Saturday, September 28, 2019
Sylvia Plath vs Ted Hughes
Sylvia Plathââ¬â¢s poem, ââ¬ËWhiteness I Rememberââ¬â¢, and Ted Hughesââ¬â¢s poem, ââ¬ËSamââ¬â¢, are two poems which describe an experience of Plathââ¬â¢s when she was a student at Cambridge. She was out on her first ride when the horse she had hired the normally-placid Sam, bolted. Although Ted Hughesââ¬â¢s is describing the experience he uses insinuations throughout the poem to let out his perception of his marriage with Sylvia Plath, hence infuriating, the conflict in perspective between the two poems. The ideas of ââ¬Ëconflicting perspectiveââ¬â¢ suggest that the composers of the texts present an even-handed, unbiased attitude to the events, personalities or situations represented. Conflicting perspectives explore the subjective truth of the individual, which are shaped by the construction of a text by a biased composer. Each personââ¬â¢s version of the truth in events, personalities and situations differs, by viewing separate perspectives an understanding of the motives and purpose of the composer is formed. Samââ¬â¢ is Hughes retrospective interpretation of an event in Plathââ¬â¢s life before she met him and which she had represented in the poem ââ¬ËWhiteness I rememberââ¬â¢. Hughesââ¬â¢ poem itself contains what can be interpreted as conflicting perspectives of her personality and when read in conjunction with Whiteness I remember reveals interesting similarities and differences. Hughes seems to accept Plathââ¬â¢s account of the event ââ¬ËI can liv e Your incredulity, your certainty that this was itââ¬â¢ and he does adhere closely to her description of her experiences during the horseââ¬â¢s headlong flight to the stable. However, the repetition of ââ¬ËYou lost your stirrupsââ¬â¢, ââ¬ËYou lost your reins, you lost your seatââ¬â¢, combine to depict Plath as a terrified victim unable to control or take responsibility for the consequences of her own actions. In contrast Plathââ¬â¢s poem suggests she was exhilarated by the speed and danger and identified with what she represents as the horsesââ¬â¢ rebellion against the ââ¬Ëhumdrumââ¬â¢ of suburbia. In contrast Hughes accuses her of glamorising her loss of control. ââ¬ËIt was grab his neck and adore him or free fallââ¬â¢. Once again the reader is arguably left with the impression that Hughes is still identifying with Sam and suggesting there are parallels between her relationship with him and the horse. As the stanza continues Hughes builds the momentum and pace with a series of commas as punctuation and an enjambment. The choice of verb in ââ¬ËYou slewed under his neck, an upside down jockey with nothing between you and the cataract of macadamââ¬â¢ creates an image of Plath unable to maintain a balance and in imminent danger of being smashed into the road by the horses hooves at high speed. The alliteration and the metaphor of the ââ¬Ëhorribly hard swift riverââ¬â¢ in full flood combine with theââ¬â¢ propeller terror of his front legsââ¬â¢ and the onomatopoeia of ââ¬Ëclangour of the iron shoesââ¬â¢ to transform the horse into an engine of destruction.
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