In his
notes to the Complete Poems (2012),
Archie Burnett quotes from a 1951 letter Larkin wrote to his girlfriend Monica
Jones while working on “Next, Please”: “I think it’s just another example of
the danger of looking forward to things…an attempt to capture my feeling on
returning here [i.e. Belfast]: a sense of amazement that what we wait for so
long & therefore seems so long in coming shouldn’t take a proportionately long time to pass – instead of
zipping away at the same speed as everything else.” No mention here of death. In
fact, Larkin makes no overt reference to it until the final stanza:
“Only one
ship is seeking us, a black-
Sailed unfamiliar, towing at her back
A huge and birdless silence. In her wake
No waters breed or break.”
Sailed unfamiliar, towing at her back
A huge and birdless silence. In her wake
No waters breed or break.”
Death is
the only promise always kept, though the theme is less death’s inevitability than time
and our subjective sense of its passing, and the way we suffuse it with our expectations.
We measure duration by our satisfactions or their absence. Of the “tiny, clear / Sparkling armada of promises,”
he writes, “We think each one will heave to and unload / All good into our
lives.” At this point, Larkin withholds the predictable, palliative
bromides: Live in the now! Carpe diem! One day at a time! In “Dying:
An Introduction,” Sissman recounts his original cancer diagnosis, beginning
with a lump on his leg. After the tissue sample is taken for the biopsy, he
writes: “I leave to live out my three days, / Reprieved from findings and their
pain.” The diagnosis (“Turns out to end in –oma”) comes on a spring-like day in
November. The poem concludes:
“Through
my
Invisible new
veil
Of finity,
I see
November’s
world—
Low scud,
slick street, three giggling girls—
As, oddly,
not as sombre
As December,
But as green
As anything:
As spring.”
1 comment:
Delightful. Clearly, I need to know more of Sissman.
Larkin's "black sailed unfamiliar" stanza gives, in its beautiful recognition of finality, satisfaction bordering on awe.
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