| LITR 5535: American
Romanticism Monday 9 October: poetry: Sylvia Plath, "Blackberrying," N 2783 poetry reader / discussion leader: Jo Lynn Sallee
Sylvia
Plath 1932-1963 Brief
biographical information: Plath
was born in 1932 in Massachusetts. She
was intelligent and a perfectionist from a young age.
Her first poem was published when she was only 8 years old.
Later, during her years at Smith College she wrote over 400 poems. Though
she seemed perfect on the surface, she had serious personal problems that seemed
to begin when her father died when she was eight years old.
The summer after her junior year Sylvia tried to kill herself with a
sleeping pill overdose. She
described this experience later in her book, The
Bell Jar. In
1956 she married Ted Hughes. By the
winter of 1962 she was living in London, alone, with her two children.
The harder her life got, the more she seemed to write. Sylvia
killed herself on February 11, 1963 with cooking gas at the age of 30. Plath
wrote “Blackberrying” in the fall of 1961, while living in England. According
to Merriam-Webster: Cacophonous
– harsh sounding Choughs
– birds related to crows with red legs and blue/black plumage (N 2783--published posthumously in Ariel) Blackberrying Nobody in the lane, and nothing, nothing but
blackberries, Overhead go the choughs in black, cacophonous flocks — The only thing to come now is the sea. COURSE OBJECTIVES relating to Romanticism: Post-Romantic Objective 1a. . . . attitudes associated to Romanticism, such as desire and loss, rebellion, nostalgia, idealism, the gothic, the sublime, individual in nature or separate from the masses. Objective 1c. . . . literary genres of Romanticism The romance narrative (journey from repression to transcendence) The gothic novel or style (haunted physical and mental spaces; the shadow of death or decay). Poem is a journey set in three stanzas. 1st stanza – Impression of tunneling from nothing to images of fat blackberries and nature that “love” and “accommodate” themselves to her. 2nd stanza – From a meadow are burnt bird images and flies/Chineese screen wings that are “protesting” and “stunned.” 3rd stanza – Images of the sea with the wind “slapping” and the sea “beating,” ending as beginning, with nothing. The reader can almost feel being drawn down the path on a journey, through the hooks of life. I see the poem as the journey through life, starting with birth (no one there). Life has wonderful moments (fat berries) that can be bittersweet (flies) and bad ones (birds like burnt paper). At the end of our journey we transcend to something larger than life (the sea). Questions 1.
Why do you think the blackberries are referred to as “dumb as eyes”
or a “bush of flies" (obj. 1a)? 2.
What evidence do you find of the gothic and sublime in the poem (obj.1a)? 3.
Critics disagree on whether Plath finds light and redemption at the end
of the path or just nothingness (Obj. 1c).
What do you think? 4.
If Plath was alive today, she could take advantage of modern drugs for
alleviating depression. How do you
think her poetry would have been different?
Works
Cited: Young,
Robert V.(editor). Poetry
Criticism. Detroit: MI.
1991 Litr
5535: American Romanticism, presentation fall 2000.
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