A Treatise of Civil Power

Compare book prices at www.BookkooB.co.uk
BookkooB : Cheap books, whichever way you look at it.
Cover of A Treatise of Civil Power by Geoffrey Hill 014103226Xtitle:

A Treatise of Civil Power

author:Geoffrey Hill
format:Paperback Buy A Treatise of Civil Power Now
publisher:Penguin Books Ltd
released:August 2, 2007
isbn:014103226X
isbn-13:9780141032269
storeavailabilityitem pricedelivered 
Amazon UK    
The Hut    
Sprint Books    
Blackwells    
WH Smith (collect in store)    
Base    
The Book Place    
WH Smith    
Pick a Book    
Global Investor    
Waterstones    
The Book People    
zavvi    
Play.com    
Another Bookshop    
History Bookshop    
Tesco Books    
BookFellas    
Foyles    
Samedaybooks    

Above you will see price and availability details for A Treatise of Civil Power by Geoffrey Hill from the leading UK book stores.

To allow you to quickly compare prices, the stores are arranged in order of delivered price, cheapest first. Click on a store name to buy this book or to view further details.

Books Related to A Treatise of Civil Power Geoffrey Hill - ISBN: 014103226X

View other editions of A Treatise of Civil Power.
View books by Geoffrey Hill.

Customer Reviews

The Matter of England - Rated 5/5
It's very hard to write a review that does justice to the intellectual content of Geoffrey Hill's recent work. He is, without doubt, one of the singular poetic voices of his generation. However, reading the poetry, and being complicit as a modern inhabitant of Hill's vision of England places the reader in a location that is neither comfortable nor secure. As he points out in the poem `On Reading Milton and the English Revolution', `England / can do without most of us'.

This is unusual because Hill's work, while being powerfully rooted in theology and history, and in the tonal music of sixteenth and seventeenth century English, is also securely provincial English in its location. Hill's poetry, especially in the 1970 `Mercian Hymns' is a voice for a version of the West Midlands, a borderland caught between ancient landscapes and the wild forces of modern industrialism, haunted in this volume and elsewhere by the long shadow of dark age kingdoms, and the cultural and trading energy of Birmingham's Jewellery Quarter.

Hill's sensibility is also haunted by the two world wars; his is a Worcestershire whose woods and copses evoke the shattered trees of Passchendaele and the Somme. His recent volumes share with Tom Paulin's `The Invasion Handbook' the poetic power of World War 2 in the modern mind. In this collection, the war is connoted by references to Alanbrookes' diary, Werner von Braun and Willy Brandt's penance at the Warsaw Ghetto memorial in 1970.

The dominant figure of the collection is Milton, who, on his 400th anniversary, permeates the collection from its title (taken from one of his pamphlets) to the political and spiritual imperatives it embodies. Perhaps the most interesting aspect of the Miltonic (and Blakean) theme is the intertextuality of reading his namesake Christopher Hill's `Milton and the English Revolution' along with Edmund Burke and Michael Horowitz' `Children of Albion'. Hill also makes the most powerful poetic engagement with the figure of Cromwell in poetry since Brendan Kennelly in 1987, not being above playful references to the portrayal of Cromwell by Richard Harris in the 1970 film. Characteristically, these are juxtaposed with Helen Mirren's Elizabeth II, which seems ironically dangled as an example of modern England's political complacency and crushing anti-intellectualism.

It is hard to comment on the immense subtleties of style, but the poems dedicated to Handel and Brahms suggest an echo of James Joyce's balance between images, connotations and closely observed musicality. The high intellectualism of the poetry is a counterpoint to the rugged dialect of provincial English, most memorably in this collection snatches of the Bible in the neo-Anglo-Saxon dialect of the Black Country.


In all, the collection is something of a psychogeography of English radicalism, acknowledging the tangled landscape of poetry in English which includes the presence of Whitman, Housman and Hopkins. Hill continues his anatomy of modern England in the role of a besieged defender of the European intellectual tradition. Like Stanley Spencer, who is a slight but significant presence in the collection, Hill is renewing its vigour with a graceful juxtaposition of the localised and the universal.

Click here to return to the price comparison table

search for books

similar books

Letters of Ted Hughes Collected Critical Writings The Drowned Book Selected Poems The Wild Places The Triumph of Love Without Title Geoffrey Hill Style and Faith Scenes from Comus

bestselling books


compare other prices

Cheap DVDs at dvdspot
Cheap Games at playspot

quick links

subject directory : Biographies, Business, Children's, Fiction, Food & Drink, Health, History, Home & Garden, Horror, Humor, Religion, Science Fiction, Society, Sports, Travel, other subjects.

information pages : About BookkooB, Release Dates, Bookmarklet, Disclaimer, Privacy Policy. Compare Book Prices.