Throughout much of his career, Geoffrey Hill has been pilloried for his alleged conservativism as well as his positive treatment of Christianity in his poetry. A careful reading of his works, however, reveals a complex thinker who was attentive to the moral fallout of the Holocaust and the Second World War as he was a lover of England and European culture. Moreover, Hill's writings reflect the apparent influence of a host of personalist, existentialist and what could also be called "humanist" twentieth century Jewish thinkers such as Martin Buber and Emmanuel Levinas. Throughout his poetry-especially his later work-Hill attempts (whether successfully or not) to fuse together this Jewish humanism with his own Christian and English voice.