Sylvia Plath

alt="sylvia plath"
 

Sylvia Plath, pseudonym Victoria Lucas, (born October 27, 1932, BostonMassachusetts, U.S.—died February 11, 1963, London, England), American poet whose best-known works, such as the poems “Daddy” and “Lady Lazarus” and the novel The Bell Jar, starkly express a sense of alienation and self-destruction closely tied to her personal experiences and, by extension, the situation of women in mid-20th-century America.

Plath published her first poem at age eight. She entered and won many literary contests, and, while still in high school, she sold her first poem to The Christian Science Monitor and her first short story to Seventeen magazine. She entered Smith College on a scholarship in 1951 and was a cowinner of the Mademoiselle magazine fiction contest in 1952. At Smith Plath achieved considerable artistic, academic, and social success, but she also suffered from severe depression, attempted suicide, and underwent a period of psychiatric hospitalization. She graduated from Smith with highest honours in 1955 and went on to Newnham College in Cambridge, England, on a Fulbright fellowship. In 1956 she married the English poet Ted Hughes; they had two children. The couple separated in 1962, after Hughes’s affair with another woman.

During 1957–58 Plath was an instructor in English at Smith College. In 1960, shortly after she returned to England with Hughes, her first collection of poems appeared as The Colossus, which received good reviews. Her novel, The Bell Jar, was published in London in 1963 under the pseudonym Victoria Lucas. Strongly autobiographical, the book describes the mental breakdown and eventual recovery of a young college girl and parallels Plath’s own breakdown and hospitalization in 1953.

During her last three years Plath abandoned the restraints and conventions that had bound much of her early work. She wrote with great speed, producing poems of stark self-revelation and confession. The anxiety, confusion, and doubt that haunted her were transmuted into verses of great power and pathos borne on flashes of incisive wit. Her poem “Daddy” and several others explore her conflicted relationship with her father, Otto Plath, who died when she was age eight. In 1963, after this burst of productivity, she took her own life.

Selected Poems by SYLVIA PLATH

  1. Edge

    BY SYLVIA PLATH

    The woman is perfected.

    Her dead


    Body wears the smile of accomplishment,

    The illusion of a Greek necessity


    Flows in the scrolls of her toga,

    Her bare


    Feet seem to be saying:

    We have come so far, it is over.


    Each dead child coiled, a white serpent,

    One at each little


    Pitcher of milk, now empty.

    She has folded


    Them back into her body as petals

    Of a rose close when the garden


    Stiffens and odors bleed

    From the sweet, deep throats of the night flower.


    The moon has nothing to be sad about,

    Staring from her hood of bone.


    She is used to this sort of thing.

    Her blacks crackle and drag.

  2. The Moon And The Yew Tree

    by SYLVIA PLATH

    This is the light of the mind, cold and planetary
    The trees of the mind are black. The light is blue.
    The grasses unload their griefs on my feet as if I were God
    Prickling my ankles and murmuring of their humility
    Fumy, spiritous mists inhabit this place.
    Separated from my house by a row of headstones.
    I simply cannot see where there is to get to.

    The moon is no door. It is a face in its own right,
    White as a knuckle and terribly upset.
    It drags the sea after it like a dark crime; it is quiet
    With the O-gape of complete despair. I live here.
    Twice on Sunday, the bells startle the sky ----
    Eight great tongues affirming the Resurrection
    At the end, they soberly **** out their names.

    The yew tree points up, it has a Gothic shape.
    The eyes lift after it and find the moon.
    The moon is my mother. She is not sweet like Mary.
    Her blue garments unloose small bats and owls.
    How I would like to believe in tenderness ----
    The face of the effigy, gentled by candles,
    Bending, on me in particular, its mild eyes.

    I have fallen a long way. Clouds are flowering
    Blue and mystical over the face of the stars
    Inside the church, the saints will all be blue,
    Floating on their delicate feet over the cold pews,
    Their hands and faces stiff with holiness.
    The moon sees nothing of this. She is bald and wild.
    And the message of the yew tree is blackness -- blackness and silence

  3. Waking In Winter

    by SYLVIA PLATH

    I can taste the tin of the sky —- the real tin thing.
    Winter dawn is the color of metal,
    The trees stiffen into place like burnt nerves.
    All night I have dreamed of destruction, annihilations —-
    An assembly-line of cut throats, and you and I
    Inching off in the gray Chevrolet, drinking the green
    Poison of stilled lawns, the little clapboard gravestones,
    Noiseless, on rubber wheels, on the way to the sea resort.

