He added, talking about an essay on Philip Larkin that made it into “Arguably”: “I knew the collection was going to come out even if I did not, and I was very pleased when I finished that one, because of the way it ends: ‘Our almost-instinct almost true:/ What will survive of us is love.’ I remember thinking, if that’s the last piece I write, that will do me.” After a moment he went on: “The influence of Larkin is much greater than I thought. He’s perfect for people who are thinking about death. You’ve got that old-line Calvinist pessimism and modern, acid cynicism — a very good combo. He’s not liking what he sees, and not pretending to.”
Monday, October 10, 2011
Brave man ...
... Christopher Hitchens on Writing, Mortality and Cancer - NYTimes.com. (Hat tip, Dave Lull.)
The other day my teacher quoted Philip larkin in class: Nothing like something happens anywhere. WoW!
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