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Tom PaulinTom Paulin
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Critical perspective  
BiographyBorn in Leeds, Yorkshire, on 25 January 1949, poet, critic and playwright Tom (Thomas Neilson) Paulin was raised in Belfast in Northern Ireland where his father was the headmaster of a grammar school, and his mother was a doctor. He was educated at Hull University and Lincoln College, Oxford.    
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Biography, Criticism, Drama, Essays, Non-fiction, Poetry, Radio drama     BibliographyTheoretical Locations Ulsterman Publications, 1975 Thomas Hardy: The Poetry of Perception Macmillan, 1975 A State of Justice Faber and Faber, 1977 Personal Column Ulsterman Publications, 1978 The Strange Museum Faber and Faber, 1980 The Book of Juniper Bloodaxe, 1981 A New Look at the Language Question Field Day, 1983 Liberty Tree Faber and Faber, 1983 Ireland and the English Crisis Bloodaxe, 1984 The Argument at Great Tew: A Poem Willbrook Press, 1985 The Riot Act: A Version of Sophocles' Antigone Faber and Faber, 1985 The Faber Book of Political Verse (editor) Faber and Faber, 1986 Fivemiletown Faber and Faber, 1987 The Hillsborough Script: A Dramatic Satire Faber and Faber, 1987 Seize the Fire: A Version of Aeschylus' Prometheus Bound Faber and Faber, 1990 The Faber Book of Vernacular Verse (editor) Faber and Faber, 1990 Minotaur: Poetry and the Nation State Faber and Faber, 1992 Selected Poems 1972-1990 Faber and Faber, 1993 Walking a Line Faber and Faber, 1994 Writing to the Moment: Selected Critical Essays 1980-1996 Faber and Faber, 1996 The Day-Star of Liberty: William Hazlitt's Radical Style Faber and Faber, 1998 The Wind Dog Faber and Faber, 1999 The Fight and Other Writings by William Hazlitt (co-editor with David Chandler) Penguin, 2000 Thomas Hardy: Poems selected by Tom Paulin (editor) Faber and Faber, 2001 The Invasion Handbook Faber and Faber, 2002 D. H. Lawrence and "Difference": The Poetry of the Present (with Amit Chaudhuri) Oxford University Press, 2003 The Road to Inver: Translations, Versions and Imitations 1975-2003 Faber and Faber, 2004 Crusoe's Secret: The Aesthetics of Dissent Faber and Faber, 2005 D. H. Lawrence (Poet to Poet) (editor) Faber and Faber, 2007 The Secret Life of Poems Faber and Faber, 2007  
  Prizes and awards1976 Eric Gregory Award 1978 Somerset Maugham Award A State of Justice 1982 Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize The Strange Museum 1999 T. S. Eliot Prize (shortlist) The Wind Dog 2004 T. S. Eliot Prize (shortlist) The Road to Inver: Translations, Versions and Imitations 1975-2003    
  Critical Perspective
Like the work of his Irish contemporary Paul Muldoon, critics often divide Paulin’s oeuvre-to-date into two: his widely acclaimed fourth collection of poems, Fivemiletown (1987), the turning point at which Paulin’s fascination with, and use of, the vernacular spectacularly took off. Where the colloquial tones and occasionally unusual dialect of Paulin’s taut and formal early lyricism are evident in poems such as ‘In the Lost Province’ from The Strange Museum (1980) and ‘Descendancy’ from Liberty Tree (1983), then, Fivemiletown sees Paulin adopt conversational free verse in order to fully explode the intellectual and emotional possibilities of his poetry. Unsurprisingly, the volume’s publication quickly followed Paulin’s editing of The Faber Book of Vernacular Verse (1986), collecting work by poets who have variously utilised dialectal and coined words and phrases in order to liberate, validate and further invigorate their writing. In the brusque, matter-of-fact speech of ‘Peacetime’ from Fivemiletown, for instance, the poet recalls how ‘We moved house / in ’63. // My brother cried / quietly in his room. // Stuff in the loft, / my dad said burn it. // I cut the brass buttons / from his khaki tunic, // sploshed petrol, / felt in the back pocket of the heavy trousers – ’, while in ‘An Ulster Unionist Walks the Streets of London’, the sparse and gritty language conjures the scene vividly: ‘I grabbed a fast black – / ack, I caught a taxi – / to Kentish Town, / then walked the streets / like a half-foreigner / among the London Irish. / What does it feel like? / I wanted to ask them – /what does it feel like / to be a child of that nation?’
