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The penultimate poem of the recent and near-complete Collected Poems of Burns Singer is two lines long, untitled and - its editor James Keery tells us - was written on the back of a review slip sometime in the last year of Singer's life:
I said I'd meet you on the other side
Of all this clutter and I did set out.
It's hard to know whether these lines were meant to stand alone or intended for a longer poem, but in this doubt lies much of their power. At once compressed and open-ended, their valedictory feel is ambiguous too: does that 'did set out' express regret at something unfinished or not seen through, or is it the opposite - an emphatic claim to something undertaken, and whose undertaking was itself achievement enough? The fragment has something else characteristic of Singer's poetry: an interpellative directness, a sense of being addressed rather than just left on the page - his poems seem launched or propelled at the reader. Whatever the 'clutter' may have been, it's difficult not to read it, by the time we've reached the end of his Collected, as an allusion to Singer's poetic heritage: the New Apocalypse, the swagger and stagger of the poetry of the 1940s on which he went to school and which informed his early styles and subjects. It is usual for the poets who began in that maligned decade to be dismissed as some sort of vatic interlude between the generation of Auden and the start of the Movement in the early 1950s, and Singer's work has suffered by association. Apart from Dylan Thomas (who started it), W.S. Graham (who outlived and outwrote it) and Keith Douglas (who died in combat and who saw more by way of Apocalypse than most of his fellow-poets), the 1940s are perhaps the most faintly praised, ignored or bad-mouthed poetic decade of the last century. It is worth considering what might be at stake here, since Singer's writing is in many respects the workingthrough of a kind of poetry-writing and a kind of thinking about poetry which has received short critical shrift.
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