Each hymn in Nathaniel Tarn's new collection The Hölderliniae is a
love song to the Poet of Poets, Friedrich Hölderlin?-- the German
Romantic poet-philosopher who spent the last thirty-six years of his
life sequestered in a carpenter's tower in the south of Germany. Tarn
speaks through Hölderlin and Hölderlin speaks through Tarn in an act of
spiritual and lyric possession unlike anything else in contemporary
poetry. The French Revolution--which Hölderlin supported passionately
until the Reign of Terror--illuminates our war-torn, ecologically
precarious age, as the failures of our age recall past tragedies. Line
after line carries Hölderlin's hope in an ideal of a poetry that can
englobe all the mind's disciplines and make a universe of its own.