PoemThalidomide
Author / PoetSylvia Plath
TagsEthics, Medicine, Moon, Tragedy

O half moon—-

Half-brain, luminosity—-
Negro, masked like a white,

Your dark
Amputations crawl and appall—-

Spidery, unsafe.
What glove

What leatheriness
Has protected

Me from that shadow—-
The indelible buds.

Knuckles at shoulder-blades, the
Faces that

Shove into being, dragging
The lopped

Blood-caul of absences.
All night I carpenter

A space for the thing I am given,
A love

Of two wet eyes and a screech.
White spit

Of indifference!
The dark fruits revolve and fall.

The glass cracks across,
The image

Flees and aborts like dropped mercury.

Sylvia Plath
Sylvia Plath
27 Oct 1932 - 11 Feb 1963
Region: North America
Period: Contemporary
Movement: Confessional
Awards: Glascock Prize, Pulitzer Prize for Poetry

more poems by Sylvia Plath

Poem NameTopic
Witch BurningEmpowerment, Feminism, History
Two Lovers And A Beachcomber By The Real SeaHouse, Ocean, Sea
TulipsEmotion, Nature, Symbolism
The JailerConfinement, Oppression, Power
The Rabbit CatcherExistentialism, Metaphor, Nature
Suicide Off Egg RockDespair, Isolation, Mortality
SpinsterConfusion, Contrast, Disorder
Soliloquy Of The SolipsistExistentialism, Philosophy, Solitude
Poppies In JulyDesire, Emptiness, Frustration
Sheep In FogDespair, Isolation, Melancholy

all poems by Sylvia Plath

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *