The Less Deceived
The Less Deceived, first published in 1955,[1] was Philip Larkin's first mature collection of poetry, having been preceded by the derivative North Ship (1945) from The Fortune Press and a privately printed collection, a small pamphlet titled XX Poems, which Larkin mailed to literary critics and authors. Unfortunately, Larkin was unaware that postal rates had gone up, and most recipients, when asked to pay the difference for delivery of a pamphlet by a little-known writer, turned them away; only around 100 copies were printed.
First edition | |
Author | Philip Larkin |
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Genre | Poetry |
Publisher | The Marvell Press |
Published in English | 1955 |
Preceded by | The North Ship |
Followed by | The Whitsun Weddings |
Despite this setback, 13 of the 20 poems, together with 16 new poems,[2][3] were finally published to much acclaim in 1955 as The Less Deceived, which was selected as a book of the year by the Times Literary Supplement and immediately went through several impressions. Put out by The Marvell Press, a small operation run by the enterprising and persistent George Hartley in Hessle, East Yorkshire, the book through the depth of its appeal, the formal skill of its verse, and its consistent striking of Larkin's distinctive tone gained wide readership. By the end of 1955 The Less Deceived was recognized as one of the outstanding collections of the year.[4]
History
The first poem in it, chronologically, to be written was "Going," of February 1946. It is about death, and, according to Andrew Motion, is the kind of poem for which Larkin "is so often regarded as an unrelievedly pessimistic poet"[5] Its concluding lines, "What is under my hands, / That I cannot feel? / What loads my hands down?", presage the helplessness, the dread of the atrophying of emotion, the despair, and the magnetic terror of death in the poems that follow. These are Larkin's most persistent themes. Throughout the collection, the feeling of diminishment and loss is pervasive, whether in the visit of a cyclist to a church in the volume's best known poem, "Church Going," or in the alienation of the speaker looking at a photograph of a young lady, or in the man in "Toads" beaten by work into an imprisonment he then wills, or even in the "I" who "starts to be happy" when light strikes on the "foreheads" of houses. "Beneath it all," ends the poem "Wants," "desire of oblivion runs." This desire for death simultaneously horrifies and allures.
Philip Larkin said on more than one occasion that his discovery of Thomas Hardy's poetry was a turning point in the writing of his own poetry: "I don't think Hardy, as a poet, is a poet for young people. I know it sounds ridiculous to say I wasn't young at twenty-five or twenty-six, but at least I was beginning to find out what life was about, and that's precisely what I found in Hardy. In other words, I'm saying that what I like about him primarily is his temperament and the way he sees life. He's not a transcendental writer, he's not a Yeats, he's not an Eliot; his subjects are men, the life of men, time and the passing of time, love and the fading of love... When I came to Hardy it was with the sense of relief that I didn't have to try and jack myself up to a concept of poetry that lay outside my own life -- this is perhaps what I felt Yeats was trying to make me do. One could simply relapse back into one's own life and write from it. Hardy taught one to feel rather than to write -- of course one has to use one's own language and one's own jargon and one's own situations -- and he taught one as well to have confidence in what one felt. I have come, I think, to admire him even more than I did then."[6]
The poems in The Less Deceived are formalist. Like his admired Thomas Hardy, Larkin invents stanza forms of intricate patterns that become one with the content of the poems. His rigorous adherence to these patterns brings the sadness into sharp relief and gives the emotions their authority. The poet's refusal to publish any but the most perfectly realized poems marked him, from this book onward, as a literary artist of high accomplishment.
With this book Larkin became, albeit unwittingly, a spokesman for his times. Written in a post–World War II England that only half acknowledged its lessening position as a global and economic power, The Less Deceived resonated because it brought forth with disarming candor England's buried sense of itself.
Poems
- Lines on a Young Lady's Photograph Album
- Wedding-Wind
- Places, Loved Ones
- Coming
- Reasons for Attendance
- Dry-Point
- Next, Please
- Going
- Wants
- Maiden Name
- Born Yesterday
- Whatever Happened?
- No Road
- Wires
- Church Going
- Age
- Myxomatosis
- Toads
- Poetry of Departures
- Triple Time
- Spring
- Deceptions
- I Remember, I Remember
- Absences
- Latest Face
- If, My Darling
- Skin
- Arrivals, Departures
- At Grass
See also
References
- Larkin, Philip (22 December 1966). "The Less Deceived: Poems". Marvell Press. Retrieved 22 December 2017 – via Google Books.
- Poet in Transition: Philip Larkin's "XX Poems" Roger Bowen, The Iowa Review
- Burnett, Archie (2012). The Complete Poems. New York: Farrar, Strauss and Giroux. p. 354. ISBN 978-374-0-12696-4.
- "The Whitsun Weddings: First Editions & Rare Books by Philip Larkin. Peter Harrington Rare & First Edition Books". Peterharrington.co.uk. Retrieved 22 December 2017.
- Sir Andrew Motion (7 March 1994). Philip Larkin : A Writer's Life. Faber & Faber. ISBN 978-0571170654.
- Philip Larkin, "The Poetry of Hardy," in Required Writing: Miscellaneous Pieces 1955-1982 (Faber and Faber 1983), pages 175-176.