    How the balconies echoed! How the sun lit up
    The skulls, the unbuckled bones facing the view!
    Space! Space! The bed linen was giving out entirely.
    Cot legs melted in terrible attitudes, and the nurses —-
    Each nurse patched her soul to a wound and disappeared.
    The deathly guests had not been satisfied
    With the rooms, or the smiles, or the beautiful rubber plants,
    Or the sea, Hushing their peeled sense like Old Mother Morphia.

  4. Crossing The Water

    by SYLVIA PLATH

    Black lake, black boat, two black, cut-paper people.
    Where do the black trees go that drink here?
    Their shadows must cover Canada.

    A little light is filtering from the water flowers.
    Their leaves do not wish us to hurry:
    They are round and flat and full of dark advice.

    Cold worlds shake from the oar.
    The spirit of blackness is in us, it is in the fishes.
    A snag is lifting a valedictory, pale hand;

    Stars open among the lilies.
    Are you not blinded by such expressionless sirens?
    This is the silence of astounded souls.

  5. Two Lovers And A Beachcomber By The Real Sea

    by SYLVIA PLATH

    Cold and final, the imagination
    Shuts down its fabled summer house;
    Blue views are boarded up; our sweet vacation
    Dwindles in the hour-glass.
    Thoughts that found a maze of mermaid hair
    Tangling in the tide's green fall
    Now fold their wings like bats and disappear
    Into the attic of the skull.
    We are not what we might be; what we are
    Outlaws all extrapolation
    Beyond the interval of now and here:
    White whales are gone with the white ocean.
    A lone beachcomber squats among the wrack
    Of kaleidoscope shells
    Probing fractured Venus with a stick
    Under a tent of taunting gulls.
    No sea-change decks the sunken shank of bone
    That chucks in backtrack of the wave;
    Though the mind like an oyster labors on and on,
    A grain of sand is all we have.
    Water will run by; the actual sun
    Will scrupulously rise and set;
    No little man lives in the exacting moon
    And that is that, is that, is that.

  6. Winter Landscape, with Rooks

    by SYLVIA PLATH

    Water in the millrace, through a sluice of stone,
    plunges headlong into that black pond
    where, absurd and out-of-season, a single swan
    floats chast as snow, taunting the clouded mind
    which hungers to haul the white reflection down.

    The austere sun descends above the fen,
    an orange cyclops-eye, scorning to look
    longer on this landscape of chagrin;
    feathered dark in thought, I stalk like a rook,
    brooding as the winter night comes on.

    Last summer's reeds are all engraved in ice
    as is your image in my eye; dry frost
    glazes the window of my hurt; what solace
    can be struck from rock to make heart's waste
    grow green again? Who'd walk in this bleak place?

  7. Mystic

    by SYLVIA PLATH

    The air is a mill of hooks -
    Questions without answer,
    Glittering and drunk as flies
    Whose kiss stings unbearably
    In the fetid wombs of black air under pines in summer.
    I remember
    The dead smell of sun on wood cabins,
    The stiffness of sails, the long salt winding sheets.
    Once one has seen God, what is the remedy?
    Once one has been seized up
    Without a part left over,
    Not a toe, not a finger, and used,
    Used utterly, in the sun's conflagration, the stains
    That lengthen from ancient cathedrals
    What is the remedy?
    The pill of the Communion tablet,
    The walking beside still water? Memory?
    Or picking up the bright pieces
    Of Christ in the faces of rodents,
    The tame flower-nibblers, the ones
    Whose hopes are so low they are comfortable -
    The humpback in his small, washed cottage
    Under the spokes of the clematis.
    Is there no great love, only tenderness?
    Does the sea
    Remember the walker upon it?
    Meaning leaks from the molecules.
    The chimneys of the city breathe, the window sweats,
    The children leap in their cots.
    The sun blooms, it is a geranium.
    The heart has not stopped.

  8. Mad Girl’s Love Song

    by SYLVIA PLATH

    I shut my eyes and all the world drops dead;
    I lift my lids and all is born again.
    (I think I made you up inside my head.)

    The stars go waltzing out in blue and red,
    And arbitrary blackness gallops in:

    I shut my eyes and all the world drops dead.

