Sylvia Plath
(/plæθ/; October 27, 1932 – February 11, 1963) 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 (1960) and
Ariel (1965), and also The Bell Jar,
a semi-autobiographical novel published shortly before her suicide in 1963. The Collected Poems was published in
1981, which included previously unpublished works. For this collection Plath
was awarded a Pulitzer Prize in Poetry in 1982, making her the fourth to receive
this honour posthumously.
Born in Boston, Massachusetts, Plath graduated from Smith
College in Massachusetts and the University of Cambridge, England, where she
was a student at Newnham College. Plath later studied with Robert Lowell at
Boston University, alongside poets Anne
Sexton and George Starbuck. She
married fellow poet Ted Hughes in 1956, and they lived together in the United
States and then in England. Their relationship was tumultuous and, in her
letters, Plath alleges abuse at his hands. They had two children before separating
in 1962.
Plath was clinically depressed for most of her adult life,
and was treated multiple times with early versions of electroconvulsive therapy
(ECT). She ended her own life in 1963.
Life and career
Early life
Sylvia Plath was
born on October 27, 1932, in Boston, Massachusetts. Her mother, Aurelia Schober Plath (1906–1994), was
a second-generation American of Austrian descent, and her father, Otto Plath (1885–1940), was from
Grabow, Germany. Plath's father was an entomologist and a professor of biology
at Boston University who wrote a book about bumblebees.
On April 27, 1935, Plath's brother Warren was born. In 1936
the family moved from 24 Prince Street in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, to 92
Johnson Avenue, Winthrop, Massachusetts. Plath's mother, Aurelia, with Plath's
maternal grandparents, the Schobers, had lived since 1920 in a section of
Winthrop called Point Shirley, a location mentioned in Plath's poetry. While
living in Winthrop, eight-year-old Plath published her first poem in the Boston
Herald's children's section. Over the next few years, Plath published multiple
poems in regional magazines and newspapers. At age 11, Plath began keeping a
journal. In addition to writing, she showed early promise as an artist, winning
an award for her paintings from the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards in
1947. "Even in her youth, Plath was
ambitiously driven to succeed."
Otto Plath died
on November 5, 1940, a week and a half after Sylvia's eighth birthday, of
complications following the amputation of a foot due to untreated diabetes. He
had become ill shortly after a close friend died of lung cancer. Comparing the
similarities between his friend's symptoms and his own, Otto became convinced
that he, too, had lung cancer and did not seek treatment until his diabetes had
progressed too far. Raised as a Unitarian, Plath experienced a loss of faith
after her father's death and remained ambivalent about religion throughout her
life. Her father was buried in Winthrop Cemetery in Massachusetts. A visit to
her father's grave later prompted Plath to write the poem "Electra on Azalea Path".
After Otto's death, Aurelia moved her children and her
parents to 26 Elmwood Road, Wellesley, Massachusetts, in 1942. Plath commented
in "Ocean 1212-W", one of
her final works, that her first nine years "sealed
themselves off like a ship in a bottle—beautiful, inaccessible, obsolete, a fine,
white flying myth". Plath attended Bradford Senior High School (now
Wellesley High School) in Wellesley, graduating in 1950. Just after graduating
from high school, she had her first national publication in the Christian
Science Monitor.
College years and
depression
In 1950, Plath attended Smith College, a private women's
liberal arts college in Massachusetts. She excelled academically. While at
Smith, she lived in Lawrence House, and a plaque can be found outside her old
room. She edited The Smith Review. After her third year of college, Plath was
awarded a coveted position as a guest editor at Mademoiselle Magazine, during
which she spent a month in New York City. The experience was not what she had
hoped for, and many of the events that took place during that summer were later
used as inspiration for her novel The Bell Jar.
She was furious at not being at a meeting the editor had
arranged with Welsh poet Dylan Thomas
— a writer whom she loved, said one of her boyfriends, "more than life itself". She hung around the White Horse
Tavern and the Chelsea Hotel for two days, hoping to meet Thomas, but he was
already on his way home. A few weeks later, she slashed her legs to see if she
had enough "courage" to
kill herself. During this time she was not accepted into a Harvard writing
seminar with author Frank O'Connor.
Following ECT for depression, Plath made her first medically documented suicide
attempt on August 24, 1953, by crawling under the front porch and taking her
mother's sleeping pills.
