Philip Larkin quotes:

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  • In everyone there sleeps. A sense of life lived according to love. To some it means the difference they could make. By loving others, but across most it sweeps. As all they might have done had they been loved. That nothing cures.

  • Deprivation is for me what daffodils were for Wordsworth.

  • You have to distinguish between things that seemed odd when they were new but are now quite familiar, such as Ibsen and Wagner, and things that seemed crazy when they were new and seem crazy now, like 'Finnegans Wake' and Picasso.

  • Since the majority of me Rejects the majority of you, Debating ends forthwith, and we Divide.'' Philip Larkin

  • Above all, though, children are linked to adults by the simple fact that they are in process of turning into them. For this they may be forgiven much. Children are bound to be inferior to adults, or there is no incentive to grow up.

  • I can't understand these chaps who go round American universities explaining how they write poems: It's like going round explaining how you sleep with your wife.

  • 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.

  • Depression hangs over me as if I were Iceland.

  • Here silence stands Like heat. Here leaves unnoticed thicken, Hidden weeds flower, neglected waters quicken, Luminously-peopled air ascends; And past the poppies bluish neutral distance Ends the land suddenly beyond a beach Of shapes and shingle. Here is unfenced existence: Facing the sun, untalkative, out of reach.

  • What will survive of us is love.

  • I have no enemies. But my friends don't like me.

  • All the unhurried day / Your mind lay open like a drawer of knives,

  • I have started to say "A quarter of a century" Or "thirty years back" About my own life.

  • Much better stay in company!To love you must have someone else,Giving requires a legatee,Good neighbours need whole parishfulsOf folk to do it on - in short,Our virtues are all social; if,Deprived of solitude, you chafe,It's clear you're not the virtuous sort.

  • You can't put off being young until you retire.

  • Heads in the Women's WardOn pillow after pillow liesThe wild white hair and staring eyes;Jaws stand open; necks are stretchedWith every tendon sharply sketched;A bearded mouth talks silentlyTo someone no one else can see.Sixty years ago they smiledAt lover, husband, first-born child.Smiles are for youth. For old age comeDeath's terror and delirium.

  • Dear, I can't write, it's all a fantasy: a kind of circling obsession."

  • I have wished you something None of the others would....

  • There is bad in all good authors: what a pity the converse isn't true!

  • It is fatal to decide, intellectually, what good poetry is because you are then in honour bound to try to write it, instead of the poems that only you can write.

  • As a guiding principle I believe that every poem must be its own sole freshly created universe, and therefore have no belief n 'tradition' or a common myth-kitty or casual allusions in poems to other poems or poets, which last I find unpleasantly like the talk of literary understrappers letting you see they know the right people.

  • Poetry should begin with emotion in the poet, and end with the same emotion in the reader. The poem is simply the instrument of transferance

  • I really am going to meet Forster: I thought I shouldn't, but apparently the old boy E.M.F. is saying with remembered my name & I am bid to John Hewitt's at 8 tomorrow. Shall I ask him if he's a homo? It's the only thing I really want to know about him, you see. I don't even care why he packed up writing.

  • I feel the only thing you can do about life is to preserve it, by art if you're an artist, by children if you're not.

  • Everyone should be forcibly transplanted to another continent from their family at the age of three.

  • Never such innocence,Never before or since,As changed itself to pastWithout a word--the menLeaving the gardens tidy,The thousands of marriagesLasting a little while longer:Never such innocence again.

  • SEX is designed for people who like overcoming obstacles.

  • Most things may never happen: this one will.

  • I think that at the bottom of all art lies the impulse to preserve.

  • Saki says that youth is like hors d'oeuvres: you are so busy thinking of the next courses you don't notice it. When you've had them, you wish you'd had more hors d'oeuvres.

  • I have a sense of melancholy isolation, life rapidly vanishing, all the usual things. It's very strange how often strong feelings don't seem to carry any message of action

  • My mother, who hates thunderstorms, Holds up each summer day and shakes It out suspiciously, lest swarms Of grape-dark clouds are lurking there....

