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    Philip Larkin Poems: Selected by Martin Amis

    Page 5
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      They hardly meant has come to be

      Their final blazon, and to prove

      Our almost-instinct almost true:

      What will survive of us is love.

      from HIGH WINDOWS

      To the Sea

      To step over the low wall that divides

      Road from concrete walk above the shore

      Brings sharply back something known long before –

      The miniature gaiety of seasides.

      Everything crowds under the low horizon:

      Steep beach, blue water, towels, red bathing caps,

      The small hushed waves’ repeated fresh collapse

      Up the warm yellow sand, and further off

      A white steamer stuck in the afternoon –

      Still going on, all of it, still going on!

      To lie, eat, sleep in hearing of the surf

      (Ears to transistors, that sound tame enough

      Under the sky), or gently up and down

      Lead the uncertain children, frilled in white

      And grasping at enormous air, or wheel

      The rigid old along for them to feel

      A final summer, plainly still occurs

      As half an annual pleasure, half a rite,

      As when, happy at being on my own,

      I searched the sand for Famous Cricketers,

      Or, farther back, my parents, listeners

      To the same seaside quack, first became known.

      Strange to it now, I watch the cloudless scene:

      The same clear water over smoothed pebbles,

      The distant bathers’ weak protesting trebles

      Down at its edge, and then the cheap cigars,

      The chocolate-papers, tea-leaves, and, between

      The rocks, the rusting soup-tins, till the first

      Few families start the trek back to the cars.

      The white steamer has gone. Like breathed-on glass

      The sunlight has turned milky. If the worst

      Of flawless weather is our falling short,

      It may be that through habit these do best,

      Coming to water clumsily undressed

      Yearly; teaching their children by a sort

      Of clowning; helping the old, too, as they ought.

      The Trees

      The trees are coming into leaf

      Like something almost being said;

      The recent buds relax and spread,

      Their greenness is a kind of grief.

      Is it that they are born again

      And we grow old? No, they die too.

      Their yearly trick of looking new

      Is written down in rings of grain.

      Yet still the unresting castles thresh

      In fullgrown thickness every May.

      Last year is dead, they seem to say,

      Begin afresh, afresh, afresh.

      Livings

      I

      I deal with farmers, things like dips and feed.

      Every third month I book myself in at

      The —— Hotel in —ton for three days.

      The boots carries my lean old leather case

      Up to a single, where I hang my hat.

      One beer, and then ‘the dinner’, at which I read

      The —shire Times from soup to stewed pears.

      Births, deaths. For sale. Police court. Motor spares.

      Afterwards, whisky in the Smoke Room: Clough,

      Margetts, the Captain, Dr. Watterson;

      Who makes ends meet, who’s taking the knock,

      Government tariffs, wages, price of stock.

      Smoke hangs under the light. The pictures on

      The walls are comic – hunting, the trenches, stuff

      Nobody minds or notices. A sound

      Of dominoes from the Bar. I stand a round.

      Later, the square is empty: a big sky

      Drains down the estuary like the bed

      Of a gold river, and the Customs House

      Still has its office lit. I drowse

      Between ex-Army sheets, wondering why

      I think it’s worthwhile coming. Father’s dead:

      He used to, but the business now is mine.

      It’s time for change, in nineteen twenty-nine.

      II

      Seventy feet down

      The sea explodes upwards,

      Relapsing, to slaver

      Off landing-stage steps –

      Running suds, rejoice!

      Rocks writhe back to sight.

      Mussels, limpets,

      Husband their tenacity

      In the freezing slither –

      Creatures, I cherish you!

      By day, sky builds

      Grape-dark over the salt

      Unsown stirring fields.

      Radio rubs its legs,

      Telling me of elsewhere:

      Barometers falling,

      Ports wind-shuttered,

      Fleets pent like hounds,

      Fires in humped inns

      Kippering sea-pictures –

      Keep it all off!

      By night, snow swerves

      (O loose moth world)

      Through the stare travelling

      Leather-black waters.

      Guarded by brilliance

      I set plate and spoon,

      And after, divining-cards.

      Lit shelved liners

      Grope like mad worlds westward.