Sidgwick Hall at Newnham
College
She survived this first suicide attempt, later writing that
she "blissfully succumbed to the
whirling blackness that I honestly believed was eternal oblivion". She
spent the next six months in psychiatric care, receiving more electric and insulin
shock treatment under the care of Ruth
Beuscher. Her stay at McLean Hospital and her Smith Scholarship were paid
for by Olive Higgins Prouty, who
also recovered from a mental breakdown. According to Plath's biographer Andrew
Wilson, Olive Higgins Prouty "would
take Dr Tillotson to task for the badly managed ECT, blaming him for Sylvia's
suicide attempt".
Plath seemed to make a good recovery and returned to
college. In January 1955, she submitted her thesis The Magic Mirror: A Study of the Double in Two of Dostoyevsky's Novels, and in June graduated from Smith with
an A.B., summa cum laude. She was a member of the Phi Beta Kappa academic honor
society, and had an IQ of around 160.
She obtained a Fulbright Scholarship to study at Newnham
College, one of the two women-only colleges of the University of Cambridge in
England, where she continued actively writing poetry and publishing her work in
the student newspaper Varsity. At Newnham, she studied with Dorothea Krook, whom she held in high
regard. She spent her first year winter and spring holidays traveling around
Europe.
Career and marriage
Plath met poet Ted
Hughes on February 25, 1956. In a 1961 BBC interview (now held by the British
Library Sound Archive), Plath describes how she met Hughes:
I'd read some of Ted's
poems in this magazine and I was very impressed and I wanted to meet him. I
went to this little celebration and that's actually where we met...Then we saw
a great deal of each other. Ted came back to Cambridge and suddenly we found
ourselves getting married a few months later...We kept writing poems to each
other. Then it just grew out of that, I guess, a feeling that we both were
writing so much and having such a fine time doing it, we decided that this
should keep on.
Plath described Hughes as "a singer, story-teller, lion and world-wanderer" with "a voice like the thunder of God".
The couple married on June 16, 1956, at St George the
Martyr, Holborn in London (now in the Borough of Camden) with Plath's mother in
attendance, and spent their honeymoon in Paris and Benidorm. Plath returned to
Newnham in October to begin her second year. During this time, they both became
deeply interested in astrology and the supernatural, using Ouija boards.
In June 1957, Plath and Hughes moved to the United States,
and from September, Plath taught at Smith College, her alma mater. She found it
difficult to both teach and have enough time and energy to write, and in the
middle of 1958, the couple moved to Boston. Plath took a job as a receptionist
in the psychiatric unit of Massachusetts General Hospital and, in the evening sat
in on creative writing seminars given by poet Robert Lowell (also attended by the writers Anne Sexton and George
Starbuck).
Both Lowell and Sexton encouraged Plath to write from her
experience and she did so. She openly discussed her depression with Lowell and
her suicide attempts with Sexton, who led her to write from a more female
perspective. Plath began to consider herself as a more serious, focused poet
and short story writer. At this time Plath and Hughes first met the poet W.S. Merwin, who admired their work and
was to remain a lifelong friend. Plath resumed psychoanalytic treatment in
December, working with Ruth Beuscher.
Plath and Hughes traveled across Canada and the United
States, staying at the Yaddo artist colony in Saratoga Springs, New York in
late 1959. Plath says that it was here that she learned "to be true to my own weirdnesses", but she remained
anxious about writing confessionally, from deeply personal and private
material. The couple moved back to England in December 1959 and lived in London
at 3 Chalcot Square, near the Primrose Hill area of Regent's Park, where an
English Heritage plaque records Plath's residence. Their daughter Frieda was
born on April 1, 1960, and in October, Plath published The Colossus, her first collection of poetry.
In February 1961, Plath's second pregnancy ended in
miscarriage; several of her poems, including "Parliament Hill Fields", address this event. In a letter
to her therapist, Plath wrote that Hughes beat her two days before the miscarriage.
In August she finished her semi-autobiographical novel The Bell Jar and immediately after this, the family moved to Court
Green in the small market town of North Tawton. Nicholas was born in January
1962. In mid-1962, Plath and Hughes began to keep bees, which would be the
subject of many Plath poems.
In August 1961, the couple rented their flat at Chalcot
Square to Assia (née Gutmann) Wevill and David Wevill. Hughes was immediately
struck with the beautiful Assia, as she was with him. In June 1962, Plath had a
car accident which she described as one of many suicide attempts. In July 1962,
Plath discovered Hughes had been having an affair with Assia Wevill; in September, Plath and Hughes separated.
