Tuesday, 3 March 2026

New Review: Parse Poetica

The following review is published as a spring 2026 feature in The High Window, and includes four poems selected from the collection.

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Parse Poetica by Estill Pollock. Broadstone Books (broadstonebooks.com). ISBN: 978-1-9666770-28-4.

In Parse Poetica, Estill Pollock turns his attention to the subtle threshold where language not only reports the world but begins to form a world of its own. The title offers a quiet clue. To “parse” is to slow down, to attend to the joints of grammar and the nuances of phrasing, to notice how meaning comes into being through structure rather than declaration. It also gestures, lightly and without didactic insistence, toward the long tradition of the ars poetica, from Horace’s reflections on the art of poetry to Archibald MacLeish’s famous suggestion that a poem should “not mean, but be”. Pollock does not write in the mode of manifesto. Instead, he shares a more tentative curiosity about how language shapes perception, inviting us to consider not simply what a poem says, but how it comes into being at all.

Pollock is clearly fascinated by that process, yet the collection never sinks into technical display. The poems remain grounded in lived experience and in the physical presence of objects, landscapes, and memories that refuse to resolve themselves neatly into abstraction.

The cover image provides an illuminating point of entry. A weathered cherub planter, its torso hollowed by time, now shelters a vigorous burst of foliage. It is a figure at once damaged and renewed. What was once decorative and human shaped has become host to unplanned growth. The past remains visible, but it has been repurposed. This doubleness of loss and persistence, erosion and unexpected flourishing, runs through much of the collection, and I became increasingly aware of it as the book unfolded.

Pollock’s language is measured, stripped back, and often understated. The poems work more by suggestion than by declaration. They rely on implication, on the spaces between statements, on images allowed to resonate without being over explained. Many of the pieces unfold associatively rather than narratively. Connections are glimpsed, then withheld. As a reader, I found myself slowing down. The poems seem to insist upon that pace, trusting that meaning will surface if one is prepared to stay with them.

The world we move through here is insistently tactile. Wood, stone, foliage, weathered domestic interiors recur with quiet persistence. They are not decorative props. They become sites of reflection, holding memory and time in ways that language can only partially approach. There is a moral seriousness in the way Pollock looks at such things. Attention, for him, feels like a form of care. To look carefully is to acknowledge both the presence of the object and one’s own implicated relation to it.

One of the book’s great strengths lies in its refusal to hurry. Pollock resists the neat epiphany or the lyrical flourish that tidies experience into a single meaning. Instead, uncertainty is allowed to remain part of the poem’s fabric. Recognition, when it arrives, feels gradual and earned. The quietness of tone, rarely rhetorical and never showy, gives the poems room to breathe. They respect the reader’s intelligence and invite participation rather than passive consumption.

At times, the lyric surface opens briefly into something more luminous. A phrase sharpens, an image clarifies, and the emotional register deepens almost imperceptibly. Because such moments are not chased, they feel earned. When feeling emerges, it rises from within the texture of the poem rather than as an effect imposed from above.

Two poems in particular, Simile and Nevermind, crystallise the wider concerns of the book. In each, ordinary perception is tilted just enough to become strange, as if we are being asked to look again without the comfort of habit. The language remains restrained, yet the emotional current is unmistakable. For me, these poems echo the image on the cover, not directly, but in the way an image can itself function as a form of language.

Pollock’s commitment to economy and fragmentation can, at moments, be demanding. Connective tissue is deliberately withheld. Syntax fractures. Transitions arrive late, if at all. Readers who prefer narrative continuity or more transparent lyric statements may sometimes feel held at a distance. Yet the difficulty rarely feels gratuitous.

Crucially, Parse Poetica does not collapse into abstraction or self absorption about language for its own sake. Pollock’s awareness of linguistic limits is matched by an awareness of embodiment, environment, and time’s steady pressure. Words both reveal and fail. They illuminate while also casting shadow.

What Parse Poetica ultimately offers is not a thesis about poetry, but an invitation to read, and perhaps to live, more slowly.

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Kevin Morris has worked across secondary and higher education as a teacher, senior leader, inspector, and academic. Influenced by the rise of critical theory in the 1980s, he wrote his undergraduate dissertation on Raymond Williams and his Master’s thesis on The Calendar of Modern Letters, a precursor to Scrutiny. He is an external examiner for teacher education programmes, an A-level examiner for Drama and Theatre Studies, and a school governor in North London.

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Review copyright Kevin Morris 2026.