'Ever
since I read the line 'Love takes a long and garrulous time to
die' (from 'Be Born a Saint') and found it imprinted on my memory
for ever (or as long as my memory lasts, a proviso he would be
careful to insert) I have been a little in awe of Pearse Hutchinson's
poems.
Underdogs, and underdog languages, he rushes to defend: 'To kill
a language is to kill one's self' ('The Frost is All Over'). Merciless
in his self-knowledge: doubts God (doubtfully) 'but might not
find it easy to refuse / if offered deification'; feels generous
emotions, examines these, and also feels 'one dry retch / of envy
(that's mine for sure)' ('Lyde'). He includes so much, the huge
and the small - the noise, when clearing a cluttered kitchen table,
that spent matches make against a silver spoon: it is time, more
than high time, for this inclusive 'Collected'.'
— P J Kavanagh