β
let me live, love, and say it well in good sentences
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
Can you understand? Someone, somewhere, can you understand me a little, love me a little? For all my despair, for all my ideals, for all that - I love life. But it is hard, and I have so much - so very much to learn.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
Yes, I was infatuated with you: I am still. No one has ever heightened such a keen capacity of physical sensation in me. I cut you out because I couldn't stand being a passing fancy. Before I give my body, I must give my thoughts, my mind, my dreams. And you weren't having any of those.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
I have never found anybody who could stand to accept the daily demonstrative love I feel in me, and give back as good as I give.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
How we need another soul to cling to, another body to keep us warm. To rest and trust; to give your soul in confidence: I need this, I need someone to pour myself into.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
If you love her," I said, "you'll love somebody else someday.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Bell Jar)
β
Living with him is like being told a perpetual story: his mind is the biggest, most imaginative I have ever met. I could live in its growing countries forever.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
I want to taste and glory in each day, and never be afraid to experience pain; and never shut myself up in a numb core of nonfeeling, or stop questioning and criticizing life and take the easy way out. To learn and think: to think and live; to live and learn: this always, with new insight, new understanding, and new love.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
If they substituted the word 'Lust' for 'Love' in the popular songs it would come nearer the truth.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
There I went again, building up a glamorous picture of a man who would love me passionately the minute he met me, and all out of a few prosy nothings.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Bell Jar)
β
Ever since I was small I loved feeling somebody comb my hair. It made me go all sleepy and peaceful.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Bell Jar)
β
I love people. Everybody. I love them, I think, as a stamp collector loves his collection. Every story, every incident, every bit of conversation is raw material for me. My love's not impersonal yet not wholly subjective either. I would like to be everyone, a cripple, a dying man, a whore, and then come back to write about my thoughts, my emotions, as that person. But I am not omniscient. I have to live my life, and it is the only one I'll ever have. And you cannot regard your own life with objective curiosity all the time...
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
What did my fingers do before they held him?
What did my heart do, with its love?
From " Three Women: A Poem for Three Voices", 1962
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Collected Poems)
β
I love my rejection slips. They show me I try.
(This quote is probably wrongly attributed to Sylvia Plath)
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
Please donβt expect me to always be good and kind and loving. There are times when I will be cold and thoughtless and hard to understand.
(This quote is probably wrongly attributed to Sylvia Plath)
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
I do not love; I do not love anybody except myself. That is a rather shocking thing to admit. I have none of the selfless love of my mother. I have none of the plodding, practical love. . . . . I am, to be blunt and concise, in love only with myself, my puny being with its small inadequate breasts and meager, thin talents. I am capable of affection for those who reflect my own world.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
I am jealous of those who think more deeply, who write better, who draw better, who ski better, who look better, who live better, who love better than I.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
Is it the sea you hear in me?
Its dissatisfactions?
Or the voice of nothing, that was your madness?
Love is a shadow.
How you lie and cry after it.
--from "Elm", written 19 April 1962
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel: The Restored Edition)
β
How we need that security. How we need another soul to cling to, another body to keep us warm. To rest and trust; to give your soul in confidence: I need this, I need someone to pour myself into.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
The blood of love welled up in my heart with a slow pain.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
Whenever I'm sad I'm going to die, or so nervous I can't sleep, or in love with somebody I won't be seeing for a week, I slump down just so far and then I say: 'I'll go take a hot bath.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Bell Jar)
β
I want so obviously, so desperately to be loved, and to be capable of love.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
There is so much hurt in this game of searching for a mate, of testing, trying. And you realize suddenly that you forgot it was a game, and turn away in tears.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
At this rate, I'd be lucky if I wrote a page a day.
Then I knew what the problem was.
I needed experience.
How could I write about life when I'd never had a love affair or a baby or even seen anybody die? A girl I knew had just won a prize for a short story about her adventures among the pygmies in Africa. How could I compete with that sort of thing?
