Choose language

Forgot your password?

Need a Spoofbox account? Create one for FREE!

No subscription or hidden extras

Login

Philip Larkin

Read through the most famous quotes from Philip Larkin




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


— Philip Larkin


#love

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


— Philip Larkin


#work #career

Poetry is nobody’s business except the poet’s, and everybody else can fuck off.


— Philip Larkin


#business

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.


— Philip Larkin


#children #letters-to-monica #philip-larkin #poem #poet

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


— Philip Larkin


#dreams

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


— Philip Larkin


#letters-to-monica #philip-larkin #poem #poet #poetry

Time has transfigured them into Untruth. The stone fidelity 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.


— Philip Larkin


#love #time #death

Most things may never happen: this one will.


— Philip Larkin


#death #poem #death

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


— Philip Larkin


#life

SEX is designed for people who like overcoming obstacles.


— Philip Larkin


#people #sex #design






About Philip Larkin

Philip Larkin Quotes




Did you know about Philip Larkin?

The view that Larkin is not a nihilist or pessimist but actually displays optimism in his works is certainly not universally endorsed but Chatterjee's lengthy study suggests the degree to which old stereotypes of Larkin are now being transcended. On the other hand the revelations were dismissed by the novelist Martin Amis in The War Against Cliché arguing that the letters in particular show nothing more than a tendency for Larkin to tailor his words according to the recipient. Brett who was chairman of the library committee who appointed him and friend until Larkin's death wrote "At first I was impressed with the time he spent in his office arriving early and leaving late.

Lisa Jardine called him a "casual habitual racist and an easy misogynist" but the academic John Osborne argued in 2008 that "the worst that anyone has discovered about Larkin are some crass letters and a taste for porn softer than what passes for mainstream entertainment". Despite the controversy Larkin was chosen in a 2003 Poetry Book Society survey almost two decades after his death as Britain's best-loved poet of the previous 50 years and in 2008 The Times named him Britain's greatest post-war writer. After graduating from Oxford in 1943 with a first in English language and literature Larkin became a librarian.

back to top