WINNER
2016

Jackself

Picador Poetry
Jacob Polley author 1200 x 1530
Jacob Polley was born in Carlisle in 1975. He is the author of five poetry collections: The Brink (2003); Little Gods (2006); The Havocs (2012); Jackself (2016); and Material Properties (2023), all published by Picador Poetry. Both The Brink and The Havocs were shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize; Jackself was awarded the T. S. Eliot Prize 2016. He...

Review

Review

In Jacob Polley's Jackself, 'the persistence of character presents a narrative of sorts: a childhood, an education, friendship and loss. However, the quasi-mythic character of Jackself presents this as a darkly magical experience [...] of a childhood lived outdoors, dancing in Bedlam wildness', writes John Field

Videos

T. S. Eliot Prize Shortlist Readings 2016
Jacob Polley reads from Jackself at the T. S. Eliot Prize Shortlist Readings
2016 T. S. Eliot Prize Shortlist Readings in full
Leah Mihalska reads from Jacob Polley’s Jackself
Jacob Polley reads from Jackself
Jacob Polley – Interview with NowThen Magazine

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Jacob Polley’s disturbing tale of lost innocence wins world’s most prestigious poetry prize The T. S. Eliot Foundation is delighted to announce that the winner of the T. S. Eliot Prize 2016 is Jacob Polley for his remarkable new collection Jackself. After months of reading and deliberation, judges Ruth Padel...
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The T. S. Eliot Prize is delighted to announce the thrilling 2016 Shortlist, featuring exciting newcomers and established names. Judges Ruth Padel (Chair), Julia Copus and Alan Gillis have chosen the Shortlist from 138 books submitted by publishers: Rachael Boast – Void Studies (Picador Poetry) Vahni Capildeo – Measures of...

Review of Jackself

‘The persistence of character presents a narrative of sorts: a childhood, an education, friendship and loss. However, the quasi-mythic character of Jackself presents this as a darkly magical experience […]Jackself offers the reader an intense experience of a childhood lived outdoors, dancing in Bedlam wildness’, writes John Field

Jacob Polley’s Jackself opens with two epigraphs – one from the anonymous ‘Tom o’Bedlam’ and the other from Gerard Manley Hopkins’s ‘My Own Heart’, one of his ‘terrible sonnets’. The despairing Hopkins seeks joy and tries to pull himself – to pull body and soul – together and, in the word ‘Jackself’, presents himself as an everyday, hard-working fellow: “Soul, self; come, poor Jackself”. ‘Tom o’Bedlam’ gives voice to a mad vagrant, dependent upon the charity of the Bethlehem (Bedlam) psychiatric hospital. Its speaker is a deluded wanderer and “By a knight of ghosts and shadows / I summoned am to tourney”. These epigraphs set the tone: Jackself promises a deep engagement with nursery rhyme and folktale and wanders in a midnight world.

The collection presents a dreamlike, shifting vision. Sometimes folklore and the modern world collide in surprising and beautiful ways. In ‘Jack Frost’, “Jackself is tapping / fractals of ice, ice / ferns and berries of ice, onto windowpanes”. Polley’s natural imagery is reassuringly familiar, but ‘fractals’ presents something mathematical: a kaleidoscopic iterating algorithm of the infinite. This collision helps to underscore the persistence of folklore and its difference from the modern world.

However, Jack Frost’s work is as dispiriting as production line drudgery and as infinite as the fractal “and 3am finds Jackself / with his silvery head / in his hands, slumped on the unspun roundabout / among the gallows-poles of the moonlit playground, / the stars grinding on above him”. The loaded “unspun” suggests his total exhaustion, unable to work, unable to play, as the location metamorphoses into one of desolation and despair. The terrestrial roundabout may remain unspun but the grinding revolution of the heavens perhaps carries echoes of another Jack – Jack in the Beanstalk – and the grinding of bones. The collection presents other arresting images of the passing of time. Take ‘The Misery’, where “the year wheels / round and the days pass like light between the spokes”. Like Hopkins’ terrible sonnets, many of these poems convey an existential despair.

The collection is also rooted to a place and its poems wheel around a farm, Lamanby, whose name ties it to Polley’s native Cumbria. ‘An Age’ presents a different kind of time as “Jackself is staying in / today, like a tool in a toolbox, to try to just be / high in the lovely lofts / of Lamanby”. Assonance, alliteration and rhyme let this poem luxuriate in language and, in contrast with the nihilistic chill of ‘Jack Frost’, we are presented with warmth, heartwood floors and a time when “bees / browsed the workshops / of wildflowers for powder of light”. It’s intoxicating stuff and Polley’s heady assonance channels Keatsian excess.

The persistence of character presents a narrative of sorts: a childhood, an education, friendship and loss. However, the quasi-mythic character of ‘Jackself’ presents this as a darkly magical experience. The intoxicating rhyming couplets which run through the collection make it feel a little like Shakeapeare’s Puck – or witches – and Polley mythologises place like Dylan Thomas’s Under Milk Wood. Jackself offers the reader an intense experience of a childhood lived outdoors, dancing in Bedlam wildness.

Jacob Polley’s Jackself (Picador Poetry) is shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize 2016. John Field blogs at Poor Rude Lines.

Jackself
Picador Poetry

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Interview of Jackself

Jackself
Picador Poetry

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