Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Philip Larkin Poems: Selected by Martin Amis

    Page 6
    Prev Next

    They see him, too. They’re quiet. To realise

      This new thing held in common makes them quiet,

      For past these doors are rooms, and rooms past those,

      And more rooms yet, each one further off

      And harder to return from; and who knows

      Which he will see, and when? For the moment, wait,

      Look down at the yard. Outside seems old enough:

      Red brick, lagged pipes, and someone walking by it

      Out to the car park, free. Then, past the gate,

      Traffic; a locked church; short terraced streets

      Where kids chalk games, and girls with hair-dos fetch

      Their separates from the cleaners – O world,

      Your loves, your chances, are beyond the stretch

      Of any hand from here! And so, unreal,

      A touching dream to which we all are lulled

      But wake from separately. In it, conceits

      And self-protecting ignorance congeal

      To carry life, collapsing only when

      Called to these corridors (for now once more

      The nurse beckons –). Each gets up and goes

      At last. Some will be out by lunch, or four;

      Others, not knowing it, have come to join

      The unseen congregations whose white rows

      Lie set apart above – women, men;

      Old, young; crude facets of the only coin

      This place accepts. All know they are going to die.

      Not yet, perhaps not here, but in the end,

      And somewhere like this. That is what it means,

      This clean-sliced cliff; a struggle to transcend

      The thought of dying, for unless its powers

      Outbuild cathedrals nothing contravenes

      The coming dark, though crowds each evening try

      With wasteful, weak, propitiatory flowers.

      Posterity

      Jake Balokowsky, my biographer,

      Has this page microfilmed. Sitting inside

      His air-conditioned cell at Kennedy

      In jeans and sneakers, he’s no call to hide

      Some slight impatience with his destiny:

      ‘I’m stuck with this old fart at least a year;

      I wanted to teach school in Tel Aviv,

      But Myra’s folks’ – he makes the money sign –

      ‘Insisted I got tenure. When there’s kids –’

      He shrugs. ‘It’s stinking dead, the research line;

      Just let me put this bastard on the skids,

      I’ll get a couple of semesters leave

      To work on Protest Theater.’ They both rise,

      Make for the Coke dispenser. ‘What’s he like?

      Christ, I just told you. Oh, you know the thing,

      That crummy textbook stuff from Freshman Psych,

      Not out of kicks or something happening –

      One of those old-type natural fouled-up guys.’

      Dublinesque

      Down stucco sidestreets,

      Where light is pewter

      And afternoon mist

      Brings lights on in shops

      Above race-guides and rosaries,

      A funeral passes.

      The hearse is ahead,

      But after there follows

      A troop of streetwalkers

      In wide flowered hats,

      Leg-of-mutton sleeves,

      And ankle-length dresses.

      There is an air of great friendliness,

      As if they were honouring

      One they were fond of;

      Some caper a few steps,

      Skirts held skilfully

      (Someone claps time),

      And of great sadness also.

      As they wend away

      A voice is heard singing

      Of Kitty, or Katy,

      As if the name meant once

      All love, all beauty.

      Homage to a Government

      Next year we are to bring the soldiers home

      For lack of money, and it is all right.

      Places they guarded, or kept orderly,

      Must guard themselves, and keep themselves orderly.

      We want the money for ourselves at home

      Instead of working. And this is all right.

      It’s hard to say who wanted it to happen,

      But now it’s been decided nobody minds.

      The places are a long way off, not here,

      Which is all right, and from what we hear

      The soldiers there only made trouble happen.

      Next year we shall be easier in our minds.

      Next year we shall be living in a country

      That brought its soldiers home for lack of money.

      The statues will be standing in the same

      Tree-muffled squares, and look nearly the same.

      Our children will not know it’s a different country.

      All we can hope to leave them now is money.

      1969

      This Be The Verse

      They fuck you up, your mum and dad.

      They may not mean to, but they do.

      They fill you with the faults they had

      And add some extra, just for you.

      But they were fucked up in their turn

      By fools in old-style hats and coats,

      Who half the time were soppy-stern

      And half at one another’s throats.

      Man hands on misery to man.

      It deepens like a coastal shelf.

      Get out as early as you can,

      And don’t have any kids yourself.

