This review is taken from PN Review 238, Volume 44 Number 2, November - December 2017.
on William Plomer
John Ennis, Heinrich Heine, Salvador Espriu, Charles Tomlinson, Peter Bland, Carole Satyamurti, Andrew Motion, Michael Longley, David Scott, Michael Longley, John Riley, Mark Strand, Denise Riley, John Montague, Clive Wilmer, Matthew Sweeney, Peter Abbs, George MacBeth, W.S. Graham, Francis Ponge, Douglas Clark, David Gascoyne, Christine Evans, Derek Mahon, Frederick Seidel, Geoff Page, Thomas Kinsella, Michael Hofmann, Ruth Bidgood, Kirkpatrick Dobie, Vicki Raymond, David Malouf, E.J. Scovell, Jean Garrigue, Fleur Adcock, Kenneth Koch, Bernard O'Donoghue, Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin, James Schuyler, Lee Harwood, David Wright, Vivian Smith, Kathleen Raine, Hugo Williams, David Harsent, Michael Hamburger, Mark O'Connor, Les A. Murray, Charles Johnston, Fleur Adcock, Philip Levine, Galway Kinnell, Michael Riviere, Lawrence Lerner, Thomas Blackburn, D.M. Thomas, Fleur Adcock, John Montague, P.J. Kavanagh, David Holbrook, John Silkin, Günter Grass, Elizabeth Jennings, Patricia Beer, Peter Sansom, Jaan Kaplinski, Vladimir Khodasevich, Jack Clemo, Frank Koenegracht, Jamie McKendrick, Michael Symmons Roberts, Jean Bleakney, William Plomer, Colette Bryce, Kathleen Jamie, Selected Poems, ed. Neilson MacKay (Little Island Press) £14.99
In contrast with a prevailing activist poetics, William Plomer (1903–73) always cultivated a reserved and personal poetry: ‘Even now I keep / To a private path, as then I kept’ (‘A Radio Interview’). In response to global conflagration, he envisioned not carnage and despair but the endurance of ordinary life. Despite the spread of mechanistic social systems, he asserted the supremacy of love. Surrounded by modernist isolation, he infused the lyric with pastoral echoes. Individual alienation may have defined the twentieth century, but Plomer resisted the extremes of self-effacement and narcissism: throughout his poetry is a metaphysical affirmation of humanity and of the mysterious workings of the divine: ‘Everything sings / in snowy stillness, / in marble wonder, / in formal myth, / believed because / impossible’ (‘A Church in Bavaria’).
It is a hallmark of Plomer’s that in an age of extraordinary (and often frightening) technological development, he found poetry in such non-poetic materials. In ‘A Walk in Würzburg’, ambling where ‘Bombs broke the wigged Baroque’, the poet finds surprising resonance with Röntgen. Here the discoverer of the X-ray became the Gutenberg of his age: the man who ‘first saw right through the skin’, who could see without the violence of surgical exploration what was wrong with the patient. The poet must be just such a visionary: ‘We still need a ray / To coax the delicate wings from the commonplace husk / And detect why the horde we are destroys itself.’ Plomer’s poems strive for these optics.
‘Painted on Darkness’ – published here for the first time – is a neo-Platonic vision of ...
It is a hallmark of Plomer’s that in an age of extraordinary (and often frightening) technological development, he found poetry in such non-poetic materials. In ‘A Walk in Würzburg’, ambling where ‘Bombs broke the wigged Baroque’, the poet finds surprising resonance with Röntgen. Here the discoverer of the X-ray became the Gutenberg of his age: the man who ‘first saw right through the skin’, who could see without the violence of surgical exploration what was wrong with the patient. The poet must be just such a visionary: ‘We still need a ray / To coax the delicate wings from the commonplace husk / And detect why the horde we are destroys itself.’ Plomer’s poems strive for these optics.
‘Painted on Darkness’ – published here for the first time – is a neo-Platonic vision of ...
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