The Toads are returning!

From Wednesday 5th to Sunday 9th of August the City of Hull will be at the centre of a massive celebration of Larkin and toad-related activity.

It is five years since the famous, and highly popular toads took to the streets of Hull under the umbrella of Larkin25 and now they are set to make a triumphant return.

‘Toads Revisited’ marks the 30th anniversary of Larkin’s death and the importance of his legacy.  A ‘Toads Revisited Trail’ around the City, a bike library, an audio-visual installation based on Larkin’s poem ‘Toads Revisited’ and a huge inflatable Larkin Toad hovering over the city centre are just a few of the events planned. And on Sunday 9th August, Larkin’s birthday, there will be an evening of performances of newly written musical compositions by David Gawthorpe inspired by, and situated at, key locations along the Larkin Trail, including Spring Bank Cemetery, Paragon Station and Ye Olde Black Boy, one of Larkin’s favourite jazz haunts. 

A weekend definitely not to be missed!

Click here for full details of the events.

 

Larkin on the Move: The Bike Library

Larkin was an ardent cyclist – as well as a poet. So – linked to a programme of events on Larkin’s birthday weekend (8th-9th August) focused on ‘Toads revisited’ and sponsored by the Larkin Society – Artlink in Hull are working in partnership with Park Bench Theatre and East Coast Bicycles to create a bike library. Park Bench Theatre Company will take to the streets of Hull and the East Riding on a beautiful vintage bike with a library trailer full of poetry books! You are invited to experience interactive performances and workshops based around the poetry of Philip Larkin and other writers. These family-friendly events are ideal for all ages!
The locations have been carefully chosen to reflect places with special connections to Philip Larkin and are all included in The Larkin Trail
Saturday 18th July, 5pm – 6.30pm, Paragon Interchange, Hull City Centre, HU1 3UF
Friday 24th July, 5pm – 6.30pm, Trinity Square, Hull HU1 1RR
Saturday 25th July, 4pm – 5.30pm, Pearson Park (by the Victorian Conservatory), Princes Ave, Hull HU5 2TQ
Saturday 22nd August, 1pm – 2.30 pm, Humber Bridge Country Park, Hessle HU13 0HB
Saturday 22nd August, 4pm – 5.30pm, The Pavilion, King George V Playing Fields, Northgate, Cottingham, HU16 5QW
Saturday 5th September [TBC], 1pm – 2.30pm, The Pier & Waiting Rooms, Nelson Street, Hull HU1 1XE
For enquiries or further information please contact Rachel Elm, Phone 01482 345104 or email artsdevelopment@artlink.uk.net

 

The Philip Larkin Society & East Riding Poetry Prize Winners 2015

We are pleased to announce that The Philip Larkin Poetry Prize 2015 at the Bridlington Poetry Festival was awarded to Mel Pryor for her poem, Three stops from St. Francis Comprehensive.

03 Mel Pryor, first prize in the Philip Larkin Society competition 2015

The East Riding Prize was awarded to Sarah Stutt, for Preparation.

04 Sarah Stutt, winner of E Riding Prize with judge Jean Sprackland

The Young Poet’s Prize went to Adam Sreeves for his poem, We, the untitled, persist.

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The entries were judged by Jean Sprackland, who commented on the difficult task she had in judging them:

Judging this competition was an absorbing task – so many strong poems, and so very varied in theme, form and style. Poetry reading is slow reading, and I enjoyed spending time with these poems, letting them grow and develop as I came back and back to them, feeling the strongest of them take hold of my own imagination and not let go. The final decisions were very difficult because the poems were so different that it was hard to compare them. In the end, it is just as Emily Dickinson said: “If I read a book and it makes my whole body so cold no fire can warm me I know that is poetry. If I feel physically as if the top of my head were taken off, I know that is poetry. These are the only way I know it. Is there any other way?

02 Poet JeanSprackland in the Orangery, Sewerby Hall, Bridlington. httpjeansprackland.com

We offer our congratulations to all the prize winners and runners up.

Full details, including the poems, can be found on the Wordquake website.

 

 

 

Poets’ Corner – The Dean’s Announcement

Here is the full text of the Dean of Westminster’s announcement, made on 17th June 2015.

Philip Larkin

University of Hull

Statement by the Dean of Westminster

17th June 2015

With the kings and queens in Westminster Abbey are buried or memorialised 3,300 men and women, many of whom have contributed with distinction to the health and well-being not only of the people of England and the United Kingdom and Commonwealth but of the whole English-speaking world. Within the Abbey’s ancient walls, alive with prayer and celebration, are writers and poets whose work has entertained and ennobled their readers, lying among the benefactors, inventors and scientists, actors and architects, clergy, artists and musicians, politicians, judges and explorers, soldiers, sailors and airmen.

Decisions whom to memorialise are not altogether easy. And they must be made by the Dean, who is of course fallible. There are no rules or regulations applying to the decision. Each Dean makes his own decision. Of course, generally Deans have consulted those with experience and recognised expertise. In the end, no doubt, Deans go with their gut instinct or are swayed by impressive voices and circumstances.

My predecessor Wesley Carr was approached many years ago about a memorial for Philip Larkin in Poets’ Corner and was impressed by the case as his predecessor Michael Mayne would have been. But Dr Carr believed it right to wait at least twenty years until it was possible to see whether a reputation was likely to be secure. He did not refuse memorialisation but delayed it.

On 6 December 2011 – Ted Hughes was memorialised in the Abbey. The intention to memorialise him in Poets’ Corner had been announced in March 2010. Alan Bennett wrote in his diary on 23 March 2010, ‘That Ted Hughes should have got into Poets’ Corner ahead of Larkin wouldn’t have surprised Larkin, though he must surely have a better claim. Though Hughes fits the popular notion of what a poet should be, many more of Larkin’s writings have passed into the national memory.’

Philip Larkin had a memorial service in the Abbey on 1st February 1986 – and it was not entirely without controversy with some traditionalist clergy. I do not know what were their reasons. Perhaps they were only concerned about one pithy expression in the opening line of one of his poems. If so, their concern can be summarily dismissed. His letters had not yet been published. They give us pause. He was expressing himself in a way that would be generally unacceptable today but that was then and private.

It may be that some might have complained back in 1986 that Larkin was no practising Christian, no adherent of the Church. That does not appear to me to erect a barrier against memorialisation in the Abbey. We who are Christian believers see God’s work in all that is good and beautiful, see the love and joy of God working through those who share in God’s wonderful work of creation, even when they are unaware of their share in God’s work. Philip Larkin, it has been said, was an agnostic but an Anglican agnostic.

Alan Bennett also wrote in his diary on that day in 2010, ‘Two deans back, and not long after Larkin’s death, I remember Michael Mayne saying that Larkin had earned his place on the strength of ‘Church Going’ alone.’ I agree but there is much more besides.

I am pleased to announce here in his library my decision to place a ledger stone in Poets’ Corner near the grave of Geoffrey Chaucer to commemorate the life and work of Philip Larkin. I am grateful for the collaboration of the Philip Larkin Society.

It is my intention that the memorial should be installed and dedicated in the autumn of 2016. Some will see it as a fitting curtain raiser for Hull’s year as City of Culture 2017.