Endlessly, time-honoured irritant,
A bubble is restively forming at your tip.
Burst it as fast as we can -
It will grow again, until we begin dying
Silently it inflates, till we're enclosed
And forced to start the struggle to get out:
Bestial, intent, real.
The wet spark comes, the bright blown walls collapse,
But what sad scapes we cannot turn from then
What ashen hills! what salted, shrunken lakes!
How leaden the ring looks,
Birmingham magic all discredited,
And how remote that bare and sunscrubbed room,
Intensely far, that padlocked cube of light
We neither define nor prove,
Where you, we dream, obtain no right of entry.
I am busy working to bring Philip Arthur Larkin's "Dry-Point" to life through some unique musical arrangements and will have a full analysis of the poem here for you later.
In the meantime, I invite you to explore the poem's themes, structure, and meaning. You can also check out the gallery for other musical arrangements or learn more about Philip Arthur Larkin's life and contributions to literature.
Check back soon to experience how "Dry-Point" transforms when verse meets melody—a unique journey that makes poetry accessible, engaging, and profoundly moving in new ways.