Subtle Maneuvers

Subtle Maneuvers

Share this post

Subtle Maneuvers
Subtle Maneuvers
Making art is like setting a trap

Making art is like setting a trap

Philip Larkin on constructing “the device”

Mason Currey's avatar
Mason Currey
Sep 18, 2023
∙ Paid
181

Share this post

Subtle Maneuvers
Subtle Maneuvers
Making art is like setting a trap
40
22
Share

“It is sometimes useful to remind ourselves of the simpler aspects of things normally regarded as complicated.” So begins a 1957 essay by the English poet and librarian Philip Larkin, titled “The Pleasure Principle,” in which Larkin breaks down the writing of a poem into three stages. Since this newsletter often seems to be focused on complicating the creative process—what can I say, I like making things difficult—today I thought it might be fun to join Larkin in taking a stab at simplicity.

So here are Larkin’s three stages of writing a poem, which I think you could apply pretty easily to any kind of artistic practice:

Stage one: Get obsessed with a feeling

Specifically, Larkin writes that you must become “obsessed with an emotional concept to such a degree that [you are] compelled to do something about it.”

OK, simple enough—though I think it’s worth noting that this first stage is where a lot of creative projects falter! If your initial impulse is to, say, show off how brilliant and sensitive you are, or to compete with what your fellow artists are doing, or to win money and fame, then—according to Larkin—you’ve failed before you’ve even started. As he writes, “If there has been no preliminary feeling, the device [i.e., the poem] has nothing to reproduce and the reader will experience nothing.”

Stage two: Try to replicate this feeling in others

This post is for paid subscribers

Already a paid subscriber? Sign in
© 2025 Mason Currey
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start writingGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture

Share