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Bell Jar)
β
I am terrified by this dark thing
That sleeps in me;
All day I feel its soft, feathery turnings, its malignity.
Clouds pass and disperse.
Are those the faces of love, those pale irretrievables?
Is it for such I agitate my heart?
I am incapable of more knowledge.
What is this, this face
So murderous in its strangle of branches? -
Its snaky acids kiss.
It petrifies the will. These are the isolate, slow faults
That kill, that kill, that kill.
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
I Am Vertical
But I would rather be horizontal.
I am not a tree with my root in the soil
Sucking up minerals and motherly love
So that each March I may gleam into leaf,
Nor am I the beauty of a garden bed
Attracting my share of Ahs and spectacularly painted,
Unknowing I must soon unpetal.
Compared with me, a tree is immortal
And a flower-head not tall, but more startling,
And I want the one's longevity and the other's daring.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Collected Poems)
β
What a man wants is a mate and what a woman wants is infinite security,β and, βWhat a man is is an arrow into the future and a what a woman is is the place the arrow shoots off from.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Bell Jar)
β
I feel good with my husband: I like his warmth and his bigness and his being-there and his making and his jokes and stories and what he reads and how he likes fishing and walks and pigs and foxes and little animals and is honest and not vain or fame-crazy and how he shows his gladness for what I cook him and joy for when I make him something, a poem or a cake, and how he is troubled when I am unhappy and wants to do anything so I can fight out my soul-battles and grow up with courage and a philosophical ease. I love his good smell and his body that fits with mine as if they were made in the same body-shop to do just that. What is only pieces, doled out here and there to this boy and that boy, that made me like pieces of them, is all jammed together in my husband. So I don't want to look around any more: I don't need to look around for anything.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
And I am aware of my heart: it opens and closes
Its bowl of red blooms out of sheer love of me.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel)
β
I am inhabited by a cry.
Nightly it flaps out
Looking, with its hooks, for something to love.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel)
β
I hated men because they didnβt stay around and love me like a father: I could prick holes in them & show they were no father-material. I made them propose and then showed them they hadnβt a chance. I hated men because they didnβt have to suffer like a woman did. They could die or go to Spain. They could have fun while a woman had birth pangs. They could gamble while a woman skimped on the butter on the bread. Men, nasty lousy men.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
I love him to hell and back and heaven and back, and have and do and will.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
There must be quite a few things a hot bath won't cure, but I don't know many of them. Whenever I'm sad I'm going to die, or so nervous I can't sleep, or in love with somebody I won't be seeing for a week, I slump down just so far and then I say: "I'll go take a hot bath.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Bell Jar)
β
I dreamed that you bewitched me into bed
And sung me moon-struck, kissed me quite insane.
(I think I made you up inside my head.)
--from "Mad Girl's Love Song: A Villanelle", written 1954
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
I wish youβd find the exit out of my head.
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
If you pluck out my heart
To find what makes it move,
Youβll halt the clock
That syncopates our love.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Collected Poems)
β
Writing, then, was a substitute for myself: if you don't love me, love my writing & love me for my writing. It is also much more: a way of ordering and reordering the chaos of experience.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
Love is the bone and sinew of my curse.
--from "Poem For A Birthday - The Stones", written 1959
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Colossus and Other Poems)
β
O love, how did you get here?
--from "Nick and the Candlestick", written 29 October 1962
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel)
β
Love is a shadow.
How you lie and cry after it
--from "Elm", written 19 April 1962
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel)
β
And I, love, am a pathological liar.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
Piece by piece, I fed my wardrobe to the night wind, and flutteringly, like a loved oneβs ashes, the gray scraps were ferried off, to settle here, there, exactly where I would never know, in the dark heart of New York.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Bell Jar)
β
God, let me think clearly and brightly; let me live, love, and say it well in good sentences, let me someday see who I am.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
To learn and think; to think and live; to live and learn: this always, with new insight, new understanding, and new love.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
The truth comes to me. The truth loves me.