Paulin’s fifth collection, Walking a Line (1994), further develops the stylistic ambitions of previous work, radically exploiting the conversational vernacular and largely unpunctuated free verse that have helped consolidate Paulin’s reputation as ‘an incisively original and dedicated poet’, as Edwin Morgan put it. It contains one of Paulin’s best known poems, ‘Klee/Clover’, a witty depiction of the improvisatory Swiss artist Paul Klee sourcing canvasses from crashed biplanes during the First World War, and is more generally a lengthy book concerned with addressing and illuminating the various significances in everything from prisons, childhood landscapes, philosophy, birds and Irish politics to the mechanics of spoken and written language itself: ‘the speechjolt’ which is ‘a kind of glitch / in what you’re saying’ (‘Almost There’). Described in the Times Literary Supplement as ‘a vitally important book […] for its compelling execution and vocal and historical imperatives’, Paulin’s sixth collection, The Wind Dog (1999), focuses even more intensely on the semantics, inherent instability and musicality of language, an exploration (even excavation) that takes the poet back to ‘when I was young – about fifteen or so – / five or six pages in a Fontana paperback / on how the ear / is the only true reader / the only true writer’ (‘Sentence Sound’). This is most obviously expressed in the recurrent Muldoonian free association which pervades the book’s poems, including the meandering thoughts of ‘Fortogiveness’, where the poet describes how ‘I’m still at home in [Belfast’s] speech / even though somewhere along the way / my vowels maybe got shifted or faked / so there’s a salt rebuff as Larkin puts it’, but also in the rich, sensory images of the poet’s walk to work in ‘Oxford’:
‘This morning I pass a big clump of purple buddleia
This style owes less to Muldoon and other contemporary poets, however, than it does to the 19th-century essayist and literary critic William Hazlitt, a major influence on Paulin’s own prose and poetry, made evident in his lengthy study, The Day-Star of Liberty: William Hazlitt’s Radical Style (1998). In fact, in a notable chapter on Hazlitt’s final collection of essays, The Plain Speaker, Paulin describes how ‘it [had] occurred to [Hazlitt] that it might be possible to combine the advantages of the literary and the conversational styles […] promising “greater variety and richness”, and perhaps […] a “greater sincerity” than could be obtained by a “more precise and scholastic method”’, something which can be seen to apply equally to Paulin’s own robust, often energetic and admirably open-ended poetry and prose writing. Most recently, Paulin’s lengthy latest collection of poems, The Road to Inver: Translations, Versions and Imitations 1975-2003 (2004), also collates the many translated works of a poet whose deft understanding of the rhyme, rhythm, assonance and alliteration that define the essence of any good poem ensures, as Stephen Romer described it in the Times Literary Supplement, for ‘a remarkable book [in which] Tom Paulin’s copious linguistic resources prove themselves up to the task in hand’. In his version of Rimbaud’s ‘Les Corbeaux’, for example, Paulin reinvents the rhythmical structure and open, natural description of the poem with success and élan: ‘Lord let the rooks – / those great clacky birds / sweep down from the clouds / onto fields and ridges / floppy crowd that bursts / into stony cries / the wind’s bashing your nests!’
Alongside Paulin’s Selected Poems 1972-1990 (1993), then, these two volumes make for essential and rewarding, if occasionally exhausting, reading for any poetry reader, especially those with a penchant for the witty and the provocative. Moreover, a future Collected Poems, which is surely on the horizon, will no doubt rank among the major publications to emerge in British and Irish poetry this coming decade: remaining testament to Paulin’s prominence as one of the best of a great generation of Irish poets.
 
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