    I dreamed that you bewitched me into bed
    And sung me moon-struck, kissed me quite insane.
    (I think I made you up inside my head.)

    God topples from the sky, hell's fires fade:
    Exit seraphim and Satan's men:
    I shut my eyes and all the world drops dead.

    I fancied you'd return the way you said,
    But I grow old and I forget your name.
    (I think I made you up inside my head.)


    I should have loved a thunderbird instead;
    At least when spring comes they roar back again.

    I shut my eyes and all the world drops dead.
    (I think I made you up inside my head.)


  9. The Colossus

    BY SYLVIA PLATH

    I shall never get you put together entirely,

    Pieced, glued, and properly jointed.

    Mule-bray, pig-grunt and bawdy cackles

    Proceed from your great lips.

    It’s worse than a barnyard.


    Perhaps you consider yourself an oracle,

    Mouthpiece of the dead, or of some god or other.

    Thirty years now I have labored

    To dredge the silt from your throat.

    I am none the wiser.


    Scaling little ladders with glue pots and pails of lysol

    I crawl like an ant in mourning

    Over the weedy acres of your brow

    To mend the immense skull plates and clear

    The bald, white tumuli of your eyes.


    A blue sky out of the Oresteia

    Arches above us. O father, all by yourself

    You are pithy and historical as the Roman Forum.

    I open my lunch on a hill of black cypress.

    Your fluted bones and acanthine hair are littered


    In their old anarchy to the horizon-line.

    It would take more than a lightning-stroke

    To create such a ruin.

    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.


  10. Daddy

    BY SYLVIA PLATH

    You do not do, you do not do

    Any more, black shoe

    In which I have lived like a foot

    For thirty years, poor and white,

    Barely daring to breathe or Achoo.


    Daddy, I have had to kill you.

    You died before I had time——

    Marble-heavy, a bag full of God,

    Ghastly statue with one gray toe

    Big as a Frisco seal


    And a head in the freakish Atlantic

    Where it pours bean green over blue

    In the waters off beautiful Nauset.

    I used to pray to recover you.

    Ach, du.


    In the German tongue, in the Polish town

    Scraped flat by the roller

    Of wars, wars, wars.

    But the name of the town is common.

    My Polack friend


    Says there are a dozen or two.

    So I never could tell where you

    Put your foot, your root,

    I never could talk to you.

    The tongue stuck in my jaw.


    It stuck in a barb wire snare.

    Ich, ich, ich, ich,

    I could hardly speak.

    I thought every German was you.

    And the language obscene


    An engine, an engine

    Chuffing me off like a Jew.

    A Jew to Dachau, Auschwitz, Belsen.

    I began to talk like a Jew.

    I think I may well be a Jew.


    The snows of the Tyrol, the clear beer of Vienna

    Are not very pure or true.

    With my gipsy ancestress and my weird luck

    And my Taroc pack and my Taroc pack

    I may be a bit of a Jew.


    I have always been scared of you,

    With your Luftwaffe, your gobbledygoo.

    And your neat mustache

    And your Aryan eye, bright blue.

    Panzer-man, panzer-man, O You——


    Not God but a swastika

    So black no sky could squeak through.

    Every woman adores a Fascist,

    The boot in the face, the brute

    Brute heart of a brute like you.


    You stand at the blackboard, daddy,

    In the picture I have of you,

    A cleft in your chin instead of your foot

    But no less a devil for that, no not

    Any less the black man who


    Bit my pretty red heart in two.

    I was ten when they buried you.

    At twenty I tried to die

    And get back, back, back to you.

    I thought even the bones would do.


    But they pulled me out of the sack,

    And they stuck me together with glue.

    And then I knew what to do.

    I made a model of you,

    A man in black with a Meinkampf look


    And a love of the rack and the screw.

    And I said I do, I do.

    So daddy, I’m finally through.

    The black telephone’s off at the root,

    The voices just can’t worm through.


    If I’ve killed one man, I’ve killed two——

    The vampire who said he was you

    And drank my blood for a year,

    Seven years, if you want to know.

    Daddy, you can lie back now.


    There’s a stake in your fat black heart

    And the villagers never liked you.

    They are dancing and stamping on you.

    They always knew it was you.

    Daddy, daddy, you bastard, I’m through.


  11. Ariel

    BY SYLVIA PLATH

    Stasis in darkness.

