One of Philip Larkin’s most technically adept poems, “Here,” is never self-consciously flashy, though the first of its three sentences is twenty-five lines long. Its earliest readers perhaps flipped past it in The Whitsun Weddings (1964) -- it’s the first poem in the collection – and moved on to “Mr. Bleaney,” or “A Study of Reading Habits,” or “Dockery and Son,” or the title poem. They may have mistaken “Here” for a desultory travelogue (of Hull). It is one of the great city poems, observed by a spectator aboard a train, not a dweller in the city. The Whitsun Weddings was that rich a volume.
Larkin had completed “Here” on October 8, 1961. According to
his biographer James Booth, Larkin reached his poetic “prime” that month.
In
Booth’s words, “After ‘Here’ the way is downward.” On October 25 he completed his
next poem, “Nothing to Be Said”:
“For nations
vague as weed,
For nomads
among stones,
Small-statured
cross-faced tribes
And
cobble-close families
In
mill-towns on dark mornings
Life is slow
dying.
“So are
their separate ways
Of building,
benediction,
Measuring
love and money
Ways of
slowly dying.
The day
spent hunting pig
Or holding a
garden-party,
“Hours
giving evidence
Or birth,
advance
On death
equally slowly.
And saying
so to some
Means
nothing; others it leaves
Nothing to
be said.”
Booth calls it Larkin’s “coldest, most reductive work.” That’s tough to argue with: “Life is slow dying.” Larkin, I suspect, is not describing a strictly biological process; rather, a gradual spiritual ennervation. Booth in his biography says the poem “owes something” to Thomas Hardy’s “The Dead Man Walking.” Present in both is death not as a single incident but an incremental process. I’ll point out the obvious: Grim poems written with flair and terse wit don’t leave us demoralized, unlike so many self-indulgent rah-rahs.
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