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
I fancied you'd return the way you said,
But I grow old and I forget your name.
--From the poem "Mad Girl's Love Song
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
If only I can find him... the man who will be intelligent, yet physically magnetic and personable. If I can offer that combination, why shouldn't I expect it in a man?
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
I cut you out because I couldn't stand being a passing fancy.
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
Clouds pass and disperse.
Are those the faces of love, those pale irretrievables?
Is it for such I agitate my heart?
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel)
β
I am accused. I dream of massacres.
I am a garden of black and red agonies. I drink them,
Hating myself, hating and fearing. And now the
world conceives
Its end and runs toward it, arms held out in love.
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
Mirror
I am silver and exact. I have no preconceptions.
Whatever I see I swallow immediately
Just as it is, unmisted by love or dislike.
I am not cruel, only truthful-
The eye of the little god, four cornered.
Most of the time I meditate on the opposite wall.
It is pink, with speckles. I have looked at it so long
I think it is a part of my heart. But it flickers.
Faces and darkness separate us over and over.
Now I am a lake. 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.
I am important to her. She comes and goes.
Each morning it is her face that replaces the darkness.
In me she has drowned a young girl, and in me an old woman
Rises toward her day after day, like a terrible fish.
--written 1960
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Collected Poems)
β
I need more than anything right now what is, of course, most impossible, someone to love me, to be with me at night when I wake up in shuddering horror and fear of the cement tunnels leading down to the shock room, to comfort me with an assurance that no psychiatrist can quite manage to convey.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
I love the people,' I said. 'I have room in me for love, and for ever so many little lives.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
Strange, when one thinks of all the other boys, infinite experimental kisses, test tube infatuations, crushes, pseudo-loves.
All through this physical separation, through the testing and the trying of the others, there has been this peculiar rapport, comradeship, of us two so alike, so similar, but for science-boy and humanities-girl - the introspection, self examination, biannual deep summarizing conversations, and then the platonic parting.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
How could I write about life when I'd never had a love affair or a baby or seen anybody die?
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Bell Jar)
β
I am inhabited by a cry.
Nightly it flaps out
Looking, with its hooks, for something to love
I am terrified by this dark thing
That sleeps in me;
All day I feel its soft, feathery turnings, its malignity.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel)
β
Please let him come, and give me the resilience & guts to make him respect me, be interested, and not to throw myself at him with loudness or hysterical yelling; calmly, gently, easy baby easy. He is probably strutting the backs among crocuses now with seven Scandinavian mistresses. And I sit, spiderlike, waiting, here, home; Penelope weaving webs of Webster, turning spindles of Tourneur. Oh, he is here; my black marauder; oh hungry hungry. I am so hungry for a big smashing creative burgeoning burdened love: I am here; I wait; and he plays on the banks of the river Cam like a casual faun.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
I want so obviously, so desperately to be loved, and to be capable of love. I am still so naive; I know pretty much what I like and dislike; but please, don't ask me who I am. A passionate, fragmentary girl, maybe?
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
I thought if only I had a keen, shapely bone structure to my face or could discuss politics shrewdly or was a famous writer Constantin might find me interesting enough to sleep with.
And then I wondered if as soon as he came to like me he would sink into ordinariness, and if as soon as he came to love me I would find fault, the way I did with Buddy Willard and the boys before him.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Bell Jar)
β
I, love, I am the pure acetylene virgin attended by roses.
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
Love is an illusion, but I would willingly fall for it if I could believe in it.
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
I shut my eyes and all the world drops dead;
I lift my lids and all is born again.
[I think I made you up inside my head.]
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
I have room in me for love, and for ever so many little lives.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
I should have loved a thunderbird instead;
At least when spring comes they roar back again.
I shut my eyes and all the world drops dead.
(I think I made you up inside my head.)
