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Daddy Sylvia Plath Analysis

Decent Essays

A prevailing feeling when someone dies is the feeling of having unfinished business. This idea was clearly incorporated into Sylvia Plath’s poem Daddy. Through Plath’s life she despised her father. “Seven years, if you want to know” (74). Plath even compares him to a Nazi at one point in the poem, “I thought every German was you” (Pg. 29). Even though the Nazi period was not during the time of Daddy’s publishing date to associate the amount of hatred she had for her father Plath compares him to the worst person she could think of, a Nazi. Plath conveys the fact that when people die there is a feeling of unfinished business that does not die along with them.

Throughout the poem Plath connects how she did not have enough time to fulfill …show more content…

To fill the feeling she used her husband who then she held the same hatred for. “I killed one man, I've killed two” (75). Plath does not literally mean “killed” when she metaphorically writes but only that they are out of her life.

Another literary device that Plath uses is connecting the poem to herself. Usually it is a norm to keep the author separate from the poem, but in Plath’s case it is a different. She is writing about her own father. Knowing this sends the meaning of the work to a different level of context and makes it stronger because it is truly how she feels about the loss of her own father. Not only is she is explaining that she does not like her father, she tells how the entire community despises her father, “And the villagers never liked you. They are dancing and stamping on you” (77). A major hit on her father in this line, writing that the herself and the villagers are dancing on his grave enforces the fact that she hated her father. Plath writes that she goes back to dance on his grave because she is not at peace with the hate she has for her father yet. The feelings left after him dying are still there.

Although Plath did write about her own father she still created characters with in the poem who portrayed her husband and father. Building her husband up to be pictured as a “The vampire who said he was you and drank my blood for a year” (72) and her father as a “Marble-heavy bag full of God” (8) creates

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