Beginning in October 1962, Plath experienced a great burst
of creativity and wrote most of the poems on which her reputation now rests,
writing at least 26 of the poems of her posthumous collection Ariel during the final months of her
life. In December 1962, she returned alone to London with their children, and
rented, on a five-year lease, a flat at 23 Fitzroy Road—only a few streets from
the Chalcot Square flat. William Butler
Yeats once lived in the house, which bears an English Heritage blue plaque
for the Irish poet. Plath was pleased by this fact and considered it a good
omen.
The northern winter of 1962–1963 was one of the coldest in
100 years; the pipes froze, the children—now two years old and nine months—were
often sick, and the house had no telephone. Her depression returned but she
completed the rest of her poetry collection, which would be published after her
death (1965 in the UK, 1966 in the US). Her only novel, The Bell Jar, was published in January 1963, under the pen name
Victoria Lucas, and was met with critical indifference.
Final depressive
episode and death
Before her death, Plath tried several times to take her own
life. On August 24, 1953, she overdosed on sleeping pills, then, in June 1962,
she drove her car off the side of the road into a river, which she later said
was an attempt to take her own life.
In January 1963, Plath spoke with John Horder, her general practitioner, and a close friend who lived
near her. She described the current depressive episode she was experiencing; it
had been ongoing for six or seven months. While for most of the time she had
been able to continue working, her depression had worsened and become severe, "marked by constant agitation, suicidal
thoughts and inability to cope with daily life". Plath struggled with
insomnia, taking medication at night to induce sleep, and frequently woke up
early. She lost 20 pounds (9 kg). However, she continued to take care of her
physical appearance and did not outwardly speak of feeling guilty or unworthy.
Horder prescribed her an anti-depressant, a monoamine
oxidase inhibitor, a few days before her suicide. Knowing she was at risk with
two young children, he says he visited her daily and made strenuous efforts to
have her admitted to a hospital; when that failed, he arranged for a live-in
nurse.
Hughes claimed in a hand-written note to the literary critic
Keith Sagar, discovered in 2001,
which the anti-depressants prescribed were a "key factor" in Plath’s suicide. He said Plath had
previously had an adverse reaction to some prescribed pills she had taken when
they lived in the USA. When they moved back to England the pills were sold
under a different name, and although Hughes does not name the pills explicitly,
he claimed they were prescribed by a new doctor who had no idea of the negative
side-effects for Plath.
Commentators have argued that because anti-depressants may
take up to three weeks to take effect, her prescription from Horder would not
have taken full effect; however, side effects of anti-depressants can begin
immediately.
The nurse was due to arrive at nine on the morning of
February 11, 1963, to help Plath with the care of her children. Upon arrival,
she could not get into the flat but eventually gained access with the help of a
workman, Charles Langridge. They
found Plath dead with her head in the oven, having sealed the rooms between her
and her sleeping children with tape, towels and cloths. She was 30 years old.
Plath's intentions have been debated. That morning, she
asked her downstairs neighbor, art historian Trevor Thomas (1907–1993), what
time he would be leaving. She also left a note reading "Call Dr. Horder", including the doctor's phone number.
It is argued Plath turned on the gas at a time when Thomas would have been able
to see the note (although the escaping gas had seeped downstairs and also
rendered Thomas unconscious while he slept). However, in her biography Giving
Up: The Last Days of Sylvia Plath, Plath's friend Jillian Becker wrote, "According
to Mr. Goodchild, a police officer attached to the coroner's office, [Plath]
had thrust her head far into the gas oven and had really meant to die." Horder
also believed her intention was clear. He stated that "No one who saw the care with which the kitchen was prepared could
have interpreted her action as anything but an irrational compulsion." Plath
had described the quality of her despair as "owl's
talons clenching my heart".
In his 1972 book on suicide, The Savage God, friend and critic Al Alvarez claimed that Plath's
suicide was an unanswered cry for help, and spoke, in a BBC interview in March
2000, about his failure to recognize Plath's depression, saying he regretted
his inability to offer her emotional support: "I failed her on that level. I was thirty years old and stupid.
What did I know about chronic clinical depression? She kind of needed someone
to take care of her. And that was not something I could do."
Following Plath's
death
An inquest was held on February 15 and gave a ruling of
suicide as a result of carbon monoxide poisoning. Hughes was devastated; they
had been separated for six months, due to his affair with Assia Wevill. In a
letter to an old friend of Plath from Smith College, he wrote "That's the end of my life. The rest is
posthumous." Wevill also committed suicide, using a gas stove, six
years later.