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
With that strange knowing that comes over me, like a clairvoyance, I know that I am sure of myself and my enormous and alarmingly timeless love for you; which will always be.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
I am sending back the key
that let me into bluebeard's study; because he would make love to me
I am sending back the key;
in his eye's darkroom I can see
my X-rayed heart, dissected body:
I am sending back the key
that let me into bluebeard s study.
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
I think Iβm in love with missing you more than Iβm in love with you.
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
Antoine St. Exupery once mourned the loss of a man and the secret treasures that he held inside him. I loved Exupery; I will read him again, and he will talk to me, not being dead, or gone. Is that life after death β mind living on paper and flesh living in offspring? Maybe. I do not know.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
There must be quite a few things a hot bath wonβt cure, but I donβt know many of them. Whenever Iβm sad Iβm going to die, or so nervous I canβt sleep, or in love with somebody I wonβt be seeing for a week, I slump down just so far and then I say: 'Iβll go take a hot bath.'
I meditate in the bath.The water needs to be very hot, so hot you can barely stand putting your foot in it. Then you lower yourself, inch by inch, till the waterβs up to your neck.
I remember the ceiling over every bathtub Iβve stretched out in. I remember the texture of the ceilings and the cracks and the colors and the damp spots and the light fixtures. I remember the tubs, too: the antique griffin-legged tubs, and the modern coffin-shaped tubs, and the fancy pink marble tubs overlooking indoor lily ponds, and I remember the shapes and sizes of the water taps and the different sorts of soap holders.
I never feel so much myself as when Iβm in a hot bath.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Bell Jar)
β
Love, love,
I have hung our cave with roses.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Selected Poems)
β
I'm not sure why it is, but I love food more than just about anything else.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Bell Jar)
β
When you give someone your whole heart and he doesnβt want it, you cannot take it back. Itβs gone forever.
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
I want to write because I have the urge to excel in one medium of translation and expression of life. I can't be satisfied with the colossal job of merely living. Oh, no, I must order life in sonnets and sestinas and provide a verbal reflector for my 60-watt lighted head. Love is an illusion, but I would willingly fall for it if I could believe in it. Now everything seems either far and sad and cold, like a piece of shale at the bottom of a canyon - or warm and near and unthinking, like the pink dogwood.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
Love is a shadow.
How you lie and cry after it.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel)
β
Your security and love of life don't depend on the presence of another, but only on yourself, your chosen work, and your developing identity. Then you can safely choose to enrich your life by marrying another person, and not, as e e cummings says, until.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Letters Home)
β
..I fancied you'd return the way you said,
But I grow old and I forget your name.
(I think I made you up inside my head.)
I should have loved a thunderbird instead;
At least when spring comes they roar back again.
I shut my eyes and all the world drops dead.
(I think I made you up inside my head.)
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
β¦ to know a lot of people I love pieces of, and to want to synthesize those pieces in me somehow, be it by painting or writing. * to know that millions of others are unhappy and that life is a gentleman's agreement to grin and paint your face gay so others will feel they are silly to be unhappy, and try to catch the contagion of joy, while inside so many are dying of bitterness and unfulfillmentβ¦
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
Daddy daddy you bastard, I'm through
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Collected Poems)
β
And round her house she set
Such a barricade of barb and check
Against mutinous weather
As no mere insurgent man could hope to break
With curse, fist, threat
Or love, either
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Colossus and Other Poems)
β
Hard, sharp, ticks. I hate them. Measuring thought, infinite space, by cogs and wheels. Can you understand? Someone, somewhere, can you understand me a little, love me a little? For all my despair, for all my ideals, for all that β I love life. But it is hard, and I have so much β so very much to learn.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
From now on when a boy starts telling me about his lost loves I am going to run in the opposite direction screaming loudly... Somehow I bring out such confidences, and I'm pretty sick of hearing about Bobbe or Dorothy or P.K. or Liota. God damn them all.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
brave love, dream
not of staunching such strict flame, but come,
lean to my wound; burn on, burn on.