    Then the substanceless blue

    Pour of tor and distances.


    God’s lioness,

    How one we grow,

    Pivot of heels and knees!—The furrow


    Splits and passes, sister to

    The brown arc

    Of the neck I cannot catch,


    Nigger-eye

    Berries cast dark

    Hooks—


    Black sweet blood mouthfuls,

    Shadows.

    Something else


    Hauls me through air—

    Thighs, hair;

    Flakes from my heels.


    White

    Godiva, I unpeel—

    Dead hands, dead stringencies.

    And now I

    Foam to wheat, a glitter of seas.

    The child’s cry

    Melts in the wall.

    And I

    Am the arrow,

    The dew that flies

    Suicidal, at one with the drive

    Into the red

    Eye, the cauldron of morning.

  12. Tulips

    BY SYLVIA PLATH

    The tulips are too excitable, it is winter here.

    Look how white everything is, how quiet, how snowed-in.

    I am learning peacefulness, lying by myself quietly

    As the light lies on these white walls, this bed, these hands.

    I am nobody; I have nothing to do with explosions.

    I have given my name and my day-clothes up to the nurses

    And my history to the anesthetist and my body to surgeons.


    They have propped my head between the pillow and the sheet-cuff

    Like an eye between two white lids that will not shut.

    Stupid pupil, it has to take everything in.

    The nurses pass and pass, they are no trouble,

    They pass the way gulls pass inland in their white caps,

    Doing things with their hands, one just the same as another,

    So it is impossible to tell how many there are.


    My body is a pebble to them, they tend it as water

    Tends to the pebbles it must run over, smoothing them gently.

    They bring me numbness in their bright needles, they bring me sleep.

    Now I have lost myself I am sick of baggage——

    My patent leather overnight case like a black pillbox,

    My husband and child smiling out of the family photo;

    Their smiles catch onto my skin, little smiling hooks.


    I have let things slip, a thirty-year-old cargo boat

    stubbornly hanging on to my name and address.

    They have swabbed me clear of my loving associations.

    Scared and bare on the green plastic-pillowed trolley

    I watched my teaset, my bureaus of linen, my books

    Sink out of sight, and the water went over my head.

    I am a nun now, I have never been so pure.


    I didn’t want any flowers, I only wanted

    To lie with my hands turned up and be utterly empty.

    How free it is, you have no idea how free——

    The peacefulness is so big it dazes you,

    And it asks nothing, a name tag, a few trinkets.

    It is what the dead close on, finally; I imagine them

    Shutting their mouths on it, like a Communion tablet.


    The tulips are too red in the first place, they hurt me.

    Even through the gift paper I could hear them breathe

    Lightly, through their white swaddlings, like an awful baby.

    Their redness talks to my wound, it corresponds.

    They are subtle : they seem to float, though they weigh me down,

    Upsetting me with their sudden tongues and their color,

    A dozen red lead sinkers round my neck.


    Nobody watched me before, now I am watched.

    The tulips turn to me, and the window behind me

    Where once a day the light slowly widens and slowly thins,

    And I see myself, flat, ridiculous, a cut-paper shadow

    Between the eye of the sun and the eyes of the tulips,

    And I have no face, I have wanted to efface myself.

    The vivid tulips eat my oxygen.


    Before they came the air was calm enough,

    Coming and going, breath by breath, without any fuss.

    Then the tulips filled it up like a loud noise.

    Now the air snags and eddies round them the way a river

    Snags and eddies round a sunken rust-red engine.

    They concentrate my attention, that was happy

    Playing and resting without committing itself.


    The walls, also, seem to be warming themselves.

    The tulips should be behind bars like dangerous animals;

    They are opening like the mouth of some great African cat,

    And I am aware of my heart: it opens and closes

    Its bowl of red blooms out of sheer love of me.

    The water I taste is warm and salt, like the sea,

    And comes from a country far away as health.

