Friday, August 30, 2019
Hartleyââ¬â¢s novel Essay
Although appearing to have a cynical view of love in the poem Larkin does in fact not doubt love, but the expectations that we have of it. In the words of Andrew Swarbrick, Larkin expresses not feelings of bitterness or pessimism but ââ¬Å"of pathos, of a tender sympathy for the widow who recalls dreams knowing they are best forgotten. â⬠Though sometimes pleasurable reminiscing can reveal hopes that were unfulfilled, dreams never lived out, good times we can never experience again. Therefore what we perceive to be pessimism in Larkin is, in this instance, simply realism, an understanding of the illusions contained in the world, making him ââ¬Å"less deceivedâ⬠as a result. He once remarked, ââ¬Å"Poetry is an affair of sanity, of seeing things as they really areâ⬠it was for him a way of being honest, not overestimating the value of things. Nonetheless, in the final poem of The Whitsun Weddings, An Arundel Tomb, Larkin hints at his belief in love. Despite not having a successful love life himself he still implies that he has faith in its existence, the ultimate word of the anthology being the abstract noun, ââ¬Å"loveâ⬠. This line is a testament to its endurance and strength, ââ¬Å"What will survive of us is love. â⬠John Saunders likens these lines containing the ââ¬Å"prove/loveâ⬠rhyme to Shakespeareââ¬â¢s attempt to define true love in Sonnet 73, Larkinââ¬â¢s concluding line echoing the rhyming couplet, ââ¬Å"If this be error, and upon me proved I never wrote, nor no man ever loved. â⬠An Arundel Tomb concentrates on the historical aspect of the past. The persona in the poem, which is in fact Larkin, examines the concept of artifacts, how something set in stone can withstand the test of time regardless of whether it actually existed in the first place. Visiting a Sussex churchyard Larkin sees an example of love that both moves and intrigues him, had it not been for the incongruity of two linked hands displayed on the tomb he would have walked by. It is a gesture small yet touching but the cynic in Larkin questions its validity presuming it to be a case of ââ¬Å"a sculptorââ¬â¢s sweet commissioned graceâ⬠rather than a symbol of a long and devoted marriage. Together in death the couplesââ¬â¢ ââ¬Å"faces blurredâ⬠but the husband is still ââ¬Å"holding her handâ⬠. Over time their features have been weathered but their effigy remains as a reminder of their lives, a monument to their love. Archaic language is used to complement the subject matter of the poem, capturing a bygone time so unlike todayââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"unarmorial ageâ⬠. Further manipulation of syntax is evident with the effective juxtaposition of the adjectives ââ¬Å"sharpâ⬠and ââ¬Å"tenderâ⬠, conveying simply but perfectly Larkinââ¬â¢s confused and mixed reaction to the union of the stone hands. There is debate over Larkinââ¬â¢s true feelings towards the real meaning of the ââ¬Å"faithfulness in effigyâ⬠. Whether or not he again intended the pun with the use of the verb ââ¬Å"lieâ⬠just as lovers were ââ¬Å"lying togetherâ⬠in bed is unclear. As Brother Anthony (An Sonjae) points out in his paper Without Metaphysics there is a huge diversity in the interpretations of Larkinââ¬â¢s intended meaning in his work, it is up to the reader to determine their own response ââ¬Å"which is good for the reader, but a challenge tooâ⬠. Does the poet believe that ââ¬Å"love survivesâ⬠not only in stone? Or as Andrew Swarbrick quite rightly points out does he ââ¬Å"almostâ⬠believe it as the penultimate line suggests? ââ¬Å"Our almost-instinct almost trueâ⬠therefore cancels out the optimism of the following statement. Here we witness Larkin lowering his defenses, allowing himself to hope for the best, to want love to be ââ¬Å"that much mentioned brillianceâ⬠but he cannot do so completely for fear of it being an illusion. Although hinting at what he truly believes it is as though he will not allow himself to trust it in case he is mistaken. Yet whether love survives or not it lives on in Arundel where ââ¬Å"only an attitude remainsâ⬠. This is also true of Larkinââ¬â¢s poetry, and in fact to the whole genre. Whereas fictional characters and places from novels are lost, forgotten, poetry allows thoughts to survive as art long after the death of the artist. Larkin wrote of this inspiring philosophy in 1955, contained in a statement to D. J. Enright he explained, ââ¬Å"I write poems to preserve things I have seen/thought/feltâ⬠¦ I think the impulse to preserve lies at the bottom of all art. â⬠Yet as mentioned previously the meaning of Larkinââ¬â¢s literature is not always clear, just like he could only assume the significance of the joined hands we can only guess at the thoughts of Philip Larkin which are contained and live on in his verse. The poem Dockery and Son relates the events and emotions that occur when Philip Larkin revisits his old college, steps back into the past only to be disappointed with what he finds there. An outsider there, he no longer belongs and finds himself a stranger in his own past, as well as physically being unable to enter his past residence ââ¬Å"the door of where (he) used to liveâ⬠is also ââ¬Å"lockedâ⬠metaphorically. However, the most disturbing thing for Larkin is the news that one of his peers now has at son at Oxford: Dockery unlike Larkin with ââ¬Å"no son, no wife, no house or landâ⬠is a success story. The door to fatherhood is therefore also ââ¬Å"lockedâ⬠for Larkin. By starting with dialogue the poem is made more authentic as it adds an injection of reality to the verse. It also alerts Larkin to the fact that he is no longer part of that world, of public school boys and ranks, he, unlike Dockery, has no reason to revisit that part of his life. He feels ââ¬Å"ignoredâ⬠. As in The Whitsun Weddings Larkin philosophizes whilst on a train which is not only a vehicle in the normal sense of the noun but a vehicle for his thoughts and also a metaphor for direction, moving forward in life. The simplistic repetition in the third stanza ââ¬Å"How muchâ⬠¦ How littleâ⬠¦ â⬠conveys Larkinââ¬â¢s disappointment in himself as he contemplates his own achievements in comparison with those of Dockery. Whereas Leo Colston benefited from his nostalgic visit to the past it has been a negative experience for Larkin who should never have returned. Both Larkin and Hartley present philosophies on the past in two contrasting but equally effective genres, which themselves give insight into the pasts of the authors. The past is, as both pieces of literature show, inevitably significant to us all. How we are affected by it however, either negatively or positively, is to some extent in our own hands. ââ¬Å"Even a god cannot change the pastâ⬠(Agathon 445 BC) yet we can move on, learn from our experiences and in the future be ââ¬Å"less deceivedâ⬠. L. P. Hartleyââ¬â¢s novel is a message to us all that we should not dwell on what has come before, but concentrate on living the present, Leo recognized that he ââ¬Å"should not be sitting aloneâ⬠before it was too late. In reality the past does not fully exist; in the words of Larkin it is a ââ¬Å"love songâ⬠that can never sound the same, a ââ¬Å"lockedâ⬠door which we can never be reopened, ââ¬Å"only an attitudeâ⬠that lives on in our minds. We may try to capture moments and emotions in stone, or in verse yet the only place where they truly exist is in our memory. We have the ability to dictate the significance the past holds for us. And so whilst we cannot change our pasts, we have the ability to change our future; Shakespeare declared that ââ¬Å"Whatââ¬â¢s past is prologueâ⬠yet we can determine what is contained in the epilogue.
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