> As far as I know, the Penguin edition is a straight reprint of the 2005 > Clutag edition. But don't take my word for it, I could be wrong. > > Roger Further: << Geoffrey Hill - A Treatise of Civil Power (Clutag Press, 2005) PUBLICATION DATE 4th February 2005 NOW SOLD OUT 48pp 170mm x 240mm ISBN 0-9547275-3-3 A major gathering of new work by one of the great poets, nowhere else published nor imminent in other forthcoming collections by Hill (January 2005, January 2006), comprising: 'ON READING Milton and the English Revolution' (12 x six-line stanzas); 'To the Lord Protector Cromwell' (x4 sonnets); 'A Treatise of Civil Power' (42 x eight-line stanzas); 'Coda' (8 x eight-line stanzas); 'ON READING Burke on Empire, Liberty, and Reform' (4 x seven-line stanzas); 'ON READING Blake: Prophet Against Empire' (45 lines in ten irregular stanzas); 'ON READING Hazlitt: Lectures on the English Comic Writers' (4 x six line stanzas); and 'A Cloud in Aquila' (6 x four line stanzas). >> http://www.clutagpress.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=18&Itemid=31 "'A Treatise of Civil Power' (42 x eight-line stanzas)" doesn't show up in the contents of the Yale (or Penguin?) edition. There's a review of the Penguin edition by Sean O'Brien here: http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/books/poetry/article2264179.ece Robin