Saturday, July 20, 2019
The poem The Lover by Don Patterson. :: English Literature
The poem The Lover by Don Patterson.    The Lover - Don Patterson    The poem "The Lover" by Don Patterson explores traditional notions of  fate and romantic love. The title represents both of these ideas, as  the lover is a tarot card used by fortune-tellers to tell you your  fate, and "the lover" has connotations of romance. He also uses vivid  imagery describes how a human is knocked down by a car, and against  the odds, is brought back to life because of love.    The poem has three stanzas of equal length and it has a half rhyme.  The main theme is identified by how love is the strongest force on the  planet.    Pattersonbegins by saying,    "Poor mortals with your horoscopes and blood tests."    This is in such a tone, that it is suggesting that a higher being is  speaking, and through references later in the poem, it seems likely  that the narrator is a classic Greek god.    Pattersonmentions "horoscopes" and "blood tests". These are both  methods that humans try in vain to predict the future. Blood tests  have connotations of illness, which becomes relevant later in the  poem.    "Even if the plane lands you safely, why should you not return to your  home in flames or ruins, your wife absconded, the children blind and  dying in their cots?"    Patterson uses very emotive and powerful imagery to try to prove a  point that our small lives are irrelevant in the eyes of the world. He  then summarises this stanza by saying,    "Only the lover walks upon the earth, careless of what fate prepares  for him".    This quote suggests that the lover is immune to the day-to-day  harshness of the world. His word choice also effectively displays ides  of immortality. It tells us that love can protect you from the perils  of the world.    In the second stanza, Pattersonintroduces the main incident in the  poem. A car knocks down the subject.    "So you step out at the lights, almost as if today you know you are  the special one. The women in the windshield lifting away her frozen  cry."    This metaphor is very effective as it has clear connotations of time  standing still and fear. Patterson is now writing on a personal basis,  as before he spoke generally.    He continues his biblical references when he says, "A white mask on a  stick". This imagery describes Atropos, the Greek god of death  (somewhat like Grim Reaper) When the time has come, they come to take  to take you away. He continues the theme of the underworld by saying,    "The sun leaves like a rocket; the sky goes out."    Patterson's effective imagery has apocalyptic connotations. This  simile compares the flash of a rocket to the brightness of the sun.  					    
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