Plath's gravestone, in Heptonstall's parish churchyard of St
Thomas the Apostle bears the inscription that Hughes chose for her: "Even amidst fierce flames the golden
lotus can be planted." Biographers attribute the source of the quote
to the Hindu text the Bhagavad Gita
or to the 16th-century Buddhist novel Journey
to the West written by Wu Cheng'en.
Plath's daughter Frieda
Hughes is a writer and artist. On March 16, 2009, Plath's son Nicholas Hughes hanged himself at his
home in Fairbanks, Alaska, following a history of depression.
Works
Plath wrote poetry from the age of 8, her first poem appearing
in the Boston Traveler. By the time
she arrived at Smith College, she had written over 50 short stories, and her
work had been published in numerous magazines. At Smith, she majored in English
literature and won all the major prizes in writing and scholarship, including
literary prizes for her poetry. Additionally, she received a summer editor
position at the young women's magazine Mademoiselle, and, on her graduation in
1955, she won the Glascock Prize for "Two
Lovers and a Beachcomber by the Real Sea". Later, she wrote for the
university publication Varsity.
The Colossus
Nights, I squat in the
cornucopia
Of your left ear, out
of the wind,
Counting the red stars
and those of plum-color.
The sun rises under
the pillar of your tongue.
My hours are married
to shadow.
No longer do I listen
for the scrape of a keel
On the blank stones of
the landing.
from "The
Colossus",
The Colossus and Other
Poems, 1960
By the time Heinemann published her first collection, The Colossus and Other Poems in the UK
in late 1960, Plath had been short-listed several times in the Yale Younger
Poets book competition and had her work printed in Harper's, The Spectator and
The Times Literary Supplement. All the poems in The Colossus had been printed in major U.S. and British journals,
and she had a contract with The New Yorker. It was, however, her 1965
collection Ariel, published posthumously, on which Plath's reputation
essentially rests. "Often, her work
is singled out for the intense coupling of its violent or disturbed imagery and
its playful use of alliteration and rhyme."
The Colossus
received largely positive UK reviews, highlighting Plath's voice as new and
strong, individual and American in tone. Peter
Dickinson at Punch called the collection "a real find" and "exhilarating
to read", full of "clean,
easy verse". Bernard Bergonzi
at the Manchester Guardian wrote the book was an "outstanding technical accomplishment" with a "virtuoso quality". From the
point of publication, she became a presence on the poetry scene. The book was
published in America in 1962 to less-glowing reviews. While her craft was
generally praised, her writing was viewed by some critics at the time as more
derivative of other poets.
The Bell Jar
Plath's semi-autobiographical novel—her mother wanted to
block publication—was published in 1963 and in the US in 1971. Describing the
compilation of the book to her mother, she wrote, "What I've done is to throw together events from my own life, fictionalizing
to add color—it's a pot boiler really, but I think it will show how isolated a
person feels when he is suffering a breakdown... I've tried to picture my world
and the people in it as seen through the distorting lens of a bell jar".
She described her novel as "an
autobiographical apprentice work which I had to write in order to free myself
from the past". Plath dated a Yale senior named Dick Norton during her junior year. Norton, upon whom the character
of Buddy in The Bell Jar is based,
contracted tuberculosis and was treated at the Ray Brook Sanatorium. While
visiting Norton, Plath broke her leg skiing, an incident that was fictionalized
in the novel. Plath also used the novel to highlight the issue of women in the
workforce during the 1950s. She strongly believed in women's abilities to be
writers and editors while society forced them to fulfill secretarial roles:
Now with me, writing
is the first delight in life. I want time and money to write, both very
necessary. I will not sacrifice my time to learn shorthand because I do not
want any of the jobs which shorthand would open up, although those jobs are no
doubt very interesting for girls who want them. I do not want the rigid hours
of a magazine or publishing job. I do not want to type other people’s letters
and read their manuscripts. I want to type my own and write my own. So
secretarial training is out for me. That I know. (Sylvia Plath's letter to her mother, 10 Feb 1955)
Double Exposure
In 1963, after The
Bell Jar was published, Plath began working on another literary work,
titled Double Exposure, which was
never published. According to Ted Hughes
in 1979, Plath left behind a typescript of "some
130 pages", but in 1995 he spoke of just "sixty, seventy pages". Olwyn Hughes wrote in 2003 that the typescript may have consisted
of the first two chapters, and did not exceed sixty pages.