  13. Electra on Azalea Path

    by SYLVIA PLATH

    The day you died I went into the dirt,
    Into the lightless hibernaculum
    Where bees, striped black and gold, sleep out the blizzard
    Like hieratic stones, and the ground is hard.
    It was good for twenty years, that wintering -
    As if you never existed, as if I came
    God-fathered into the world from my mother's belly:
    Her wide bed wore the stain of divinity.
    I had nothing to do with guilt or anything
    When I wormed back under my mother's heart.
    Small as a doll in my dress of innocence
    I lay dreaming your epic, image by image.
    Nobody died or withered on that stage.
    Everything took place in a durable whiteness.
    The day I woke, I woke on Churchyard Hill.
    I found your name, I found your bones and all
    Enlisted in a cramped necropolis
    your speckled stone skewed by an iron fence.
    In this charity ward, this poorhouse, where the dead
    Crowd foot to foot, head to head, no flower
    Breaks the soil. This is Azalea path.
    A field of burdock opens to the south.
    Six feet of yellow gravel cover you.
    The artificial red sage does not stir
    In the basket of plastic evergreens they put
    At the headstone next to yours, nor does it rot,
    Although the rains dissolve a bloody dye:
    The ersatz petals drip, and they drip red.
    Another kind of redness bothers me:
    The day your slack sail drank my sister's breath
    The flat sea purpled like that evil cloth
    My mother unrolled at your last homecoming.
    I borrow the silts of an old tragedy.
    The truth is, one late October, at my birth-cry
    A scorpion stung its head, an ill-starred thing;
    My mother dreamed you face down in the sea.
    The stony actors poise and pause for breath.
    I brought my love to bear, and then you died.
    It was the gangrene ate you to the bone
    My mother said: you died like any man.
    How shall I age into that state of mind?
    I am the ghost of an infamous suicide,
    My own blue razor rusting at my throat.
    O pardon the one who knocks for pardon at
    Your gate, father - your hound-bitch, daughter, friend.
    It was my love that did us both to death.

  14. Lady Lazarus

    BY SYLVIA PLATH

    I have done it again.

    One year in every ten

    I manage it——


    A sort of walking miracle, my skin

    Bright as a Nazi lampshade,

    My right foot


    A paperweight,

    My face a featureless, fine

    Jew linen.


    Peel off the napkin

    O my enemy.

    Do I terrify?——


    The nose, the eye pits, the full set of teeth?

    The sour breath

    Will vanish in a day.


    Soon, soon the flesh

    The grave cave ate will be

    At home on me


    And I a smiling woman.

    I am only thirty.

    And like the cat I have nine times to die.


    This is Number Three.

    What a trash

    To annihilate each decade.


    What a million filaments.

    The peanut-crunching crowd

    Shoves in to see


    Them unwrap me hand and foot——

    The big strip tease.

    Gentlemen, ladies


    These are my hands

    My knees.

    I may be skin and bone,


    Nevertheless, I am the same, identical woman.

    The first time it happened I was ten.

    It was an accident.


    The second time I meant

    To last it out and not come back at all.

    I rocked shut


    As a seashell.

    They had to call and call

    And pick the worms off me like sticky pearls.


    Dying

    Is an art, like everything else.

    I do it exceptionally well.


    I do it so it feels like hell.

    I do it so it feels real.

    I guess you could say I’ve a call.


    It’s easy enough to do it in a cell.

    It’s easy enough to do it and stay put.

    It’s the theatrical


    Comeback in broad day

    To the same place, the same face, the same brute

    Amused shout:


    ‘A miracle!’

    That knocks me out.

    There is a charge


    For the eyeing of my scars, there is a charge

    For the hearing of my heart——

    It really goes.


    And there is a charge, a very large charge

    For a word or a touch

    Or a bit of blood


    Or a piece of my hair or my clothes.

    So, so, Herr Doktor.

    So, Herr Enemy.


    I am your opus,

    I am your valuable,

    The pure gold baby


    That melts to a shriek.

    I turn and burn.

    Do not think I underestimate your great concern.


    Ash, ash—

    You poke and stir.

    Flesh, bone, there is nothing there——


    A cake of soap,

    A wedding ring,

    A gold filling.


    Herr God, Herr Lucifer

    Beware

    Beware.


    Out of the ash

    I rise with my red hair

    And I eat men like air.

  15. I Am Vertical

    BY SYLVIA PLATH

    But I would rather be horizontal.
    I am not a tree with my root in the soil
    Sucking up minerals and motherly love
    So that each March I may gleam into leaf,

    Nor am I the beauty of a garden bed
    Attracting my share of Ahs and spectacularly painted,

    Unknowing I must soon unpetal.
    Compared with me, a tree is immortal
    And a flower-head not tall, but more startling,
    And I want the one's longevity and the other's daring.

    Tonight, in the infinitesimal light of the stars,
    The trees and the flowers have been strewing their cool odors.

