Sunday, 16 March 2014

Ignorance, Days, Nothing To Be Said, Water, As Bas as a Mile, First Sight

From the poem by Larkin called ‘Ignorance’, I got the feeling that Larkin believes that you have to see something to believe it. This can be seen in “never to be sure of what is true or right or real”. This suggests that you can never be sure of anything in life to either believe it or discard it. The title of this poem also suggests an uncertain approach to the poem as the word ignorance means uninformed and unaware. Throughout the poem there is a focus on abstract thoughts rather than concrete lexis. This could suggest further that Larkin is pessimistic to other people’s beliefs and ideas which cannot be proven. I believe that this poem could also link in with ‘Dockery and Son’ through the line “we think truest or most want to do”. This could suggest that we can only understand what we want and cannot understand that of others.
From the poem by Larkin called ‘Days’, I got the feeling that Larkin was again being quite pessimistic as he is suggesting that life is what you make of it. This is shown in “they wake us, time and time over”. This suggests that if you don’t make the most of each day, it will become repetitive and become an endless cycle. The quote “where can we live by days?” could suggest that people can get caught up looking at each day as a whole rather than taking each minute as it comes. I believe that by the use of short sentences leaves the poem with a quite simple feel when it focuses on more of a complex idea about the belief that people have in their own lives.
The poem ‘Nothing To Be Said’ is quite puzzling as it seems to suggest that as you get older your life slowly becomes increasingly lifeless. This can be seen in “Life is slowly dying”. This suggests that there is a negative aspect to this poem as every day your life is losing its importance. The quote “Or birth, advance on death equally slowly”. This suggests that our life is a continuous cycle which creates a similarity with everyone else as we all live a continuous cycle making decisions throughout our lives. This links in with ‘Reference Back’ and the idea that we are making conscious life choices all the time. I also found the quote “others it leaves nothing to be said” quite interesting as I believe it suggests the difference between those that ask questions about other people’s beliefs and those that simply accept the ideas within our society.
From the poem called ‘Water’, I got the impression that Larkin was mocking religions as he seems to believe that the only use you could get about going to church would be to “make use of the water” and “to dry, different clothes”. This suggests that Larkin is not a believer in any religion and does not understand those that can be. Although, it seems at first to be quite a religious poem, as you delve deeper you find that Larkin is being quite negative towards people’s beliefs by suggesting that instead of going to church to pray that they should make use of their help and the holy water.
The poem ‘As Bad as a Mile’ is about failure to do with the Garden of Eden and the fruit that Eve picked from the Tree of Knowledge. This is suggesting that ‘As Bad as Mile’ is in fact a poem about religion; however it is again not looking at in a positive way. Larkin is talking about failure linking it with the aspect of Christianity reflecting this. I believe that this poem suggests that everyone has failure inside of them, however you have to delve deeper inside someone to find this which reflects getting to the core of an apple.
The poem called ‘First Sight’ seems to be quite positive at a first glance but it is in fact not. It focuses on natural imagery and seems to create a new life feeling to the poem. It seems to suggest that you are unable to grasp the things that you most want to in life and that new life will struggle with this the most.

In conclusion, I feel that Larkin is mocking religion and can never understand how people can have such strong beliefs in facts that cannot be proven. This therefore shows that Larkin is not in any way religious. 

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