Ariel
And I
Am the arrow,
The dew that flies
Suicidal, at one with
the drive
Into the red
Eye, the cauldron of
morning.
from the poem
"Ariel", October 12, 1962
The posthumous publication of Ariel in 1965 precipitated Plath's rise to fame. The poems in Ariel mark a departure from her earlier
work into a more personal arena of poetry. Robert
Lowell's poetry may have played a part in this shift as she cited Lowell's
1959 book Life Studies as a
significant influence, in an interview just before her death. The impact of Ariel was dramatic, with its dark and
potentially autobiographical descriptions of mental illness in poems such as "Tulips", "Daddy"
and "Lady Lazarus". Plath's
work is often held within the genre of confessional poetry and the style of her
work compared to other contemporaries, such as Lowell and W.D. Snodgrass.
Plath's close friend Al Alvarez, who wrote about her extensively, said of her
later work: "Plath's case is
complicated by the fact that, in her mature work, she deliberately used the
details of her everyday life as raw material for her art. A casual visitor or
unexpected telephone call, a cut, a bruise, a kitchen bowl, a
candlestick—everything became usable, charged with meaning, transformed. Her
poems are full of references and images that seem impenetrable at this
distance, but which could mostly be explained in footnotes by a scholar with
full access to the details of her life." Many of Plath's later poems
deal with what one critic calls the "domestic
surreal" in which Plath takes everyday elements of life and twists the
images, giving them an almost nightmarish quality. Plath's poem "Morning Song" from Ariel is
regarded as one of her finest poems on freedom of expression of an artist.
Plath's fellow confessional poet and friend Anne Sexton
commented: "Sylvia and I would talk
at length about our first suicide, in detail and in depth—between the free
potato chips. Suicide is, after all, the opposite of the poem. Sylvia and I
often talked opposites. We talked death with burned-up intensity, both of us
drawn to it like moths to an electric lightbulb, sucking on it. She told the
story of her first suicide in sweet and loving detail, and her description in
The Bell Jar is just that same story." The confessional interpretation
of Plath's work has led to some dismissing certain aspects of her work as an
exposition of sentimentalist melodrama; in 2010, for example, Theodore
Dalrymple asserted that Plath had been the "patron
saint of self-dramatization" and of self-pity. Revisionist critics
such as Tracy Brain have, however,
argued against a tightly autobiographical interpretation of Plath's material.
On January 16, 2004, The Independent newspaper in London published an article
that ranked Ariel as the 3rd best
book of modern poetry among 'The 10 Best
Modern Poetry Books.'
Other works
In 1971, the volumes Winter
Trees and Crossing the Water were
published in the UK, including nine previously unseen poems from the original
manuscript of Ariel. Writing in New
Statesman, fellow poet Peter Porter wrote:
Crossing the Water is
full of perfectly realised works. Its most striking impression is of a
front-rank artist in the process of discovering her true power. Such is Plath's
control that the book possesses a singularity and certainty which should make
it as celebrated as The Colossus or Ariel.
The Collected Poems,
published in 1981, edited and introduced by Ted Hughes, contained poetry written from 1956 until her death.
Plath posthumously was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. In 2006, Anna Journey, then a graduate student
at Virginia Commonwealth University, discovered a previously unpublished sonnet
written by Plath titled "Ennui".
The poem, composed during Plath's early years at Smith College, was published
in the online journal Blackbird.
Journals and letters
Plath's letters were published in 1975, edited and selected
by her mother Aurelia Plath. The
collection Letters Home: Correspondence
1950–1963 came out partly in response to the strong public reaction to the
publication of The Bell Jar in America.
Plath began keeping a diary from the age of 11 and continued doing so until her
suicide. Her adult diaries, starting from her first year at Smith College in 1950,
were published in 1982 as The Journals of
Sylvia Plath, edited by Frances
McCullough, with Ted Hughes as
consulting editor. In 1982, when Smith College acquired Plath's remaining
journals, Hughes sealed two of them until February 11, 2013, the 50th anniversary
of Plath's death.
During the last years of his life, Hughes began working on a
fuller publication of Plath's journals. In 1998, shortly before his death, he
unsealed the two journals, and passed the project onto his children by Plath,
Frieda and Nicholas, who passed it on to Karen
V. Kukil, who finished her editing in December 1999. In 2000 Anchor Books
published The Unabridged Journals of
Sylvia Plath. More than half of the new volume contained newly released
material; the American author Joyce
Carol Oates hailed the publication as a "genuine
literary event". Hughes faced criticism for his role in handling the
journals: He claims to have destroyed Plath's last journal, which contained
entries from the winter of 1962 up to her death. In the foreword of the 1982
version, he writes "I destroyed [the
last of her journals] because I did not want her children to have to read it
(in those days I regarded forgetfulness as an essential part of
survival)."