      III

      Tonight we dine without the Master

      (Nocturnal vapours do not please);

      The port goes round so much the faster,

      Topics are raised with no less ease –

      Which advowson looks the fairest,

      What the wood from Snape will fetch,

      Names for pudendum mulieris,

      Why is Judas like Jack Ketch?

      The candleflames grow thin, then broaden:

      Our butler Starveling piles the logs

      And sets behind the screen a jordan

      (Quicker than going to the bogs).

      The wine heats temper and complexion:

      Oath-enforced assertions fly

      On rheumy fevers, resurrection,

      Regicide and rabbit pie.

      The fields around are cold and muddy,

      The cobbled streets close by are still,

      A sizar shivers at his study,

      The kitchen cat has made a kill;

      The bells discuss the hour’s gradations,

      Dusty shelves hold prayers and proofs:

      Above, Chaldean constellations

      Sparkle over crowded roofs.

      Forget What Did

      Stopping the diary

      Was a stun to memory,

      Was a blank starting,

      One no longer cicatrised

      By such words, such actions

      As bleakened waking.

      I wanted them over,

      Hurried to burial

      And looked back on

      Like the wars and winters

      Missing behind the windows

      Of an opaque childhood.

      And the empty pages?

      Should they ever be filled

      Let it be with observed

      Celestial recurrences,

      The day the flowers come,

      And when the birds go.

      High Windows

      When I see a couple of kids

      And guess he’s fucking her and she’s

      Taking pills or wearing a diaphragm,

      I know this is paradise

      Everyone old has dreamed of all their lives –

      Bonds and gestures pushed to one side

      Like an outdated combine harvester,

      And everyone young going down the long slide

      To happiness, endlessly. I wonder if

      Anyone looked at me, forty years back,

      And thought, That’ll be the life;

      No God any more, or sweating in the dark

      About hell and that, or having to hide

      What you think of the priest. He

      And his lot will all go down the
    long slide

      Like free bloody birds. And immediately

      Rather than words comes the thought of high windows:

      The sun-comprehending glass,

      And beyond it, the deep blue air, that shows

      Nothing, and is nowhere, and is endless.

      Friday Night in the Royal Station Hotel

      Light spreads darkly downwards from the high

      Clusters of lights over empty chairs

      That face each other, coloured differently.

      Through open doors, the dining-room declares

      A larger loneliness of knives and glass

      And silence laid like carpet. A porter reads

      An unsold evening paper. Hours pass,

      And all the salesmen have gone back to Leeds,

      Leaving full ashtrays in the Conference Room.

      In shoeless corridors, the lights burn. How

      Isolated, like a fort, it is –

      The headed paper, made for writing home

      (If home existed) letters of exile: Now

      Night comes on. Waves fold behind villages.

      The Old Fools

      What do they think has happened, the old fools,

      To make them like this? Do they somehow suppose

      It’s more grown-up when your mouth hangs open and drools,

      And you keep on pissing yourself, and can’t remember

      Who called this morning? Or that, if they only chose,

      They could alter things back to when they danced all night,

      Or went to their wedding, or sloped arms some September?

      Or do they fancy there’s really been no change,

      And they’ve always behaved as if they were crippled or tight,

      Or sat through days of thin continuous dreaming

      Watching light move? If they don’t (and they can’t), it’s strange:

      Why aren’t they screaming?

      At death, you break up: the bits that were you

      Start speeding away from each other for ever

      With no one to see. It’s only oblivion, true:

      We had it before, but then it was going to end,

      And was all the time merging with a unique endeavour

      To bring to bloom the million-petalled flower

      Of being here. Next time you can’t pretend

      There’ll be anything else. And these are the first signs:

      Not knowing how, not hearing who, the power

      Of choosing gone. Their looks show that they’re for it:

      Ash hair, toad hands, prune face dried into lines –

      How can they ignore it?

      Perhaps being old is having lighted rooms

      Inside your head, and people in them, acting.

      People you know, yet can’t quite name; each looms

      Like a deep loss restored, from known doors turning,

      Setting down a lamp, smiling from a stair, extracting

      A known book from the shelves; or sometimes only

      The rooms themselves, chairs and a fire burning,

      The blown bush at the window, or the sun’s

      Faint friendliness on the wall some lonely

      Rain-ceased midsummer evening. That is where they live:

      Not here and now, but where all happened once.

