Patricia Beer was an English poet, as well as a critic.
Along with this, she was known as a 'new romantic' poet, and established her
style with key subjects and themes of good and evil, love and the passing of
time; one subject that is constantly present in many of her works is the
subject of death, specifically how the dead haunt the living. This is presented
in her poem, The Lost Woman, using simple yet effective language, along with imagery (such as
metaphors and constant comparisons to nature), to describe a mother who, long
gone, still lives on within the shadows of her daughter's thoughts.
With the monotony of six stanzas with six lines each, Patricia
exhibits a hint of chaos and disturbance, with her half rhyming words making an
appearance in alternate stanzas presenting an ababcc scheme. To add to the
almost sinister set up, the mother is introduced in the first stanza with a
departure, "My mother went with... bad pain". The usage of the simple
word "went" instead of the more obvious option - "died" -
hints the reader to the presence of a slight detachment between the mother and
the daughter (or the poet herself). Despite this, there is still an element of
surprise, or disturbance, due to the departure, as seen through the
description, "a shocking white ambulance" - the use of
"shocking" shows that it was out of place, and didn't belong.
The second stanza develops the complicated new found
relationship between the mother and daughter. Through nature, the mother is
personified, depicted as ivy, or a climbing evergreen, transforming into a
tree; contrary to the fact that she, as a tree, is rooted to the ground, she
"still hops away like a rainbow... I approach". The mention of a "rainbow"
here alludes to the fact that no matter how close you get to one, you could
never catch it - likewise, no matter how close the daughter got, she would
never be able to catch her mother. Her desperation to do so is described
through the simple sentence: "my tendrils are the one that clutch."
It was her mother that was ivy, a climbing plant, with tendrils that would
reach for support, but it is the daughter that is holding on too tightly, as
seen through the word, "clutch." As a method of coping, the daughter
fabricates a life for her mother, as seen in the third stanza. In this life,
her mother is transformed, no longer bound by the clutches of her old life,
"frustrated no more"; the daughter imagines her ‘mother’ to be much
better than she really was, as a result of their weak and distant relationship,
as seen in the first stanza and the apparent out-of-reach set up.
The fourth and fifth paragraph is where the mother's
haunting becomes painfully clear. The mention of the "acquired lost
woman" appeals to the reader, for while it mentions that only poets and
heroes have them, the readers are invited to imagine the feeling of losing a
woman, such as a sister, or a mother, or a girlfriend, while simultaneously
making them realize that they don’t just haunt the home, but the life as well. The
anaphoric use of “who will not alter, who will not grow” gives rise to a
dramatic feel, and refers to the evergreen description of her mother, as well
as the daunting fact that after death everything is at a standstill. The fifth
paragraph presents the mother, the lost woman, and makes the readers realize
that the mother did not just haunt the daughter, but the wider populace as
well, as seen in the alliterative sentence, “hear how they hate… as they did”,
although this could still be part of the daughters illusions. Active during the
hazy time of twilight, “rabbit Light”, her mother is shown as a gentle,
harmless creature, and so, when she comes out during “rabbit light” she is seen
as exactly that; a rabbit.
The sixth and final paragraph completely shatters and
contradicts all ideas created by the reader; instead, the truth is revealed. The
previously recognized benign creature attacks the reader with a malign tone, as
seen in the word, “snaps” – it could have been an allusion to the sentence “nearly
always benign”, in which this was the rare times she wasn’t, or the word could
have been used to place the idea of something breaking into the readers’ minds.
The truth is further uncovered as the ‘lost woman’ attacks the daughter with
her words. The sentence “I sacrificed… you took it” shows the displacement of
their relationship. The mother sacrifices, and when given the chance, the
daughter rises above her, leaving her mom behind. “You are the ghost with the
bat-voice” – this statement takes a dark turn, because it is the mother,
deceased, accusing her daughter of being the ghost, a dead creature manifested
as a living creature, and with a firm four words, “I am not lost” the readers’
are forced to readjust their perspectives, realizing that all along it wasn’t the
mother, but the daughter herself.
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