Hughes controversies
And here you come,
with a cup of tea
Wreathed in steam.
The blood jet is
poetry,
There is no stopping
it.
You hand me two
children, two roses.
from
"Kindness", written February 1, 1963. Ariel
As Hughes and Plath were legally married at the time of her
death, Hughes inherited the Plath estate, including all her written work. He
has been condemned repeatedly for burning Plath's last journal, saying he "did not want her children to have to
read it". Hughes lost another journal and an unfinished novel, and
instructed that a collection of Plath's papers and journals should not be released
until 2013. He has been accused of attempting to control the estate for his own
ends, although royalties from Plath's poetry were placed into a trust account
for their two children, Frieda and Nicholas.
Plath's gravestone has been repeatedly vandalized by those
aggrieved that "Hughes" is
written on the stone; they have attempted to chisel it off, leaving only the
name "Sylvia Plath". When
Hughes' mistress Assia Wevill killed
herself and their four-year-old daughter Shura in 1969, this practice
intensified. After each defacement, Hughes had the damaged stone removed,
sometimes leaving the site unmarked during repair. Outraged mourners accused
Hughes in the media of dishonoring her name by removing the stone. Wevill's
death led to claims that Hughes had been abusive to both Plath and Wevill.
Radical feminist poet Robin
Morgan published the poem "Arraignment",
in which she openly accused Hughes of the battery and murder of Plath. Her book
Monster (1972) "included a piece in which a gang of Plath aficionados are
imagined castrating Hughes, stuffing his penis into his mouth and then blowing
out his brains". Hughes threatened to sue Morgan. The book was
withdrawn by the publisher Random House, but it remained in circulation among
feminists. Other feminists threatened to kill Hughes in Plath's name and pursue
a conviction for murder. Plath's poem "The
Jailor", in which the speaker condemns her husband's brutality, was
included in Morgan's 1970 anthology Sisterhood
Is Powerful: An Anthology of Writings from the Women's Liberation Movement.
In 1989, with Hughes under public attack, a battle raged in
the letters pages of The Guardian and The Independent. In The Guardian on April
20, 1989, Hughes wrote the article "The
Place Where Sylvia Plath Should Rest in Peace": "In the years soon
after [Plath's] death, when scholars approached me, I tried to take their
apparently serious concern for the truth about Sylvia Plath seriously. But I
learned my lesson early...If I tried too hard to tell them exactly how
something happened, in the hope of correcting some fantasy, I was quite likely
to be accused of trying to suppress Free Speech. In general, my refusal to have
anything to do with the Plath Fantasia has been regarded as an attempt to
suppress Free Speech...The Fantasia about Sylvia Plath is more needed than the
facts. Where that leaves respect for the truth of her life (and of mine), or
for her memory, or for the literary tradition, I do not know."
Still the subject of speculation and opprobrium in 1998,
Hughes published Birthday Letters
that year, his own collection of 88 poems about his relationship with Plath.
Hughes had published very little about his experience of the marriage and
Plath's suicide, and the book caused a sensation, being taken as his first
explicit disclosure, and it topped bestseller charts. It was not known at the
volume's release that Hughes had terminal cancer and would die later that year.
The book won the Forward Poetry Prize, the T.
S. Eliot Prize for Poetry, and the Whitbread Poetry Prize. The poems,
written after Plath's death, in some cases long after, try to find a reason why
Plath took her own life.
In October 2015, the BBC Two documentary Ted Hughes: Stronger than Death examined
Hughes' life and work; it included audio recordings of Plath reciting her own
poetry. Their daughter Frieda spoke for the first time about her mother and
father.
Themes and legacy
Love set you going
like a fat gold watch.
The midwife slapped
your footsoles, and your bald cry
Took its place among
the elements.
from "Morning
Song", Ariel, 1965
Sylvia Plath's
early poems exhibit what became her typical imagery, using personal and
nature-based depictions featuring, for example, the moon, blood, hospitals,
fetuses, and skulls. They were mostly imitation exercises of poets she admired
such as Dylan Thomas, W. B. Yeats
and Marianne Moore. Late in 1959,
when she and Hughes were at the Yaddo writers' colony in New York State, she
wrote the seven-part "Poem for a
Birthday", echoing Theodore
Roethke's Lost Son sequence,
though its theme is her own traumatic breakdown and suicide attempt at 20.
