Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes
Their story is not a happy one although their meeting of hearts, souls, body and mind produced strong, passionate poetry, Ted didn’t fit the restrictions of children and marriage and escaped from their farm in Devon to commence an affair with Assia Wevill, who although giving birth to a daughter couldn’t get him to commit to her.Sylvia, left with two young children in a London flat in the extremely harsh winter of 1962//3 killed herself. Ted was devastated and stopped writing for 3 years but then Assia also took her own and her daughter’s life.It is a high octane tragedy and you wonder how Hughes recovered enough to carry on, remarrying eventually and becoming The Poet Laureate in 1984 .One tale he told was of studying English at university and the essay wouldn’t gel so he went to bed and a fox in his dream showed him its charred paws saying “ Look what you are doing to us”, He changed his course the next day to Anthropology. He died in 1963.This poem was written after that dream and is his first animal poem –The Thought Fox
I imagine this midnight moment’s forest: Something else is alive Beside the clock’s loneliness And this blank page where my fingers move, Through the window I see no star: Something more near Though deeper within darkness Is entering the loneliness: Cold, delicately as the dark snow A fox’s nose touches twig, leaf; Two eyes serve a movement, that now And again, now and now, and nowSets neat prints into the snow Between trees, and warily a lame Shadow lags by stump and in hollow Of a body that is bold to comeAcross clearings, an eye, A widening deepening greenness, Brilliantly, concentratedly, Coming about it’s own business Till, with a sudden sharp hot stink of fox It enters the dark hole of the head. The window is starless still, the clock ticks, The page is printed. Ted Hughes
You’re
Clownlike, happiest on your hands, Feet to the stars and moon-skulled, Gilled like a fish. A common-sense Thumbs down on the dodo’s mode Wrapped up in yourself like a spool, Trawling your dark as owls do, Mute as a turnip from the Fourth Of July to All Fools' day, O high-riser, my little loaf. Vague as fog and looked for like mail, Farther off than Australia. Bent-backed Atlas, our traveled prawn. Snug as bud and at home Like a sprat in a pickle jar. A creel of eels, all ripples, Jumpy as a Mexican bean. Right, like a well-done sum. A clean slate, with your own face on. Sylvia Plath
A more cheerful one during her pregnancy.
Thanks for reading. Cynthia Kitchen
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