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Elegy for Sylvia Plath
Sylvia, did they ever give you
that pearl button, or an eye
seeing to the road you drew,
The bones you arranged
and stuck together with glue?
Were the worms
that jolted into you
something you knew?
Something that grew like tulips,
that you couldn’t uproot?
The mirrors you filled with smiles,
they learned to undo.
They grabbed your foot and your root
and stuck them together with glue,
untwisting your smile like a screw.
They all claim to know your “truth,”
a Picasso painting in the period of blue.
They never seem to let you be through,
your black telephone
was never cut from the root.
Did the dark water dark heaven
let you through? They never could
talk to you.
So they walk through the road you drew,
using your images and words as clues.
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Just a poem I wrote as a reflection of Sylvia Plath’s edgy depressed girl persona the media made up. I find it very stupid that a poetic voice such as spoken in the “Ariel,” poems is used to interpret Plath’s life. In reality, no one but Plath’s family and friends truly knew her. “Ariel” should be celebrated for its brutal poetic voice and paving the way for women in poetry, and talking about topics that were previously considered taboo, not used as an interpretation for Plath’s life.