After 1960 her work moved into a more surreal landscape darkened by a sense of
imprisonment and looming death, overshadowed by her father. The Colossus is filled with themes of
death, redemption and resurrection. After Hughes left, Plath produced, in less
than two months, the 40 poems of rage, despair, love, and vengeance on which her
reputation mostly rests.
Plath's landscape poetry, which she wrote throughout her
life, has been described as "a rich
and important area of her work that is often overlooked...some of the best of
which was written about the Yorkshire moors". Her September 1961 poem
"Wuthering Heights" takes
its title from the Emily Brontë
novel, but its content and style is Plath's own particular vision of the
Pennine landscape.
It was Plath's publication of Ariel in 1965 that precipitated her rise to fame and helped
establish her reputation as one of the 20th century's best poets. As soon as it
was published, critics began to see the collection as the charting of Plath's
increasing desperation or death wish. Her dramatic death became her most famous
aspect and remains so. Time and Life
both reviewed the slim volume of Ariel
in the wake of her death. The critic at Time said: "Within a week of her death, intellectual London was hunched over
copies of a strange and terrible poem she had written during her last sick
slide toward suicide. 'Daddy' was its title; its subject was her morbid
love-hatred of her father; its style was as brutal as a truncheon. What is
more, 'Daddy' was merely the first jet of flame from a literary dragon who in
the last months of her life breathed a burning river of bile across the
literary landscape...In her most ferocious poems, 'Daddy' and 'Lady Lazarus',
fear, hate, love, death and the poet's own identity become fused at black heat
with the figure of her father, and through him, with the guilt of the German
exterminators and the suffering of their Jewish victims. They are poems, as
Robert Lowell says in his preface to Ariel, that 'play Russian roulette with
six cartridges in the cylinder'." On January 16, 2004, The Independent
in London published an article which ranked Ariel as the third best book of
modern poetry among its T10 Best Modern Poetry Books.
Some in the feminist movement saw Plath as speaking for
their experience, as a "symbol of
blighted female genius". Writer Honor
Moore describes Ariel as marking
the beginning of a movement, Plath suddenly visible as "a woman on paper", certain and audacious. Moore says: "When Sylvia Plath's Ariel was
published in the United States in 1966, American women noticed. Not only women
who ordinarily read poems, but housewives and mothers whose ambitions had
awakened ... Here was a woman, superbly trained in her craft, whose final poems
uncompromisingly charted female rage, ambivalence, and grief, in a voice with which
many women identified." Some feminists threatened to kill Hughes in
Plath's name.
Portrayals in media
Plath's voice is heard in a BBC documentary about her life,
recorded in London in late 1962. Of the BBC recording Elizabeth Hardwick wrote:
I have never before
learned anything from a poetic reading, unless the clothes, the beard, the
girls, the poor or good condition of the poet can be considered a kind of
knowledge. But I was taken aback by Sylvia Plath's reading. It was not anything
like I could have imagined. Not a trace of the modest, retreating, humorous
Worcester, Massachusetts, of Elizabeth Bishop; nothing of the swallowed plain
Pennsylvania of Marianne Moore. Instead these bitter poems—"Daddy",
"Lady Lazarus", "The Applicant", "Fever
103°"—were beautifully read, projected in full-throated, plump,
diction-perfect, Englishy, mesmerizing cadences, all round and rapid, and paced
and spaced. Poor recessive Massachusetts had been erased. "I have done it
again!" Clearly, perfectly, staring you down. She seemed to be standing at
a banquet like Timon, crying, "Uncover, dogs, and lap!"
Gwyneth Paltrow
portrayed Plath in the biopic Sylvia (2003). Despite criticism from Elizabeth Sigmund, a friend of Plath
and Hughes, that Plath was portrayed as a "permanent
depressive and possessive person", she conceded that "the film has an atmosphere towards the
end of her life which is heartbreaking in its accuracy". Frieda Hughes, now a poet and painter,
who was age 2 when her mother died, was angered by the making of entertainment
featuring her parents' lives. She accused the "peanut crunching" public of wanting to be titillated by
the family's tragedies. In 2003, Frieda reacted to the situation in the poem "My Mother" in Tatler:
Now they want to make
a film
For anyone lacking the
ability
To imagine the body,
head in oven,
Orphaning children
... they think
I should give them my
mother's words
To fill the mouth of
their monster,
Their Sylvia Suicide
Doll
Musical settings
In his Ariel: Five
Poems of Sylvia Plath (1971), American composer Ned Rorem has set for
soprano, clarinet and piano the poems "Words",
"Poppies In July", "The Hanging Man", "Poppies In
October", and "Lady
Lazarus."
