CHURCH GOING- Philip Larkin
“Church Going” is one of the best of Philip Larkin’s
poems. The title itself is puzzling. It gives us two different meanings.
One meaning is that it is a regular visit to a church. The other shows the
decline of the institution because people lost faith in God and religion. His
greatest virtues are clarity and close observation of social life, perfect
control over feeling and tone. The language is always simple and lucid and the
idiom has great variety. Through
his poetry Larkin advises us not to be deceived by illusions or ideals.
He asks us to have a better awareness of man’s weaknesses. Larkin is called a sceptic poet. He enters the church as a sceptic
who does not have any faith in the church. But he slowly realizes the
truth that church fulfils a deeply felt human need and that it is “a serious house on a serious earth it
is”.
Making sure
that nothing is going on inside, the speaker of the poem enters the church and
closes the door behind him. He finds that it is just like any other
church. He also notices the furniture, furnishings such as the plate, the
pyx, prayer books, the Bible, flowers cut for Sunday holy Mass, matting, seats,
the baptismal font and the organ. There are no worshippers in the church and
the silence tensed him. He looks around him with contempt and he feels a bad
smell when he stands staring at the altar where the church services are
conducted. Having observed these details, the speaker takes off his cycle-clips
in an act of mock-reverence. He did not wear a hat.
The speaker
then moves forward and touches the baptismal font with his hands. He notices
that the roof looks almost new but he does not know whether it has been cleaned
or restored because he is not a regular church-goer. Then he mounts the lectern
and began to read out a few verses from the Bible. After that he comes
back to the door and signs the visitor’s book and donates an Irish six pence which has no value in England. Thus
all his activities and manners inside the church show that he is a sceptic who
has no faith in the church service. Finally he thinks that his time is wasted,
because the place is not worth visiting at all.
But the speaker
could not avoid the church. Over and again he visited the church and each time
his skeptical attitude grew less and less. This time he stood inside the
churching thinking about its future. As science and technology began to
develop, people lost faith in the institution of church. In future, churches
will become empty and completely out of use. A few cathedrals may be
preserved as museums for future generation because of its great art and
architectural value. Their parchment, the plate and the pyx may be kept in
locked cases. But other church buildings will become sheltering centers for
sheep and other animals and poor people during rainy time. Sometime people may
avoid such places as unlucky because of its graveyard. The speaker of the poem thinks
that perhaps the church will become the centre of superstitions in the coming
years. But if faith disappeared,
naturally superstition will also be disappeared because both are connected with
each other. Finally the church buildings will tumble down and only its
concrete pillars would be standing as silent witness of the past glory of the
church. The church path will be over grown with grass, weeds and creepers. It
will become a deserted place. In course of time future generation will forget
even the shape of the churches.
Now the speaker
of the poem reflects who will be the last person to visit the church for its
purpose. It may be a lover of antiquity who is eager to see very old things or
some Christmas-addict who visits church only on important occasions such as the
Easter or Christmas and he wants to enjoy the smell of myrrh burnt, the
flowers, the choir music, the dress worn by the choir and the priest and the
music of the organ.
Finally the
speaker realizes that the church is a serious house on a serious
earth. A church is a symbol of man’s sincere search for the
ultimate meaning of life. Science and technology cannot solve his
spiritual needs. That is why the speaker himself comes to the church again and
again when he is tired of the problems of life. A church is equipped with
baptismal fond, flowers and the graveyard where “all human glories are buried”
with his bones. Thus the ceremonies of most important events in man’s life such
as birth, marriage and death are conducted in the church. In
this sense we can say that this is a religious poem. Thus the first
meaning of the title “Church Going” is affirmed. The poem underlines the
truth that the power and the glory of God cannot be destroyed by the
advancement of science and technology. On the other hand the church will
continue to be the centre focusing universal love and peace and giving
spiritual solace to man’s problems and sufferings in his life.
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