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
And then I wondered if as soon as he came to like me he would sink into ordinariness, and if as soon as he came to love me I would find fault after fault, the way I did with Buddy Willard and the boys before him. The same thing happened over and over: I would catch sight of some flawless man off in the distance, but as soon as he moved closer I immediately saw he wouldn't do at all.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Bell Jar)
β
...love knows not of death nor calculus above the simple sum of heart plus heart.
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
I want to love somebody because I want to be loved. In a rabbit-fear I may hurl myself under the wheels of the car because the lights terrify me, and under the dark blind death of the wheels I will be safe. I am very tired, very banal, very confused. I do not know who I am tonight. I wanted to walk until I dropped and not complete the inevitable circle of coming home. I have lived in boxes above, below, and down the hall from girls who think hard, feel similarly, and long companionably, and I have not bothered to cultivate them because I did not want to, could not, sacrifice the time. People know who I am, and the harder I try to know who they are, the more I forget their names - I want to be alone, and yet there are times when the liquid eye and the cognizant grin of a small monkey would send me into a crying fit of brotherly love. I work and think alone. I live with people, and act. I love and cherish both. If I knew now what I wanted I would know when I saw it, who he was.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
I went to the bronze boy whom I love, partly because no one really cares for him
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
And then I wondered if as soon as he came to like me he would sink into
ordinariness, and if as soon as he came to love me I would find fault after fault, the way I did with Buddy Willard and the boys before him.
The same thing happened over and over:
I would catch sight of some flawless man off in the distance, but as soon as he moved closer I immediately saw he wouldn't do at all.
That's one of the reasons I never wanted to get married. The last thing I wanted was infinite security and to be the place an arrow shoots off from. I wanted change and excitement and to shoot off in all directions myself, like the colored arrows from a Fourth of July rocket.
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
Is anyone anywhere happy? No, not unless they are living in a dream or in an artifice that they or someone else has made. For a time I was lulled in the arms of a blind organism with breasts full of champagne and nipples made of caviar. I thought she was true, and that the true was the beautiful. But the true is the ugly mixed up everywhere, like a peck of dirt scattered through your life. The true is that there is no security, no artifice to stop the unsavory changes, the rat race, the death unwish - the winged chariot, the horns and the motors, the Devil in the clock. Love is a desperate artifice to take the place of those two original parents who turned out not to be omnisciently right gods, but a rather pedestrian pair of muddled suburbanites who, no matter how bumbling they tried, never could quite understand how or why you grew up to your 21st birthday.
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
You are still on your own; be stoic; don't panic; get through this hell to the generous sweet overflowing GIVING love of spring... dawn came, black and white gray into a frozen hell.
I lived: that once. And must shoulder the bundle, the burden of my dead selves until I, again, live.
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
It's the living, the eating, the sleeping that everyone needs. Ideas don't matter so much after all. My three best friends are Catholic. I can't see their beliefs, but I can see the things they love to do on earth. When you come right down to it, I do believe in the freedom of the individualβ¦
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
I love you because you are me ... my writing, my desire to be many lives. I will be a little god in my small way. My happiness streams from having wrenched a piece out of my life, a piece of hurt and beauty, and transformed it to typewritten words on paper. I am justifying my life, my keen emotion, my feeling, by turning it into print.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
β
Who are you in love with?" I said then.
For a minute Marco didn't say anything, he simply opened his mouth and breathed out a blue, vaporous ring.
"Perfect!" he laughed.
The ring widened and blurred, ghost-pale on the dark air.
Then he said, "I am in love with my cousin."
I felt no surprise.
"Why don't you marry her?"
"Impossible."
"Why?"
Marco shrugged. "She's my first cousin. She's going to be a nun."
"Is she beautiful?"
"There's no one to touch her."
"Does she know you love her?"
"Of course."
I paused. The obstacle seemed unreal to me.
"If you love her," I said, "you'll love somebody else someday.
β
β
Sylvia Plath
β
In Plaster
I shall never get out of this! There are two of me now:
This new absolutely white person and the old yellow one,
And the white person is certainly the superior one.
