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    Ted Hughes

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    university poetry magazines. At Cambridge he met and married U.S. poet Sylvia Plath in 1956. Hughe’s first book of poems‚ Hawk in the Rain‚ was published in 1957 to immediate acclaim‚ winning the Harper publication contest. Over the next 41 years‚ he would write upwards of 90 books‚ and win numerous prizes and fellowships. In 1984‚ he was appointed England’s poet laureate.  Hughes and Plath had separated by 1963‚ when Plath committed suicide in 1963 (they had separated in 1962)‚ many held Hughes

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    October 2012 Tue 9:50am “Any man can be a father‚ but it takes a special person to be a dad.” There are some people who do not have the opportunity to have a father in their life. Someone they can call dad. Like the men in the work’s “Daddy” Sylvia Plath and “My Papa’s Waltz” by Theodore Roethke. A similarity of the works is that that the fathers were admired by their children. In contrast‚ In “Daddy” the fathers was abusive and in “My Papa’s Waltz” the father wasn’t abusive towards the son. The

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    Disappointment and Identity Crisis ——the reasons of Esther’s insanity in The Bell Jar The Bell Jar is the autobiographical book of Sylvia Plath and it follows the real story of the author’s experience of adolescent depression and suicide attempts (Wang‚ 2006). Esther Greenwood is the protagonist and narrator of The Bell Jar. She is a girl from Boston who is swept up into a fast-paced New York City life and cannot take it. The novel follows her descent into madness and her struggle to escape from

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    black‚ and‚ one by one‚ they plopped to the ground at my feet.” (Plath 77) Esther notices a gap between what society says she should experience and what she does experience‚ and this gap intensifies her growing insanity. 1950’s society expects women of Esther’s age to act

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    Identity In The Bell Jar

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    Unraveling Parallels In her modern classic‚ Sylvia Plath tells the story of a neurotic woman on the grip of insanity. The Bell Jar presents the atypical coming-of-age of the successful and magnetic Esther Greenwood. As her mental health declines‚ she longs to escape her cosmopolitan life through taking her own. Though Neurotic Poets recounts the biography of Sylvia Plath‚ The Bell Jar reveals a more personal struggle with clinical depression. Esther’s failure to recognize her self-importance

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    The Yellow Wallpaper Essay

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    Cited: Bolina‚ Jaswinder. "Tulips by Sylvia Plath : The Poetry Foundation ." Poetry Foundation. N.p.‚ n.d. Web. 2 Dec. 2011. . Siegel‚ Jennifer. Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Famous Charlotte Perkins Gilman Quotes." Charlotte Perkins Gilman. N.p.‚ n.d. Web. 2 Dec. 2011. . Gilman‚ Charlotte Perkins

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    Figurative Language

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    by assuming that any connection to the beauties of nature implies a positive connotation; however‚ it can be argued that nature’s attributes are mostly associated with negative references such as liminal space‚ phallic symbols‚ and death. Both Sylvia Plath in "The Night Dances" and Seamus Heaney in "Ocean’s Love to Ireland" use nature to create clear imagery in their poems in a manner that

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    • Duality  ‘if not red‚ then white;’ ‘only the bookshelves escaped into whiteness.’ • Sylvia: Red is a life force‚ vitality‚ the sun; Hughes: Red is blood‚ macabre‚ etc. • White: sanitised hospitals‚ death‚ decay. In asia: mourning. Also cleanliness. “bone clinic whiteness.” • Contrast: Each party’s different meanings for the respective colours. • Repition of “blood” • ‘the family bones’ – reference to plath’s father. • ‘when YOU had YOUR way‚’ insinuating Plath’s dominance in the relationship

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    TJ Waller Mrs. Pinchback AP English 12 18 November 2013 Explication One: “Mad Girl’s Love Song” “Mad Girl’s Love Song” by Sylvia Plath dramatizes the clash between perception and reality in the mind of a speaker who has lost a love so vital to her world that she begins to question her own sanity. No formal setting is introduced‚ which supports a theme of mental instability as it can be inferred that the entire poem is taking place within the speaker’s mind as she struggles to determine the

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    ‘Your Paris’ present the main issues of Birthday Letters? (Reference to two other poems) Ted Hughes’ poem ‘Your Paris’ was written about Ted Hughes’ and Sylvia Plath’s visit to Paris shortly after their marriage on 16 June 1956. The poem is part of the collection ‘Birthday Letters’ published in 1998‚ 35 years after the suicide of Sylvia Plath and so is written (as most of the collection) with the benefit of Hindsight and so Hughes is able to relate their trip to Paris to the future of their relationship

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