Ted Hughes Essay

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    Sylvia Plath once said, "It is as if my life were magically run by two electric currents: joyous positive and despairing negative- whichever is running at the moment dominates my life, floods it,"(Brainyquote). Sylvia Plath had her despairing negative moments, but she also had her joyous positive moments. Plath was an extremely talented, unique, and creative writer and her work is still remembered today. Plath influenced literature in a positive manner because she used her poetry to stand up for

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    surrounding Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath, contentious poets of the twenty first century portray their own reality through their semi-confessional poetry. Sylvia Plath frequently extends her cereal obsession with her dead father as

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    interesting way. This language is not supposed to be taken literally and through comparisons to another concept, a deeper undertone is revealed to the reader. Two of the poems in which make use of figurative language are “Mary’s Song” by Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes “The Thought Fox” In Plath's “Mary Song” she uses metaphors to portray a deeper message to the reader. There are three main metaphors all overlapping within Plath’s poetry. This is the goal of figurative language within the text. It is not

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    Your husband, whom was also a famous poet and wrote about nature, Ted Hughes. You two secretly on June 16, 1956, stayed together until your death. However, your life with him was not all romantic poetry. Ted Hughes was known to be a cheater, fementitis blamed him for your suicide, Ted did remarry after you died, also had another child, ironically they died the same way you did. In Daddy you talked about a german nazi father

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    Sylvia Plath was a American Poet that lived a life of betrayal,depression,and madness. Some People say Plath’s works are really good because of her depression and madness. Plath is misunderstood because of her poems and because people don't see the meaning of her poems. Yet sadly people look away because it is “too dark” or “too depression” and miss the hidden deep meaning behind it all. Sylvia Plath was born in Boston,Massachusetts in October, 1932. Sylvia was a top tier student that got accepted

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    Daddy By Sylvia Plath

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    vampire who said he was you / And drank my blood for a year, / Seven years, if you want to know.” This stanza accounts the way Plath’s husband stripped her of her sense of self. Plath gave Hughes her trust and he gained total control over her, which he used to his advantage, thus “drinking her blood.” Additionally, Hughes and Plath were married for exactly seven years before he left

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    Spinster, by Sylvia Plath

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    “Spinster” by Sylvia Plath is a poem that consists of a persona, who in other words serves as a “second self” for the author and conveys her innermost feelings. The poem was written in 1956, the same year as Plath’s marriage to Ted Hughes, who was also a poet. The title suggests that the persona is one who is not fond of marriage and the normal rituals of courtship as a spinster is an unmarried woman, typically an older woman who is beyond the usual age of marriage and may never marry. The persona

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    She went from being the star poet of her life to having to share that spotlight with someone else. In 1956 when they met, Hughes was already a developed and famous poet, so not only did Plath have to struggle to make a name for herself in the first place, but she had to fight against the shadow of her husband. Their relationship developed very quickly; after meeting at a party

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    However, the ambiguity of Hughes 's poetry may be derived not so much from a desire to obscure truthful representation, but from the inherently traumatic impact of this act of writing. In light of this, Hughes 's fragmentary syntax and the episodic construction of the Birthday Letters sequence, may well be understood as a literal manifestation of his attempt to pull together a "scattered, dispersed, or lost" series of recollections (Freeman, 30); the trauma of which constantly resists any easy assimilation

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    “I desire the things which will destroy me in the end” (Goodreads). In Sylvia Plath’s final days, the things she desired, did in fact annihilate her. Sylvia Plath desired perfectionism and the need to feel like she acquired a meaning. As interpreted in the novel, The Bell Jar, and her other works; Sylvia Plath parallels her own traumatic path throughout her life and her downward spiral during the 1950s, explaining her struggle with her mental suffocation and the inexorable depression that contaminated

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