She doesn't need food, she is one of the real saints.
β¨At the beginning I hated her, she had no personality --
She lay in bed with me like a dead body
β¨And I was scared, because she was shaped just the way I was β¨
Only much whiter and unbreakable and with no complaints.
I couldn't sleep for a week, she was so cold.
I blamed her for everything, but she didn't answer.
β¨I couldn't understand her stupid behavior!
β¨When I hit her she held still, like a true pacifist.
β¨Then I realized what she wanted was for me to love her:
She began to warm up, and I saw her advantages.
β¨β¨Without me, she wouldn't exist, so of course she was grateful.
β¨I gave her a soul, I bloomed out of her as a rose
β¨Blooms out of a vase of not very valuable porcelain,
And it was I who attracted everybody's attention,
β¨Not her whiteness and beauty, as I had at first supposed.
β¨I patronized her a little, and she lapped it up --
β¨You could tell almost at once she had a slave mentality.
β¨β¨I didn't mind her waiting on me, and she adored it.
β¨In the morning she woke me early, reflecting the sun
β¨From her amazingly white torso, and I couldn't help but notice
β¨Her tidiness and her calmness and her patience:
She humored my weakness like the best of nurses,
β¨Holding my bones in place so they would mend properly.
In time our relationship grew more intense.
β¨β¨She stopped fitting me so closely and seemed offish.
β¨I felt her criticizing me in spite of herself,
β¨As if my habits offended her in some way.
She let in the drafts and became more and more absent-minded.
β¨And my skin itched and flaked away in soft pieces
β¨Simply because she looked after me so badly.
Then I saw what the trouble was: she thought she was immortal.
She wanted to leave me, she thought she was superior,
β¨And I'd been keeping her in the dark, and she was resentful --
Wasting her days waiting on a half-corpse!
β¨And secretly she began to hope I'd die.
Then she could cover my mouth and eyes, cover me entirely,
β¨And wear my painted face the way a mummy-case
Wears the face of a pharaoh, though it's made of mud and water.
β¨β¨I wasn't in any position to get rid of her.
She'd supported me for so long I was quite limp --
I had forgotten how to walk or sit,
So I was careful not to upset her in any way
β¨Or brag ahead of time how I'd avenge myself.
Living with her was like living with my own coffin:
Yet I still depended on her, though I did it regretfully.
I used to think we might make a go of it together --
β¨After all, it was a kind of marriage, being so close.
β¨Now I see it must be one or the other of us.
She may be a saint, and I may be ugly and hairy,
β¨But she'll soon find out that that doesn't matter a bit.
I'm collecting my strength; one day I shall manage without her,
β¨And she'll perish with emptiness then, and begin to miss me.
--written 26 Feburary 1961
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Sylvia Plath (The Collected Poems)
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God, I scream for time to let go, to write, to think. But no. I have to exercise my memory in little feats just so I can stay in this damn wonderful place which I love and hate with all my heart. And so the snow slows and swirls, and melts along the edges. The first snow isn't good for much. It makes a few people write poetry, a few wonder if the Christmas shopping is done, a few make reservations at the skiing lodge. It's a sentimental prelude to the real thing. It's picturesque & quaint.
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Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
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A little thing, like children putting flowers in my hair, can fill up the widening cracks in my self-assurance like soothing lanolin. I was sitting out on the steps today, uneasy with fear and discontent. Peter, (the little boy-across-the-street) with the pointed pale face, the grave blue eyes and the slow fragile smile came bringing his adorable sister Libby of the flaxen braids and the firm, lyrically-formed child-body. They stood shyly for a little, and then Peter picked a white petunia and put it in my hair. Thus began an enchanting game, where I sat very still, while Libby ran to and fro gathering petunias, and Peter stood by my side, arranging the blossoms. I closed my eyes to feel more keenly the lovely delicate-child-hands, gently tucking flower after flower into my curls. "And now a white one," the lisp was soft and tender. Pink, crimson, scarlet, white ... the faint pungent odor of the petunias was hushed and sweet. And all my hurts were smoothed away. Something about the frank, guileless blue eyes, the beautiful young bodies, the brief scent of the dying flowers smote me like the clean quick cut of a knife. And the blood of love welled up in my heart with a slow pain.
