Philip Larkin’s Poetry: Themes, Form, Style, Imagery and Symbolism
between those who admire it and who detracting it, often protected by the divergent
readings that are made about his work, even so it is undeniable that we are in front of
one of the maximum poetic referents of our era, that it has reached to millions of people
without pretentions, nor trimmings whose direct language identification foul language
work continues surprising today and whose declining vision and displeases demanded
changes is a vision with which we can still felt identified nowadays.
3.REFERENCES
Balakian, Anna. 1993. ‘Symbolism’, in Preminger and Brogan (eds.):1256-1259.
Bayley, John. 1988. “Larkin’s Short Story Poems”, in Hartley (ed.):
272-283.
Brogan, T. V. F. and Scott, Clive. 1993. “Enjambren”, in Preminger and Brogan (eds.):
359-60.
Brownjohn, Alan. 1975. Philip Larkin. Essex: Longman.
Chesters, Graham. 2007 “Philip Larkin and the Poetics of Resistance.” About Larkin 23