Christopher Hassall

The Dancing Years – Selected Poems of Christopher Hassall (2025)

£16.00

Edited by John Howlett.

A Waterloo Press Classic Text.

Marking the sixtieth anniversary of his untimely death, this volume, edited by John Howlett, is the first selection of the poetry of the poet, lyricist, and playwright Christopher Vernon Hassall (1912-1963).

By drawing upon a selection of his six volumes of shorter lyrics, as well as representative excerpts from a small number of longer poems, it intends to stand as a corrective to those who today know Hassall only through his other work especially his popular collaborations with Ivor Novello. Whilst undoubtedly he excelled in those forms, as an early winner of both the Hawthornden Prize and the A.C. Benson Medal, it is surprising why his substantial body of poetry, known and appreciated by key contemporaries has lain dormant for so long.

Following Howlett’s At the Dark Hour: Collected Poems of Paul Dehn (Waterloo Press, 2021), this new
publication is a welcome and valuable re-appraisal of this major figure in twentieth century poetry.

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Texts and any future associated E-Edition’s text © John Howlett, in association with the estate of Christopher Vernon Hassall 2025

Design and cover design © Waterloo Press 2025

Front cover image after an original painting, Resting Acrobats by Philpot, Glyn Warren (1884-1937), under license from Bridgeman Images

Back cover image Christopher Vernon Hassall by Joan Hassall, with kind permissions and license obtained © National Portrait Gallery, London

Author photo © John Howlett 2025

All rights reserved. All rights remain with the authors. John Howlett and Christopher Vernon Hassall are hereby identified as authors of this work in accordance with Section 77 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988

 

ISBN: 978-1-915241-10-8 Category: Tag:

Praise and Poems

Fame and fortune is a pretty good way of obscuring what you’re really good at. Christopher Hassall (1912-63) not only committed the cardinal sin of being lauded as librettist and song lyricist for composers from Ivor Novello to William Walton, he found acclaim as dramatist and literary biographer (notably his posthumous Rupert Brooke). Though valued by contemporaries, the poetry world never quite forgave him, especially for being first published by Georgian Poetry entrepreneur Edward Marsh. His other sin – dying young – cemented this.

 

Yet Hassall’s an impressive poet who developed, not only responding to his peers, but as editor John Howlett demonstrates: “his poetry, at its best ruminative, witty, and conversational, seems both distant and distinct from those with whom he has been compared.” There’s soon no trace of Georgian poetry. Hassall takes in the scope of history and its pressure. If, as he claimed, verse dramas came as easily as breathing, and obituarists snarled the air pressure had changed, they forgot to read later Hassall, and breathe out.  Hassall blazed at his best towards his end, like another poet dying in 1963: Louis MacNeice. In his last collection’s title poem ‘Bell Harry’ he can write with laconic precision:

 

Bare, musty, undisturbed, plain roughcast white,

The leper church still hugs my northward height.

Even the silence is of Norman date.

Who calls another day may come too late

To catch the frescoes sinking out of sight.

 

There’s quite a few leper churches to be found here in the bittersweet roughcast of Hassall’s once smooth poetry. His best, gnarled with maturity, is truly memorable speech.

 

Additional information

Weight 0.45 kg
Dimensions 15.5 × 1.8 × 23 cm
Christopher Hassall

Writer

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