Full Description
In Earth House, Matthew Hollis evokes the landscape, language and ecology of the isles of Britain and Ireland to explore how our most intimate moments have resonance in the wider cycle of life. Beginning in the slate waters of the north, the book revolves around the cardinal points and the ancient elements: through the wide skies of the east and the terrain of a southern city, to the embers of places lost to us, to which we can no longer return.
What emerges is a moving meditation on time and the transformative phases of nature that calls many forces into its presence - the wisdoms of Anglo-Saxon verse, the metamorphoses of Norse and Celtic myth, the stoicism of classical thought and the far east - unforgettably phrased by a writer who, in the words of the TLS, 'makes the language of his poetry an event in itself'. Subtly attuned to the rhythms of the turning world, these poems open with the passing of an old life and culminate in the birth of a new one. They bravely work the seam between the present and the past, between destruction and renewal, humanity and our environment, and make Earth House a timeless exploration of our timed encounter with the remarkable lives of our planet.
Longlisted for the Laurel Prize 2023, Earth House was Matthew Hollis's long awaited follow up to Ground Water (2004), shortlisted for the Guardian First Book Award, the Forward Prize for Best First Collection and the Whitbread Poetry Award. He is the author of Now All Roads Lead to France: The Last Years of Edward Thomas (2011), winner of the Costa Award for Biography and Sunday Times Biography of the Year, and The Waste Land: A Biography of a Poem (2022).
'A quietly magnificent book. Wholly lived. A magnificat in that way. Devoted to the austere and painful truths that poem by poem it discovers and quietly, as ever, magnifies. These poems sound a music like the warming subsong of a blackbird from the bare heart of a winter thorn, a cold cheer, a kindling blues.' - Tim Dee, author of Greenery
'A magical combination of the delicate and the intense.' - Julia Blackburn, author of Time Song
'Enchanting...what good poems.' - Ronald Blythe, author of Akenfield
Contents
I
1. Causeway 5
2. The Sea Stick 6
3. Beck 8
4. Wastwater 9
5. A White Hart at Sykeside 10
6. All there ever is 12
7. Call 13
8. Stones 14
9. The Long Snow 21
Lone 22
II
1. Anglia 27
2. Iken 28
3. A Harnser for James 29
4. Winterton Ness 32
5. I will lift up my eyes 34
6. Where narrow water widens 36
7. The Island 37
8. Rooks 38
9. The Staithe 41
Deor 42
III
1. The Blackbird of Spitalfields 47
2. The Diomedes 48
3. Commute 49
4. Losing Time 50
5. Animal 52
6. The Collect 54
7. The Fox Runner 56
8. Leaves 57
9. A Bluebird for Rose 67
Wulf 68
IV
1. West 71
2. A Red Hairband in Iveragh 72
3. Cara 74
4. Four Roads 75
5. Landlock 76
6. The Mansion 78
7. Hedge Bird 79
8. Havener 80
9. Headland 89
Ruin 90
Place notes 93