In 1999, while working as his Literary Secretary, the Earl of Burford, a
descendant of the 3rd Earl of Southampton (Shakespeare's patron) and of
the 17th Earl of Oxford and heir to the Dukedom of St Albans, made a
selection of Nicholas Hagger's poems that celebrates places in England,
conveys his mystical awareness of the unity of the universe and places
him in the visionary tradition of William Blake, the poet of 'Jerusalem'
and "England's green and pleasant land". Soon after Visions of England
was completed the Earl of Burford came to international attention when
he leapt onto the Woolsack of the House of Lords in a principled protest
against the Blair Government's plan to abolish hereditary peers' voting
rights, which led to 92 remaining in the Lords. A few months later he
left Nicholas Hagger's employ and the selection was buried under papers
for nearly 20 years. In 2018 Nicholas Hagger came across Visions of
England while preparing papers to send to his archive. It now seemed as
if the selection had been made with Brexit in mind. The places are full
of English history and culture, and the poems are prophetic in their
anticipation of England's new spirit of independence. These poems convey
Englishness with a freshness and vividness that startle. The Earl of
Burford is a prominent lecturer and biographer, and his selection is
noteworthy for the metaphysical perspective he brings out in Nicholas
Hagger's profound poems whose traditional qualities constantly surprise
and delight.