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Sylvia Plath

Decent Essays

In Sylvia Plath’s “Daddy,” and “Lady Lazarus,” Plath displays her deepest emotions and concerns. Her beliefs completely contradicts her fathers so she has to deal with a lot of negative emotions throughout her life. Both of these poems were both written at the end of Plath’s life and really show her state of mind. Throughout her poems, we are able to see the motivation behind her feelings and her suicide attempts. “Daddy,” and “Lady Lazarus,” by Sylvia Plath are the closing notes to Plath’s grudges towards her father, her husband, and many other things.
In her poems, Plath displays her struggles with her personal relationship with her father, her father’s collaborations, and her mental status. Sylvia Plath’s relationship with her father is …show more content…

Towards the end of “Daddy,” Sylvia flips everything around and ends the poem with a triumphant declaration stating, “Daddy, daddy, you bastard, im through”(Beam 425). In the beginning of “Daddy,” and throughout the middle, we are convinced that Sylvia is completely shot down and devastated because of her father, but she concludes her poem with a declaration of intense triumph over him. Although she ends “Daddy,” triumphantly, as if she has found closure with her father, Plath still has residual pain from what her father did throughout his life. Even though she may not have triumph from her feelings toward her father, she does have triumph in her life in general. Instead of concentrating on her fathers works and in result being stagnant in life, she finds her own voice. The book “Gracefully Insane: The Rise and Fall of America’s Premier Mental Hospital,” comments on Plath’s “Daddy,” by saying, “The overt subject of this poem is not the totality of her oppression but rather her triumph in resisting it- in repudiating her muse and finding her own voice”(Beam 425). Instead of holding a grudge and not going anywhere in her life, she creates her own beliefs, but her past eventually catches up to her and causes her depression. The absence of a father figure could have contributed to her search for fulfillment, in which she never found. Plath struggles tremendously throughout her life regarding her father. Her …show more content…

In lines 43-47 she says that she dies exceptionally well and she does it as though it feels real. This indicated that she is indeed depressed and feels dead to the world and to herself (Plath 1). On the other side, in lines 79-83 of “Lady Lazarus,” Plath says, “Herr God, Herr Lucifer. Beware beware. Out of the ash I rise with my red hair (Plath 1).” She says this as if she has risen from the dead. This could be symbolic of her overcoming her feelings towards he father and moving on with her life. Herr is German for mister, so in complete English, Plath is saying, “Mister God, Mister Lucifer...” She symbolically tells God and Lucifer to beware, because she is rising from the dead with her red hair. After all of this time, Sylvia Plath’s burdens eventually became too heavy for her to carry, and she eventually reaches her breaking point. “Daddy,” and “Lady Lazarus,” were her last works before she breaks down. Although she had attempted to kill herself many times before, her attempt on February 11, 1963 was different. She succeeded in her suicide attempt on February 11, 1963, leaving behind her

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