Sylvia Plath

Selected Poems of Sylvia Plath

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Selected Poems


Sylvia Plath was an American poet, novelist, and short-story writer. She is credited with advancing the genre of confessional poetry and is best known for two of her published collections, The Colossus and Other Poems and Ariel, as well as The Bell Jar, a semi-autobiographical novel published shortly before her death.


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33 printed pages
Original publication
2021
Publication year
2020
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Quotes

  • John Zendrickhas quoted6 days ago
    The night sky is only a sort of carbon paper,

    Blueblack, with the much-poked periods of stars

    Letting in the light, peephole after peephole –

    A bonewhite light, like death, behind all things.

    Under the eyes of the stars and the moon’s rictus

    He suffers his desert pillow, sleeplessness

    Stretching its fine, irritating sand in all directions.

    Over and over the old, granular movie

    Exposes embarrassments – the mizzling days

    Of childhood and adolescence, sticky with dreams,

    Parental faces on tall stalks, alternately stern and tearful,

    A garden of buggy roses that made him cry.

    His forehead is bumpy as a sack of rocks.

    Memories jostle each other for face-room like obsolete film stars.

    He is immune to pills: red, purple, blue –

    How they lit the tedium of the protracted evening!

    Those sugary planets whose influence won for him

    A life baptized in no-life for a while,

    And the sweet, drugged waking of a forgetful baby.

    Now the pills are worn-out and silly, like classical gods.

    Their poppy-sleepy colors do him no good.

    His head is a little interior of gray mirrors.

    Each gesture flees immediately down an alley

    Of diminishing perspectives, and its significance

    Drains like water out the hole at the far end.

    He lives without privacy in a lidless room,

    The bald slots of his eyes stiffened wide-open

    On the incessant heat-lightning flicker of situations.

    Nightlong, in the granite yard, invisible cats

    Have been howling like women, or damaged instruments.

    Already he can feel daylight, his white disease,

    Creeping up with her hatful of trivial repetitions.

    The city is a map of cheerful twitters now,

    And everywhere people, eyes mica-silver and blank,

    Are riding to work in rows, as if recently brainwashed.
  • Natasha Klimchukhas quoted5 years ago
    The snow has no voice.
  • Natasha Klimchukhas quoted5 years ago
    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.

On the bookshelves

  • Natasha Klimchuk
    Poetry
    • 30
    • 4
  • Marie Thomas
    Poetry
    • 13
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