      How Distant

      How distant, the departure of young men

      Down valleys, or watching

      The green shore past the salt-white cordage

      Rising and falling,

      Cattlemen, or carpenters, or keen

      Simply to get away

      From married villages before morning,

      Melodeons play

      On tiny decks past fraying cliffs of water

      Or late at night

      Sweet under the differently-swung stars,

      When the chance sight

      Of a girl doing her laundry in the steerage

      Ramifies endlessly.

      This is being young,

      Assumption of the startled century

      Like new store clothes,

      The huge decisions printed out by feet

      Inventing where they tread,

      The random windows conjuring a street.

      Sad Steps

      Groping back to bed after a piss

      I part thick curtains, and am startled by

      The rapid clouds, the moon’s cleanliness.

      Four o’clock: wedge-shadowed gardens lie

      Under a cavernous, a wind-picked sky.

      There’s something laughable about this,

      The way the moon dashes through clouds that blow

      Loosely as cannon-smoke to stand apart

      (Stone-coloured light sharpening the roofs below)

      High and preposterous and separate –

      Lozenge of love! Medallion of art!

      O wolves of memory! Immensements! No,

      One shivers slightly, looking up there.

      The hardness and the brightness and the plain

      Far-reaching singleness of that wide stare

      Is a reminder of the strength and pain

      Of being young; that it can’t come again,

      But is for others undiminished somewhere.

      Solar

      Suspended lion face

      Spilling at the centre

      Of an unfurnished sky

      How still you stand,

      And how unaided

      Single stalkless flower

      You pour unrecompensed.

      The eye sees you

      Simplified by distance

      Into an origin,

      Your petalled head of flames

      Continuously exploding.

      Heat is the echo of your

      Gold.

      Coined there among


      Lonely horizontals

      You exist openly.

      Our needs hourly

      Climb and return like angels.

      Unclosing like a hand,

      You give for ever.

      Annus Mirabilis

      Sexual intercourse began

      In nineteen sixty-three

      (Which was rather late for me) –

      Between the end of the Chatterley ban

      And the Beatles’ first LP.

      Up till then there’d only been

      A sort of bargaining,

      A wrangle for a ring,

      A shame that started at sixteen

      And spread to everything.

      Then all at once the quarrel sank:

      Everyone felt the same,

      And every life became

      A brilliant breaking of the bank,

      A quite unlosable game.

      So life was never better than

      In nineteen sixty-three

      (Though just too late for me) –

      Between the end of the Chatterley ban

      And the Beatles’ first LP.

      Vers de Société

      My wife and I have asked a crowd of craps

      To come and waste their time and ours: perhaps

      You’d care to join us? In a pig’s arse, friend.

      Day comes to an end.

      The gas fire breathes, the trees are darkly swayed.

      And so Dear Warlock-Williams: I’m afraid –

      Funny how hard it is to be alone.

      I could spend half my evenings, if I wanted,

      Holding a glass of washing sherry, canted

      Over to catch the drivel of some bitch

      Who’s read nothing but Which;

      Just think of all the spare time that has flown

      Straight into nothingness by being filled

      With forks and faces, rather than repaid

      Under a lamp, hearing the noise of wind,

      And looking out to see the moon thinned

      To an air-sharpened blade.

      A life, and yet how sternly it’s instilled

      All solitude is selfish. No one now

      Believes the hermit with his gown and dish

      Talking to God (who’s gone too); the big wish

      Is to have people nice to you, which means

      Doing it back somehow.

      Virtue is social. Are, then, these routines

      Playing at goodness, like going to church?

      Something that bores us, something we don’t do well

      (Asking that ass about his fool research)

      But try to feel, because, however crudely,

      It shows us what should be?

      Too subtle, that. Too decent, too. Oh hell,

      Only the young can be alone freely.

      The time is shorter now for company,

      And sitting by a lamp more often brings

      Not peace, but other things.

      Beyond the light stand failure and remorse

      Whispering Dear Warlock-Williams: Why, of course –

      Show Saturday

      Grey day for the Show, but cars jam the narrow lanes.

      Inside, on the field, judging has started: dogs

      (Set their legs back, hold out their tails) and ponies (manes

      Repeatedly smoothed, to calm heads); over there, sheep

      (Cheviot and Blackface); by the hedge, squealing logs

      (Chain Saw Competition). Each has its own keen crowd.

      In the main arena, more judges meet by a jeep:

      The jumping’s on next. Announcements, splutteringly loud,

      Clash with the quack of a man with pound notes round his hat

      And a lit-up board. There’s more than just animals:

      Bead-stalls, balloon-men, a Bank; a beer-marquee that

      Half-screens a canvas Gents; a tent selling tweed,

      And another, jackets. Folks sit about on bales

      Like great straw dice. For each scene is linked by spaces

      Not given to anything much, where kids scrap, freed,

      While their owners stare different ways with incurious faces.

      The wrestling starts, late; a wide ring of people; then cars;

      Then trees; then pale sky. Two young men in acrobats’ tights

      And embroidered trunks hug each other; rock over the grass,

      Stiff-legged, in a two-man scrum. One falls: they shake hands.

      Two more start, one grey-haired: he wins, though. They’re not so much fights

      As long immobile strainings that end in unbalance

      With one on his back, unharmed, while the other stands

      Smoothing his hair. But there are other talents –

      The long high tent of growing and making, wired-off

      Wood tables past which crowds shuffle, eyeing the scrubbed spaced

      Extrusions of earth: blanch leeks like church candles, six pods of

      Broad beans (one split open), dark shining-leafed cabbages – rows

      Of single supreme versions, followed (on laced

      Paper mats) by dairy and kitchen; four brown eggs, four white eggs,

      Four plain scones, four dropped scones, pure excellences that enclose

      A recession of skills. And, after them, lambing-sticks, rugs,

      Needlework, knitted caps, baskets, all worthy, all well done,

      But less than the honeycombs. Outside, the jumping’s over.

      The young ones thunder their ponies in competition

      Twice round the ring; then trick races, Musical Stalls,

      Sliding off, riding bareback, the ponies dragged to and fro for

      Bewildering requirements, not minding. But now, in the background,

      Like shifting scenery, horse-boxes move; each crawls

      Towards the stock entrance, tilting and swaying, bound

      For far-off farms. The pound-note man decamps.

      The car park has thinned. They’re loading jumps on a truck.

      Back now to private addresses, gates and lamps

      In high stone one-street villages, empty at dusk,

      And side roads of small towns (sports finals stuck

      In front doors, allotments reaching down to the railway);

      Back now to autumn, leaving the ended husk

      Of summer that brought them here for Show Saturday –

      The men with hunters, dog-breeding wool-defined women,

      Children all saddle-swank, mugfaced middleaged wives

      Glaring at jellies, husbands on leave from the garden

      Watchful as weasels, car-tuning curt-haired sons –

      Back now, all of them, to their local lives:

      To names on vans, and business calendars

      Hung up in kitchens; back to loud occasions

      In the Corn Exchange, to market days in bars,

      To winter coming, as the dismantled Show

      Itself dies back into the area of work.

      Let it stay hidden there like strength, below

      Sale-bills and swindling; something people do,

      Not noticing how time’s rolling smithy-smoke

      Shadows much greater gestures; something they share

      That breaks ancestrally each year into

      Regenerate union. Let it always be there.

      Money

      Quarterly, is it, money reproaches me:

      ‘Why do you let me lie here wastefully?

      I am all you never had of goods and sex.

      You could get them still by writing a few cheques.’

      So I look at others, what they do with theirs:

      They certainly don’t keep it upstairs.

      By now they’ve a second house and car and wife:

      Clearly money has something to do with life

      – In fact, they’ve a lot in common, if you enquire:

      You can’t put off being young until you retire,

      And however you bank your screw, the money you save

      Won’t in the end buy you more than a shave.

      I listen to mone
    y singing. It’s like looking down

      From long french windows at a provincial town,

      The slums, the canal, the churches ornate and mad

      In the evening sun. It is intensely sad.

      Cut Grass

      Cut grass lies frail:

      Brief is the breath

      Mown stalks exhale.

      Long, long the death

      It dies in the white hours

      Of young-leafed June

      With chestnut flowers,

      With hedges snowlike strewn,

      White lilac bowed,

      Lost lanes of Queen Anne’s lace,

      And that high-builded cloud

      Moving at summer’s pace.

      Poems uncollected by Larkin

      Love

      The difficult part of love

      Is being selfish enough,

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026