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1979 poem by Philip Larkin From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Mower is a poem by British poet Philip Larkin, written on 12 June 1979.[1] It was first published in Humberside, the Hull Literary Club magazine, in Autumn 1979.
The poem describes a moment when the speaker accidentally killed a hedgehog with his lawn mower while mowing his lawn.
Author Maeve Brennan recalled an earlier incident in which Larkin had deliberately killed a hedgehog with his car, and his guilt about it. She linked that incident with the later poem.[2] Author Sisir Kumar Chatterjee writes that the poem embodies Larkin's themes of "mutual care, sympathy, and kindness."[3] Janice Rossen notes this is a recurring theme in his work, citing the similar suffering of a dying rabbit in "Myxomatosis," published in The Less Deceived.[4]
The archive of Philip Larkin's work at University of Hull includes the blue 'Victa' rotary lawn mower involved in the incident that inspired the poem.[5][6]
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