Ian Mair, writing in
The Age, commented that as Mann felt "no great affinity with his senior or juniors, he has therefore to get a style of his own." Mair indicated a number of poems in the collection for special mention, concluding that in "each of these there is somewhere, suddenly, the line, the word that sheds a great light." Reviewing the collection for
The Bulletin a reviewer noted that Mann is "experimenting with a nubbly, stubbly Anglo-Saxon kind of verse which might have its origin in the Norse Edda, in the Oxford carols, in Skelton, in Donne or in the modem revival of such techniques begun by Gerard Manley Hopkins and carried on by Auden and his followers." While that ambition was considered lauable they also found that "it cannot be said, full of strength though his best effects are, that Mann always handles these perilous devices like an expert." ==Awards==