Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Born Yesterday
- Information
- for Sally Amis - welcoming a
new-born baby into the world
- Born Yesterday
- pun: literally written day after Sally was
born / used to symbolise how the baby
'knows nothing' - childhood innocence
- platonic relationship + awareness of the
negative (like Nettles + Brothers)
- an acceptance of the harsh realities
of life, like in 'Sonnet 43'
- But if it shouldn’t, then May you be ordinary;
Have, like other women, An average of talents:
- But - negative
- ordinary -
unexceptional, common
place, of no special note
- average of talents: cooking,
cleaning (womanly duties)
- Philip Larkin
- English poet. 1922 -1985
- solitary man who disliked fame
- observations of everyday life
- negative + cynical
- Not the usual stuff
About being beautiful,
Or running off a spring
Of innocence and love -
- usual stuff - very un-poetic, common phrase used to deliberately
contradict the special, unrealism hopes people normally have for a
child. Strikes out against other people's comments
- beauty beautiful -
alliteration: makes the
phrase roll off the tongue +
sound elegant + attractive
- spring - natural flow of water. From folk
tales: a fountain able to make people
young again. Highlights unrealistic
associations with youth + baby-hood
- Structure
- Made a wish for the baby
- He first tells us what it is NOT. Creates
suspense, much like suspense about how
child will turn out
- Wishes catch us off guard, especially
given intended recipient of poem
- Disclaimer 'fi' shows us that
Larkin's wish is positive after all
- They will all wish you that,
And should it prove possible,
Well, you’re a lucky girl.
- he's not saying he doesn't wish that on her, but he is cynical about how realistic those
expectations are. These traits are by products of luck, over which you have no control
- lucky girl - condescending phrase
- Nothing uncustomary To pull you off your balance,
That, unworkable itself, Stops all the rest from
working.
- doesn't want her to be
ridiculously good-looking or
talented because as a result it
will disrupt your whole life
- In fact, may you be dull —
If that is what a skilled,
Vigilant, flexible,
Unemphasised, enthralled
Catching of happiness is
called.
- if - disclaimer
- 'I don't want you to be dull I want you to be skilled,
vigilant, flexible, unemphasised + enthralled -> but
these qualities are thought to be dull by others'
- quick firing off of
these 5 adjectives
shows how
complicated
catching happiness
is
- skilled - trained or
experienced to do a set task
(domestically - sexist views)
- vigilant - watching out
to detect danger,
protective over your
family
- flexible - adaptable + willing
- unemphasised - not
bragging. Prefix 'un'
suggests that the lack of
something can be a virtue
- enthralled - captivating +
charming
- catching - language of
infection is used to suggest
that happiness can be
caught
- last 2 lines rhyme, making them
stand out and contrast the
conversational tone of poem.
Clearly these 2 lines, like the volta
in a Shakespearean sonnet, contain
the message of the poem
- message: true happiness can be found for a
woman in embracing the domestic role of a
wife (cooking, cleaning, looking after family,
being humble) -> sexist
- Tightly-folded bud, I have wished you something
None of the others would:
- tightly-folded bud - metaphor:
undeveloped part of a plant (like a
new-born baby swaddled in a blanket).
Has its whole life to come - opening of
its flower, beauty etc.
- you - direct address
- Not ugly, not good-looking,
- repetition of negative words
- overemphasises negativity