    I walk among them, but none of them are noticing.
    Sometimes I think that when I am sleeping
    I must most perfectly resemble them --

    Thoughts gone dim.
    It is more natural to me, lying down.
    Then the sky and I are in open conversation,

    And I shall be useful when I lie down finally:
    Then the trees may touch me for once, and the flowers have time for me.


  16. Never Try to Trick Me With a Kiss

    BY SYLVIA PLATH

    Never try to trick me with a kiss
    Pretending that the birds are here to stay;
    The dying man will scoff and scorn at this.

    A stone can masquerade where no heart is
    And virgins rise where lustful Venus lay:
    Never try to trick me with a kiss.

    Our noble doctor claims the pain is his,
    While stricken patients let him have his say;
    The dying man will scoff and scorn at this.

    Each virile bachelor dreads paralysis,
    The old maid in the gable cries all day:
    Never try to trick me with a kiss.

    The suave eternal serpents promise bliss
    To mortal children longing to be gay;
    The dying man will scoff and scorn at this.

    Sooner or later something goes amiss;
    The singing birds pack up and fly away;
    So never try to trick me with a kiss:
    The dying man will scoff and scorn at this.

  17. Fever 103°

    BY SYLVIA PLATH

    Pure? What does it mean?

    The tongues of hell

    Are dull, dull as the triple


    Tongues of dull, fat Cerberus

    Who wheezes at the gate. Incapable

    Of licking clean


    The aguey tendon, the sin, the sin.

    The tinder cries.

    The indelible smell


    Of a snuffed candle!

    Love, love, the low smokes roll

    From me like Isadora’s scarves, I’m in a fright


    One scarf will catch and anchor in the wheel,

    Such yellow sullen smokes

    Make their own element. They will not rise,


    But trundle round the globe

    Choking the aged and the meek,

    The weak


    Hothouse baby in its crib,

    The ghastly orchid

    Hanging its hanging garden in the air,


    Devilish leopard!

    Radiation turned it white

    And killed it in an hour.


    Greasing the bodies of adulterers

    Like Hiroshima ash and eating in.

    The sin. The sin.


    Darling, all night

    I have been flickering, off, on, off, on.

    The sheets grow heavy as a lecher’s kiss.


    Three days. Three nights.

    Lemon water, chicken

    Water, water make me retch.


    I am too pure for you or anyone.

    Your body

    Hurts me as the world hurts God. I am a lantern——


    My head a moon

    Of Japanese paper, my gold beaten skin

    Infinitely delicate and infinitely expensive.


    Does not my heat astound you! And my light!

    All by myself I am a huge camellia

    Glowing and coming and going, flush on flush.


    I think I am going up,

    I think I may rise——

    The beads of hot metal fly, and I love, I


    Am a pure acetylene

    Virgin

    Attended by roses,


    By kisses, by cherubim,

    By whatever these pink things mean!

    Not you, nor him


    Nor him, nor him

    (My selves dissolving, old whore petticoats)——

    To Paradise.

  18. Dream With Clam-Diggers

by SYLVIA PLATH

This dream budded bright with leaves around the edges,
Its clear air winnowed by angels; she was come
Back to her early sea-town home
Scathed, stained after tedious pilgrimages.

Barefoot, she stood, in shock of that returning,
Beside a neighbor’s house
With shingles burnished as glass,
Blinds lowered on that hot morning.

No change met her: garden terrace, all summer
Tanged by melting tar,
Sloped seaward to plunge in blue; fed by white fire,
The whole scene flared welcome to this roamer.

High against heaven, gulls went wheeling soundless
Over tidal-flats where three children played
Silent and shining on a green rock bedded in mud,
Their fabulous heyday endless.

With green rock gliding, a delicate schooner
Decked forth in cockle-shells,
They sailed till tide foamed round their ankles
And the fair ship sank, its crew knelled home for dinner.

Plucked back thus sudden to that far innocence,
She, in her shabby travel garb, began
Walking eager toward water, when there, one by one,
Clam-diggers rose up out of dark slime at her offense.

Grim as gargoyles from years spent squatting at sea’s border
In wait amid snarled weed and wrack of wave
To trap this wayward girl at her first move of love,
Now with stake and pitchfork they advance, flint eyes fixed on murder.

 
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Dorothy Parker

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Edgar Allan Poe