SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 39
Download to read offline
Sylvia Plath Daddy
Relationships can be hard to manage, especially when it comes to family. The poem "Daddy" by Sylvia Plath is about a cynical father who died
and left his daughter a wreck. Although the father was a bad man, his daughter thought the world of him. The speaker of the poem hates her father
because she wants to be like him even though he was not a good man. At a few different places throughout the poem, the speaker states that her father
was anything but a good man. She describes a photo she has of him in front of a blackboard with, "A cleft in your chin instead of your foot/But no
less a devil for that, no not" (53–54) which implies that her father had a cleft, much like the cleft foot the devil is commonly pictured with, and it
didn't make him any less of a devil due to its improper location.... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
"The vampire who said he was you/And drank my blood for a year,/Seven years, if you want to know." The end of that line sounds like the narrator
could be sarcastic, as if her father never had time to listen to her. She talks about how her father broke her heart with all the evil he did, which could
have taken time away from her. He died when she was ten, and at age 20 she tried to commit suicide because she wanted to be close to him again that
even being in the same coffin would suffice (60–65). The closest she could be to her father alive was by marrying a man who embodies her father,
particularly his dark side since it seemed to be all she knew. And she finds a man just so, "A man in black with a Meinkampf look/And a love of the
rack and the screw" (65–66). She chooses her husband even though he was bad to make up for lost time; she was young when her father died and
didn't get a chance to be with him as long as she
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath Allusions
Written task 2 Sylvia Plath is not your average poet. Plath is a poet from the Confessional era who also suffered from depression. She uses a lot of
similes, metaphors, and allusions in her poems, mainly Greek mythology. She uses mythological allusions including stories like Midas' Touch and
Narcissus as well as historical allusions using Jews and concentration camps to add more depth and meaning. Plath refers to the story Midas' Touch in
her poem In Midas' Country. Midas turns everything he touches into gold and she compares August to Midas saying it turns things gold. Plath states,"
August gives over its Midas touch, wind bares a flintier landscape". She is saying as August is ending, the gold is leaving nature and everything is
getting darker. Plath is giving a more illustrative example of just how golden and bright everything was in August. August is known to be one of the
hottest months with everything being sun kissed. She says," Apples gold on the bough, goldfinch, goldfish, golden tiger cat stock...". She claims
everything is much more brighter and golden in... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The poem Daddy, referencing the camps and Nazis, is supposed to be a negative sounding poem. "...an engine chuffing me off like a Jew. A Jew to
Dachau, Auschwitz, Belsen," explains how Plath was feeling. The places listed are concentration camps where the Jews went, with her having felt
like a Jew herself.Plath comparing herself to a Jew explains how distant she felt from her father.Obviously Jews and Nazis did not have a close
relationship, so her calling her father a Nazi explains her feelings. "... with your Luftwaffe, your gobbledygoo. And your neat mustache and your
Aryan eye,bright blue", is the description she gives her father. Neat mustache and bright blue eyes were traits of Nazis and her father had all of those
and Luftwaffe was the German military. By comparing her father to a Nazi, it shows what kind of man he was to
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Essay On Sylvia Plath
"Dying is an art, like everything else. I do it exceptionally well. I do it so it feels like hell. I do it so it feels real. I guess you could say I've a call"
(2603). Sylvia Plath was born October 27, 1932, in Boston Massachusetts. She carried herself with a non–apologetic attitude and an obsession with
death, so much so that she tried to take her own life on more than one occasion. Her first attempt happened during the summer of her junior year in
college. After taking several sleeping pills, she crawled under her mother's house and was not found until three days later. After some time in a
psychiatric hospital, she recovered fully and attained a Fulbright scholarship to Newnham College, Cambridge ("Sylvia Plath," Famousauthors.org).
Her poetry was known as a confessional type, typically based on her innermost feelings and thoughts, with a twist for the dramatic and sensationalism
("Sylvia Plath," Biography.com). She also wrote one novel, The Bell Jar, a dark literary work said to parallel much of her own life. In a forward to The
Bell Jar, written by Frances McCullough, McCullough states "Although her illness was never diagnosed, several researchers in the field have noted
Plath's unerring description of schizophrenic perception..." (xvi). Perhaps this condition had something to do with Plath's early demise, for it was not
long after publication of The Bell Jar, that Plath made the decision to take her own life.
According to an article on the New World Encyclopedia's
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Spinster, by Sylvia Plath
"Spinster" by Sylvia Plath is a poem that consists of a persona, who in other words serves as a "second self" for the author and conveys her
innermost feelings. The poem was written in 1956, the same year as Plath's marriage to Ted Hughes, who was also a poet. The title suggests that the
persona is one who is not fond of marriage and the normal rituals of courtship as a spinster is an unmarried woman, typically an older woman who is
beyond the usual age of marriage and may never marry. The persona of the poem is a woman who dislikes disorder and chaos and finds relationships
to be as unpredictable as the season of spring, in which there is no sense of uniformity. In this poem, Plath not only uses a persona to disclose her
feelings, but ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In the winter, nothing is out of proportion and everything is disciplined like the heart, whereas in the spring when budding relationships and spring
fever make the heart out of control. This image of winter that Plath provides, suggests that the woman is cold emotionally as she has little emotion.
She has the frame of mind that nature like human interaction should be in black and white with as little color or disarray as possible. Towards the end
of the poem, Plath once again discloses the persona's abhorrence toward spring. She writes, "but hereвЋЇa burgeoning unruly enough to pitch her five
queenly wits into vulgar motley" (19–21). The word "burgeoning", which means growth, indicates the persona admitting that she knows that growth is
uncontrollable: flowers bloom, relationships develop, and spring occurs every year (19). However, the persona is depressed because she feels like
she has no control and that scares her. Spring is too complex for her to understand and it falls outside of her comfort zone. Still, by using the phrase
"five queenly wits", Plath points out that the reader feels superior to all that is in disorder (20). Plath explains, "let idiots reel giddy in bedlam spring:
she withdrew neatly", which implies that the persona separates herself from society and would rather be in solitude (23–24). When one is alone, life is
less confusing and everything is structured like the season of winter. As a result, the persona puts a wall
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath Research Paper
Sylvia came into the world on October 27, 1932, in Boston, Massachusetts. Sylvia Plath had been writing since she was a child. She started writing
by starting a journal. But when she was eight years her father died. Sylvia and her father did not have the best relationship. She said that he was a
horrible father to her and compared him to the Nazis in her poem "Daddy". In this poem she talked about hating her father and how she wanted him to
die. She also wrote this poem to cope with the grief and mixture of feelings she experiences when her father suddenly died of diabetes. Her mother,
Aurelia Plath, soon moved the family after his death and came to Wellesley, Massachusetts.Sylvia's poems that she wrote in her teens were published
in regional newspapers and articles. (Academy of American Poets). Soon ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In college, Sylvia Plath worked for Mademoiselle magazine as a guest editor. Soon after, Plath went into a depression because she missed the chance
to meet her idol, Dylan Thomas, and she was rejected from attending Harvard's summer program for writing. She tried to commit suicide by hiding
under her bed and taking her mother's pills but she was found before she died. She went to a mental facility and eventually recovered from her
depression. Plath returned to Smith and finished her degree in 1955 (Biography).
Sylvia Plath received a scholarship after Smith to attend Newnham College in England. She met her husband, Ted Hughes, there. Ted Hughes was not a
very good husband and they went through a tough relationship. In the end, he left her for another woman, eventually leading her to the depression that
ended her life. While studying at the university's Newnham College, she met Ted Hughes. Plath published her first poetry collection, The Colossus in
1960, and during the same year, she gave birth to her daughter, Frieda, and two years later gave birth to her son,
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath Controversy
That's Not How You Bake a Cake, Sylvia Sylvia Plath was an American Poet known for her confessional style with brilliant wordplay. She had an
interesting life filled with love and losses. Sylvia Plath was and is still a major source of controversy. Sylvia had a troublesome childhood plagued
with death and depression. She was born on October 27, 1932, in Boston, Massachusetts (Biography1). Her parents were Otto Emil, a German
professor and entomologist, and Aurelia Schober, a teacher (Poetry29). Sylvia had a relatively privileged childhood, until her father died when she
was eight years old (Poetry29). That same year she wrote and published her first poem Daddy, which is based on her father (Poetry29).
I think that Sylvia writing Daddy was her way of mourning her father. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Sylvia is best known for The Colossus, Ariel, and possibly her most controversial writing The Bell Jar (Learner1&2). Sylvia was the first poet to be
posthumously awarded the Pulitzer Prize for her Collected Poems (Archive1). I want to believe that if Plath received this award when she was
alive, it would have dampened her depression and make her rethink suicide. Sylvia Plath had a major part in the battle for feminism because she had
such a difficult time conforming to the wife and mother roles in her life (Learner1). I think that Sylvia did not want to be a part of the feminist
movement, but instead she was just handling her problems the only way she knew, through writing about them. Numerous people speculate what sent
Sylvia over the edge. Some possibilities are the feminist movement using her as an icon, Hughes' infidelity, or her father dying when she was at such
a young age (Archive1). I think that Plath's suicide had something to do with her being the jump starter for a movement and also not being able to
please or satisfy her husband, which in her era was one of the most important roles in women's
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Mirror By Sylvia Plath
MID YEAR TEST
How and why women are represented as being vulnerable and superficial in Sylvia Plath's poem "Mirror?
Sylvia Plath's poem "Mirror" deals with women's preoccupation about aging and their concern towards their looks. Plath uses powerful imagery
throughout the poem to relate to the theme of "All is Vanity"1 denouncing the superficiality of women, making a social critique of women's illogical
attraction to mirrors and their own image. Proper of Plath's confessional poetry, she portrays her own anxieties about aging from a global feminine
perspective. In this essay I am going to analyze why Plath, being a woman, represents this social group as being shallow and susceptible.
A mirror is objective; it will never reflect what you want to see, instead it ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The protagonist of the poem considers that she is not half of what she used to be when she was young and beautiful. This demonstrates that her
beauty defined her whole identity. Now, that she is starting to age, she feels like the young beautiful image is being replaced by an image that
seems to terrify and deeply disturb her. "Rises toward her day after day, like a terrible fish".6 We can see how Plath portrays women as vulnerable,
that a simple reflection can bring women into emotional break. As said directly in stanza "She rewards me with tears and an agitation of
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath Research Paper
The Indelible Self Possessed Poet: Sylvia Plath
Sylvia Plath once said, " The worst enemy to creativity is self doubt"(Good Reads). Ms. Sylvia Plath was a novelist, poet, and a short–story writer
(Monroe 2015). At the age of eight, she published her first poem which appeared in The Boston Traveller (Orr, Morrish, Press, et.al). Plath a terrific
artist, which lead her to receiving the Scholastic Art & Writing award (Beckmann 2006).Sylvia Plath influenced literature in a positive manner because
of her feminist voice in her poems.
The smart and creative Sylvia Plath was born in the month of October the 27th of 1932 (Beckmann 2006). Plath was raised in Boston, Massachusetts
(Monroe 2015). Aurelia and Otto Plath were her loving parents (Monroe
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Carrh : A Biography Of Sylvia Plath
"Why can't I try on different lives, like dresses, to see which one fits me best and is most becoming?" Sylvia Plath once asked in The Journals of
Sylvia Plath (Plath 38). Any reader of Sylvia Plath can instantly recognize Plath's dislike for her life and all that comes with it. Plath grew up with the
realities of death in the forefront because of her father's passing at a young age and her struggles with at least one mental illness. Much like her
characters in her many works, Sylvia Plath struggled from mental illnesses, such as depression and, possibly, anxiety. Sylvia Plath is famously known
for committing suicide and the "Sylvia Plath Effect", the term coined by James Kaufman, PhD in 2001. The Sylvia Plath Effect considers the
possibility that creative minds, such as writers, poets and artists can be more susceptible to mental illnesses. Though plenty of studies have not found a
causal link, popular psychology has come to continue the stereotype that poets are generally depressed or anxious. While Plath is 'famous' in a general
sense for this more commonly known information, her literary work published throughout her life and posthumously is arguably more impressive.
Because The Bell Jar is semi–autobiographical, we are given insight into the younger years of Sylvia Plath and have general ideas of how she
managed her depression. After numerous suicide attempts, Plath eventually succumbed to her depression and killed herself on February 11th, 1963 at
thirty years old. She left behind her forty–poem manuscript of Ariel on her desk, as well as an additional nineteen poems, that her husband later
published two years after Plath's death. Leaving the poems behind allowed for Plath to control the narrative of her life, as the poems from "Ariel"
have a noticeable separation between the speaker of the poems, and Sylvia Plath herself.
Plath's desire to try on different lives not only encapsulates the feelings of the writer, but also her characters with her works, The Bell Jar and
"Ariel", specifically, "Lady Lazarus. Like her characters, Plath wishes for the ability to have more control over who she is and her experiences
because trying on different lives would allow her to eventually choose the life she
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath Biography
Sylvia Plath, a renowned poet, was born on October 27, 1932 in Boston, Massachusetts. Her father, Otto Plath was born in Germany and was a
professor of biology at Boston University. Plath's mother, a student of Otto Plath, was named Aurelia Schober Plath (Two Views on Plath's Life
and Career). Her father died on November 5, 1940 due to untreated diabetes and infection when Plath was eight years old. This experience
"haunt[ed] her for life and [lead] her to create most of her poetry." Plath was brought up in a Christian home, but lost all faith after her father's
passing (Sylvia Plath Biography). As a child, one of Plath's poems was published in the Boston Herald's children's section. By the age of eleven,
she began to keep a journal and won multiple awards for her writings and art. She was recognized in the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards for her
paintings in 1947 and sold her first poem and short story while she was still attending high school. Plath earned a scholarship from Smith College in
1951 and "enjoyed remarkable artistic, academic, and social success" there (Sylvia Plath). During the summer after her third year of college, Plath
won a fiction writing contest and spent a summer in New York City working as an editor for the magazine company, Mademoiselle. Many of her
memories from this summer are reflected in her novel The Bell Jar. Despite this success, Plath experienced a mental breakdown and cut her legs. She
later hid underneath her mother's house and
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath Accomplishments
Sylvia Plath the famous American writer from Boston, Massachusetts accomplished many great poems and short stories in her short life. One of the
greatest quotes and a personal favorite is"If you expect nothing from anybody, you're never disappointed." By this quote she helped people rely more
on themselves than on others. Even though Plath life was tragically cut short due to suicide, she made great accomplishments in todays life and her
work is still used in everyday life. In many classrooms throughout the world. Sylvia Plath was born on October twenty–seventh 1932 in Boston,
Massachusetts. She was raised in a middle class family. Plath started writing at a young age. She published her first book at the age of eight. Once
Sylvia graduated high school, she went to Smith college in 1950. Her junior year of college, Plath got awarded ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
After Plath got released from the rehab she published a book called The Bell Jar in 1963 it took her over two and a half years just to finish her
story and to published the book. The Bell Jar was one of her most famous works. The bell jar was in an inverted glass jar, generally used to display
an object of scientific curiosity, contain a certain kind of gas, or a maintain a vacuum(Sam Adam). For Esther, the bell jar symbolized madness.
When gripped by insanity, she feels as if she is inside an airless jar that distorts her perspective on a world and prevents her from connecting with the
people around her (Adam). At the end of the novel, the bell jar has lifted, but she can sense's going to drop at any moment and it described the
relationships she had with other guys. The theme of the story is a young woman coming of age but does not follow the usual trajectory development of
childhood. The style of the poem was a flashback with Esther's past and the relationship with Buddy
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath
A relationship is an emotional connection to someone involving an interaction between two or more people. There are many types of relationships,
some functional and others far from being workable. I will demonstrate this through my texts of; Little Fugue, and Morning Song both poems written
by Sylvia Plath; the movie, Love Actually; and the book, Trickster's Choice by Tamora Pierce. Little Fugue bySylvia Plath is my first example of how
we all perceive our different relationships. This poem is about Plath talking of her father and herself and the lack of communication between the two.
Throughout the poem, Plath contradicts herself, saying, 'I was seven, I knew nothing' yet she constantly talks of the past, remembering. Her tone is very
... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The daughter's of the Grace's, Dovasary and Sarai, and with a man who was once a crow, Nawat. As a crow, he was always fascinated by humans,
Aly in particular. So using a special brand of innate magic, Nawat changed himself to human form. A crow's perception of relationships is very
different from a human's. Nawat sees Aly as a potential 'mate'. The relationship between the two was rocky and awkward at first, with Nawat trying to
feed her with his own mouth and Aly resisting, confusing the poor birdman. However, slowly, Nawat's vision changed, becoming more human than
crow, slowly. Towards the end of the book, Aly is reunited with her father, who managed to find her through his spy system in Corus2 and Rajmuat.
She decides to stay even though she hasn't seen her family in months, even though she knew it was going to leave her mother and father heartbroken
and pining for her return. Her views had changed from the daughter of a spy to a spy herself. This has taught me about resilience and that not all
people are what you think. There is a strong strain of racism within the Luarin (white) forces, against the Raka (natives). However, throughout the book
the Luarin's views towards the Raka changed somewhat in the way that they were actually seen as human, previously they were seen as 'Raka dogs'.
Aly's relationships with her mother changed in her absence, as Plath and her father never did. As a contrast to Little Fugue, Morning Song is a
comepletely different
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Daddy By Sylvia Plath Analysis
After reading the poem "Daddy" written by Sylvia Plath an American poet, best known for her dark, and confessional writing. Sylvia Plath lets you
understand her thoughts through her writing, for example poems like "Daddy" and her novel The Bell Jar. More and more people learn about her
work by reading her poetry or novels today. For one reason, this poem gives many emotions to the reader. By reading "Daddy" you can sense sadness,
hopefulness, a broken child, while others may argue it is a cry for help. Secondly, Sylvia Plath casts herself as a victim by sharing all the negative
feelings she experienced after her father's dead. Lastly, Plath expresses how she portraits her father as a powerful figure, especially when Plath
refer him as a Nazi, German, Frisco, and vampire. I feel this poem is very powerful because you can feel the writer's emotions towards her father
and including herself worth. In the poem "Daddy" it projects the emotions Sylvia Plath was trying to share with the reader. Poems like these can
help other people deal with their negative feelings, by realizing they are not the only ones dealing with negative thoughts, and searching for the help
they may need in case of a crisis. Some of the dark negative emotions Sylvia Plath shares in this poem can make anyone have sympathy on her
feelings. Especially, when she writes, Daddy, I have had to kill you. You died before I had time
– Marble–heavy, a bag full of God, Ghastly statue with
one gray toe Big as a Frisco seal
And a head in the freakish Atlantic Where it pours bean green over blue In the waters off beautiful Nauset. I used to pray to recover you. Ach, du.
(Plath 274).
In stating this, Plath is reminding us that she did not know how to cope with the loss of her father, while growing up. When Sylvia Plath writes "I
used to pray to recover you," it expresses the sadness, the pain, she was feeling after her father's loss. Plath makes you feel the brief with her writing,
thinking of killing her father it's a metaphor for killing the sadness in her because he is no longer with her. I personally did not grow up with my
father, and do not share none of Sylvia Plath negative thoughts. The poem gives the reader the sense of her abandonment
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Metaphors By Sylvia Plath Essay
In Sylvia Plath's poem "Metaphors" there are several references and comparisons that are made between various images and pregnancy. Plath's life
experiences and the perception of women's roles of the 1950's shaped her poems and was of particular importance in this poem. As the poem
progresses, the reader can infer that her attitude towards her pregnancy is not static. Through her ironic use of various metaphors, Plath is able to
convey her feelings of bearing a child, and how her perception and emotions of herself change over the course of her pregnancy. Plath was an
