Interviewer: “Isn’t there a danger in adducing one’s own temperament as the truth about life?”
Philip Larkin: “A danger
who for? Nobody pays any attention to what you write. They read it and then
forget about it. There may be a lunatic fringe who believe that life is what
writers say, not what they experience themselves, but most people just say, ‘Oh
well, that’s what it’s like to be Larkin,’ and start thinking about something else.”
As always, Larkin is tonic.
He snorts at the inflated persona adopted by many writers, as though
arranging words on a page conferred prophet-like authority. His tone is irreverent and shouldn’t be mistaken for self-revulsion or a show of false
humility. Most writers are congenitally equipped with a surplus of self-esteem
and speak confidently of matters they know nothing about. In answer to the
previous question, Larkin expresses his great admiration for D.H. Lawrence, the
very model of novelist-as-crackpot. I’m with Max Beerbohm when it comes to the
author of Lady Chatterley’s Lover: “Poor D. H. Lawrence. He never
realized, don’t you know — he never suspected that to be stark, staring mad is
somewhat of a handicap to a writer.”
Over the weekend Mike Juster wrote on Twitter: “I read a lot of poems each week to find a few I like
& I think many of you will like, but I have to tell you that in the past
week I have read more dreadful poems in major publications than ever before.
“This ‘whatever pops into
my head is a great poem’ thing is killing poetry.”
Mike speaks for many of
us. Much of the nominal poetry I see online is adolescent diary-fodder, poems without craft that don’t even work as interesting prose. Among Larkin’s friends was the poet
Elizabeth Jennings who, like him, defied categories, poetic and otherwise, and
was a genuinely independent soul. In Let’s Have Some Poetry! (1960), her
introduction to the subject for young people, Jennings writes fondly of Larkin:
“Apart from his fastidious
care for the precise verb, noun and adjective, and his impressive use of the
conventional stanza form, Larkin’s chief quality seems to be a deep compassion
which, though sometimes tempered by humour or irony, denotes a real concern for
other people’s lives.”
Jennings goes on to quote
lines from an early Larkin poem, “Wedding Wind” (The Less Deceived,
1955), the only one in which the speaker is a woman:
“All is the wind
Hunting through clouds and
forests, thrashing
My apron and the hanging
cloths on the line.
Can it be borne, this
bodying-forth by wind
Of joy my actions turn on,
like a thread
Carrying beads? Shall I be
let to sleep
Now this perpetual morning
shares my bed?”
Jennings judges the poem
“beautiful,” and quotes with approval another poem from the same collection,
“Triple Time”:
“And on another day will
be the past,
A valley cropped by fat
neglected chances
That we insensately
forbore to fleece.
On this we blame our last
Threadbare perspectives,
seasonal decrease.”
Jennings finds this and
other early Larkin poems “melancholy though never self-pitying.” I detect no wish
on his part to drag us into an egoistic slough of despond. The lines might
occur to any thoughtful grownup who could write first-rate poetry. Larkin is
often pegged as gloomy and obstinately refusing to look on the sunny side of
life. Something to that. But his poems move some of us to exalt in their beauty
and truth.
Larkin was born on this
date, August 9, in 1922.
[Larkin’s 1980 interview
with John Haffenden is collected in Further Requirements: Interviews,
Broadcasts, Statements and Book Reviews, Faber and Faber, 2001.]
No comments:
Post a Comment