  • I'm terrified of the thought of time passing (or whatever is meant by that phrase) whether I 'do' anything or not. In a way I may believe, deep down, that doing nothing acts as a brake on 'time's - it doesn't of course. It merely adds the torment of having done nothing, when the time comes when it really doesn't matter if you've done anything or not.

  • The only way to eliminate unemployment is to eliminate unemployment benefits.

  • Depression is to me as daffodils were to Wordsworth.

  • They say eyes clear with age.

  • Nothing, like something, happens anywhere.

  • ... everyone young going down the long slide To happiness, endlessly.

  • ...the breath that sharpens life is life itself...

  • A good meal can somewhat repair / The eatings of slight love

  • A good poem about failure is a success.

  • A writer can have only one language, if language is going to mean anything to him.

  • A writer once said to me, If you ever go to America, go either to the East Coast or the West Coast: The rest is a desert full of bigots. That's what I think I'd like . . . a version of pastoral.

  • 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.

  • And the case of butterflies so rich it looks As if all summer settled there and died.

  • Any memory for the most part depending on chance.

  • As a child, I thought I hated everybody, but when I grew up I realized it was just children I didn't like.

  • Beneath it all, desire of oblivion runs: Despite the artful tensions of the calendar, The life insurance, the tabled fertility rites, The costly aversion of the eyes from death- Beneath it all, desire of oblivion runs.

  • Boys dream of native girls who bring breadfruit, Whatever they are....

  • But O, Photography! as no art is, Faithful and disappointing!

  • But superstition, like belief, must die...

  • But, o, photography! as no art is,Faithful and disappointing! That recordsDull days as dull, and hold-it smiles as frauds,And will not censor blemishes,Like washing-lines, and Hall's-Distemper boards

  • Clearly money has something to do with life....

  • Courage is no good: It means not scaring others. Being brave Lets no one off the grave. Death is no different whined at than withstood.

  • Dear, I can't write, it's all a fantasy: a kind of circling obsession.

  • Death is no different whined at than withstood.

  • Death: the anaesthetic from which none come round.

  • Get stewed:Books are a load of crap.

  • Give me a thrill, says the reader, Give me a kick; I don't care how you succeed, or What subject you pick.

  • He married a woman to stop her getting away Now she's there all day.

  • Here is an unfenced existance

  • Here no elsewhere underwrites my existence.

  • Home is so sad. It stays as it was left, / Shaped to the comfort of the last to go / As if to win them back

  • How little our careers express what lies in us, and yet how much time they take up. It's sad, really.

  • I am always trying to 'preserve' things by getting other people to read what I have written, and feel what I felt.

  • I am awakened each dawn Increasingly to fear....

  • I am beginning to think of the human imagination as a fruit machine on which victories are rare and separated by much vain expense, and represent a rare alignment of mental and spiritual qualities that normally are quite at odds.

  • I am not sure, once a poet has found out what has been written already, and how it was written - once, in short, he has learnt his trade - that he should bother with literature at all. Poetry is not like surgery, a technique that can be copied. Every operation the poet performs is unique, and need never be done again.

  • I didn't choose poetry: poetry chose me.

  • I like spaghetti because you don't have to take your eyes off the book to pick about among it, it's all the same.

  • I listen to money 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...

  • I never think of poetry or the poetry scene, only separate poems written by individuals.

  • I think a young poet, or an old poet, for that matter, should try to produce something that pleases himself personally, not only when he's written it but a couple of weeks later. Then he should see if it pleases anyone else, by sending it to the kind of magazine he likes reading.

  • I think we got much better poetry when it was all regarded as sinful or subversive, and you had to hide it under the cushion when somebody came in.

  • I think writing about unhappiness is probably the source of my popularity, if I have any - after all, most people are unhappy, don't you think?

  • I wonder love can have already set In dreams, when we've not met More times than I can number on one hand.

  • I work all day, and get half-drunk at night,

  • I wouldn't mind seeing China if I could come back the same day.

  • I'd like to think...that people in pubs would talk about my poems

  • If we seriously contemplate life it appears an agony too great to be supported, but for the most part our minds gloss such things over & until the ice finally lets us through we skate about merrily enough. Most people, I'm convinced, don't think about life at all. They grab what they think they want and the subsequent consequences keep them busy in an endless chain till they're carried out feet first.

