preserving.’ Don’t be misled by his characteristic modesty, these poems are very much ‘worth preserving’.
When reviewing the first edition of this volume, Vernon Scannell referred to J. C. Hall’s ‘considerable gifts’ going on to say, ‘it is interesting to watch the development of a talent that has always been rooted firmly in the great tradition of English lyrical poetry’ in a ‘tone ... rather like that of a more genial Philip Larkin ...’
In a nice apothegm, W. H. Auden once observed, ‘formal verse frees one from the fetters of one’s ego’ and in the poems of J. C. Hall we see a craftsmanship that yields to the reader constant pleasure and enjoyment. J. C. Hall should be better known.
‘Some of them are so very moving. I love the last lines of "Juliot" - just the sort of thing I should like to have done myself.’ Philip Larkin (in a letter to the author)
‘Hall writes movingly and often wittily about childhood, love and loss. These poems are the real thing.’ Vernon Scannell,
Sunday Telegraph
'It is a delight to have JohnHall’s poems available again, appearing in his ninetieth year and spanning an even longer period of writing than his Selected and New Poems, 1939-1984. His is a subtly crafted, highly approachable poetry that never strains for effect - and yet delivers haunting truths in its gentle exploration of ordinary human experience.
'
Alan Brownjohn
‘The result is real poems - moving elegies, spirited epiphanies, wryly humorous observations. I read this book with growing admiration and then - with enormous pleasure - I immediately read it again.’ Matt Simpson,
Stride
Tags
Categorised as:
Poetry
Sub-categories:
Poetry Collections
Genres & Themes:
Faber Finds;
Loss;
Childhood;
Love
Collected Poems 1950-1993
Vernon Scannell
In 2002 Vernon Scannell wrote the following: ‘It has been my firm belief since I first began to attempt the art of poetry that the ...
Keith Douglas, 1920-1944
Desmond Graham
Keith Douglas was almost certainly the greatest poet of the Second World War. He was killed in Normandy three days after D-Day. He was only ...
Collected Poems
Norman Nicholson
With its publication by Faber in 1994, this Collected Poems revealed for the first time the true range of Norman Nicholson's output, as well ...
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