American poet, born in 1932. Her parents "demanded superior academic performance" and this resulted in Plath being somewhat of a perfectionist in
her writing (Carmean 1). She... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Beginning at line 7 of the poem, Plath's tone shifts from one of excitement and satisfaction to that of disdain and disillusionment because of a
crushing realization. Instead of having the initial joy and excitement of being pregnant, Plath now feels as if her body is a mere means and that
its only purpose is to bare the child she is currently supporting. She feels more like a vessel storing something or an incubator. She "sees herself as
a shelter for the child growing inside of her" (Devi 2). She further highlights this feeling when she again focuses on her appearance when she
mentions how she is a "cow in calf" (7). Many women would feel disrespected if called a cow and the fact that Plath portrays herself as one, she
allows the reader to see her true feelings of her pregnancy and that she might, in fact, wish she was not. The newness of pregnancy has worn off and
now she is left with a sour taste and realization as if she had "eaten a bag of green apples" (8). All Plath is left with now is the bitter truth about what
comes next in her
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analysis Of Sylvia 's ' The Cow '
Sylvia isolates herself in nature and identifies herself as a person who prefers to be alone. While wandering in the woods and playing around with
her cow, she "would look upon the cow's pranks as an intelligent attempt to play hide and seek, as [she] had no playmates" (Jewett 196). Sylvia does
not experience human interaction, besides her grandmother, due to being isolated in the countryside. However, she interacts with her best friend,
Mistress Moolly the cow, as a way to fill in the need of communicating with others. Sylvia could be feeling lonely, so she treats her cow as a friend.
Mrs. Tilley, Sylvia's grandmother, notices how her granddaughter spends more time in nature. She states, "Afraid of folks, they said! I guess [Sylvia]
won't be troubled no great with them up to the old place" (Jewett 196). The "old place" indicates Sylvia's house in the city. Generally, a city is
crowded and there is not enough space for her to freely wander unlike the countryside. Mrs. Tilley suggests that her granddaughter is more comfortable
in the countryside, where it is open and peaceful, rather than the congested city. There is a slight hint of transcendentalism in Sylvia. Due to her
familiarity with nature, she realizes how much she prefers being alone in the woods. Additionally, the isolation that Sylvia experiences allow her to
retain her innocence, a part of her identity, until she meets the hunter. Sylvia experiences a coming–of–age process as she meets the hunter in the woods
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Who Is Sylvia Plath's Daddy?
"Says there are a dozen or two so I never could tell where you put your foot, your root, I never could talk to you, the tongue struck in my jaw". (Sylvia
Plath, 1962). Have you every experience a lost love one? I believe Sylvia Plath this poem was written by her experience of a lost love one. She wrote "
Daddy" in 1962 to explain, and interpret how she felt for her love lost one who was hated on, and how he treated her.
In the poem Sylvia Plath definitely describe her true feelings about her departed father. At the beginning of her poem she interprets about a child
living the unspeakable, dreadful memory of how her father pasted away. Throughout the conversation, the reader founded many emotional feelings
of hate towards her father, and how he treated her. Sylvia Plath was afraid of her father. When it was clear that she never communicated, and
shield herself towards him in the first line "You do not do, you do not do Any more, black shoeing which I have lived like a foot for thirty years,
poor and white, barely daring to breathe or Achoo" (Sylvia Plath, 1962). Her father experienced a growth on his toe, and ignored the situation until he
passed away cause of the critical condition. It was too late to save his life. In the following passage, "And a head in the freakish Atlantic Where it
pours bean green over blue in the waters off beautiful Nauset" interpret how Sylvia reacted when she found out her father's medical condition that made
her very indisposed to her stomach.
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath Metaphors
Metaphors by Sylvia Plath was written in 1959. It is a lyric poem that uses metaphors to create a riddle, as she states in line one. Plath is using a
narrator voice in her poetry to describe her pregnancy with the use of metaphors and her ambivalence to her current state. The narrator is mocking
herself and I find her mocking tone to pregnancy as something I want to incorporate in my writing when writing about my character's eating disorder.
The poem starts with the narrator announcing herself as a riddle in nine syllables. The nine syllables is the first hint that the poem is going to be
about pregnancy. Plath correlated the use of the word 'nine' to the length of a pregnancy, giving the reader an inkling of what is to be expected of
the poem. The narrator then goes on to describe herself as an elephant, then a house, two very distinctively large objects. She is now mocking the
weight gain caused by pregnancy and she furthers this by comparing herself to a melon, strolling on two tendrils. These lines give the reader a vivid
imagery of someone that has become stout and is struggling to do normal tasks such as walk. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In the poem she uses vivid imagery to convey the feelings of emotional suicide. The poem begins with an answer to the question "why do you want to
die?" she answers this question by starting the poem with "since you ask" and takes the reader through a journey where the final destination is
committing suicide. In her poetry, she does not use the voice of the narrator like the way Plath does, instead it is more of a conversational piece. Her
poetry is confessional and written in her point of view, whereas with Plath's poems I've mentioned before, there is a disconnect where the reader
reads it in the voice of the narrator, instead of Plath's voice. In the poem, she notes that her body is a physical " bad prison" that should be emptied
completely in order to finally be
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath Figurative Language
When writing a poem, the poet has no guarantee that he or she will create a great poem that captures the attention and heart of the reader. This is
because every poem ever written by even the most famous of poets possesses the ability to fail miserably or be truly great. However, the poet Sylvia
Plath employs certain techniques and includes specific characteristics in her in poem, "Daddy", that separates it from a bad poem. For these reasons,
"Daddy" is truly a great poem. To begin, "Daddy" written bySylvia Plath is a great poem because her choice of words and poetic devices create vivid
imagery. As stated in an article created by Kathryne Bradesca, imagery that is created by figurative language allows the reader to better feel and
comprehend ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
"Daddy" falls under the category free verse. This means that the poet does not have create a specific rhyme scheme or meter. Because of this,
Sylvia Plath is able to focus more on the message she is trying to convey than on making sure the poem follows a set meter or rhyme scheme. If she
had to follow traditional patterns, she would have been limited and not able to fully express the magnitude of the speaker's oppression. However,
although this poem falls under free verse, that does not necessarily mean rhyme is not present. For example, she starts out by writing "You do not do,
you do not do/ Anymore, black shoe" (Plath 1–2). In this example, there is an end rhyme present. This sporadic rhyming involving the "oo" sound
allows Plath to draw emphasis on the oppressor in the poem. For example, Plath uses words such as Jew, brute, and shoe to describe her oppressor or
the "you" in this poem. The rhyme also gives the poem rhythm; however, the spontaneous rhymes do not make it excessively singsong in nature like a
love poem or one that emphasizes happiness. The structure used to create this poem is just another reason why this poem is so
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Mirrors by Sylvia Plath
13th March, 2014 In the poem "Mirrors", by Sylvia Plath the speaker accentuates the importance of looks as an aging woman brawls with her inner
and outward appearance. Employing an instance of self refection, the speaker shifts to a lake and describes the discrepancies between inevitable old
age and zealous youth. By means of sight and personification, shifts and metaphors, the orator initiates the change in appearance which relies on an
individual's decision to embrace and reject it. The author applies sight and personification to accentuate the mirror's roles. The declaimer of the
poem says "I am silver and exact [and] whatever I see I swallow" (1, 20). The purpose of these devices is to convey the position of the mirror in... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
According to Tomei,Sylvia Plath is subject to depression just like her father (1213). Possibly hereditary, she detaches herself from everyone due to her
immense discomfort and displeasure. Moreover, she imprints her feelings and memories in her poems as witnessed in the poem "Mirrors". Plath initiates
her child hood in the narrative when she "meditates on the opposite wall" in her room (6). Although a mirror is personified in the poem, it signifies
Plath's nature as an individual. As lonely as widow, she reposes against the wall, gazes at the divider and muses about her life. This can be due to the
fact that Plath felt it was her fault her father died (Freedman 159). Thus, she translates her experiences into a poem and transmutes it literary
denotation to figurative language. To conclude, everything happens for a reason and life teaches great lessons. As detected from the shift in the poem,
Plath utilizes symbols in nature to delineate her view on the world. Situated in the criticism of Giles, Plath creates "images of great sound and
beauty... as the sea is second only to the moon as one of her favorite symbols" (2597). As witnessed in the sonnet, the candles and the moon are viewed
as liars; however, they are distinguished as her favorite symbols. Since society and individuals represent these symbols, Plath conveys the deceitful
nature of people in the word. Subsequently, she "turns"to them
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath Research Paper
"What horrifies me most is the idea of being useless: well–educated, brilliantly promising, and fading out into an indifferent middle age." (The
Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath, 2000)
American poet Sylvia Plath (October 27 1932 – February 11 1963) was one of the most influential poets of the 20th century. Her
semi–autobiographical writing style pioneered the postmodernist form of poetry known commonly as 'Confessional Poetry', which emerged from the
United State in the late 1950's and early 1960's. The confessional poetry of the mid–twentieth century centred mainly on subject matter that was
previously considered taboo in American poetry, such as mental illness and sexuality. Plath battled clinical depression for most of her adult life,... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
"The bag of green apples" is an allusion from the Bible.
"To the woman he said,
I will make your pains in childbearing very severe; With painful labour you will give birth to children."
(Genesis 3:3)
At the time this poem was written, Plath had a rising academic career and motherhood would limit her literary work. It was expected that the mother
would give up her career to stay home with the children. Plath envied her husband, Ted Hughes, because he was free from all these domestic
responsibilities and was able to dedicate his time to writing. The result is discontent and bitterness towards children and her husband.
When observing how Sylvia Plath's life affected her poetry, it is important not to overlook her distinguished poem 'Lady Lazarus'. Plath uses numerous
forms of imagery to establish her emotions of pain and agony. Throughout the poem, Plath brazenly associates her depression and oppression to the
experiences of Holocaust victims. Her hatred of life is also represented through her use of the Holocaust as imagery:
"A sort of walking miracle, my skin
Bright as a Nazi
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
`` Daddy `` By Sylvia Plath
Over six million innocent lives were taken during the Holocaust. It had a significant effect on much of the world's population, and it still has an
impact to this day. In Sylvia Plath's poem, "Daddy", she shows her emotions for her father, Otto Plath. Sylvia Plath lost her father at eight years
old when she still had much love for him (Famous People "Biography"). After a number of years, hatred is built up inside of Sylvia towards her
father. When her father first died, she loved him and she grieved over her father's death. After years of confusion, she eventually decided and
wrote, "Daddy, Daddy, you bastard, I'm through" (Line 80). In "Daddy" by Sylvia Plath, the author resents her father and husband so much that
they are comparable to Nazi Germans, showing her feelings for them through poetic devices. The speaker says that her German father is like a
Nazi and that she feels like a Jew. This metaphor is the most powerful one in the entire poem. It shows us as readers how she feels like she is a
victim of her father. She never directly calls him a Jew though. She points to the fact using metaphors and imagery. For example, the author wrote: I
thought every German was you. And the language obscene An engine, an engine Chuffing me off like a Jew. A Jew to Dachau, Auschwitz, Belsen. I
began to talk like a Jew. I think I may well be a Jew. ("Daddy" Lines 29–35) She compares the German language to a train, taking her to a
concentration camp. Her father speaks German so this
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath Research Paper
It is said that without melancholy there is no art, and there is no better embodiment of that than beloved poet and author, Sylvia Plath. Often referred
to as one of the most dynamic poets of the 1900's, Plath had no limits on her expression through poetry. Her poems ranged from flowing verses on
nature to unconventional commentary on the social restrictions placed on individuals. She is most known for her poetic expression of her own mental
anguish, never shying away from topics of death and despair. Born in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts in 1932, Plath was the daughter of Aurelia Schober,
high school teacher and student at Boston University , and Otto Plath, German immigrant and Boston University professor. At the age of eight, Plath
lost her father due to complications from diabetes, which had a drastic affect on her emotionally. From the way she talks of her father in her poems it
is easy to tell that Otto Plath had been a strict father, and both his overbearing relationship with his daughter and death heavily influenced her future
relationships and her poetry. In one of her more famous poems, "Daddy", Plath uses multiple ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
She began at the age of eleven until her death at the age of thirty writing journals filled with her poetry as well as her more personal and morbid
thoughts. For example, in this quote, "I am afraid. I am not solid, but hollow. I feel behind my eyes a numb, paralyzed cavern, a pit of hell, a
mimicking nothingness. I never thought. I never wrote, I never suffered. I want to kill myself, to escape from responsibility, to draw back abjectly
into the womb. I do not know who I am, where I am going..." (Sylvia Plath, The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath), Plath discusses her feelings
emotional numbness, and of never wanting to have lived or suffered. After her death her journals were published, by her husband, English poet Ted
Hughes, along with many other poems she had not yet
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Polish Father
The relationship between the speaker in Sylvia Plath's "Daddy" and her father is the most complex due to the difficult situation that is presented.
This piece begins with the speaker stating that she is fed up with the "black shoe" that she has lived in for thirty years. This is the beginning of an
assumed tension between the speaker and her father that builds throughout the poem. The speaker then goes on to talk about how she should have
"killed" her father before he "left". This is the breaking point of the relationship between the speaker and her father. This poem shows that the father
passed away, most likely in the speakers youth, before the speaker was ready to let him go. One can assume that the speaker was trying to earn the
approval or maker her father proud and could not... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This is a very complex and hard problem to deal with and can be seen in the writing throughout this poem. The next part of the poem hints at the
speaker having a German background which could suggest that her father is a German immigrant. This could have also contributed to the
frustrations that the speaker and her father faced throughout their years living in a "black shoe" for a home. The speaker then goes on to discuss
how a polish town was completely destroyed in a war. The speaker repeated the word "war" three times which hints that this town has been through
more than war, maybe even three. Now we get more about Germany than just an exclamation in the language. The speaker is talking about the
German tongue, or language, but in a Polish town that has been destroyed by war. The speaker describes that there are a lot of town in Poland that
share the same name so that she will never know for
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath Research Paper
Confessionalism are topics written by authors confessing his/her thoughts and emotions and sharing them to the public. Sylvia Plath was born in
Boston, Massachusetts on October 27, 1932; is a confessionalist author with famous works such as Daddy, Lady Lazarus, and Cut which the trio
contain a dark nature of writing. Sylvia Plath wrote many poems about her life and sharing it to the public before her suicide in February 11, 1963.
Though her writing style convey to confessionalism, people believe that she deviates from confessionalism because she breaks some rules of
confessionalism, but Plath conforms to the conventions as she conveys her writing with thought and emotions of her troubled life, fear of her father,
and mental issues .
In the poem Daddy, Plath shares that she must kill her father to be set free. "Daddy, I have had to kill you You died before I had time
– ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
The title of the poem is a biblical allusion to Lazarus, whom Jesus raised from the dead and adding Lady representing Plath's resurrection from the
dead. "I have done it again one year in every ten I manage it (Plath)."Therefore, stating that she attempts suicide once every ten years.
Confessionalism can be traced from suicide, mental health abuse, sexuality, and death. Plath also includes the amount of times she has attempted
suicide, but not specifically in the poem only for readers who read other works. "A sort of walking miracle, my skin... Jew linen (Plath)." giving
the introduction of the jew readers were able to analyze the amount of attempted suicide coming to a conclusion of 3 attempts. In her previous poem
discussed in paragraph one her father is a Nazi and she has been trapped with him for thirty with evidence that once in every decade she tries to kill
herself. The poem written by Plath does convey to rules of confessionalism as it is a way of one to express their emotion she was feeling during the
time she was
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analysis Of Mirror By Sylvia Plath
Mirrors reflect the innermost part of the soul. A mirror can show you at your most beautiful and your most unpleasant times. Sylvia Plath's poem
"Mirrors", conveys a message that is much deeper than the words printed on the page. The denotation of "Mirrors" provides the reader a basic reading
of the poem, whereas the connotation gives a deeper meaning to the work. Plath's word usage conveys two meanings to "Mirrors", allowing the reader
to better personalize the work. "I am silver and exact. I have no preconceptions. / Whatever I see I swallow immediately / Just as it is, unmisted by love
or dislike. /" (Plath 739 lines 1–3) Reading these lines obviously describe a mirror. The mirror is a first person narrator describing itself; it is "silver
and exact" with no "preconceptions". It takes in whatever looks at it and feels no emotion towards it. Studying the text shows a deeper meaning. The
mirror is exact, nothing is wrong with the object itself. The mirror does not have any feelings, it will not judge whomever is looking into it. Whatever
looks into the mirror will see its entire self, without filters of love or dislike. The next lines follow "I am not cruel, only truthful –/ The eye of a little
god, four cornered. /" (Plath lines 4–5) The mirror is not mean, it only shows the object its true reflection. It seems to be a god–like entity since it sees
all. The connotation is seen as the mirror shows you who you truly are. It casts back an image that some are happy with
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
An Explication Of Sylvia Plath's Daddy
Upon hearing the word daddy, pleasant thoughts such as love, support, and dependence usually come to mind. Daddy is the person that little girls relate
to, and count on to fix anything from boo–boos to a broken heart. In Sylvia Plath's "Daddy" one would expect to read about the love and comfort that a
daddy can bring to a child, but after reading the first stanza it becomes clear that "Daddy" is far from anything lovely and beautiful. The speaker in
"Daddy" is a girl who is emotionally torn. She has mixed emotions towards her father– deep love and strong hate. The love comes from her childhood
and the way she viewed her father like God. The intense hate comes from the great fear she felt towards her father because he dictated her life
completely. "Daddy" is filled with dark ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
It stuck in a barb wire snare. Ich, ich, ich, ich, I could hardy speak. (24–28) "Ich" is German for "I." The onomatopoeia and repetition of the word gives
the reader the sound of the speaker stuttering, attempting to speak to her father. The reader is able to imagine the speaker's tongue trapped in a "barb
wire snare" unable to open her mouth to produce actual words, which shows the strain in communication she constantly had with her father. The fear
that she had was so real that she found it extremely difficult to speak, if not impossible. Pain came along with any attempt to speak with her father.
Plath writes: "Marble–heavy, a bag full of God, / Ghastly statue with one gray toe (8–9)" The speaker compares her father to a statue and reveals her
permanent memory of him set into her mind like a monument. The metaphor "a bag full of God" allows the reader to understand that the speaker saw
her father as a colossal authority figure as a child, who she happened to be quite intimidated by. Also, the statue is described as "ghastly" which tells
that her memory of her father is not necessarily a pleasant one, but merely an unchanging image that she cannot
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Research Paper On Sylvia Plath
Sylvia Plath's importance to American history results from the literary distinction of her writing style, as well as her works that show the difficulty of
women in the mid–twentieth century. Plath's significance comes from her writing styles in which she opened the doors to exploration of feminism to a
masculine led society. Plath's life can be explored through her poems and her stories. By aligning Sylvia Plath's works to the events throughout her
lifetime, we can have a better understanding of Plath's importance. "Daddy" is probably one of Sylvia Plath's best–known poems. It has received many
different critiques. These critiques include praise from feminist because of its rage towards male dominance and its attention to and use of Holocaust
imagery. This poem has been reviewed by hundreds of scholars and the poem has ultimately been deemed as one of the best examples of a
confessional poem. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath was only eight years old when her father died leaving her traumatized and at times emotionally void. She loved her father but hated him
for leaving her. In lines 54–67, Sylvia Plath talks about her father's death. "At twenty I tried to die/ And get back, back, back to you." (Lines 58–59).
