Substantial events occurred in the lives of Plath and Sexton that feasibly impacted their decisions to take their lives. Plath’s father died when she was eight and she suffered from depression for most of her life (Sylvia Plath). In 1962, Plath’s husband, Ted Hughes, left Plath for the woman whom he engaged in an affair with (Sylvia Plath). The next year, Plath committed suicide by suffocating in her gas oven. Similarly, Anne Sexton suffered from depression and had multiple mental breakdowns throughout her
encourage her large audience of readers who were facing the same issues with depression and other struggles.(Poetry Foundation). Plath was a loving wife to Ted Hughes and later a wonderful mother to her two children (poets.org). Plath gave birth to two children in 1960 and 1962, Frieda and Nicholas Hughes (poets.org). Also in 1962 her husband, Hughes left her for another women,
abuse. In the myth “Castillo and Arcas”, Jupiter has a deep desire for Castillo, so he rapes her and leaves Castillo pregnant and alone. In the myth “Phaethon”, his lust for power causes him to put the entire earth in danger. In Tales From Ovid, by Ted Hughes, Ovid conveys that when one is consumed by a deep feeling of lust, their morals shift. In the myth “Tereus”, Tereus, the protagonist, is overcome by lust for his wife’s sister, Philomela, which makes him do gruesome things. His wife’s only desire
Born and raised in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, she tolerated an unpleasant and depressing childhood. Sylvia Path was born on October 27,1932 to Aurelia Schobert Plath and Otto Emile Plath. Her father was an author and professor, who taught at Boston University. There was a significant age difference between Plath’s parents; her mother was twenty-one years younger to her father. “The couple met when her mother was attaining Master’s Degree in teaching and opted one of his father’s course”. “The
many of her poems. The authoritarian attitude and strictness her father displayed (poets.org) provoked difficulties in her relationship with him. When Plath moved to Cambridge, England in 1950 she met the English poet Ted Hughes, whom she married on June 16, 1956. However, in 1962 Ted started a new relationship with Assia Gutmann Wevill and left Sylvia. The previews caused Sylvia to go into a severe state of depression, and even pushed her to attempt suicide. When Sylvia was 30, she attempted suicide
was born. Now that she had a child, she found very little time to write. She felt like there was no exit and that she was being held down with nowhere to go and nobody to talk to. To make matters worse, her husband, Ted Hughes, kept publishing articles, poems, and books. By Hughes continuation of publication, he was indirectly rubbing it in Plath’s face. With Plath’s deteriorating health and severe depression, she had a miscarriage while pregnant with her second child in February of 1961. The
The Indelible Self Possessed Poet: Sylvia Plath Sylvia Plath once said, “ The worst enemy to creativity is self doubt”(Good Reads). Ms. Sylvia Plath was a novelist, poet, and a short-story writer (Monroe 2015). At the age of eight, she published her first poem which appeared in The Boston Traveller (Orr, Morrish, Press, et.al). Plath a terrific artist, which lead her to receiving the Scholastic Art & Writing award (Beckmann 2006). Sylvia Plath influenced literature in a positive manner because
Examining the Life of Sylvia Plath as Seen Within “Lady Lazarus” Sylvia Plath’s poem, “Lady Lazarus”, was greatly about the author’s life: the influence by her suicide attempts, years of troubled mental health, and stressed relationships with her father and husband. The opening lines of “Lady Lazarus” read “I have done it again. / One year in every ten” (Plath 1-2). These two lines immediately reference Plath’s suicide attempts, her first of three being in 1953 when she was just a university student
where I am going…” (Sylvia Plath, The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath), Plath discusses her feelings emotional numbness, and of never wanting to have lived or suffered. After her death her journals were published, by her husband, English poet Ted Hughes, along with many other poems she had not yet
recovery and soon after that she went back to Smith College to continue her studies. After Plath finished her studies in Smith College, she was accepted to Cambridge University on Fulbright scholarship where she met her future husband and a poet, Ted Hughes, whom she married in June 1956 (Kirk, 2009: 86). Steven Gould Axelrod holds that Plath’s marriage affected her creative life because frequent unhappiness “inhibited her writing in which she could not give herself credit even for the poems and stories