Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from March, 2020

Analysis of Take one Home for the Kiddies

Synopsis= The poem regards the temporary nature of pets and the devaluation of life by children perhaps due to their inexperience with death. It is whether or not the parents are to blame in buying the pet for the children perhaps regarding working class negligence. Larkin appears to subvert the usual attitudes towards the innocence of children as he bands children as heartless and violent.  Key Quotations + Analysis  1.) "Take on home for the kiddies" "Take"= suggests the unnatural action of ownership over pets and the willingness people have to remove them from their natural habitat "One" furthers the ideals of lacking individuality as the poem never specifies the animal showing the lack of importance branded to the pets "Kiddies" suggests the commercialisation of life not only the lives of children but also of their pets.  2.) "Mam get us one of them" Colloquial language, Larkins use of the colloquial "mam" co...

Analysis of Talking in Bed

Synopsis= Larkin begins this poem with an intimate moment between a couple that is talking in bed, and this moment is carried through the entire poem to highlight that even in our most intimate moments we can feel isolated and lonely. Events such as talking in bed only makes an individual blatantly aware of our solitude and insignificance in such a vast world. Key Quotations + Analysis 1.) "Talking in bed ought to be easiest" The opening line of the poem may mark the realisation of the speakers loneliness, it is only when they are in such an intimate moment that they realise how isolated they are from the rest of the world. "ought" is an expression of doubt, this connotes that the speaker is confused by their conflicting emotions, they perhaps feel as if their conversations should flow easily but their realisation is blocking them from being so intimate. It could also highlight that perhaps the couple have grown apart over time and gradually they have ran ou...

Analysis of Mr Bleaney

Synopsis= In this poem, the speaker is lodging in a room that once belonged to a gentleman named Mr Bleaney. When observing this room that he lived his entire life in, it seems that the speaker is adopting more and more similar characteristics to Mr Bleaney himself. It is interesting to consider whether the details of Mr Bleaneys life is a product of the narrators imagination or are they true, factual details? Key Quotations + Analysis  1.) "One hired box" Here the reference to a box could allude to a coffin, insinuating that Mr Bleaney died in the room which accentuates his loneliness and solitude, in addition it could also imply that all of Mr Bleaneys possessions could fit into one box, this connotes that he may have lived in poverty and therefore had very few possessions to his name Context= in this poem there is reference to "the bodies", this refers to a periods in the 40's where there was a manufacturing boom in the Midlands, which could be an expl...

Analysis of Dockery and Son

Synopsis=  In Dockery and Son, Larkin takes a step back and reflects on his life, in particularly his life in the past. It is also clearly highlighting in this poem the obvious lack of offspring that Larkin has in his life, accompanied with the absence of marriage too, and Larkin is perhaps showing through language how far he differs from the pre programmed idealism that many people (such as Dockery) follow through life, which is traditionally marriage followed by children.  Key Quotations + Analysis  1.) "death-suited"  This has many connotations, it could initially imply that the death of his lineage is soon approaching, as he doesn't have a child to pursue it. It could also allude to Larkins feelings of the past, Larkins past is dead to him as he hasn't achieved the traditional idealism of having children.  Suited= the sombre life that Larkin has chosen to not follow this traditional path is suited to him.  Perhaps he is "death suited" as he is...