Tom Docherty
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The fifth and final chapter is on the forms of Hill’s poems: do they arrive at ends; and if so what are they? The chapter’s introductory section attends to the notion of the ‘ideal’ in Hill’s thought. Quoting at length from remarks Hill made in 2008 and in 2016 at his last public reading, it relates the ideal shaping of the poem to what Hill calls its ‘necessary closure’. The chapter goes on to examine four of Hill’s forms: unrhymed sonnets; versets; clavics; and sapphics. The first two of these appear in Hill’s early work (1968–1971), the latter two in his late work (2007–2012). Hill’s use of each is distinctive; together, they illustrate Hill’s resourceful and attentive handling of various forms to reach, or deflect from, a sense of closure. There is a closing discussion of the thought of ‘yearning’, which is taken as fundamental to Hill’s end-directed language and forms. What F. H. Bradley calls ‘the idea of perfection’ is deemed an essential stimulus not only of the sapphic’s short final line but of Hill’s poetry as a whole. The chapter ends with a summary of the nature of forms in Hill’s early and late work, including the pointedly unbounded end of his posthumous collection, The Book of Baruch by the Gnostic Justin.

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