Tom Docherty
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Dead ends
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Reiterations and quasi-repetitions of words play dangerously close to dull redundancy; they are potential ‘dead ends’. This chapter’s four sections, the first on repeating figures and the latter three on tautologies, look at the expressions of language’s limitations in Hill’s poetry, focusing particularly on The Triumph of Love (1998), The Orchards of Syon (2002), and The Book of Baruch by the Gnostic Justin (2019). With the help of a Chestertonian allusion to Aristotle’s sense of meson, or balance, the first section argues that repeating figures can present discrete rebalances of language, which aim to transcend the corrupt histories of words. The next three sections are devoted to tautologies, in which a superficial balance of words is already evident. After a preliminary investigation of the link between tautology, infancy, and speechlessness, with reference to Tennyson, the second section claims that tautologies, for Hill especially, are the closest thing in language to expressions of ‘mute desire’. The third section examines the ‘evenness’ of tautologies, understood as necessary for the potential transcendence of their expression; and the fourth section, following this logic of tautologies to its intended end, considers Hill’s tautology as a childlike plea to God for reconciliation.

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