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The Philip Larkin Society |
Neurotics - September 2006Chosen by Colleen Hawkins
What surprises me most about 'Neurotics' is that fact that its author doesn’t seem to have valued it very highly, since the poem was only published after Larkin’s death (and nearly forty years after it was written) in the superior, original version of the Collected Poems. For me it was one of the most impressive additions to the Larkin canon that came to us when that volume appeared and reading the poem today I’m still mystified as to why, given that it was completed in 1949, he deemed it of insufficient quality to find a place in The Less Deceived. To me it seems as strong as (or even stronger than) many of the poems that did make the grade.
…The mind, it’s said, is free:
Sadly, Larkin’s neurotics have long been abandoned as hopeless chronic cases by those psychiatric professionals who are supposed to be providing them with care (“No one gives you a thought" and "No one pretends/To want to help you now”). Treatment is no longer a component of any “care” being offered. Instead younger patients jostle for prime position and, as is so often the case in such institutions, there’s only so much actual treatment to go around. Inevitably it’s the older patients who find themselves sidelined. Their basic wants are met, but without the treatment which ought to be theirs by right, predictably they lose their battle for mental health and the poem ends on a tragic note with them being enveloped by the world of delusion and hallucination with little hope of finding their way back (“a hired darkness ends/Your long defence against the non-existent”).
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