The North Ship

The North Ship

First edition
Author Philip Larkin
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre Poetry
Publisher Fortune Press
Published in English
1945

The North Ship is a collection of poems by Philip Larkin (1922-1985), and was published in 1945 by Reginald A. Caton's Fortune Press. Caton did not pay his writers and expected them to buy a certain number of copies themselves. A similar arrangement had been used in 1934 by Dylan Thomas for his first anthology.

The volume was published again, in 1966, by Faber and Faber Limited.[1] In the 1945 version there are 31 items, numbered with Roman numerals. The last of these, "The North Ship" is a set of five poems tracking a ship's northward progress. Of the 30 single poems, only seven have titles. Some of the poems were composed while Larkin was an undergraduate at the University of Oxford, but the bulk were written in the period 1943 to 1944 when he was running the public library in Wellington, Shropshire and writing his second novel A Girl in Winter.

In the 1966 reissue an extra poem, "Waiting for breakfast, while she brushed her hair" was added at the end. This edition is still in print.

The North Ship constitutes the first part of the 2003 edition of Larkin's Collected Poems

Content

The book contains 32 poems:

SequencePoem title or first line
IAll catches alight...
IIThis was your place of birth, this daytime palace...
IIIThe moon is full tonight...
IV Dawn
V Conscript
VIKick up the fire, and let the flames break loose...
VIIThe horns of the morning...
VIII Winter
IXClimbing the hill within the deafening wind...
XWithin the dream you said...
XI Night-Music
XIILike the train's beat...
XIIII put my mouth...
XIV Nursery Tale
XV The Dancer
XVIThe bottle is drunk out by one...
XVIITo write one song, I said...
XVIIIIf grief could burn out...
XIX Ugly Sister
XXI see a girl dragged by the wrists...
XXII dreamed of an out-thrust arm of land...
XXIIOne man walking a deserted platform...
XXIIIIf hands could free you, heart...
XXIVLove, we must part now: do not let it be...
XXVMorning has spread again...
XXVIThis is the first thing...
XXVIIHeaviest of flowers, the head...
XXVIIIIs it for now or for always...
XXIXPour away that youth...
XXXSo through that unripe day you bore your head...
XXXIThe North Ship

Legend
Songs 65° N
70° N Fortunetelling
75° N Blizzard
Above 80° N

XXXIIWaiting for breakfast, while she brushed her hair...

See also

References


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