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FURTHER READING
Related Prose
High Talk: Influences from the British Isles
External Links
Sacramentalism in the Poetry of Philip Larkin
An essay by Dr. Don W. King, Associate Professor of English at Montreat College.
The Philip Larkin Society
Includes selections from the magazine About Larkin.
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Philip Larkin
Philip Larkin

Philip Larkin was born in 1922 in Coventry, England. He attended St. John's College, Oxford. His first book of poetry, The North Ship, was published in 1945 and, though not particularly strong on its own, is notable insofar as certain passages foreshadow the unique sensibility and maturity that characterizes his later work. In 1946, Larkin discovered the poetry of Thomas Hardy and became a great admirer of his poetry, learning from Hardy how to make the commonplace and often dreary details of his life the basis for extremely tough, unsparing, and memorable poems. With his second volume of poetry, The Less Deceived (1955), Larkin became the preeminent poet of his generation, and a leading voice of what came to be called "The Movement," a group of young English writers who rejected the prevailing fashion for neo-Romantic writing in the style of Yeats and Dylan Thomas. Like Hardy, Larkin focused on intense personal emotion but strictly avoided sentimentality or self-pity.

In 1964, he confirmed his reputation as a major poet with the publication of The Whitsun Weddings, and again in 1974 with High Windows: collections whose searing, often mocking, wit does not conceal the poet's dark vision and underlying obsession with universal themes of mortality, love, and human solitude. Deeply anti-social and a great lover (and published critic) of American jazz, Larkin never married and conducted an uneventful life as a librarian in the provincial city of Hull, where he died in 1985.

A Selected Bibliography

Poetry

Aubade (1980)
Collected Poems (1989)
Corgi Modern Poets in Focus 5 (1971)
Femmes Damnées (1978)
High Windows (1974)
Poems (1954)
The Less Deceived (1955)
The North Ship (1945)
The Whitsun Weddings (1964)
XX Poems (1951)

Prose

All What Jazz: A Record Diary 1961-68 (1970)
Required Writing: Miscellaneous Pieces 1955-1982 (1984)
Selected Letters 1940-1985 (1992)
Jill (1964)
A Girl in Winter (1947)

Poems by
Philip Larkin

Home is so Sad




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