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"The Old Fools" by Philip Larkin (read by Tom O'Bedlam)

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  • čas přidán 4. 10. 2009
  • Larkin had a persistent terror of death and he wasn't looking forward to old age, either. He needn't have worried, it never happened. Larkin died at 63.
    Freud said that the unconscious mind did not believe in death because it considered itself immortal: therefore repressed fear of death didn't exist or motivate decisions or actions - and fear of death is really fear of having your balls cut off because you fancy your Mother. Believe me, I don't make this stuff up:
    "a secondary substitutive phenomenon of the castration fear which grew out of an inadequately resolved Oedipus Complex". If you feel the need to comment keep it relevant and impersonal, please.
    The Old Fools Larkin describes are suffering from illness, not old age. Such illness is not an inevitability and some people live long active lives. However it is a strong possibility and that's a good argument for staying busy and eating a sensible diet, i.e. don't live on tea and biscuits, like so many old people do.
    We live in a society that is most prejudiced against old age. People are so afraid of looking old that they have plastic surgery to look a freaky forty rather than a nifty fifty.
    Palmerston was Prime Minister of England at 81, Gladstone at 84. Titian was still painting at 98. Chaucer didn't start "The Canterbury Tales" until he was 63. Tennyson wrote "Crossing the Bar" at 83. Cervantes finished Don Quixote at 68. These are not exceptions - most old men still have their faculties.
    Plenty of old guys still have a happy fulfilled life with better sex than they ever got in their twenties: they're more likely to know how to do it properly because they've had more practice. Many old people will tell you they got happier with each decade. The other thing an older man can do better than a younger man is drive a car. Insurance companies think so and it pays them to know.
    Also it seems that a man never gets too old to father a child. Charlie Chaplin did it at 73, Anthony Quinn at 81, Pablo Picasso at 68. Children of older fathers do have a higher risk of autism but Dad is more likely to treat them responsibly and more likely to bestow wisdom and wealth - and sooner.
    "The Head of an Old Man", was by Peter Paul Rubens, 1610

Komentáře • 13

  • @jin_cotl
    @jin_cotl Před 2 lety +6

    Amazing

  • @sendaitohoku
    @sendaitohoku Před 11 lety +14

    He's not talking about death when he says "We shall find out." He's talking about old age - we will find out what the old fools are really thinking because we will be them. He's pretty clear what he thinks about any chance of an afterlife in the poem. There is none - only oblivion.

  • @KevTheImpaler
    @KevTheImpaler Před 2 lety +3

    That was cheery.

  • @ceceliapassarella8485
    @ceceliapassarella8485 Před 9 lety +4

    Even as a child and a teen I always preferred the company of the elders even now also they seemed so much wiser their stories so much better that's what happens when u are raised by others than ur parents or family

  • @lilmissfoxygirl
    @lilmissfoxygirl Před 11 lety +6

    "Growing old is inevitable, growing up is optional." ;-)

  • @aesthetic1950
    @aesthetic1950 Před 15 lety +3

    "We live in a society that is most prejudiced against old age. People are so afraid of looking old that they have plastic surgery to look a freaky forty rather than a nifty fifty." AMEN.

  • @alanna4858
    @alanna4858 Před 15 lety +1

    Better sex? Really? Well I am 24 and not in the least prejudiced against older men. I knew that some of the best works have been done by older men. I like older men.

  • @Oakleaf700
    @Oakleaf700 Před 13 lety +1

    Well, none of us know what will happen after death- but as Larkin says-''we shall all find out!'' personally I think there is a chance of some sort of afterlife, and i really hope there is, as it would be lovely to be reunited with old friends, old dogs, and beloved family members... And if it is only Oblivion, like the blackness of a general anaesthetic, well, at least we won't be aware of it!

  • @zimshowfan
    @zimshowfan Před 3 lety +1

    Perhaps if Aubrey de Grey and his team at SENS develop their anti-aging therapies in the next couple of decades, then very many of us living today won't become anything like the old fools. It wouldn't eliminate all possibility of death, but it would make sure no one dies simply from getting too old and losing their minds.

  • @dp-sr1fd
    @dp-sr1fd Před 4 lety +1

    Once a man twice a child as the saying goes. The bit in between contains all the shit

  • @D375
    @D375 Před 14 lety +1

    Getting old isn't optional - but acting old, is ....

  • @lilmissfoxygirl
    @lilmissfoxygirl Před 11 lety

    Prejudiced against the young AND old. You can age gracefully, but there will always be people who think that children are lesser human because they haven't lived as long.

  • @danasheys9300
    @danasheys9300 Před 4 lety +1

    Nice try at trying to make us old guys feel better