Friday, March 15, 2019
Comparing Suffering in Plaths Ariel, Stings, Lady Lazarus, Wintering,
Portrayal of Suffering in Plaths Ariel, Stings, Lady Lazarus, Wintering, and pyrexia 103 Sylvia Plaths numberss evoke the worst of subjective fallacies. Probably some of our charged reactions are symptomatic of the times and the culture but more of them seem to chaff from the always-too-easy identification between troubled poet and what might be the tone of resource and rhythm of the numbers considered. Because Plath worked so intensively in archetypal imagination (water, air, fire as bases for image patterns, for example), many of her poems could be read as either dark wasteland kinds of expressions, or as the reverse, as death-by-water, buyback poems--destruction implied, but in like manner survived, phoenix-like. Ariel, the title poem of the collection that made Plath cognize to the reading world so soon after her 1962 suicide, is a likewise ambiguous poem, rich in its image patterns of movement-stasis, light-dark, earth-fire. The progression in the poem is from the s imply stated Stasis in darkness, a negative condition as Plath indicates in the very similarly imaged poem Years, to the ecstatic transformation-through- motility of the closing. That this is a poem about motion is clear from the second image, which seems to be a personation of the faint light of morning (substanceless blue pour of tor and distances) yet also stresses the movement of the image--pour, distances. The eye of the reader, like that of the poet, is on what is coming, and the scene that appears is always couched in imagery that includes motion words or impressions. Even the furrows of earth are moving (splits and passes). The antagonistic forces in the poem are those contrary to the motion that is so wildly evoked. Set against the unity of... ...e close of Ariel suggests the same benizon, I / Am the arrow, // The dew that flies / Suicidal, at one with the drive / Into the red // Eye, the caldron of morning. Then to the elements be free . . . at one with the dew. Plaths drive to motion, that edit out impact of energy and force, beyond the Dead hands, dead stringencies, is the power rear end not only Ariel but also Stings, Lady Lazarus, Wintering, and Fever 103. That she, with Shakespeare, base such violence as the gale winds auspicious is an important index to these passionate and sometimes difficult poems, poems important enough to us that we must stop to read them with an insight closer to Plaths own emphasis, and to her equally personal thematic direction. Works Cited Linda Wagner, Plaths Ariel Auspicious Gales, in Concerning Poetry, Vol. 10, No. 2, 1977, pp. 5-7.
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