The limited person in the novel "British Patient" of British patient Michael Ondaatje of Michael Ondaatje is Almásy. Almásy is a man who is burned from head to toe, his character is limited because he can not recognize his identity. The novels occurred at a cottage that was being taken care of by Hana, a young nurse stayed to take care of Almassis, and other nurses fled to a safer place. She did not know where he came from, but she called him a British patient for his accents.
The English Patient of Michael Ondaatje tells stories of four different people and how they lived together in a small Italian villa during the Second World War. This novel has a rich iconic meaning, and the image is set to bring life. The novel is also full of patterns. The most common theme of Ondaatje may be a desert. The theme of the desert appears in the novel to achieve one of two things: representing the characteristics of a British patient or strengthening the country 's theme.
Before British patients suffered burns, he lost memory in an Italian hospital, he was an explorer of the Sahara and met Catherine, the other male's wife. Michael Ondaatje's core historical novel masterpiece is this passionate event when Katherine's husband Jeffrey attempted suicide by three people. This event ended with a drama that draws attention. British patients and Catherine survived and looked for evacuation centers in the cave. When a patient in the UK departed for help, Katherine disappeared in the cold and responded to the dark, so I wrote the last goodbye.
The weather tells the story and the mood and tone of the character. The weather is not just part of the landscape. For authors the weather is a device for plots and themes. A good example is Michael Ondaatje 's The English Patient, there is a way for him to evoke emotions, personality, tension, theme, and final story using the desert environment and enthusiasm.
Among patients in the UK, Michael Ondaatje proposed a totally different view on the influence of war on human psychology. Though he never said that, Ondaatje seems to have made a fairly specific view. The fate of his role seems to go beyond their control often. It seemed as if his character was hit by a huge tide and could not resist because of being taken away. Readers rarely think that the role of Ondaatje has other options besides thinking and acting in their own way. They are regarded as victims of the environment, they guarantee our sympathy and do not guarantee our judgment. Everyone left a war deeply hurt in spiritual sense.