  • If you tell a novelist, 'Life's not like that', he has to do something about it. The poet simply replies, 'No, but I am.'

  • In everyone there sleeps a sense of life lived according to love.

  • In times when nothing stood but worsened, or grew strange, there was one constant good: she did not change.

  • It's easy to write when you've nothing to write about (That is, when you are young)....

  • Joy Is for the simple or the great to feel, Neither of which we are.

  • Life and literature is a question of what one thrills to, and further than that no man shall ever go without putting his foot in a turd.

  • Life has a practice of living you, if you don't live it.

  • Life is first boredom, then fear,

  • Life is first boredom, then fear. Whether or not we use it, it goes, And leaves what something hidden from us chose, And age, and then the only end of age.

  • Living in England has no such excuse: These are my customs and establishments....

  • Many famous feet have trod Sublunary paths, and famous hands have weighed The strength they have against the strength they need; And famous lips interrogated God Concerning franchise in eternity....

  • Many modern novels have a beginning, a muddle and an end.

  • Most people know more as they get older: I give all that the cold shoulder.

  • My age fallen away like white swaddling Floats in the middle distance, becomes An inhabited cloud.

  • No one can tear your thread out of himself. No one can tie you down or set you free.

  • Novels are about other people and poems are about yourself

  • Novels seem to me to be richer, broader, deeper, more enjoyable than poems.

  • Now, helpless in the hollow of An unarmorial age, a trough Of smoke in slow suspended skeins Above their scrap of history, Only an attitude remains: Time has transfigured them into Untruth. The stone finality 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.

  • On me your voice falls as they say love should, Like an enormous yes.

  • One of the great criticisms of poets of the past is that they said one thing and did another.

  • One of the quainter quirks of life is that we shall never know who dies on the dame day as we do ourselves.

  • One of the sadder things, I think, Is how our birthdays slowly sink: Presents and parties disappear, The cards grow fewer year by year, Till, when one reaches sixty-five, How many care we're still alive?

  • Only in books the flat and final happens, Only in dreams we meet and interlock....

  • Only one ship is seeking us, a black-Sailed unfamiliar, towing at her backA huge and birdless silence. In her wakeNo waters breed or break.

  • Originality is being different from oneself, not others.

  • Parting is a training streamer,Lingering like leaves in autumn...

  • Poetry is an affair of sanity, of seeing things as they are, to recreate the familar,eternalizing the poet's own poerception in unique and original verbal form.

  • Poetry is an affair of sanity, of seeing things as they are.

  • Selflessness is like waiting in a hospital In a badly-fitting suit on a cold wet morning. Selfishness is like listening to good jazz With drinks for further orders and a huge fire.

  • Seriously, I think it is a grave fault in life that so much time is wasted in social matters, because it not only takes up time when you might be doing individual private things, but it prevents you storing up the psychic energy that can then be released to create art or whatever it is. It's terrible the way we scotch silence & solitude at every turn, quite suicidal. I can't see how to avoid it, without being very rich or very unpopular, & it does worry me, for time is slipping by , and nothing is done. It isn't as if anything was gained by this social frivolity, It isn't: it's just a waste.

  • Sex means nothing--just the moment of ecstasy, that flares and dies in minutes.

  • Sexual intercourse began in 1963 ... / Between the end of the Chatterley ban/ and the Beatles first LP

  • Slowly light strengthens, and the room takes shape. It stands plain as a wardrobe, what we know, Have always known, know that we can't escape, Yet can't accept. One side will have to go. Meanwhile telephones crouch, getting ready to ring In locked-up offices, and all the uncaring Intricate rented world begins to rouse. The sky is white as clay, with no sun. Work has to be done. Postmen like doctors go from house to house.

  • Something, like nothing, happens anywhere.

  • Spring, of all seasons most gratuitous, Is fold of untaught flower, is race of water, Is earth's most multiple, excited daughter; And those she has least use for see her best, Their paths grown craven and circuitous, Their visions mountain-clear, their needs immodest.

  • Still, vicious or virtuous, Love suits most of us.

  • The chromatic scale is what you use to give the effect of drinking a quinine martini and having an enema simultaneously.

  • The difficult part of love Is being selfish enough....

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