This demonstrates her dire to reconnect with her father in the afterlife. She fills the void of her father's absence by writing poetry and marrying a
man that reminds her of her father. Plath says, "I made a model of you, A man in black with a Meinkampf look/ And a love of the rack and the screw.
And I said I do, I do." (Lines
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath Figurative Language
Throughout Sylvia Plath's poem "You're" she addresses what her life is like as a pregnant women. This poem was written when she was pregnant
with her first child so the emotions she was feeling were at full throttle. Through her use of similes and metaphors Plath is able to portray these first
time emotions as excitement of a soon to be mother starts to grow.
It is no secret that Sylvia Plath thought very highly of her soon to be child. There is no way however she can express this love in normal words. She
must use figurative language to portray this new love. For example Plath writes, "Gilled like a fish. A common–sense" (line 3). This is the first simile
she uses in her poem and she uses it to compare her daughter to a fish. Though this ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Plath explores, "Bent–backed Atlas, our travelled prawn"(13). At first glance it seems Plath is referring to a map of some sort but instead she is
referring to a greek Titan. Andrew Spacey who is a writer for Owlcation wrote about this poem in his analysis. He writes, " In psychology Atlas is a
metaphor for the personality of a child who has excessive responsibilities in life" (Spacey). Plath is already hinting at her new child's future and
what is to come. She has high hopes for a child she hasn't even met yet, but is so in tune with her emotions she is feeling during her pregnancy she
is able to use these metaphors to show her expectations. Another example would be when Plath writes, "A clean slate, with your own face on"(18).
This child is new to Plath, new to her family, and new to the world. By comparing her to a new slate Plath is able to show the reader that she is
creating new life from her own body. To most women a no greater joy can be felt. She has created this living being and gets the opportunity to raise a
unique, child of her own. Only a metaphor could truly show that's how Plath is
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath Research Paper
Audra Etcheson
3.27.15
ELA 3
Sylvia Plath
To become a successful writer, you have to have a lot of knowledge of the English writing. Usually, it takes a lot of time to work on and become a
famous American literature writer, but not for Sylvia Plath. By the time that Plath took her life, she already had a following in the literary community.
Many of the readers that she attracted were because of her attempt to list despair, violent emotion, and her obsession with death. Plath's poems explore
her mental pain, her troubled marriage to poet Ted Hughes, her unsolved conflicts with her parents, and how she saw herself. Whether Plath wrote
about nature or someone else, she excluded the polite surface. She tore apart the appearance of the American ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
Sylvia Plath was born October 27, 1932 in Boston, Massachusetts, to Otto Plath who was a professor at Boston University where he met his wife and
fellow student, Aurelia Schober.
When Plath was only eight years old, her father died from complications of diabetes. He was a strict father and both his attitude and death defined
many of Plath's poems, including one of her best, "Daddy" ("Sylvia Plath"). Sylvia Plath was always determined to succeed. She kept a journal from
the age eleven and published many stories and poems in regional magazines and newspapers. The first poem that was published in a national magazine
was in 1950 just after she graduated high school. Plath was a gifted student who won many awards and published many stories and poems in national
magazines while still in her teens. She attended Smith College on scholarship and continued to excel in her writing ("Sylvia Plath").
During her undergraduate years, she began to suffer from depression. She described her feelings as positive and negative currents and whichever one
is feeling the strongest, it takes over her body. This was also described as bipolar disorder and in Plath's lifetime, there were no medications that were
available. In 1953, when Plath was only nineteen years old,
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Essay Sylvia Plath's Mirror
Sylvia Plath's Mirror
Sylvia Plath's "Mirror" offers a unique perspective on the attitudes of aging. "Mirror" displays tremendous insight and objectivity into the natural human
behavior of growing older. Plath is able to emphasize the loneliness, hope, despair, and insecurity that awaits us through mankind's incessant addiction
with reflection. "Mirror" expresses the problems associated with aging through terse comparisons between reality and desire.
Plathe's strength of "Mirror" lies in its ability to establish a solid comparison among appearance and human emotions between the first and second
stanzas. At first "Mirror" introduces reflection as a precise and accurate force through ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
It is also a very objective telling of both the aging and reflection process in that "faces and darkness separate us over and over" stemming from the
people who come and go in front of this mirror. Who are almost getting in the way so to speak of its life and it can be assumed they already know the
range of emotions they are receiving when they look into this mirror.
Plathe's second stanza is clearly engineered to reveal the darker aspects of reflection. In the second paragraph the perspective changes from a
mirror to that of a lake. In doing so does the shift in message for it marks the change in reflection from exact to distorted. She is also able to clearly
show this by utilizing a simple reflection of a woman: "A woman bends over me searching my reaches for what she really is. Then she turns to those
liars, the candles or the moon. I see her back and reflect it faithfully. She rewards me with tears and an agitation of hands." (Plathe lines 10–14) This
example infers that the woman was firmly searching for a specific reflection and that displays insecurity and longing for something that might have
passed due to age. This is especially true when taking into account "the candles or the moon" which are symbols of romance thus leading towards the
suspicion that she was with or searching for somebody. The
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
An Explication Of Sylvia Plath's Daddy
Sylvia Plath is a passionate poet, and her poem Daddy shows a broad range of emotions. She likes to use her writing to let out all her delicate feelings
and expresses how she feels in her poem Daddy. This particular poem of hers is somewhat dark and leaves the person who reads this with a sense of
hopelessness and misery, the reader questions why the writer feels this way. The speaker ofSylvia Plath's poem "Daddy" depicts that she both loves and
dislikes her father.
By reading this poem, you can undertake that she is speaking about her affiliation with her father, for the reason that the title states it. Her raw emotions
of unhappiness and fury that are in this poem portray this assumption pretty well. By interpreting this poem her father was a German refugee and was ...
Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The poem also expresses diverse emotions such as anger, grief, depression, and some distress. 'There are several imageries of oppression in her poem
"Daddy" of Nazis, swastikas, barbed wires, fascists, brutes, devils, and vampires–are so frantic, imposing, and vituperative that the poem seems more
out of control that it truly is." (http://web.b.ebscohost.com.ezp.tccd.edu) "In Plath's poem, it is clear that these characteristics are fantasies, not for the
ultimate and distinct purpose that they arise inside a text, but because the sonnet addresses the production of imaginary as such. In this sense, I read
'Daddy' as a poem about its conditions of language and illusion production. Rather than casually produce identification, it asks a question about
identification, laying out one set of unbearable psychic conditions under which such an identification with the Jew might take place."
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath
Sylvia Plath is said to be one the most prodigious, yet interesting, confessional poets of her time. She was an extremely vital poet of the post–World
War II time period and expressed her feelings towards her father and husband through her poetry. Plath's mental illness had a dramatic influence upon
her work in which she demonstrated the hatred she had for her father specifically. The poem "Daddy" is an easily applicable example. Within this piece
of work, Plath uses direct references to how she feels towards her father who was the greatest influence on her poetry. The bond, or lack of, between
Sylvia Plath and her "Daddy" is commonly associated with the purpose of her poetry. Her father died when Plath was only ten years old and ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Eileen M. Aird analyzes and comments, "The danger of such criticism lies in its assumption that the poem is objectively 'true', that it bears a
precise relationship to the facts of the poet's life." The direct criticism Plath puts upon her father is very crucial, yet evidently true if one was
research her life. Sylvia Plath's autobiographical poetry can be easily connected to her life and the answers to the many questions are easier to
uncover than one may suspect. As her poetry developed, it became more autobiographical and although through her teenage years she possessed
what seemed to be a rounded personality, the anguish and grief of her father's death was easily linked with her mental instability that haunted her
in the later years. Her time period is easily reflected in the poem with the severity in her reference to Nazis, swastikas, barbed wire, fascists, brutes,
devils, and vampires. In "Daddy", Plath refers to herself as a Jew multiple times, "An engine, an engine Chuffing me off like a Jew. A Jew to Dachau,
Auschwitz, Belsen. I began to talk like a Jew. I think I may well be a Jew."
The extremity Plath went to to emphasize these references during her time period were enough to make any soul cringe. World War II's concentration
camps are still enough over half a century later to make one shudder in despair. The rage Plath has for her father is so easily conveyed to the reader
that an illiterate individual could pick up on it, let
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Table By Sylvia Plath Tone
The Table, written in 1998 by Ted Hughes, is a free verse poem communicating the idea of loss, using the death of his wife, Sylvia Plath, as his form
of expressing his experiences and interpretations of the topic. The change of tone from the beginning to the end of the poem assists the idea of loss, as
well as the language used and the strong use of imagery. Ted Hughes' wife, Sylvia Plath, struggled with depression for most of her life. Hughes seems
to be using this poem as an opportunity to convince the reader of his desire to support her love of writing – but it was through her writing that she was
truly able to express her own grief and loss and to eventually let her long–dead father back into her life – the result being Hughes losing his wife to her
father.
"Feelings of loss and grief can occur after losing someone or something that you care about." ("What is Loss and Grief"). This could include a range of
things ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The poem starts with a seemingly supportive husband, he is positive about helping her pursue her love and talent of writing so he builds her a table
to write on. He shortly transforms into a very confused and lost man. He doesn't understand what is happening to his wife and doesn't know how to
reach out to her as he can't compete with her father. "I embraced / Lady Death, your rival" (Hughes, 36–37). Hughes is signifying that he must accept
that he has lost his wife, physically and emotionally and all the plans and dreams they had for their lives. His tone begins to turn to anger and
bitterness after her passing. Hughes explains that he has all the props of a happy life around him but there is no her, therefore there is no life
anymore. He appears to blame the situation on Plath, saying that the script of their lives is shredded as she allowed her father into their lives, allowed
him to take her away willingly, that she was the one who brought this underlying issue to
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analysis Of The Poem By Sylvia Plath
Throughout numerous works by Sylvia Plath, she is characteristically known for emphasizing conflict, whether it be within herself or in the world
around her. This poem dramatizes the conflict between the craving a sense of belonging and feeling useless. To create this effect, the speaker
refers eloquently to the notion that she feels bland and unnoticed in comparison to nature. She wishes to possess the same striking beauty that the
flowers have in their beds, or the same sense of direction that the trees have within their secured roots. The speaker then attempts to relate herself
to her environment but fails, knowing that she will continue to be overlooked even though she and the sky "are in open conversation" (l 18).
Finally, after realizing that nature cannot be paralleled when compared, especially to her, she concludes that she is more useful when she is lying
horizontally without a purpose, hence the first line. In this way, the speaker seems to imply that she would be more valuable if she was dead and
used as fertilizer for those same flowers and trees. However, the speaker expresses her thoughts in ways that are beautifully clouded and hidden in
plain sight due to the way the poem was written. It was authored on March 28th of 1961, so the era it was composed in was the start of an era with
more fluid pieces of work that had fewer literary boundaries. The poem consists of two stanzas, each ten lines, giving the poem a moderate length that
flows easily. It's composed into a lyric written in parallel structure that consists of slant–rhyme with no meter, therefore making it simple to read.
However, with this simplicity, there are also many topics of interest that are easily missed. For example, a reader may study "sucking up minerals
and motherly love" and believe it's a reference to the tree's roots, when in reality it's a metaphor referring to someone receiving love and nurturing in a
way that eventually grows into a healthy personality (l 3). In order to stress the lyric form, large amounts of assonance are used, as seen in "unpetal,"
"immortal," "starting," and "daring" (ll 7–10). All of these components contribute to the musical sound portrayed throughout the lyric. The first stanza
begins with a
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath
In Sylvia Plath's "Daddy," and "Lady Lazarus," Plath displays her deepest emotions and concerns. Her beliefs completely contradicts her fathers so
she has to deal with a lot of negative emotions throughout her life. Both of these poems were both written at the end of Plath's life and really show her
state of mind. Throughout her poems, we are able to see the motivation behind her feelings and her suicide attempts. "Daddy," and "Lady Lazarus," by
Sylvia Plath are the closing notes to Plath's grudges towards her father, her husband, and many other things.
In her poems, Plath displays her struggles with her personal relationship with her father, her father's collaborations, and her mental status. Sylvia Plath's
relationship with her father is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In lines 43–47 she says that she dies exceptionally well and she does it as though it feels real. This indicated that she is indeed depressed and feels
dead to the world and to herself (Plath 1). On the other side, in lines 79–83 of "Lady Lazarus," Plath says, "Herr God, Herr Lucifer. Beware beware.
Out of the ash I rise with my red hair (Plath 1)." She says this as if she has risen from the dead. This could be symbolic of her overcoming her
feelings towards he father and moving on with her life. Herr is German for mister, so in complete English, Plath is saying, "Mister God, Mister
Lucifer..." She symbolically tells God and Lucifer to beware, because she is rising from the dead with her red hair. After all of this time, Sylvia
Plath's burdens eventually became too heavy for her to carry, and she eventually reaches her breaking point. "Daddy," and "Lady Lazarus," were her
last works before she breaks down. Although she had attempted to kill herself many times before, her attempt on February 11, 1963 was different. She
succeeded in her suicide attempt on February 11, 1963, leaving behind her
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Biography of Sylvia Plath
As one of the most multitalented writers of the twentieth century, Sylvia Plath was highly esteemed by fans and fellow writers alike. Sylvia Plath's
parents, Aurelia Schober and Otto Plath, had met when Aurelia became Otto's student at Boston University. Otto was a biology professor with an
infatuation with bees; he had even published a book titled Bumblebees and their ways. Otto and Aurelia married in January of 1932, and by October of
the same year Aurelia gave birth in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts to a daughter, Sylvia.
Sylvia spent her childhood in Winthrop, but after Plath's father died of diabetes, her mother moved her and her brother, Warren, to Wellesley,
Massachusetts which was closer to Plath's grandmother. Aurelia had acquired... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
During this time Plath had begun to search for lodging in London, she was working with the BBC
Plat found an apartment in London fairly quickly. Plath took the children with her to London, where she balanced her career with her family. Plath
would work on her Ariel poems before the children would wake up in the morning. She continued to suffer from sickness, and during the day she
would have to deal with freezing temperatures, and nonfunctional electricity and heating. On top of no heat and power, Plath had to wait for a
telephone that never got installed (Ames 211–215).
Plath's only book, The Bell Jar, revolves around Esther Greenwood, a typical teenage girl aspiring to be an English teacher. The plot, however, is
atypical; instead of Greenwood coming of age with normal, positive scenarios, Greenwood descends into madness and graduates not from college, but
from a mental institution. Greenwood reactions to daily life differ from normal girls her age. She becomes obsessed with oddities like pickled fetuses,
dead bodies, and the execution of the Rosenburgs.
Greenwood scoffs at the notion of no premarital sex, viewing it as hypocritical of boys being able to sleep around while girls are to remain virgins
until marriage. This option is due in part by Buddy, Greenwood's boyfriend, having sex with a coworker repeatedly over the summer while still dating
Greenwood.
Greenwood's subsequent actions cause her to be admitted to a mental institution after her
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Barren Woman By Sylvia Plath
"Barren Woman" by Sylvia Plath Poems are a structure of words with multiple layers of meanings. The "Barren Woman" by Sylvia Plath describes a
childless woman who sees herself as empty and bare. Plath uses specific figurative language, such as, allusion, diction, and imagery to help explain
what being barren is like. The form, context, and figurative language of "Barren Woman" conveys what it is like to be barren, emotionally and
physically. "Barren Woman" is a relatively short poem. It is separated into two parts. This helps distinctly structure the poem. In the first part of this
poem, the woman is comparing herself to an empty museum. "Empty, I echo to the least footfall, / Museum without statues, grand with pillars,
porticoes, rotundas. / In my courtyard a fountain leaps and sinks back into itself" (1–3). In the second part of this poem the narrator takes a different
point–of–view. She abruptly changes from describing herself as an empty museum, to expressing how she imagines her life, and the harsh reality that
it actually is: "I imagine myself with a great public, / Mother of a white Nike and several bald–eyed Apollos. / Instead, the dead injure me with
attentions, and nothing can happen" ("Barren" 5–7). Plath constructs the separate parts as two separate stanzas; part one is the first stanza, and the
second part is the second stanza. By doing two stanzas each with five lines, it helps balance two different points in one poem. "Barren Woman" is a
very important
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath Thesis
Sylvia Plath is best known for "the intense coupling of violent or disturbed imagery with the playful use of alliteration and rhyme in her work."
(poets.org). "Daddy," one of Plath's poems is a way for her to express her life story and allow others to see into it. Living in an abusive home, she was
torn down daily. She makes it clear that her father was a male–dominating, evil individual. By constantly being in this environment, it ultimately
affected her work. "Daddy" was written only months before she committed suicide by placing her head in a gas oven. By taking her life in this
extreme way, it shows how much of an impact the relationship with her father had; she could only live with so much mental and emotional abuse. This
poem can be seen as a final ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
(need an argumentative thesis) Those that have read "Daddy," know that there is a repetitive mention of victim and villain, Nazi and Jew. Plath uses
the Holocaust as an analogy and final cry to be heard. This poem was written roughly twenty years after the Holocaust occurred, some may find this as
insensitive, however Plath knew she was using it to her advantage, a way to express the intensity and horridness of living with her father. It allowed an
insight for the readers to truly understand her feelings. Plath grew up with her father, a German, who was a manipulative man that did not understand
the idea of being kind. Poets.org suggests that Mr. Plath was a strict man, and that Sylvia Plath lived in what seemed like a communistic environment.
Until she was eight years old, Plath put up with her father's wickedness; after his passing, she became obsessed with his death and began to
overwhelm herself with a mix of emotions. This went on to define her relationships and poems. She went on to marry Ted Hughes who, shortly after,
left her for Assia Gutmann Wevill, which threw her into a deep depression. She proceeded for ten years to attempt
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sylvia Plath Research Paper
Sylvia Plath once said "Let me live, love, and say it in good sentences." Plath fulfilled this quote because she did write many "good sentences", seen
in her beautiful poetry and novels. Plath is a very distinguished and well known writer because of those good sentences. And her life was indeed
filled with love, but also filled with tragedy and depression. Although Plath lived a short life, she wrote prolifically and used the tragedy in her life as
inspiration. In fact, Sylvia Plath's depression, her relationship with Ted Hughes, and her German roots and culture are all reflected in her poetry. One
aspect of Plath's life reflected in her poetry is her depression. Plath became depressed in 1953 when she learned she had not been accepted into ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
One source describes how Sylvia Plath's father, Otto Plath, emigrated to New York from Germany and later taught German at Boston University.
The source continues to say that Aurelia Schober, Plath's mother, was a German from Austria who taught German at a high school (Bloom). Plath
was raised in a home with strong German influences and her father "ruled the household through the German concept of Ordnung ("order")"
(Meyers). In "Plath, Sylvia", Hobby describes how in 1940, when Plath was eight, Otto died from untreated diabetes leading to gangrene (Hobby).
Plath writes about her sadness over her father's death in "Electra on Azalea Plath" and says "I brought my love to bear, and then, you died. / It was
the gangrene ate you to the bone / My mother said; you died like any man." ("Electra on Azalea Plath, lines 38–40). After her father's death, Plath "felt
his absence intensely and remarked to her mother that she would never speak to God again" (Hobby). Plath describes her anger towards her father
for not seeking help in her poem "Daddy" and says "There's a stake in your fat black heart / And the villagers never liked you. / They are dancing and
stamping on you. / They always knew it was you. / Daddy, daddy, you bastard, I'm through." ("Daddy", lines 76–80). Not only did Plath eventually try
and separate herself from her father, but she grew up during WWII where being German was looked down
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