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Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
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Life, of course, never gets anyone's entire attention. Death always remains interesting, pulls us, draws us. As sleep is necessary to our physiology, so depression seems necessary to our psychic economy. In some secret way, Thanatos nourishes Eros as well as opposes it. The two principles work in covert concert; though in most of us Eros dominates, in none of us is Thanatos completely subdued. However-and this is the paradox of suicide-to take one's life is to behave in a more active, assertive, "erotic" way than to helplessly watch as one's life is taken away from one by inevitable mortality. Suicide thus engages with both the death-hating and the death-loving parts of us: on some level, perhaps, we may envy the suicide even as we pity him. It has frequently been asked whether the poetry of Plath would have so aroused the attention of the world if Plath had not killed herself. I would agree with those who say no. The death-ridden poems move us and electrify us because of our knowledge of what happened. Alvarez has observed that the late poems read as if they were written posthumously, but they do so only because a death actually took place. "When I am talking about the weather / I know what I am talking about," Kurt Schwitters writes in a Dada poem (which I have quoted in its entirety). When Plath is talking about the death wish, she knows what she is talking about. In 1966, Anne Sexton, who committed suicide eleven years after Plath, wrote a poem entitled "Wanting to Die," in which these startlingly informative lines appear: But suicides have a special language.
Like carpenters they want to know which tools.
They never ask why build.
When, in the opening of "Lady Lazarus," Plath triumphantly exclaims, "I have done it again," and, later in the poem, writes, 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, we can only share her elation. We know we are in the presence of a master builder.
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Janet Malcolm (The Silent Woman: Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes)
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Paralytic
It happens. Will it go on? ----
My mind a rock,
No fingers to grip, no tongue,
My god the iron lung
That loves me, pumps
My two
Dust bags in and out,
Will not
Let me relapse
While the day outside glides by like ticker tape.
The night brings violets,
Tapestries of eyes,
Lights,
The soft anonymous
Talkers: 'You all right?'
The starched, inaccessible breast.
Dead egg, I lie
Whole
On a whole world I cannot touch,
At the white, tight
Drum of my sleeping couch
Photographs visit me ----
My wife, dead and flat, in 1920 furs,
Mouth full of pearls,
Two girls
As flat as she, who whisper 'We're your daughters.'
The still waters
Wrap my lips,
Eyes, nose and ears,
A clear
Cellophane I cannot crack.
On my bare back
I smile, a buddha, all
Wants, desire
Falling from me like rings
Hugging their lights.
The claw
Of the magnolia,
Drunk on its own scents,
Asks nothing of life.
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Sylvia Plath (Ariel)
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Love Letter"
Not easy to state the change you made.
If I'm alive now, then I was dead,
Though, like a stone, unbothered by it,
Staying put according to habit.
You didn't just tow me an inch, no-
Nor leave me to set my small bald eye
Skyward again, without hope, of course,
Of apprehending blueness, or stars.
That wasn't it. I slept, say: a snake
Masked among black rocks as a black rock
In the white hiatus of winter-
Like my neighbors, taking no pleasure
In the million perfectly-chisled
Cheeks alighting each moment to melt
My cheeks of basalt. They turned to tears,
Angels weeping over dull natures,
But didn't convince me. Those tears froze.
Each dead head had a visor of ice.
And I slept on like a bent finger.
The first thing I was was sheer air
And the locked drops rising in dew
Limpid as spirits. Many stones lay
Dense and expressionless round about.
I didn't know what to make of it.
I shone, mice-scaled, and unfolded
To pour myself out like a fluid
Among bird feet and the stems of plants.
I wasn't fooled. I knew you at once.