Also drawing from Ariel,
in his Six Poems by Sylvia Plath for
solo soprano (1975), German composer Aribert
Reimann has set the poems "Edge",
"Sheep In Fog", "The Couriers", "The Night
Dances", and "Words."
He later set "Lady Lazarus"
(1992), also for solo soprano.
Finnish composer Kaija
Saariaho's five-part From the Grammar
of Dreams for soprano and mezzo a cappella (1988) is constructed on a
collage of fragments from The Bell Jar and
the poem "Paralytic." The
piece was also arranged by the composer into a version for soprano and
electronics (2002), in which the singer sings in interaction with a recorded
double of her own voice. Albeit composed as a concert piece, From the Grammar of Dreams has also been staged.
American composer Juliana
Hall's Lorelei (1989) for mezzo,
horn, and piano is a setting of Plath's poem of the same name. Hall had
previously set "The Night
Dances" as a movement of her cycle for soprano and piano Night Dances (1987) featuring texts by
five female poets, and went on to write a song cycle for soprano and piano
entirely devoted to Plath, Crossing The
Water (2011), which comprises the poems "Street
Song", "Crossing The Water", "Rhyme", and "Alicante Lullaby."
In her cycle for soprano and piano The Blood Jet (2006), American composer Lori Leitman set the poems "Morning
Song", "The Rival", "Kindness", and "Balloons."
Publication list
Poetry collections
The Colossus and Other Poems (1960, William Heinemann)
Ariel (1965, Faber and Faber)
Three Women: A Monologue for Three Voices (1968, Turret
Books)
Crossing the Water (1971, Faber and Faber)
Winter Trees (1971, Faber and Faber)
The Collected Poems (1981, Faber and Faber)
Selected Poems (1985, Faber and Faber)
Ariel: The Restored Edition (2004, Faber and Faber)
Collected prose and
novels
The Bell Jar, under the pseudonym "Victoria Lucas" (novel, 1963, Heinemann)
Letters Home: Correspondence 1950–1963 (1975, Harper &
Row, US; Faber and Faber, UK)
Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams: Short Stories, Prose,
and Diary Excerpts (1977, Faber and Faber)
The Journals of Sylvia Plath (1982, Dial Press)
The Magic Mirror (1989), Plath's Smith College senior thesis
The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath, edited by Karen V.
Kukil (2000, Anchor Books)
I can never read all
the books I want; I can never be all the people I want and live all the lives I
want. I can never train myself in all the skills I want. And why do I want? I
want to live and feel all the shades, tones and variations of mental and physical
experience possible in my life.
The Letters of Sylvia Plath, Volume 1, edited by Peter K.
Steinberg and Karen V. Kukil (2017, Faber and Faber)
The Letters of Sylvia Plath, Volume 2, edited by Peter K.
Steinberg and Karen V. Kukil (2018, Faber and Faber)
Mary Ventura and the Ninth Kingdom (2019, Faber and Faber)
Children's books
The Bed Book, illustrated by Quentin Blake (1976, Faber and
Faber)
The It-Doesn't-Matter Suit (1996, Faber and Faber)
Mrs. Cherry's Kitchen (2001, Faber and Faber)
Collected Children's Stories (UK, 2001, Faber and Faber)
Sylvia Plath effect
Notes
"On 15 July, when Sylvia came downstairs,
Aurelia noticed that her daughter had a couple of partially healed scars on her
legs. After being questioned about them, Sylvia told her mother that she had
gashed herself in an effort to see if she had the guts. Then she took hold of
Aurelia's hand and said: 'Oh, Mother, the world is so rotten! I want to die!
Let's die together!'"
Two poems titled Ennui (I) and Ennui (II) are listed in a partial catalogue of Plath's juvenilia
in the Collected Poems. A note explains that the texts of all but half a dozen
of the many pieces listed are in the Sylvia Plath Archive of juvenilia in the
Lilly Library at Indiana University. The rest are with the Sylvia Plath Estate.
Plath has been
criticized for her numerous and controversial allusions to the Holocaust.
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