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  1. The Less Deceived”: Subjectivity, Gender, Sex and Love in Sylvia Plath's and Philip Larkin's Poetry by Alita Fonseca Balbi Submitted to the Programa de Pós-graduação em Letras: Estudos Literários in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Mestre em Literaturas de Expressão Inglesa.

  2. It is a matter of opinion as to whether the young woman, as Larkin contends, was the “less deceived”. Structure The poem comprises two stanzas, the first nine lines and the second eight lines.

  3. Some of these early sonnets (‘Conscript’, ‘A Writer’, ‘Observation’) could be taken for Auden, whereas such North Ship poems as ‘The moon is full tonight ’ or ‘To write one song, I said’ sound less like Yeats than like imitations of him: even the fact that they have no titles, when we realize how carefully chosen, and how important, the titles of Larkin's mature poems are ...

  4. Philip Larkin's second collection, 'The Less Deceived' was published by The Marvell Press in 1955. 'The Less Deceived' contained the mature Philip Larkin style—that of a detached observer of what Jean Hartley referred to as 'ordinary people doing ordinary things' - the virtues of which came to be as

  5. 9 de mar. de 2019 · The Guide has been written primarily for students of GCE A Level English Literature as specified by EDEXCEL in the post-2015 syllabus (9ET0). It addresses the requirement to study, under Component 3: Poetry, one text from a prescribed list, namely The Movement Poet: Philip Larkin: The Less Deceived.

  6. 14 de set. de 2020 · Cover title: The Whitsun weddings and The less deceived by Philip Larkin Includes bibliographical references (pages 76-77) Access-restricted-item

  7. Philip Larkin's second collection, The Less Deceived was published by The Marvell Press in 1955, and now appears for the first time in Faber covers. The eye can hardly pick them out From the cold shade they shelter in, Till wind distresses tail and mane; Then one crops grass, and moves about - The other seeming to look on - And stands anonymous again. from 'At Grass'

    • Philip Larkin