More Related Content

Recently uploaded

Proudly South Africa powerpoint Thorisha.pptx
Proudly South Africa powerpoint Thorisha.pptxProudly South Africa powerpoint Thorisha.pptx
Proudly South Africa powerpoint Thorisha.pptxthorishapillay1
 
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPTECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPTiammrhaywood
 
Full Stack Web Development Course for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course  for BeginnersFull Stack Web Development Course  for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course for BeginnersSabitha Banu
 
Gas measurement O2,Co2,& ph) 04/2024.pptx
Gas measurement O2,Co2,& ph) 04/2024.pptxGas measurement O2,Co2,& ph) 04/2024.pptx
Gas measurement O2,Co2,& ph) 04/2024.pptxDr.Ibrahim Hassaan
 
How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17
How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17
How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17Celine George
 
Judging the Relevance and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
Judging the Relevance  and worth of ideas part 2.pptxJudging the Relevance  and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
Judging the Relevance and worth of ideas part 2.pptxSherlyMaeNeri
 
AMERICAN LANGUAGE HUB_Level2_Student'sBook_Answerkey.pdf
AMERICAN LANGUAGE HUB_Level2_Student'sBook_Answerkey.pdfAMERICAN LANGUAGE HUB_Level2_Student'sBook_Answerkey.pdf
AMERICAN LANGUAGE HUB_Level2_Student'sBook_Answerkey.pdfphamnguyenenglishnb
 
EPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptx
EPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptxEPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptx
EPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptxRaymartEstabillo3
 
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media ComponentAlper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media ComponentInMediaRes1
 
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...Jisc
 
Introduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptx
Introduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptxIntroduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptx
Introduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptxpboyjonauth
 
Hierarchy of management that covers different levels of management
Hierarchy of management that covers different levels of managementHierarchy of management that covers different levels of management
Hierarchy of management that covers different levels of managementmkooblal
 
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️9953056974 Low Rate Call Girls In Saket, Delhi NCR
 
Keynote by Prof. Wurzer at Nordex about IP-design
Keynote by Prof. Wurzer at Nordex about IP-designKeynote by Prof. Wurzer at Nordex about IP-design
Keynote by Prof. Wurzer at Nordex about IP-designMIPLM
 
ACC 2024 Chronicles. Cardiology. Exam.pdf
ACC 2024 Chronicles. Cardiology. Exam.pdfACC 2024 Chronicles. Cardiology. Exam.pdf
ACC 2024 Chronicles. Cardiology. Exam.pdfSpandanaRallapalli
 
Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17
Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17
Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17Celine George
 
Solving Puzzles Benefits Everyone (English).pptx
Solving Puzzles Benefits Everyone (English).pptxSolving Puzzles Benefits Everyone (English).pptx
Solving Puzzles Benefits Everyone (English).pptxOH TEIK BIN
 

Recently uploaded (20)

Proudly South Africa powerpoint Thorisha.pptx
Proudly South Africa powerpoint Thorisha.pptxProudly South Africa powerpoint Thorisha.pptx
Proudly South Africa powerpoint Thorisha.pptx
 
Raw materials used in Herbal Cosmetics.pptx
Raw materials used in Herbal Cosmetics.pptxRaw materials used in Herbal Cosmetics.pptx
Raw materials used in Herbal Cosmetics.pptx
 
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPTECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
ECONOMIC CONTEXT - LONG FORM TV DRAMA - PPT
 
Full Stack Web Development Course for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course  for BeginnersFull Stack Web Development Course  for Beginners
Full Stack Web Development Course for Beginners
 
Gas measurement O2,Co2,& ph) 04/2024.pptx
Gas measurement O2,Co2,& ph) 04/2024.pptxGas measurement O2,Co2,& ph) 04/2024.pptx
Gas measurement O2,Co2,& ph) 04/2024.pptx
 
TataKelola dan KamSiber Kecerdasan Buatan v022.pdf
TataKelola dan KamSiber Kecerdasan Buatan v022.pdfTataKelola dan KamSiber Kecerdasan Buatan v022.pdf
TataKelola dan KamSiber Kecerdasan Buatan v022.pdf
 
How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17
How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17
How to Configure Email Server in Odoo 17
 
Judging the Relevance and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
Judging the Relevance  and worth of ideas part 2.pptxJudging the Relevance  and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
Judging the Relevance and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
 
AMERICAN LANGUAGE HUB_Level2_Student'sBook_Answerkey.pdf
AMERICAN LANGUAGE HUB_Level2_Student'sBook_Answerkey.pdfAMERICAN LANGUAGE HUB_Level2_Student'sBook_Answerkey.pdf
AMERICAN LANGUAGE HUB_Level2_Student'sBook_Answerkey.pdf
 
EPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptx
EPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptxEPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptx
EPANDING THE CONTENT OF AN OUTLINE using notes.pptx
 
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media ComponentAlper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
Alper Gobel In Media Res Media Component
 
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
Procuring digital preservation CAN be quick and painless with our new dynamic...
 
Introduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptx
Introduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptxIntroduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptx
Introduction to AI in Higher Education_draft.pptx
 
Hierarchy of management that covers different levels of management
Hierarchy of management that covers different levels of managementHierarchy of management that covers different levels of management
Hierarchy of management that covers different levels of management
 
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
call girls in Kamla Market (DELHI) 🔝 >༒9953330565🔝 genuine Escort Service 🔝✔️✔️
 
Keynote by Prof. Wurzer at Nordex about IP-design
Keynote by Prof. Wurzer at Nordex about IP-designKeynote by Prof. Wurzer at Nordex about IP-design
Keynote by Prof. Wurzer at Nordex about IP-design
 
ACC 2024 Chronicles. Cardiology. Exam.pdf
ACC 2024 Chronicles. Cardiology. Exam.pdfACC 2024 Chronicles. Cardiology. Exam.pdf
ACC 2024 Chronicles. Cardiology. Exam.pdf
 
Model Call Girl in Bikash Puri Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝
Model Call Girl in Bikash Puri  Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝Model Call Girl in Bikash Puri  Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝
Model Call Girl in Bikash Puri Delhi reach out to us at 🔝9953056974🔝
 
Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17
Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17
Difference Between Search & Browse Methods in Odoo 17
 
Solving Puzzles Benefits Everyone (English).pptx
Solving Puzzles Benefits Everyone (English).pptxSolving Puzzles Benefits Everyone (English).pptx
Solving Puzzles Benefits Everyone (English).pptx
 

Featured

2024 State of Marketing Report – by Hubspot
2024 State of Marketing Report – by Hubspot2024 State of Marketing Report – by Hubspot
2024 State of Marketing Report – by HubspotMarius Sescu
 
Everything You Need To Know About ChatGPT
Everything You Need To Know About ChatGPTEverything You Need To Know About ChatGPT
Everything You Need To Know About ChatGPTExpeed Software
 
Product Design Trends in 2024 | Teenage Engineerings
Product Design Trends in 2024 | Teenage EngineeringsProduct Design Trends in 2024 | Teenage Engineerings
Product Design Trends in 2024 | Teenage EngineeringsPixeldarts
 
How Race, Age and Gender Shape Attitudes Towards Mental Health
How Race, Age and Gender Shape Attitudes Towards Mental HealthHow Race, Age and Gender Shape Attitudes Towards Mental Health
How Race, Age and Gender Shape Attitudes Towards Mental HealthThinkNow
 
AI Trends in Creative Operations 2024 by Artwork Flow.pdf
AI Trends in Creative Operations 2024 by Artwork Flow.pdfAI Trends in Creative Operations 2024 by Artwork Flow.pdf
AI Trends in Creative Operations 2024 by Artwork Flow.pdfmarketingartwork
 
PEPSICO Presentation to CAGNY Conference Feb 2024
PEPSICO Presentation to CAGNY Conference Feb 2024PEPSICO Presentation to CAGNY Conference Feb 2024
PEPSICO Presentation to CAGNY Conference Feb 2024Neil Kimberley
 
Content Methodology: A Best Practices Report (Webinar)
Content Methodology: A Best Practices Report (Webinar)Content Methodology: A Best Practices Report (Webinar)
Content Methodology: A Best Practices Report (Webinar)contently
 
How to Prepare For a Successful Job Search for 2024
How to Prepare For a Successful Job Search for 2024How to Prepare For a Successful Job Search for 2024
How to Prepare For a Successful Job Search for 2024Albert Qian
 
Social Media Marketing Trends 2024 // The Global Indie Insights
Social Media Marketing Trends 2024 // The Global Indie InsightsSocial Media Marketing Trends 2024 // The Global Indie Insights
Social Media Marketing Trends 2024 // The Global Indie InsightsKurio // The Social Media Age(ncy)
 
Trends In Paid Search: Navigating The Digital Landscape In 2024
Trends In Paid Search: Navigating The Digital Landscape In 2024Trends In Paid Search: Navigating The Digital Landscape In 2024
Trends In Paid Search: Navigating The Digital Landscape In 2024Search Engine Journal
 
5 Public speaking tips from TED - Visualized summary
5 Public speaking tips from TED - Visualized summary5 Public speaking tips from TED - Visualized summary
5 Public speaking tips from TED - Visualized summarySpeakerHub
 
ChatGPT and the Future of Work - Clark Boyd
ChatGPT and the Future of Work - Clark Boyd ChatGPT and the Future of Work - Clark Boyd
ChatGPT and the Future of Work - Clark Boyd Clark Boyd
 
Getting into the tech field. what next
Getting into the tech field. what next Getting into the tech field. what next
Getting into the tech field. what next Tessa Mero
 
Google's Just Not That Into You: Understanding Core Updates & Search Intent
Google's Just Not That Into You: Understanding Core Updates & Search IntentGoogle's Just Not That Into You: Understanding Core Updates & Search Intent
Google's Just Not That Into You: Understanding Core Updates & Search IntentLily Ray
 
Time Management & Productivity - Best Practices
Time Management & Productivity -  Best PracticesTime Management & Productivity -  Best Practices
Time Management & Productivity - Best PracticesVit Horky
 
The six step guide to practical project management
The six step guide to practical project managementThe six step guide to practical project management
The six step guide to practical project managementMindGenius
 
Beginners Guide to TikTok for Search - Rachel Pearson - We are Tilt __ Bright...
Beginners Guide to TikTok for Search - Rachel Pearson - We are Tilt __ Bright...Beginners Guide to TikTok for Search - Rachel Pearson - We are Tilt __ Bright...
Beginners Guide to TikTok for Search - Rachel Pearson - We are Tilt __ Bright...RachelPearson36
 

Featured (20)

2024 State of Marketing Report – by Hubspot
2024 State of Marketing Report – by Hubspot2024 State of Marketing Report – by Hubspot
2024 State of Marketing Report – by Hubspot
 
Everything You Need To Know About ChatGPT
Everything You Need To Know About ChatGPTEverything You Need To Know About ChatGPT
Everything You Need To Know About ChatGPT
 
Product Design Trends in 2024 | Teenage Engineerings
Product Design Trends in 2024 | Teenage EngineeringsProduct Design Trends in 2024 | Teenage Engineerings
Product Design Trends in 2024 | Teenage Engineerings
 
How Race, Age and Gender Shape Attitudes Towards Mental Health
How Race, Age and Gender Shape Attitudes Towards Mental HealthHow Race, Age and Gender Shape Attitudes Towards Mental Health
How Race, Age and Gender Shape Attitudes Towards Mental Health
 
AI Trends in Creative Operations 2024 by Artwork Flow.pdf
AI Trends in Creative Operations 2024 by Artwork Flow.pdfAI Trends in Creative Operations 2024 by Artwork Flow.pdf
AI Trends in Creative Operations 2024 by Artwork Flow.pdf
 
Skeleton Culture Code
Skeleton Culture CodeSkeleton Culture Code
Skeleton Culture Code
 
PEPSICO Presentation to CAGNY Conference Feb 2024
PEPSICO Presentation to CAGNY Conference Feb 2024PEPSICO Presentation to CAGNY Conference Feb 2024
PEPSICO Presentation to CAGNY Conference Feb 2024
 
Content Methodology: A Best Practices Report (Webinar)
Content Methodology: A Best Practices Report (Webinar)Content Methodology: A Best Practices Report (Webinar)
Content Methodology: A Best Practices Report (Webinar)
 
How to Prepare For a Successful Job Search for 2024
How to Prepare For a Successful Job Search for 2024How to Prepare For a Successful Job Search for 2024
How to Prepare For a Successful Job Search for 2024
 
Social Media Marketing Trends 2024 // The Global Indie Insights
Social Media Marketing Trends 2024 // The Global Indie InsightsSocial Media Marketing Trends 2024 // The Global Indie Insights
Social Media Marketing Trends 2024 // The Global Indie Insights
 
Trends In Paid Search: Navigating The Digital Landscape In 2024
Trends In Paid Search: Navigating The Digital Landscape In 2024Trends In Paid Search: Navigating The Digital Landscape In 2024
Trends In Paid Search: Navigating The Digital Landscape In 2024
 
5 Public speaking tips from TED - Visualized summary
5 Public speaking tips from TED - Visualized summary5 Public speaking tips from TED - Visualized summary
5 Public speaking tips from TED - Visualized summary
 
ChatGPT and the Future of Work - Clark Boyd
ChatGPT and the Future of Work - Clark Boyd ChatGPT and the Future of Work - Clark Boyd
ChatGPT and the Future of Work - Clark Boyd
 
Getting into the tech field. what next
Getting into the tech field. what next Getting into the tech field. what next
Getting into the tech field. what next
 
Google's Just Not That Into You: Understanding Core Updates & Search Intent
Google's Just Not That Into You: Understanding Core Updates & Search IntentGoogle's Just Not That Into You: Understanding Core Updates & Search Intent
Google's Just Not That Into You: Understanding Core Updates & Search Intent
 
How to have difficult conversations
How to have difficult conversations How to have difficult conversations
How to have difficult conversations
 
Introduction to Data Science
Introduction to Data ScienceIntroduction to Data Science
Introduction to Data Science
 
Time Management & Productivity - Best Practices
Time Management & Productivity -  Best PracticesTime Management & Productivity -  Best Practices
Time Management & Productivity - Best Practices
 
The six step guide to practical project management
The six step guide to practical project managementThe six step guide to practical project management
The six step guide to practical project management
 
Beginners Guide to TikTok for Search - Rachel Pearson - We are Tilt __ Bright...
Beginners Guide to TikTok for Search - Rachel Pearson - We are Tilt __ Bright...Beginners Guide to TikTok for Search - Rachel Pearson - We are Tilt __ Bright...
Beginners Guide to TikTok for Search - Rachel Pearson - We are Tilt __ Bright...
 

