In Larkin Country

I can’t really not mention Larkin, since yesterday was the 100th anniversary of his birth. Last week, I spent a few days in deepest Holderness, the flatlands of East Yorkshire between Hull and the North Sea.

It’s the area celebrated in ‘Here’, the opening poem of The Whitsun Weddings, and which ends in one of trademark, secular-mystical epiphanies:

                             Here silence stands
Like heat. Here leaves unnoticed thicken,
Hidden weeds flower, neglected waters quicken,
Luminously-peopled air ascends;
And past the poppies bluish neutral distance
Ends the land suddenly beyond a beach
Of shapes and shingle. Here is unfenced existence:
Facing the sun, untalkative, out of reach.


Nowhere is that sense of ‘unfenced existence’ more apparent than along the spit of Spurn, which protrudes three miles into the last knockings of the Humber estuary, much in the same way that Southend Pier does at the end of the Thames.

A field near Spurn
The North Sea from Spurn
The lighthouse at Spurn

From the end of Spurn Point you can see Bull Sand Fort, a derelict First World War fort guarding the approaches to the Humber. I wonder if it’s what inspired the strange phrase in Larkin’s ‘Friday Night at the Royal Station Hotel’: ‘How / Isolated, like a fort, it is’.

What’s for sure is that Holderness is little changed from Larkin’s time. Since he was still alive when I first became interested in poetry, I somehow think of him as being more contemporary than he is. It seems hard to credit that he was born in the same year as another great writer who inspired me to pick up a pencil, Jack Kerouac, though he, of course, had died long before (in 1969) I came of age. They both inclined to melancholy, and both loved jazz, though Kerouac’s hero Charlie Parker was a figure of hate for Larkin. But I digress. Neither has remained a great, direct influence, but bear repeated, pleasurable re-readings.

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Responses

  1. quercuscommunity Avatar
    quercuscommunity

    Ah! That explains the Larkin on TV last night.

    1. Matthew Paul Avatar
      Matthew Paul

      Yup. As well as all those programmes, on YouTube there’s a South Bank Show on Larkin from 1982 or so.

      1. quercuscommunity Avatar
        quercuscommunity

        I’m always sure I wouldn’t have liked him if we’d met but you can’t fault the poems.

  2. Claire Booker Avatar
    Claire Booker

    I’ve been enjoying Simon Armitage’s ten short programmes on Larkin from BBC i-player. Well worth a listen if you haven’t already.

    1. Matthew Paul Avatar
      Matthew Paul

      Thanks for the reminder, Claire – I must get round to them.

  3. On Ted Hughes – Matthew Paul

    […] on Holderness’, such a contrast to Larkin’s ‘Here’ covering the same terrain, which I trod recently. The last three stanzas travel a vast distance:The crow sleeps glutted and the stoat begins.There […]

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    […] my head fully formed, from the hot days in Holderness back in August, which I partially reported on here. I was sat on a bench outside the White Horse, Easington, a few minutes after it opened at the odd […]

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