      This is why they give

      An air of baffled absence, trying to be there

      Yet being here. For the rooms grow farther, leaving

      Incompetent cold, the constant wear and tear

      Of taken breath, and them crouching below

      Extinction’s alp, the old fools, never perceiving

      How near it is. This must be what keeps them quiet:

      The peak that stays in view wherever we go

      For them is rising ground. Can they never tell

      What is dragging them back, and how it will end? Not at night?

      Not when the strangers come? Never, throughout

      The whole hideous inverted childhood? Well,

      We shall find out.

      Going, Going

      I thought it would last my time –

      The sense that, beyond the town,

      There would always be fields and farms,

      Where the village louts could climb

      Such trees as were not cut down;

      I knew there’d be false alarms

      In the papers about old streets

      And split-level shopping, but some

      Have always been left so far;

      And when the old part retreats

      As the bleak high-risers come

      We can always escape in the car.

      Things are tougher than we are, just

      As earth will always respond

      However we mess it about;

      Chuck filth in the sea, if you must:

      The tides will be clean beyond.

      – But what do I feel now? Doubt?

      Or age, simply? The crowd

      Is young in the M1 café;

      Their kids are screaming for more –

      More houses, more parking allowed,

      More caravan sites, more pay.

      On the Business Page, a score

      Of spectacled grins approve

      Some takeover bid that entails

      Five per cent profit (and ten

      Per cent more in the estuaries): move

      Your works to the unspoilt dales

      (Grey area grants)! And when

      You try to get near the sea

      In summer …

      It seems, just now,

      To be happening so very fast;

      Despite all the land left free

      For the first time I feel somehow

      That it isn’t going to last,

      That before I snuff it, the whole

      Boiling will be bricked in

      Except for the tourist parts –

      First slum of Europe: a role

      It won’t be so hard to win,

      With a cast of crooks and tarts.

      And that will be England gone,

      The shadows, the meadows, the lanes

      The guildhalls, the carved choirs.

      There’ll be books; it will linger on

      In galleries; but all that remains

      For us will be concrete and tyres.

      Most things are never meant.

      This won’t be, most likely: but greeds

      And garbage are too thick-strewn

      To be swept up now, or invent

      Excuses that make them all needs.

      I just think it will happen, soon.

      The Card-Players

      Jan van Hogspeuw staggers to the door

      And pisses at the dark. Outside, the rain

      Courses in cart-ruts down the deep mud lane.

      Inside, Dirk Dogstoerd pours himself some more,

      And holds a cinder to his clay with tongs,

      Belching out smoke. Old Prijck snores with the gale,

      His skull face firelit; someone behind drinks ale,

      And opens mussels, and croaks scraps of songs

      Towards the ham-hung rafters about love.

      Dirk deals the cards. Wet century-wide trees

      Clash in surrounding starlessness above

      This lamplit cave, where Jan turns back and farts,

      Gobs at the grate, and hits the queen of hearts.

      Rain, wind and fire! The secret, bestial peace!

      The Building

      Higher than the handsomest hotel

      The lucent comb shows up for miles, but see,

      All round it close-ribbed streets rise and fall

      Like a great sigh out of the last century.

      The porters are scruffy; what keep drawing up

      At the entrance are not taxis; and in the hall

      As well as creepers hangs a frightening smell.

      There are paperbacks, and tea at so much a cup,

      Like an airport lounge, but those who tamely sit

      On rows of steel chairs turning the ripped mags

      Haven’t come far. More lik
    e a local bus,

      These outdoor clothes and half-filled shopping bags

      And faces restless and resigned, although

      Every few minutes comes a kind of nurse

      To fetch someone away: the rest refit

      Cups back to saucers, cough, or glance below

      Seats for dropped gloves or cards. Humans, caught

      On ground curiously neutral, homes and names

      Suddenly in abeyance; some are young,

      Some old, but most at that vague age that claims

      The end of choice, the last of hope; and all

      Here to confess that something has gone wrong.

      It must be error of a serious sort,

      For see how many floors it needs, how tall

      It’s grown by now, and how much money goes

      In trying to correct it. See the time,

      Half-past eleven on a working day,

      And these picked out of it; see, as they climb

      To their appointed levels, how their eyes

      Go to each other, guessing; on the way

      Someone’s wheeled past, in washed-to-rags ward clothes:

     


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