I think that at the bottom of all art lies the impulse to preserve.

I think that at the bottom of all art lies the impulse to preserve.

Philip Larkin
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Dear, I can't write, it's all a fantasy: a kind of circling obsession.

Philip Larkin, Philip Larkin: Letters to Monica
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Everyone should be forcibly transplanted to another continent from their family at the age of three.

Philip Larkin, Philip Larkin: Letters to Monica
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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, Philip Larkin: Letters to Monica
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There is bad in all good authors: what a pity the converse isn't true!

Philip Larkin, Philip Larkin: Letters to Monica
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I think that at the bottom of all art lies the impulse to preserve.

Philip Larkin
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When I throw back my head and howlPeople (women mostly) sayBut you've always done what you want, You always get your way- A perfectly vile and foulInversion of all that's been.What the old ratbags meanIs I've never done what I don't.So the shit in the shuttered chateauWho does his five hundred wordsThen parts out the rest of the dayBetween bathing and booze and birdsIs far off as ever, but soIs that spectacled schoolteaching sod(Six kids, and the wife in pod, And her parents coming to stay)...Life is an immobile, locked, Three-handed struggle betweenYour wants, the world's for you, and (worse)The unbeatable slow machineThat brings what you'll get. Blocked, They strain round a hollow stasisOf havings-to, fear, faces.Days sift down it constantly. Years.--The Life with the Hole in It

Philip Larkin, Philip Larkin Poetry
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Most writers deserve the reputation posterity has bestowed upon them: You can’t for long conceal the toxic spots on your character—Philip Larkin is Exhibit A—nor can you conceal your dignity, your humanism, your regard for veracity and freedom.

William Giraldi
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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, Philip Larkin: Letters to Monica
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Work is a kind of vacuum, an emptiness, where I just switch off everything except the scant intelligence necessary to keep me going. God, the people are awful - great carved monstrosities from the sponge-stone of secondratedness. Hideous.

Philip Larkin, Philip Larkin: Letters to Monica
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You know, I know I should be just as panicky as you about the filthy work - one wants to do nothing in the evenings, certainly not spread rotten books around & dredge for a 'line'. It must be like still being a student, with an essay to do after a week's drinking, only you haven't had the drinking. Quite clearly, to me, you aren't a voluntary worker, from the will: you do it by intuitive flashes, more like an act of creation, & when the flashes don't come, as of course they don't, especially when the excess energy of undergraduate days is gone, then it is a hideous unnatural effort.

Philip Larkin, Philip Larkin: Letters to Monica
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