Kenly Ramirez Period-3October 19, 2017Lady Lazarus and Daddy are poems narrated by Silvia Plath who is a Jewish victim of theHolocaust, in both poem they commonly shared the same purpose of suicide, as well connected with religious theme. This poems illustrate the struggle finding her identity against the oppression of a male which she faced throughout the poem. In the poem “Daddy”, she describes how her father impacted her life. The uses of phrases as “I have always been scared of you, your neat
Relationships can be hard to manage, especially when it comes to family. The poem "Daddy" by Sylvia Plath is about a cynical father who died and left his daughter a wreck. Although the father was a bad man, his daughter thought the world of him. The speaker of the poem hates her father because she wants to be like him even though he was not a good man. At a few different places throughout the poem, the speaker states that her father was anything but a good man. She describes a photo she has of
“Daddy” written by Sylvia Plath an American poet best known for her dark, and confessional poems, and novels. Sylvia Plath lets you understand her thoughts through her writing, for example poems like “Daddy” and her novel The Bell Jar. More and more people learn about her work by reading her poetry or novels today. For one reason, this poem gives many emotions to the reader. By reading “Daddy” you can sense sadness, hopefulness, a broken child, while others may argue it is a cry for help. Secondly
was clearly incorporated into Sylvia Plath’s poem Daddy. Through Plath’s life she despised her father. “Seven years, if you want to know” (74). Plath even compares him to a Nazi at one point in the poem, “I thought every German was you” (Pg. 29). Even though the Nazi period was not during the time of Daddy’s publishing date to associate the amount of hatred she had for her father Plath compares him to the worst person she could think of, a Nazi. Plath conveys the fact that when people die there is
Daddy by Sylvia Plath is a confessional poem about a daughter's hatred and anger because she felt oppressed by her father for thirty years. Confessional poetry focuses on the inner expressions of conflict and emotion through the use of detail in the poet's life. Plath was nine when her father passed away and she was too young to get to know her father. Her father passed away because of a wound he received on his toe and since he was diabetic the wound eventually got infected and killed him. The young
In Sylvia Plath’s free verse poem “Daddy”, the speaker, assumingly a female, kills their father’s memory through a metaphorical murder. Plath employs multiple themes, dark and violent imagery as well as war to emphasize the speakers internal struggle with her father and his memory. Plath incorporates multiple themes within her poem to highlight the someone to social issues occurring at the time it was written as well as emphasize the nature of her relationship with her father. Freedom and confinement
After reading the poem “Daddy” written by Sylvia Plath an American poet, best known for her dark, and confessional writing. Sylvia Plath lets you understand her thoughts through her writing, for example poems like “Daddy” and her novel The Bell Jar. More and more people learn about her work by reading her poetry or novels today. For one reason, this poem gives many emotions to the reader. By reading “Daddy” you can sense sadness, hopefulness, a broken child, while others may argue it is a cry for
Another poem where the writer remembers the father but in a slightly negative and brutal concept is daddy by Silvia Plath. The speaker begins by saying that he "does not do anymore," and that she feels like she has been a ‘foot living in a black shoe for thirty years’, ‘too timid to either breathe or sneeze’. She insists that she needed to kill him (she refers to him a "Daddy"), but that he died before she had time. She describes him as heavy, like a "bag full of God, “resembling a statue which could
“You do not do, you do not do, anymore, black shoe in which I have lived like a foot for thirty years, poor and white, barely daring to breath or achoo.” This is the first stanza of “Daddy” by Sylvia Plath, and delivers the precise amount of bizarre yet relevant images that entice interest. It would be a disgrace to stop analyzing there; nevertheless, there is more revealed throughout this dramatic, sorrowful, and torturous account of a girl’s aversion toward her father. The following paragraphs
A Dissection of “Daddy” by Sylvia Plath “You do not do, you do not do, anymore, black shoe in which I have lived like a foot for thirty years, poor and white, barely daring to breath or achoo.” This is the first stanza of “Daddy” by Sylvia Plath, and delivers the precise amount of bizarre yet relevant images that entice interest. It would be a disgrace to stop analyzing there; nevertheless, there is more revealed throughout this dramatic, sorrowful, and torturous account of a girl’s aversion toward