This thesis focuses on Thomas Kinsella's poetry between 1952 and 1979 and discovers a stylistic development which shows a distinctive way of dealing with the poetic subject. The poems move from a more formal style of lyric poetry to a novel method that engages with the poetic subject in a form that uses the poem as a site of interaction between the reader and the page; the poem as event. In the 1950s Kinsella is seen exploring his poetic subject and experimenting with binary ways of representing metaphysical ideas and romantic love. At this point Kinsella is seen effectively testing his poetic subject against rationalist ideas that tend to split identity through the binary opposition of the rational and the sensual. In the early 1960s Kinse...