Sylvia Plath Daddy

  • 1. Sylvia Plath Daddy Relationships can be hard to manage, especially when it comes to family. The poem "Daddy" by Sylvia Plath is about a cynical father who died and left his daughter a wreck. Although the father was a bad man, his daughter thought the world of him. The speaker of the poem hates her father because she wants to be like him even though he was not a good man. At a few different places throughout the poem, the speaker states that her father was anything but a good man. She describes a photo she has of him in front of a blackboard with, "A cleft in your chin instead of your foot/But no less a devil for that, no not" (53–54) which implies that her father had a cleft, much like the cleft foot the devil is commonly pictured with, and it didn't make him any less of a devil due to its improper location.... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "The vampire who said he was you/And drank my blood for a year,/Seven years, if you want to know." The end of that line sounds like the narrator could be sarcastic, as if her father never had time to listen to her. She talks about how her father broke her heart with all the evil he did, which could have taken time away from her. He died when she was ten, and at age 20 she tried to commit suicide because she wanted to be close to him again that even being in the same coffin would suffice (60–65). The closest she could be to her father alive was by marrying a man who embodies her father, particularly his dark side since it seemed to be all she knew. And she finds a man just so, "A man in black with a Meinkampf look/And a love of the rack and the screw" (65–66). She chooses her husband even though he was bad to make up for lost time; she was young when her father died and didn't get a chance to be with him as long as she ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. Sylvia Plath Allusions Written task 2 Sylvia Plath is not your average poet. Plath is a poet from the Confessional era who also suffered from depression. She uses a lot of similes, metaphors, and allusions in her poems, mainly Greek mythology. She uses mythological allusions including stories like Midas' Touch and Narcissus as well as historical allusions using Jews and concentration camps to add more depth and meaning. Plath refers to the story Midas' Touch in her poem In Midas' Country. Midas turns everything he touches into gold and she compares August to Midas saying it turns things gold. Plath states," August gives over its Midas touch, wind bares a flintier landscape". She is saying as August is ending, the gold is leaving nature and everything is getting darker. Plath is giving a more illustrative example of just how golden and bright everything was in August. August is known to be one of the hottest months with everything being sun kissed. She says," Apples gold on the bough, goldfinch, goldfish, golden tiger cat stock...". She claims everything is much more brighter and golden in... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The poem Daddy, referencing the camps and Nazis, is supposed to be a negative sounding poem. "...an engine chuffing me off like a Jew. A Jew to Dachau, Auschwitz, Belsen," explains how Plath was feeling. The places listed are concentration camps where the Jews went, with her having felt like a Jew herself.Plath comparing herself to a Jew explains how distant she felt from her father.Obviously Jews and Nazis did not have a close relationship, so her calling her father a Nazi explains her feelings. "... with your Luftwaffe, your gobbledygoo. And your neat mustache and your Aryan eye,bright blue", is the description she gives her father. Neat mustache and bright blue eyes were traits of Nazis and her father had all of those and Luftwaffe was the German military. By comparing her father to a Nazi, it shows what kind of man he was to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. Essay On Sylvia Plath "Dying is an art, like everything else. I do it exceptionally well. I do it so it feels like hell. I do it so it feels real. I guess you could say I've a call" (2603). Sylvia Plath was born October 27, 1932, in Boston Massachusetts. She carried herself with a non–apologetic attitude and an obsession with death, so much so that she tried to take her own life on more than one occasion. Her first attempt happened during the summer of her junior year in college. After taking several sleeping pills, she crawled under her mother's house and was not found until three days later. After some time in a psychiatric hospital, she recovered fully and attained a Fulbright scholarship to Newnham College, Cambridge ("Sylvia Plath," Famousauthors.org). Her poetry was known as a confessional type, typically based on her innermost feelings and thoughts, with a twist for the dramatic and sensationalism ("Sylvia Plath," Biography.com). She also wrote one novel, The Bell Jar, a dark literary work said to parallel much of her own life. In a forward to The Bell Jar, written by Frances McCullough, McCullough states "Although her illness was never diagnosed, several researchers in the field have noted Plath's unerring description of schizophrenic perception..." (xvi). Perhaps this condition had something to do with Plath's early demise, for it was not long after publication of The Bell Jar, that Plath made the decision to take her own life. According to an article on the New World Encyclopedia's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. Spinster, by Sylvia Plath "Spinster" by Sylvia Plath is a poem that consists of a persona, who in other words serves as a "second self" for the author and conveys her innermost feelings. The poem was written in 1956, the same year as Plath's marriage to Ted Hughes, who was also a poet. The title suggests that the persona is one who is not fond of marriage and the normal rituals of courtship as a spinster is an unmarried woman, typically an older woman who is beyond the usual age of marriage and may never marry. The persona of the poem is a woman who dislikes disorder and chaos and finds relationships to be as unpredictable as the season of spring, in which there is no sense of uniformity. In this poem, Plath not only uses a persona to disclose her feelings, but ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the winter, nothing is out of proportion and everything is disciplined like the heart, whereas in the spring when budding relationships and spring fever make the heart out of control. This image of winter that Plath provides, suggests that the woman is cold emotionally as she has little emotion. She has the frame of mind that nature like human interaction should be in black and white with as little color or disarray as possible. Towards the end of the poem, Plath once again discloses the persona's abhorrence toward spring. She writes, "but hereвЋЇa burgeoning unruly enough to pitch her five queenly wits into vulgar motley" (19–21). The word "burgeoning", which means growth, indicates the persona admitting that she knows that growth is uncontrollable: flowers bloom, relationships develop, and spring occurs every year (19). However, the persona is depressed because she feels like she has no control and that scares her. Spring is too complex for her to understand and it falls outside of her comfort zone. Still, by using the phrase "five queenly wits", Plath points out that the reader feels superior to all that is in disorder (20). Plath explains, "let idiots reel giddy in bedlam spring: she withdrew neatly", which implies that the persona separates herself from society and would rather be in solitude (23–24). When one is alone, life is less confusing and everything is structured like the season of winter. As a result, the persona puts a wall ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. Sylvia Plath Research Paper Sylvia came into the world on October 27, 1932, in Boston, Massachusetts. Sylvia Plath had been writing since she was a child. She started writing by starting a journal. But when she was eight years her father died. Sylvia and her father did not have the best relationship. She said that he was a horrible father to her and compared him to the Nazis in her poem "Daddy". In this poem she talked about hating her father and how she wanted him to die. She also wrote this poem to cope with the grief and mixture of feelings she experiences when her father suddenly died of diabetes. Her mother, Aurelia Plath, soon moved the family after his death and came to Wellesley, Massachusetts.Sylvia's poems that she wrote in her teens were published in regional newspapers and articles. (Academy of American Poets). Soon ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In college, Sylvia Plath worked for Mademoiselle magazine as a guest editor. Soon after, Plath went into a depression because she missed the chance to meet her idol, Dylan Thomas, and she was rejected from attending Harvard's summer program for writing. She tried to commit suicide by hiding under her bed and taking her mother's pills but she was found before she died. She went to a mental facility and eventually recovered from her depression. Plath returned to Smith and finished her degree in 1955 (Biography). Sylvia Plath received a scholarship after Smith to attend Newnham College in England. She met her husband, Ted Hughes, there. Ted Hughes was not a very good husband and they went through a tough relationship. In the end, he left her for another woman, eventually leading her to the depression that ended her life. While studying at the university's Newnham College, she met Ted Hughes. Plath published her first poetry collection, The Colossus in 1960, and during the same year, she gave birth to her daughter, Frieda, and two years later gave birth to her son, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. Sylvia Plath Controversy That's Not How You Bake a Cake, Sylvia Sylvia Plath was an American Poet known for her confessional style with brilliant wordplay. She had an interesting life filled with love and losses. Sylvia Plath was and is still a major source of controversy. Sylvia had a troublesome childhood plagued with death and depression. She was born on October 27, 1932, in Boston, Massachusetts (Biography1). Her parents were Otto Emil, a German professor and entomologist, and Aurelia Schober, a teacher (Poetry29). Sylvia had a relatively privileged childhood, until her father died when she was eight years old (Poetry29). That same year she wrote and published her first poem Daddy, which is based on her father (Poetry29). I think that Sylvia writing Daddy was her way of mourning her father. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Sylvia is best known for The Colossus, Ariel, and possibly her most controversial writing The Bell Jar (Learner1&2). Sylvia was the first poet to be posthumously awarded the Pulitzer Prize for her Collected Poems (Archive1). I want to believe that if Plath received this award when she was alive, it would have dampened her depression and make her rethink suicide. Sylvia Plath had a major part in the battle for feminism because she had such a difficult time conforming to the wife and mother roles in her life (Learner1). I think that Sylvia did not want to be a part of the feminist movement, but instead she was just handling her problems the only way she knew, through writing about them. Numerous people speculate what sent Sylvia over the edge. Some possibilities are the feminist movement using her as an icon, Hughes' infidelity, or her father dying when she was at such a young age (Archive1). I think that Plath's suicide had something to do with her being the jump starter for a movement and also not being able to please or satisfy her husband, which in her era was one of the most important roles in women's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. Mirror By Sylvia Plath MID YEAR TEST How and why women are represented as being vulnerable and superficial in Sylvia Plath's poem "Mirror? Sylvia Plath's poem "Mirror" deals with women's preoccupation about aging and their concern towards their looks. Plath uses powerful imagery throughout the poem to relate to the theme of "All is Vanity"1 denouncing the superficiality of women, making a social critique of women's illogical attraction to mirrors and their own image. Proper of Plath's confessional poetry, she portrays her own anxieties about aging from a global feminine perspective. In this essay I am going to analyze why Plath, being a woman, represents this social group as being shallow and susceptible. A mirror is objective; it will never reflect what you want to see, instead it ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The protagonist of the poem considers that she is not half of what she used to be when she was young and beautiful. This demonstrates that her beauty defined her whole identity. Now, that she is starting to age, she feels like the young beautiful image is being replaced by an image that seems to terrify and deeply disturb her. "Rises toward her day after day, like a terrible fish".6 We can see how Plath portrays women as vulnerable, that a simple reflection can bring women into emotional break. As said directly in stanza "She rewards me with tears and an agitation of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. Sylvia Plath Research Paper The Indelible Self Possessed Poet: Sylvia Plath Sylvia Plath once said, " The worst enemy to creativity is self doubt"(Good Reads). Ms. Sylvia Plath was a novelist, poet, and a short–story writer (Monroe 2015). At the age of eight, she published her first poem which appeared in The Boston Traveller (Orr, Morrish, Press, et.al). Plath a terrific artist, which lead her to receiving the Scholastic Art & Writing award (Beckmann 2006).Sylvia Plath influenced literature in a positive manner because of her feminist voice in her poems. The smart and creative Sylvia Plath was born in the month of October the 27th of 1932 (Beckmann 2006). Plath was raised in Boston, Massachusetts (Monroe 2015). Aurelia and Otto Plath were her loving parents (Monroe ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. Sylvia Carrh : A Biography Of Sylvia Plath "Why can't I try on different lives, like dresses, to see which one fits me best and is most becoming?" Sylvia Plath once asked in The Journals of Sylvia Plath (Plath 38). Any reader of Sylvia Plath can instantly recognize Plath's dislike for her life and all that comes with it. Plath grew up with the realities of death in the forefront because of her father's passing at a young age and her struggles with at least one mental illness. Much like her characters in her many works, Sylvia Plath struggled from mental illnesses, such as depression and, possibly, anxiety. Sylvia Plath is famously known for committing suicide and the "Sylvia Plath Effect", the term coined by James Kaufman, PhD in 2001. The Sylvia Plath Effect considers the possibility that creative minds, such as writers, poets and artists can be more susceptible to mental illnesses. Though plenty of studies have not found a causal link, popular psychology has come to continue the stereotype that poets are generally depressed or anxious. While Plath is 'famous' in a general sense for this more commonly known information, her literary work published throughout her life and posthumously is arguably more impressive. Because The Bell Jar is semi–autobiographical, we are given insight into the younger years of Sylvia Plath and have general ideas of how she managed her depression. After numerous suicide attempts, Plath eventually succumbed to her depression and killed herself on February 11th, 1963 at thirty years old. She left behind her forty–poem manuscript of Ariel on her desk, as well as an additional nineteen poems, that her husband later published two years after Plath's death. Leaving the poems behind allowed for Plath to control the narrative of her life, as the poems from "Ariel" have a noticeable separation between the speaker of the poems, and Sylvia Plath herself. Plath's desire to try on different lives not only encapsulates the feelings of the writer, but also her characters with her works, The Bell Jar and "Ariel", specifically, "Lady Lazarus. Like her characters, Plath wishes for the ability to have more control over who she is and her experiences because trying on different lives would allow her to eventually choose the life she ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. Sylvia Plath Biography Sylvia Plath, a renowned poet, was born on October 27, 1932 in Boston, Massachusetts. Her father, Otto Plath was born in Germany and was a professor of biology at Boston University. Plath's mother, a student of Otto Plath, was named Aurelia Schober Plath (Two Views on Plath's Life and Career). Her father died on November 5, 1940 due to untreated diabetes and infection when Plath was eight years old. This experience "haunt[ed] her for life and [lead] her to create most of her poetry." Plath was brought up in a Christian home, but lost all faith after her father's passing (Sylvia Plath Biography). As a child, one of Plath's poems was published in the Boston Herald's children's section. By the age of eleven, she began to keep a journal and won multiple awards for her writings and art. She was recognized in the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards for her paintings in 1947 and sold her first poem and short story while she was still attending high school. Plath earned a scholarship from Smith College in 1951 and "enjoyed remarkable artistic, academic, and social success" there (Sylvia Plath). During the summer after her third year of college, Plath won a fiction writing contest and spent a summer in New York City working as an editor for the magazine company, Mademoiselle. Many of her memories from this summer are reflected in her novel The Bell Jar. Despite this success, Plath experienced a mental breakdown and cut her legs. She later hid underneath her mother's house and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. Sylvia Plath Accomplishments Sylvia Plath the famous American writer from Boston, Massachusetts accomplished many great poems and short stories in her short life. One of the greatest quotes and a personal favorite is"If you expect nothing from anybody, you're never disappointed." By this quote she helped people rely more on themselves than on others. Even though Plath life was tragically cut short due to suicide, she made great accomplishments in todays life and her work is still used in everyday life. In many classrooms throughout the world. Sylvia Plath was born on October twenty–seventh 1932 in Boston, Massachusetts. She was raised in a middle class family. Plath started writing at a young age. She published her first book at the age of eight. Once Sylvia graduated high school, she went to Smith college in 1950. Her junior year of college, Plath got awarded ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... After Plath got released from the rehab she published a book called The Bell Jar in 1963 it took her over two and a half years just to finish her story and to published the book. The Bell Jar was one of her most famous works. The bell jar was in an inverted glass jar, generally used to display an object of scientific curiosity, contain a certain kind of gas, or a maintain a vacuum(Sam Adam). For Esther, the bell jar symbolized madness. When gripped by insanity, she feels as if she is inside an airless jar that distorts her perspective on a world and prevents her from connecting with the people around her (Adam). At the end of the novel, the bell jar has lifted, but she can sense's going to drop at any moment and it described the relationships she had with other guys. The theme of the story is a young woman coming of age but does not follow the usual trajectory development of childhood. The style of the poem was a flashback with Esther's past and the relationship with Buddy ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. Sylvia Plath A relationship is an emotional connection to someone involving an interaction between two or more people. There are many types of relationships, some functional and others far from being workable. I will demonstrate this through my texts of; Little Fugue, and Morning Song both poems written by Sylvia Plath; the movie, Love Actually; and the book, Trickster's Choice by Tamora Pierce. Little Fugue bySylvia Plath is my first example of how we all perceive our different relationships. This poem is about Plath talking of her father and herself and the lack of communication between the two. Throughout the poem, Plath contradicts herself, saying, 'I was seven, I knew nothing' yet she constantly talks of the past, remembering. Her tone is very ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The daughter's of the Grace's, Dovasary and Sarai, and with a man who was once a crow, Nawat. As a crow, he was always fascinated by humans, Aly in particular. So using a special brand of innate magic, Nawat changed himself to human form. A crow's perception of relationships is very different from a human's. Nawat sees Aly as a potential 'mate'. The relationship between the two was rocky and awkward at first, with Nawat trying to feed her with his own mouth and Aly resisting, confusing the poor birdman. However, slowly, Nawat's vision changed, becoming more human than crow, slowly. Towards the end of the book, Aly is reunited with her father, who managed to find her through his spy system in Corus2 and Rajmuat. She decides to stay even though she hasn't seen her family in months, even though she knew it was going to leave her mother and father heartbroken and pining for her return. Her views had changed from the daughter of a spy to a spy herself. This has taught me about resilience and that not all people are what you think. There is a strong strain of racism within the Luarin (white) forces, against the Raka (natives). However, throughout the book the Luarin's views towards the Raka changed somewhat in the way that they were actually seen as human, previously they were seen as 'Raka dogs'. Aly's relationships with her mother changed in her absence, as Plath and her father never did. As a contrast to Little Fugue, Morning Song is a comepletely different ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. Daddy By Sylvia Plath Analysis After reading the poem "Daddy" written by Sylvia Plath an American poet, best known for her dark, and confessional writing. Sylvia Plath lets you understand her thoughts through her writing, for example poems like "Daddy" and her novel The Bell Jar. More and more people learn about her work by reading her poetry or novels today. For one reason, this poem gives many emotions to the reader. By reading "Daddy" you can sense sadness, hopefulness, a broken child, while others may argue it is a cry for help. Secondly, Sylvia Plath casts herself as a victim by sharing all the negative feelings she experienced after her father's dead. Lastly, Plath expresses how she portraits her father as a powerful figure, especially when Plath refer him as a Nazi, German, Frisco, and vampire. I feel this poem is very powerful because you can feel the writer's emotions towards her father and including herself worth. In the poem "Daddy" it projects the emotions Sylvia Plath was trying to share with the reader. Poems like these can help other people deal with their negative feelings, by realizing they are not the only ones dealing with negative thoughts, and searching for the help they may need in case of a crisis. Some of the dark negative emotions Sylvia Plath shares in this poem can make anyone have sympathy on her feelings. Especially, when she writes, Daddy, I have had to kill you. You died before I had time – Marble–heavy, a bag full of God, Ghastly statue with one gray toe Big as a Frisco seal And a head in the freakish Atlantic Where it pours bean green over blue In the waters off beautiful Nauset. I used to pray to recover you. Ach, du. (Plath 274). In stating this, Plath is reminding us that she did not know how to cope with the loss of her father, while growing up. When Sylvia Plath writes "I used to pray to recover you," it expresses the sadness, the pain, she was feeling after her father's loss. Plath makes you feel the brief with her writing, thinking of killing her father it's a metaphor for killing the sadness in her because he is no longer with her. I personally did not grow up with my father, and do not share none of Sylvia Plath negative thoughts. The poem gives the reader the sense of her abandonment ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. Metaphors By Sylvia Plath Essay In Sylvia Plath's poem "Metaphors" there are several references and comparisons that are made between various images and pregnancy. Plath's life experiences and the perception of women's roles of the 1950's shaped her poems and was of particular importance in this poem. As the poem progresses, the reader can infer that her attitude towards her pregnancy is not static. Through her ironic use of various metaphors, Plath is able to convey her feelings of bearing a child, and how her perception and emotions of herself change over the course of her pregnancy. Plath was an American poet, born in 1932. Her parents "demanded superior academic performance" and this resulted in Plath being somewhat of a perfectionist in her writing (Carmean 1). She... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Beginning at line 7 of the poem, Plath's tone shifts from one of excitement and satisfaction to that of disdain and disillusionment because of a crushing realization. Instead of having the initial joy and excitement of being pregnant, Plath now feels as if her body is a mere means and that its only purpose is to bare the child she is currently supporting. She feels more like a vessel storing something or an incubator. She "sees herself as a shelter for the child growing inside of her" (Devi 2). She further highlights this feeling when she again focuses on her appearance when she mentions how she is a "cow in calf" (7). Many women would feel disrespected if called a cow and the fact that Plath portrays herself as one, she allows the reader to see her true feelings of her pregnancy and that she might, in fact, wish she was not. The newness of pregnancy has worn off and now she is left with a sour taste and realization as if she had "eaten a bag of green apples" (8). All Plath is left with now is the bitter truth about what comes next in her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. Analysis Of Sylvia 's ' The Cow ' Sylvia isolates herself in nature and identifies herself as a person who prefers to be alone. While wandering in the woods and playing around with her cow, she "would look upon the cow's pranks as an intelligent attempt to play hide and seek, as [she] had no playmates" (Jewett 196). Sylvia does not experience human interaction, besides her grandmother, due to being isolated in the countryside. However, she interacts with her best friend, Mistress Moolly the cow, as a way to fill in the need of communicating with others. Sylvia could be feeling lonely, so she treats her cow as a friend. Mrs. Tilley, Sylvia's grandmother, notices how her granddaughter spends more time in nature. She states, "Afraid of folks, they said! I guess [Sylvia] won't be troubled no great with them up to the old place" (Jewett 196). The "old place" indicates Sylvia's house in the city. Generally, a city is crowded and there is not enough space for her to freely wander unlike the countryside. Mrs. Tilley suggests that her granddaughter is more comfortable in the countryside, where it is open and peaceful, rather than the congested city. There is a slight hint of transcendentalism in Sylvia. Due to her familiarity with nature, she realizes how much she prefers being alone in the woods. Additionally, the isolation that Sylvia experiences allow her to retain her innocence, a part of her identity, until she meets the hunter. Sylvia experiences a coming–of–age process as she meets the hunter in the woods ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. Who Is Sylvia Plath's Daddy? "Says there are a dozen or two so I never could tell where you put your foot, your root, I never could talk to you, the tongue struck in my jaw". (Sylvia Plath, 1962). Have you every experience a lost love one? I believe Sylvia Plath this poem was written by her experience of a lost love one. She wrote " Daddy" in 1962 to explain, and interpret how she felt for her love lost one who was hated on, and how he treated her. In the poem Sylvia Plath definitely describe her true feelings about her departed father. At the beginning of her poem she interprets about a child living the unspeakable, dreadful memory of how her father pasted away. Throughout the conversation, the reader founded many emotional feelings of hate towards her father, and how he treated her. Sylvia Plath was afraid of her father. When it was clear that she never communicated, and shield herself towards him in the first line "You do not do, you do not do Any more, black shoeing which I have lived like a foot for thirty years, poor and white, barely daring to breathe or Achoo" (Sylvia Plath, 1962). Her father experienced a growth on his toe, and ignored the situation until he passed away cause of the critical condition. It was too late to save his life. In the following passage, "And a head in the freakish Atlantic Where it pours bean green over blue in the waters off beautiful Nauset" interpret how Sylvia reacted when she found out her father's medical condition that made her very indisposed to her stomach. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. Sylvia Plath Metaphors Metaphors by Sylvia Plath was written in 1959. It is a lyric poem that uses metaphors to create a riddle, as she states in line one. Plath is using a narrator voice in her poetry to describe her pregnancy with the use of metaphors and her ambivalence to her current state. The narrator is mocking herself and I find her mocking tone to pregnancy as something I want to incorporate in my writing when writing about my character's eating disorder. The poem starts with the narrator announcing herself as a riddle in nine syllables. The nine syllables is the first hint that the poem is going to be about pregnancy. Plath correlated the use of the word 'nine' to the length of a pregnancy, giving the reader an inkling of what is to be expected of the poem. The narrator then goes on to describe herself as an elephant, then a house, two very distinctively large objects. She is now mocking the weight gain caused by pregnancy and she furthers this by comparing herself to a melon, strolling on two tendrils. These lines give the reader a vivid imagery of someone that has become stout and is struggling to do normal tasks such as walk. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In the poem she uses vivid imagery to convey the feelings of emotional suicide. The poem begins with an answer to the question "why do you want to die?" she answers this question by starting the poem with "since you ask" and takes the reader through a journey where the final destination is committing suicide. In her poetry, she does not use the voice of the narrator like the way Plath does, instead it is more of a conversational piece. Her poetry is confessional and written in her point of view, whereas with Plath's poems I've mentioned before, there is a disconnect where the reader reads it in the voice of the narrator, instead of Plath's voice. In the poem, she notes that her body is a physical " bad prison" that should be emptied completely in order to finally be ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. Sylvia Plath Figurative Language When writing a poem, the poet has no guarantee that he or she will create a great poem that captures the attention and heart of the reader. This is because every poem ever written by even the most famous of poets possesses the ability to fail miserably or be truly great. However, the poet Sylvia Plath employs certain techniques and includes specific characteristics in her in poem, "Daddy", that separates it from a bad poem. For these reasons, "Daddy" is truly a great poem. To begin, "Daddy" written bySylvia Plath is a great poem because her choice of words and poetic devices create vivid imagery. As stated in an article created by Kathryne Bradesca, imagery that is created by figurative language allows the reader to better feel and comprehend ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "Daddy" falls under the category free verse. This means that the poet does not have create a specific rhyme scheme or meter. Because of this, Sylvia Plath is able to focus more on the message she is trying to convey than on making sure the poem follows a set meter or rhyme scheme. If she had to follow traditional patterns, she would have been limited and not able to fully express the magnitude of the speaker's oppression. However, although this poem falls under free verse, that does not necessarily mean rhyme is not present. For example, she starts out by writing "You do not do, you do not do/ Anymore, black shoe" (Plath 1–2). In this example, there is an end rhyme present. This sporadic rhyming involving the "oo" sound allows Plath to draw emphasis on the oppressor in the poem. For example, Plath uses words such as Jew, brute, and shoe to describe her oppressor or the "you" in this poem. The rhyme also gives the poem rhythm; however, the spontaneous rhymes do not make it excessively singsong in nature like a love poem or one that emphasizes happiness. The structure used to create this poem is just another reason why this poem is so ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. Mirrors by Sylvia Plath 13th March, 2014 In the poem "Mirrors", by Sylvia Plath the speaker accentuates the importance of looks as an aging woman brawls with her inner and outward appearance. Employing an instance of self refection, the speaker shifts to a lake and describes the discrepancies between inevitable old age and zealous youth. By means of sight and personification, shifts and metaphors, the orator initiates the change in appearance which relies on an individual's decision to embrace and reject it. The author applies sight and personification to accentuate the mirror's roles. The declaimer of the poem says "I am silver and exact [and] whatever I see I swallow" (1, 20). The purpose of these devices is to convey the position of the mirror in... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... According to Tomei,Sylvia Plath is subject to depression just like her father (1213). Possibly hereditary, she detaches herself from everyone due to her immense discomfort and displeasure. Moreover, she imprints her feelings and memories in her poems as witnessed in the poem "Mirrors". Plath initiates her child hood in the narrative when she "meditates on the opposite wall" in her room (6). Although a mirror is personified in the poem, it signifies Plath's nature as an individual. As lonely as widow, she reposes against the wall, gazes at the divider and muses about her life. This can be due to the fact that Plath felt it was her fault her father died (Freedman 159). Thus, she translates her experiences into a poem and transmutes it literary denotation to figurative language. To conclude, everything happens for a reason and life teaches great lessons. As detected from the shift in the poem, Plath utilizes symbols in nature to delineate her view on the world. Situated in the criticism of Giles, Plath creates "images of great sound and beauty... as the sea is second only to the moon as one of her favorite symbols" (2597). As witnessed in the sonnet, the candles and the moon are viewed as liars; however, they are distinguished as her favorite symbols. Since society and individuals represent these symbols, Plath conveys the deceitful nature of people in the word. Subsequently, she "turns"to them ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. Sylvia Plath Research Paper "What horrifies me most is the idea of being useless: well–educated, brilliantly promising, and fading out into an indifferent middle age." (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath, 2000) American poet Sylvia Plath (October 27 1932 – February 11 1963) was one of the most influential poets of the 20th century. Her semi–autobiographical writing style pioneered the postmodernist form of poetry known commonly as 'Confessional Poetry', which emerged from the United State in the late 1950's and early 1960's. The confessional poetry of the mid–twentieth century centred mainly on subject matter that was previously considered taboo in American poetry, such as mental illness and sexuality. Plath battled clinical depression for most of her adult life,... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... "The bag of green apples" is an allusion from the Bible. "To the woman he said, I will make your pains in childbearing very severe; With painful labour you will give birth to children." (Genesis 3:3) At the time this poem was written, Plath had a rising academic career and motherhood would limit her literary work. It was expected that the mother would give up her career to stay home with the children. Plath envied her husband, Ted Hughes, because he was free from all these domestic responsibilities and was able to dedicate his time to writing. The result is discontent and bitterness towards children and her husband. When observing how Sylvia Plath's life affected her poetry, it is important not to overlook her distinguished poem 'Lady Lazarus'. Plath uses numerous forms of imagery to establish her emotions of pain and agony. Throughout the poem, Plath brazenly associates her depression and oppression to the experiences of Holocaust victims. Her hatred of life is also represented through her use of the Holocaust as imagery: "A sort of walking miracle, my skin Bright as a Nazi ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. `` Daddy `` By Sylvia Plath Over six million innocent lives were taken during the Holocaust. It had a significant effect on much of the world's population, and it still has an impact to this day. In Sylvia Plath's poem, "Daddy", she shows her emotions for her father, Otto Plath. Sylvia Plath lost her father at eight years old when she still had much love for him (Famous People "Biography"). After a number of years, hatred is built up inside of Sylvia towards her father. When her father first died, she loved him and she grieved over her father's death. After years of confusion, she eventually decided and wrote, "Daddy, Daddy, you bastard, I'm through" (Line 80). In "Daddy" by Sylvia Plath, the author resents her father and husband so much that they are comparable to Nazi Germans, showing her feelings for them through poetic devices. The speaker says that her German father is like a Nazi and that she feels like a Jew. This metaphor is the most powerful one in the entire poem. It shows us as readers how she feels like she is a victim of her father. She never directly calls him a Jew though. She points to the fact using metaphors and imagery. For example, the author wrote: I thought every German was you. And the language obscene An engine, an engine Chuffing me off like a Jew. A Jew to Dachau, Auschwitz, Belsen. I began to talk like a Jew. I think I may well be a Jew. ("Daddy" Lines 29–35) She compares the German language to a train, taking her to a concentration camp. Her father speaks German so this ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. Sylvia Plath Research Paper It is said that without melancholy there is no art, and there is no better embodiment of that than beloved poet and author, Sylvia Plath. Often referred to as one of the most dynamic poets of the 1900's, Plath had no limits on her expression through poetry. Her poems ranged from flowing verses on nature to unconventional commentary on the social restrictions placed on individuals. She is most known for her poetic expression of her own mental anguish, never shying away from topics of death and despair. Born in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts in 1932, Plath was the daughter of Aurelia Schober, high school teacher and student at Boston University , and Otto Plath, German immigrant and Boston University professor. At the age of eight, Plath lost her father due to complications from diabetes, which had a drastic affect on her emotionally. From the way she talks of her father in her poems it is easy to tell that Otto Plath had been a strict father, and both his overbearing relationship with his daughter and death heavily influenced her future relationships and her poetry. In one of her more famous poems, "Daddy", Plath uses multiple ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... She began at the age of eleven until her death at the age of thirty writing journals filled with her poetry as well as her more personal and morbid thoughts. For example, in this quote, "I am afraid. I am not solid, but hollow. I feel behind my eyes a numb, paralyzed cavern, a pit of hell, a mimicking nothingness. I never thought. I never wrote, I never suffered. I want to kill myself, to escape from responsibility, to draw back abjectly into the womb. I do not know who I am, where I am going..." (Sylvia Plath, The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath), Plath discusses her feelings emotional numbness, and of never wanting to have lived or suffered. After her death her journals were published, by her husband, English poet Ted Hughes, along with many other poems she had not yet ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. Sylvia Polish Father The relationship between the speaker in Sylvia Plath's "Daddy" and her father is the most complex due to the difficult situation that is presented. This piece begins with the speaker stating that she is fed up with the "black shoe" that she has lived in for thirty years. This is the beginning of an assumed tension between the speaker and her father that builds throughout the poem. The speaker then goes on to talk about how she should have "killed" her father before he "left". This is the breaking point of the relationship between the speaker and her father. This poem shows that the father passed away, most likely in the speakers youth, before the speaker was ready to let him go. One can assume that the speaker was trying to earn the approval or maker her father proud and could not... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This is a very complex and hard problem to deal with and can be seen in the writing throughout this poem. The next part of the poem hints at the speaker having a German background which could suggest that her father is a German immigrant. This could have also contributed to the frustrations that the speaker and her father faced throughout their years living in a "black shoe" for a home. The speaker then goes on to discuss how a polish town was completely destroyed in a war. The speaker repeated the word "war" three times which hints that this town has been through more than war, maybe even three. Now we get more about Germany than just an exclamation in the language. The speaker is talking about the German tongue, or language, but in a Polish town that has been destroyed by war. The speaker describes that there are a lot of town in Poland that share the same name so that she will never know for ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Sylvia Plath Research Paper Confessionalism are topics written by authors confessing his/her thoughts and emotions and sharing them to the public. Sylvia Plath was born in Boston, Massachusetts on October 27, 1932; is a confessionalist author with famous works such as Daddy, Lady Lazarus, and Cut which the trio contain a dark nature of writing. Sylvia Plath wrote many poems about her life and sharing it to the public before her suicide in February 11, 1963. Though her writing style convey to confessionalism, people believe that she deviates from confessionalism because she breaks some rules of confessionalism, but Plath conforms to the conventions as she conveys her writing with thought and emotions of her troubled life, fear of her father, and mental issues . In the poem Daddy, Plath shares that she must kill her father to be set free. "Daddy, I have had to kill you You died before I had time – ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The title of the poem is a biblical allusion to Lazarus, whom Jesus raised from the dead and adding Lady representing Plath's resurrection from the dead. "I have done it again one year in every ten I manage it (Plath)."Therefore, stating that she attempts suicide once every ten years. Confessionalism can be traced from suicide, mental health abuse, sexuality, and death. Plath also includes the amount of times she has attempted suicide, but not specifically in the poem only for readers who read other works. "A sort of walking miracle, my skin... Jew linen (Plath)." giving the introduction of the jew readers were able to analyze the amount of attempted suicide coming to a conclusion of 3 attempts. In her previous poem discussed in paragraph one her father is a Nazi and she has been trapped with him for thirty with evidence that once in every decade she tries to kill herself. The poem written by Plath does convey to rules of confessionalism as it is a way of one to express their emotion she was feeling during the time she was ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. Analysis Of Mirror By Sylvia Plath Mirrors reflect the innermost part of the soul. A mirror can show you at your most beautiful and your most unpleasant times. Sylvia Plath's poem "Mirrors", conveys a message that is much deeper than the words printed on the page. The denotation of "Mirrors" provides the reader a basic reading of the poem, whereas the connotation gives a deeper meaning to the work. Plath's word usage conveys two meanings to "Mirrors", allowing the reader to better personalize the work. "I am silver and exact. I have no preconceptions. / Whatever I see I swallow immediately / Just as it is, unmisted by love or dislike. /" (Plath 739 lines 1–3) Reading these lines obviously describe a mirror. The mirror is a first person narrator describing itself; it is "silver and exact" with no "preconceptions". It takes in whatever looks at it and feels no emotion towards it. Studying the text shows a deeper meaning. The mirror is exact, nothing is wrong with the object itself. The mirror does not have any feelings, it will not judge whomever is looking into it. Whatever looks into the mirror will see its entire self, without filters of love or dislike. The next lines follow "I am not cruel, only truthful –/ The eye of a little god, four cornered. /" (Plath lines 4–5) The mirror is not mean, it only shows the object its true reflection. It seems to be a god–like entity since it sees all. The connotation is seen as the mirror shows you who you truly are. It casts back an image that some are happy with ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26. An Explication Of Sylvia Plath's Daddy Upon hearing the word daddy, pleasant thoughts such as love, support, and dependence usually come to mind. Daddy is the person that little girls relate to, and count on to fix anything from boo–boos to a broken heart. In Sylvia Plath's "Daddy" one would expect to read about the love and comfort that a daddy can bring to a child, but after reading the first stanza it becomes clear that "Daddy" is far from anything lovely and beautiful. The speaker in "Daddy" is a girl who is emotionally torn. She has mixed emotions towards her father– deep love and strong hate. The love comes from her childhood and the way she viewed her father like God. The intense hate comes from the great fear she felt towards her father because he dictated her life completely. "Daddy" is filled with dark ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It stuck in a barb wire snare. Ich, ich, ich, ich, I could hardy speak. (24–28) "Ich" is German for "I." The onomatopoeia and repetition of the word gives the reader the sound of the speaker stuttering, attempting to speak to her father. The reader is able to imagine the speaker's tongue trapped in a "barb wire snare" unable to open her mouth to produce actual words, which shows the strain in communication she constantly had with her father. The fear that she had was so real that she found it extremely difficult to speak, if not impossible. Pain came along with any attempt to speak with her father. Plath writes: "Marble–heavy, a bag full of God, / Ghastly statue with one gray toe (8–9)" The speaker compares her father to a statue and reveals her permanent memory of him set into her mind like a monument. The metaphor "a bag full of God" allows the reader to understand that the speaker saw her father as a colossal authority figure as a child, who she happened to be quite intimidated by. Also, the statue is described as "ghastly" which tells that her memory of her father is not necessarily a pleasant one, but merely an unchanging image that she cannot ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. Research Paper On Sylvia Plath Sylvia Plath's importance to American history results from the literary distinction of her writing style, as well as her works that show the difficulty of women in the mid–twentieth century. Plath's significance comes from her writing styles in which she opened the doors to exploration of feminism to a masculine led society. Plath's life can be explored through her poems and her stories. By aligning Sylvia Plath's works to the events throughout her lifetime, we can have a better understanding of Plath's importance. "Daddy" is probably one of Sylvia Plath's best–known poems. It has received many different critiques. These critiques include praise from feminist because of its rage towards male dominance and its attention to and use of Holocaust imagery. This poem has been reviewed by hundreds of scholars and the poem has ultimately been deemed as one of the best examples of a confessional poem. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Sylvia Plath was only eight years old when her father died leaving her traumatized and at times emotionally void. She loved her father but hated him for leaving her. In lines 54–67, Sylvia Plath talks about her father's death. "At twenty I tried to die/ And get back, back, back to you." (Lines 58–59). This demonstrates her dire to reconnect with her father in the afterlife. She fills the void of her father's absence by writing poetry and marrying a man that reminds her of her father. Plath says, "I made a model of you, A man in black with a Meinkampf look/ And a love of the rack and the screw. And I said I do, I do." (Lines ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. Sylvia Plath Figurative Language Throughout Sylvia Plath's poem "You're" she addresses what her life is like as a pregnant women. This poem was written when she was pregnant with her first child so the emotions she was feeling were at full throttle. Through her use of similes and metaphors Plath is able to portray these first time emotions as excitement of a soon to be mother starts to grow. It is no secret that Sylvia Plath thought very highly of her soon to be child. There is no way however she can express this love in normal words. She must use figurative language to portray this new love. For example Plath writes, "Gilled like a fish. A common–sense" (line 3). This is the first simile she uses in her poem and she uses it to compare her daughter to a fish. Though this ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Plath explores, "Bent–backed Atlas, our travelled prawn"(13). At first glance it seems Plath is referring to a map of some sort but instead she is referring to a greek Titan. Andrew Spacey who is a writer for Owlcation wrote about this poem in his analysis. He writes, " In psychology Atlas is a metaphor for the personality of a child who has excessive responsibilities in life" (Spacey). Plath is already hinting at her new child's future and what is to come. She has high hopes for a child she hasn't even met yet, but is so in tune with her emotions she is feeling during her pregnancy she is able to use these metaphors to show her expectations. Another example would be when Plath writes, "A clean slate, with your own face on"(18). This child is new to Plath, new to her family, and new to the world. By comparing her to a new slate Plath is able to show the reader that she is creating new life from her own body. To most women a no greater joy can be felt. She has created this living being and gets the opportunity to raise a unique, child of her own. Only a metaphor could truly show that's how Plath is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. Sylvia Plath Research Paper Audra Etcheson 3.27.15 ELA 3 Sylvia Plath To become a successful writer, you have to have a lot of knowledge of the English writing. Usually, it takes a lot of time to work on and become a famous American literature writer, but not for Sylvia Plath. By the time that Plath took her life, she already had a following in the literary community. Many of the readers that she attracted were because of her attempt to list despair, violent emotion, and her obsession with death. Plath's poems explore her mental pain, her troubled marriage to poet Ted Hughes, her unsolved conflicts with her parents, and how she saw herself. Whether Plath wrote about nature or someone else, she excluded the polite surface. She tore apart the appearance of the American ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Sylvia Plath was born October 27, 1932 in Boston, Massachusetts, to Otto Plath who was a professor at Boston University where he met his wife and fellow student, Aurelia Schober. When Plath was only eight years old, her father died from complications of diabetes. He was a strict father and both his attitude and death defined many of Plath's poems, including one of her best, "Daddy" ("Sylvia Plath"). Sylvia Plath was always determined to succeed. She kept a journal from the age eleven and published many stories and poems in regional magazines and newspapers. The first poem that was published in a national magazine was in 1950 just after she graduated high school. Plath was a gifted student who won many awards and published many stories and poems in national magazines while still in her teens. She attended Smith College on scholarship and continued to excel in her writing ("Sylvia Plath"). During her undergraduate years, she began to suffer from depression. She described her feelings as positive and negative currents and whichever one is feeling the strongest, it takes over her body. This was also described as bipolar disorder and in Plath's lifetime, there were no medications that were available. In 1953, when Plath was only nineteen years old, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. Essay Sylvia Plath's Mirror Sylvia Plath's Mirror Sylvia Plath's "Mirror" offers a unique perspective on the attitudes of aging. "Mirror" displays tremendous insight and objectivity into the natural human behavior of growing older. Plath is able to emphasize the loneliness, hope, despair, and insecurity that awaits us through mankind's incessant addiction with reflection. "Mirror" expresses the problems associated with aging through terse comparisons between reality and desire. Plathe's strength of "Mirror" lies in its ability to establish a solid comparison among appearance and human emotions between the first and second stanzas. At first "Mirror" introduces reflection as a precise and accurate force through ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... It is also a very objective telling of both the aging and reflection process in that "faces and darkness separate us over and over" stemming from the people who come and go in front of this mirror. Who are almost getting in the way so to speak of its life and it can be assumed they already know the range of emotions they are receiving when they look into this mirror. Plathe's second stanza is clearly engineered to reveal the darker aspects of reflection. In the second paragraph the perspective changes from a mirror to that of a lake. In doing so does the shift in message for it marks the change in reflection from exact to distorted. She is also able to clearly show this by utilizing a simple reflection of a woman: "A woman bends over me searching my reaches for what she really is. Then she turns to those liars, the candles or the moon. I see her back and reflect it faithfully. She rewards me with tears and an agitation of hands." (Plathe lines 10–14) This example infers that the woman was firmly searching for a specific reflection and that displays insecurity and longing for something that might have passed due to age. This is especially true when taking into account "the candles or the moon" which are symbols of romance thus leading towards the suspicion that she was with or searching for somebody. The ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. An Explication Of Sylvia Plath's Daddy Sylvia Plath is a passionate poet, and her poem Daddy shows a broad range of emotions. She likes to use her writing to let out all her delicate feelings and expresses how she feels in her poem Daddy. This particular poem of hers is somewhat dark and leaves the person who reads this with a sense of hopelessness and misery, the reader questions why the writer feels this way. The speaker ofSylvia Plath's poem "Daddy" depicts that she both loves and dislikes her father. By reading this poem, you can undertake that she is speaking about her affiliation with her father, for the reason that the title states it. Her raw emotions of unhappiness and fury that are in this poem portray this assumption pretty well. By interpreting this poem her father was a German refugee and was ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The poem also expresses diverse emotions such as anger, grief, depression, and some distress. 'There are several imageries of oppression in her poem "Daddy" of Nazis, swastikas, barbed wires, fascists, brutes, devils, and vampires–are so frantic, imposing, and vituperative that the poem seems more out of control that it truly is." (http://web.b.ebscohost.com.ezp.tccd.edu) "In Plath's poem, it is clear that these characteristics are fantasies, not for the ultimate and distinct purpose that they arise inside a text, but because the sonnet addresses the production of imaginary as such. In this sense, I read 'Daddy' as a poem about its conditions of language and illusion production. Rather than casually produce identification, it asks a question about identification, laying out one set of unbearable psychic conditions under which such an identification with the Jew might take place." ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32. Sylvia Plath Sylvia Plath is said to be one the most prodigious, yet interesting, confessional poets of her time. She was an extremely vital poet of the post–World War II time period and expressed her feelings towards her father and husband through her poetry. Plath's mental illness had a dramatic influence upon her work in which she demonstrated the hatred she had for her father specifically. The poem "Daddy" is an easily applicable example. Within this piece of work, Plath uses direct references to how she feels towards her father who was the greatest influence on her poetry. The bond, or lack of, between Sylvia Plath and her "Daddy" is commonly associated with the purpose of her poetry. Her father died when Plath was only ten years old and ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Eileen M. Aird analyzes and comments, "The danger of such criticism lies in its assumption that the poem is objectively 'true', that it bears a precise relationship to the facts of the poet's life." The direct criticism Plath puts upon her father is very crucial, yet evidently true if one was research her life. Sylvia Plath's autobiographical poetry can be easily connected to her life and the answers to the many questions are easier to uncover than one may suspect. As her poetry developed, it became more autobiographical and although through her teenage years she possessed what seemed to be a rounded personality, the anguish and grief of her father's death was easily linked with her mental instability that haunted her in the later years. Her time period is easily reflected in the poem with the severity in her reference to Nazis, swastikas, barbed wire, fascists, brutes, devils, and vampires. In "Daddy", Plath refers to herself as a Jew multiple times, "An engine, an engine Chuffing me off like a Jew. A Jew to Dachau, Auschwitz, Belsen. I began to talk like a Jew. I think I may well be a Jew." The extremity Plath went to to emphasize these references during her time period were enough to make any soul cringe. World War II's concentration camps are still enough over half a century later to make one shudder in despair. The rage Plath has for her father is so easily conveyed to the reader that an illiterate individual could pick up on it, let ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. The Table By Sylvia Plath Tone The Table, written in 1998 by Ted Hughes, is a free verse poem communicating the idea of loss, using the death of his wife, Sylvia Plath, as his form of expressing his experiences and interpretations of the topic. The change of tone from the beginning to the end of the poem assists the idea of loss, as well as the language used and the strong use of imagery. Ted Hughes' wife, Sylvia Plath, struggled with depression for most of her life. Hughes seems to be using this poem as an opportunity to convince the reader of his desire to support her love of writing – but it was through her writing that she was truly able to express her own grief and loss and to eventually let her long–dead father back into her life – the result being Hughes losing his wife to her father. "Feelings of loss and grief can occur after losing someone or something that you care about." ("What is Loss and Grief"). This could include a range of things ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The poem starts with a seemingly supportive husband, he is positive about helping her pursue her love and talent of writing so he builds her a table to write on. He shortly transforms into a very confused and lost man. He doesn't understand what is happening to his wife and doesn't know how to reach out to her as he can't compete with her father. "I embraced / Lady Death, your rival" (Hughes, 36–37). Hughes is signifying that he must accept that he has lost his wife, physically and emotionally and all the plans and dreams they had for their lives. His tone begins to turn to anger and bitterness after her passing. Hughes explains that he has all the props of a happy life around him but there is no her, therefore there is no life anymore. He appears to blame the situation on Plath, saying that the script of their lives is shredded as she allowed her father into their lives, allowed him to take her away willingly, that she was the one who brought this underlying issue to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34. Analysis Of The Poem By Sylvia Plath Throughout numerous works by Sylvia Plath, she is characteristically known for emphasizing conflict, whether it be within herself or in the world around her. This poem dramatizes the conflict between the craving a sense of belonging and feeling useless. To create this effect, the speaker refers eloquently to the notion that she feels bland and unnoticed in comparison to nature. She wishes to possess the same striking beauty that the flowers have in their beds, or the same sense of direction that the trees have within their secured roots. The speaker then attempts to relate herself to her environment but fails, knowing that she will continue to be overlooked even though she and the sky "are in open conversation" (l 18). Finally, after realizing that nature cannot be paralleled when compared, especially to her, she concludes that she is more useful when she is lying horizontally without a purpose, hence the first line. In this way, the speaker seems to imply that she would be more valuable if she was dead and used as fertilizer for those same flowers and trees. However, the speaker expresses her thoughts in ways that are beautifully clouded and hidden in plain sight due to the way the poem was written. It was authored on March 28th of 1961, so the era it was composed in was the start of an era with more fluid pieces of work that had fewer literary boundaries. The poem consists of two stanzas, each ten lines, giving the poem a moderate length that flows easily. It's composed into a lyric written in parallel structure that consists of slant–rhyme with no meter, therefore making it simple to read. However, with this simplicity, there are also many topics of interest that are easily missed. For example, a reader may study "sucking up minerals and motherly love" and believe it's a reference to the tree's roots, when in reality it's a metaphor referring to someone receiving love and nurturing in a way that eventually grows into a healthy personality (l 3). In order to stress the lyric form, large amounts of assonance are used, as seen in "unpetal," "immortal," "starting," and "daring" (ll 7–10). All of these components contribute to the musical sound portrayed throughout the lyric. The first stanza begins with a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 35. Sylvia Plath In Sylvia Plath's "Daddy," and "Lady Lazarus," Plath displays her deepest emotions and concerns. Her beliefs completely contradicts her fathers so she has to deal with a lot of negative emotions throughout her life. Both of these poems were both written at the end of Plath's life and really show her state of mind. Throughout her poems, we are able to see the motivation behind her feelings and her suicide attempts. "Daddy," and "Lady Lazarus," by Sylvia Plath are the closing notes to Plath's grudges towards her father, her husband, and many other things. In her poems, Plath displays her struggles with her personal relationship with her father, her father's collaborations, and her mental status. Sylvia Plath's relationship with her father is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In lines 43–47 she says that she dies exceptionally well and she does it as though it feels real. This indicated that she is indeed depressed and feels dead to the world and to herself (Plath 1). On the other side, in lines 79–83 of "Lady Lazarus," Plath says, "Herr God, Herr Lucifer. Beware beware. Out of the ash I rise with my red hair (Plath 1)." She says this as if she has risen from the dead. This could be symbolic of her overcoming her feelings towards he father and moving on with her life. Herr is German for mister, so in complete English, Plath is saying, "Mister God, Mister Lucifer..." She symbolically tells God and Lucifer to beware, because she is rising from the dead with her red hair. After all of this time, Sylvia Plath's burdens eventually became too heavy for her to carry, and she eventually reaches her breaking point. "Daddy," and "Lady Lazarus," were her last works before she breaks down. Although she had attempted to kill herself many times before, her attempt on February 11, 1963 was different. She succeeded in her suicide attempt on February 11, 1963, leaving behind her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. Biography of Sylvia Plath As one of the most multitalented writers of the twentieth century, Sylvia Plath was highly esteemed by fans and fellow writers alike. Sylvia Plath's parents, Aurelia Schober and Otto Plath, had met when Aurelia became Otto's student at Boston University. Otto was a biology professor with an infatuation with bees; he had even published a book titled Bumblebees and their ways. Otto and Aurelia married in January of 1932, and by October of the same year Aurelia gave birth in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts to a daughter, Sylvia. Sylvia spent her childhood in Winthrop, but after Plath's father died of diabetes, her mother moved her and her brother, Warren, to Wellesley, Massachusetts which was closer to Plath's grandmother. Aurelia had acquired... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... During this time Plath had begun to search for lodging in London, she was working with the BBC Plat found an apartment in London fairly quickly. Plath took the children with her to London, where she balanced her career with her family. Plath would work on her Ariel poems before the children would wake up in the morning. She continued to suffer from sickness, and during the day she would have to deal with freezing temperatures, and nonfunctional electricity and heating. On top of no heat and power, Plath had to wait for a telephone that never got installed (Ames 211–215). Plath's only book, The Bell Jar, revolves around Esther Greenwood, a typical teenage girl aspiring to be an English teacher. The plot, however, is atypical; instead of Greenwood coming of age with normal, positive scenarios, Greenwood descends into madness and graduates not from college, but from a mental institution. Greenwood reactions to daily life differ from normal girls her age. She becomes obsessed with oddities like pickled fetuses, dead bodies, and the execution of the Rosenburgs. Greenwood scoffs at the notion of no premarital sex, viewing it as hypocritical of boys being able to sleep around while girls are to remain virgins until marriage. This option is due in part by Buddy, Greenwood's boyfriend, having sex with a coworker repeatedly over the summer while still dating Greenwood. Greenwood's subsequent actions cause her to be admitted to a mental institution after her ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37. The Barren Woman By Sylvia Plath "Barren Woman" by Sylvia Plath Poems are a structure of words with multiple layers of meanings. The "Barren Woman" by Sylvia Plath describes a childless woman who sees herself as empty and bare. Plath uses specific figurative language, such as, allusion, diction, and imagery to help explain what being barren is like. The form, context, and figurative language of "Barren Woman" conveys what it is like to be barren, emotionally and physically. "Barren Woman" is a relatively short poem. It is separated into two parts. This helps distinctly structure the poem. In the first part of this poem, the woman is comparing herself to an empty museum. "Empty, I echo to the least footfall, / Museum without statues, grand with pillars, porticoes, rotundas. / In my courtyard a fountain leaps and sinks back into itself" (1–3). In the second part of this poem the narrator takes a different point–of–view. She abruptly changes from describing herself as an empty museum, to expressing how she imagines her life, and the harsh reality that it actually is: "I imagine myself with a great public, / Mother of a white Nike and several bald–eyed Apollos. / Instead, the dead injure me with attentions, and nothing can happen" ("Barren" 5–7). Plath constructs the separate parts as two separate stanzas; part one is the first stanza, and the second part is the second stanza. By doing two stanzas each with five lines, it helps balance two different points in one poem. "Barren Woman" is a very important ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38. Sylvia Plath Thesis Sylvia Plath is best known for "the intense coupling of violent or disturbed imagery with the playful use of alliteration and rhyme in her work." (poets.org). "Daddy," one of Plath's poems is a way for her to express her life story and allow others to see into it. Living in an abusive home, she was torn down daily. She makes it clear that her father was a male–dominating, evil individual. By constantly being in this environment, it ultimately affected her work. "Daddy" was written only months before she committed suicide by placing her head in a gas oven. By taking her life in this extreme way, it shows how much of an impact the relationship with her father had; she could only live with so much mental and emotional abuse. This poem can be seen as a final ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... (need an argumentative thesis) Those that have read "Daddy," know that there is a repetitive mention of victim and villain, Nazi and Jew. Plath uses the Holocaust as an analogy and final cry to be heard. This poem was written roughly twenty years after the Holocaust occurred, some may find this as insensitive, however Plath knew she was using it to her advantage, a way to express the intensity and horridness of living with her father. It allowed an insight for the readers to truly understand her feelings. Plath grew up with her father, a German, who was a manipulative man that did not understand the idea of being kind. Poets.org suggests that Mr. Plath was a strict man, and that Sylvia Plath lived in what seemed like a communistic environment. Until she was eight years old, Plath put up with her father's wickedness; after his passing, she became obsessed with his death and began to overwhelm herself with a mix of emotions. This went on to define her relationships and poems. She went on to marry Ted Hughes who, shortly after, left her for Assia Gutmann Wevill, which threw her into a deep depression. She proceeded for ten years to attempt ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39. Sylvia Plath Research Paper Sylvia Plath once said "Let me live, love, and say it in good sentences." Plath fulfilled this quote because she did write many "good sentences", seen in her beautiful poetry and novels. Plath is a very distinguished and well known writer because of those good sentences. And her life was indeed filled with love, but also filled with tragedy and depression. Although Plath lived a short life, she wrote prolifically and used the tragedy in her life as inspiration. In fact, Sylvia Plath's depression, her relationship with Ted Hughes, and her German roots and culture are all reflected in her poetry. One aspect of Plath's life reflected in her poetry is her depression. Plath became depressed in 1953 when she learned she had not been accepted into ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... One source describes how Sylvia Plath's father, Otto Plath, emigrated to New York from Germany and later taught German at Boston University. The source continues to say that Aurelia Schober, Plath's mother, was a German from Austria who taught German at a high school (Bloom). Plath was raised in a home with strong German influences and her father "ruled the household through the German concept of Ordnung ("order")" (Meyers). In "Plath, Sylvia", Hobby describes how in 1940, when Plath was eight, Otto died from untreated diabetes leading to gangrene (Hobby). Plath writes about her sadness over her father's death in "Electra on Azalea Plath" and says "I brought my love to bear, and then, you died. / It was the gangrene ate you to the bone / My mother said; you died like any man." ("Electra on Azalea Plath, lines 38–40). After her father's death, Plath "felt his absence intensely and remarked to her mother that she would never speak to God again" (Hobby). Plath describes her anger towards her father for not seeking help in her poem "Daddy" and says "There's a stake in your fat black heart / And the villagers never liked you. / They are dancing and stamping on you. / They always knew it was you. / Daddy, daddy, you bastard, I'm through." ("Daddy", lines 76–80). Not only did Plath eventually try and separate herself from her father, but she grew up during WWII where being German was looked down ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...