Tree and stone glittered, without shadows.
My finger-length grew lucent as glass.
I started to bud like a March twig:
An arm and a leg, and arm, a leg.
From stone to cloud, so I ascended.
Now I resemble a sort of god
Floating through the air in my soul-shift
Pure as a pane of ice. It's a gift.
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Sylvia Plath (Crossing the Water)
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Now I'll never see him again, and maybe it's a good thing. He walked out of my life last night for once and for all. I know with sickening certainty that it's the end. There were just those two dates we had, and the time he came over with the boys, and tonight. Yet I liked him too much - - - way too much, and I ripped him out of my heart so it wouldn't get to hurt me more than it did. Oh, he's magnetic, he's charming; you could fall into his eyes. Let's face it: his sex appeal was unbearably strong. I wanted to know him - - - the thoughts, the ideas behind the handsome, confident, wise-cracking mask. "I've changed," he told me. "You would have liked me three years ago. Now I'm a wiseguy." We sat together for a few hours on the porch, talking, and staring at nothing. Then the friction increased, centered. His nearness was electric in itself. "Can't you see," he said. "I want to kiss you." So he kissed me, hungrily, his eyes shut, his hand warm, curved burning into my stomach. "I wish I hated you," I said. "Why did you come?" "Why? I wanted your company. Alby and Pete were going to the ball game, and I couldn't see that. Warrie and Jerry were going drinking; couldn't see that either." It was past eleven; I walked to the door with him and stepped outside into the cool August night. "Come here," he said. "I'll whisper something: I like you, but not too much. I don't want to like anybody too much." Then it hit me and I just blurted, "I like people too much or not at all. I've got to go down deep, to fall into people, to really know them." He was definite, "Nobody knows me." So that was it; the end. "Goodbye for good, then," I said. He looked hard at me, a smile twisting his mouth, "You lucky kid; you don't know how lucky you are." I was crying quietly, my face contorted. "Stop it!" The words came like knife thrusts, and then gentleness, "In case I don't see you, have a nice time at Smith." "Have a hell of a nice life," I said. And he walked off down the path with his jaunty, independent stride. And I stood there where he left me, tremulous with love and longing, weeping in the dark. That night it was hard to get to sleep.
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Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)
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On a relatively unfrequented, stony beach there is a great rock which juts out over the sea. After a climb, an ascent from one jagged foothold to another, a natural shelf is reached where one person can stretch at length, and stare down into the tide rising and falling below, or beyond to the bay, where sails catch light, then shadow, then light, as they tack far out near the horizon. The sun has burned these rocks, and the great continuous ebb and flow of the tide has crumbled the boulders, battered them, worn them down to the smooth sun-scalded stones on the beach which rattle and shift underfoot as one walks over them. A serene sense of the slow inevitability of the gradual changes in the earthβs crust comes over me; a consuming love, not of a god, but of the clean unbroken sense that the rocks, which are nameless, the waves which are nameless, the ragged grass, which is nameless, are all defined momentarily through the consciousness of the being who observes them. With the sun burning into rock and flesh, and the wind ruffling grass and hair, there is an awareness that the blind immense unconscious impersonal and neutral forces will endure, and that the fragile, miraculously knit organism which interprets them, endows them with meaning, will move about for a little, then falter, fail, and decompose at last into the anonomous [sic] soil, voiceless, faceless, without identity.
From this experience I emerged whole and clean, bitten to the bone by sun, washed pure by the icy sharpness of salt water, dried and bleached to the smooth tranquillity that comes from dwelling among primal things.
From this experience also, a faith arises to carry back to a human world of small lusts and deceitful pettiness. A faith, naΓ―ve and child like perhaps, born as it is from the infinite simplicity of nature. It is a feeling that no matter what the ideas or conduct of others, there is a unique rightness and beauty to life which can be shared in openness, in wind and sunlight, with a fellow human being who believes in the same basic principles.
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Sylvia Plath (The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath)