Sunday, July 24, 2016

MONEY - PHILIP LARKIN

Money - Philip Larkin

PHILIP LARKIN was the best-loved poet of his generation in England, and the winner of many academic and literary awards. His collected Poems appeared posthumously in 1988.

Larkin’s ‘Money’ treats a familiar subject in a charmingly candid and personal way. He urges us to question the wisdom of frugal spending in youth. It is hard, says the poet, to resist the temptation of money, harder to control our desire for creature-comforts.

I yield to the temptation of money. Metaphorically, the poet imagines that he listens to a siren’s song in the tinkle of coins, and the rustle of paper money. The rising inflation always devalues money. And therefore reduces one’s capacity for buying goods and services. If you are going to buy all unnecessary things one-day you cannot buy the necessary things. 

“By now they’ve a second house and car and wife:
Clearly money has something to do with life”

House and car are some ‘goods and services’ others have in excess when the thrifty person does not even fulfill his basic physical needs or enjoy social prestige and respect.

‘You can’t put off being young until you retire,’

There are certain things you can afford to put off (delay) until you retire. But your body and mind does not hear you in youth. Further, it makes no sense to have a lot of money when it hardly tempts you as in youth.

When the poet listens to ‘money singing’, he is reminded of scenes rich in visual details: the provincial town, the slums, the canal, the churches. Each has its place in answering to man’s desire; each exists to prompt man’s desire.

These scenic details prompt both desire and guilt, the first followed by the second. This quit sad like having money. Money in hand, one finds one’s longing inevitable as much as guilt that goes with it.


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