Sylvia Plath 1-Poppies in October The poem is a remarkable play of life and death‚ said and unsaid‚ hope and hopelessness. The poem is about an unusual time and its impact on the poetess‚ wherein she tells her agony and pain through the metaphor of nature. The poem brings before us a personal touch of the poetess’ life. October is the beginning of winter when flowers withered away and trees are leafless. It is the coming up of a long and cold winter and is not a season of blooming and blossoming
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Sylvia Plath (October 27‚ 1932 – February 11‚ 1963) was an American poet‚ novelist and short story writer. Born in Boston‚ Massachusetts‚ she studied at Smith College and Newnham College‚ Cambridge‚ before receiving acclaim as a professional poet and writer. She married fellow poet Ted Hughes in 1956 and they lived together first in the United States and then England‚ having two children together‚ Frieda and Nicholas. Plath suffered from depression for much of her adult life‚[1] and in 1963 she committed
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‘Plath’s poems seethe with anger‚ hope‚ desire and disappointment. Her poems reveal a perspective and a language use that are utterly unique’. Sylvia Plath poetry is unique because of her use of language and the perspective and themes she explores‚ creating powerful images and original metaphorical ideas to evoke a strong climax of feelings which express the struggles she experienced in her own personal life. Her poems ‘Lady Lazarus’ and ‘Daddy’ are confessional poems that use contemporary form
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A Recurring Theme in Sylvia Plath’s Poetry Sylvia Plath’s poetry speaks to readers of today because of its clear attack on the betrayed and powerless‚ emotions that many people understand. The loss of a loved one is an emotional detachment shown in Plath’s writing that unites the reader’s feelings of helplessness to her own. Plath’s emotions became unbearable and lead to her suicide. Her pieces give evidence as to why she took her own life. She expresses how belittled and out of control she was in
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The poetic techniques employed by Plath succeed in making the world of her poetry a strange and terrifying one. I agree with the above statement as I feel that the world of Plath’s poetry is made strange and often terrifying by her use of poetic techniques. In my opinion the poetic techniques that aid most in making the world of her poetry strange and terrifying would be the use of allegory‚ imagery‚ similes and metaphors and also the use of words with ominous connotations. The poems that I will
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Essay Just like Sylvia Plath tries to illustrate her dislike towards Nazis in a very explicit way by saying “every woman adores a Fascist” as an irony- I think she intends to express another idea rather than the fact that she disliked Nazis or that her father resembled them. At a first glance‚ Sylvia Plath could be telling the world that all en have Nazi features in one way or another. The narrator of the poem has obviously had a terrible‚ severe and authoritarian father‚ even compared to
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interpreting the work in a number of different ways. The poets John Keats‚ W.H. Auden‚ and Sylvia Plath all use these techniques in their poetry‚ with
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SYLVIA PLATH “MIRROR” Truth or lie? What do we prefer to hear? Abstact: The paper analyzes the poem “Mirror“‚ written by Sylvia Plath. What it wants to show are the multiple meanings which depend on the different readers. The paper is intended to show the importance of the “mirror” and its reflection of the person looking into it. This paper also explains how a poem can serve a writer as an instrument to describe her/his life and feelings on a sheet of paper. Silvia
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the swinging motion would be symbolic of her ambivalent state and her unfulfilled longing as well.) Plath confesses that‚ after failing to escape her predicament through attempted suicide‚ she married a surrogate father‚ "a man in black with a Meinkampf look" who obligingly was just as much a vampire of her spirit—one who "drank my blood for a year‚ / Seven years‚ if you want to know." (Sylvia Plath was married to the poet Ted Hughes for seven years.) When she drives the stake through her father’s
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Sylvia Plath draws upon her personal experiences to blend a range of powerful emotions‚ weaving them cleverly throughout her poems. ‘Lady Lazarus’ and ‘Daddy’ explore her intimate struggles and how the abandonment and betrayal of masculine figures in her life shaped her views on life and death. Her carefully selected language is crucial in exhibiting her feelings about the oppression of herself as a woman and her demand of dominance over the men around her. The protagonist of ‘Lady Lazarus’ is
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