Cassandra McCulley
Dr. Sharon Oster
March 25, 2012
Breaking Down “Daddy” by Sylvia Plath
After
reading Sylvia Plath’s poem, “Daddy” for the first time, I really didn’t know
what to think. I wasn’t sure if the narrator was Sylvia herself, I wasn’t sure
if the father being described was indeed a Nazi, and I had very little
knowledge about Sylvia Plath’s background to begin with.
Throughout
the entire poem Plath, the narrator, describes things that she has been feeling
her entire life. We know this because on line three she clearly states, “For
thirty years…” (3). So now that she is grown and writing this poem, we realize
she is reflecting on her childhood. Her style of writing seems almost childish,
somewhat similar to the old nursery rhyme, “There was an old woman that lived
in a shoe…” This connection suggests to me, as a reader, that she is unable to
let go of her past. She also uses other childish words and language such as the
word “daddy”, also showing that she is unable to let go of the things that happened
to her as a child.
We
later realize that her father died when she was quite young. Plath writes,
“Daddy, I have had to kill you./ You died before I had time—,” (6-7). When I
read this line I had to think it over a few times. By saying that she had to
kill her father, I translated that to she had to forget him, she had to kill
her memories of him. When she said he died before she had time, I wonder what
she meant. What wasn’t she able to do before he died? This is answered later in
the poem.
Continuing
on in the poem, we realize that communication was a big problem for Plath. In
lines 24 through 30 she writes, “I never could talk to you./ The tongue stuck
in my jaw./ It stuck in a barb wire snare./ Ich, ich, ich, ich,/ I cold hardly
speak./ I though every German was you./ And the language obscene.” (24-30).
Here we begin to realize that Plath was unable to communicate with her father.
She was so scared that she could hardly speak. We also begin to see Plath’s
references to the Holocaust. She continues to compare her father to a Nazi, and
herself to a Jew. She was a prisoner, helpless, unwanted, a weak oppressed
victim of her father.
Then
Plath began to talk about her own brushes with death. “I was ten when they
buried you./ At twenty I tried to die/ And get back, back, back to you.”
(57-60). She is describing her own three attempts at suicide here in such a
unique way. I didn’t know she had attempted to suicide, although I did know she
eventually succeeded in doing so. This was an interesting way of sneakily
incorporating her death experiences.
Plath’s
writing continued to stump me. “And I said I do, I do./ So daddy, I’m finally
through./ The black telephone’s off at the root,/ The voices just can’t worm
through. If I’ve killed one man I’ve killed two--/ The vampire who said he was
you/ And drank my blood for a year,/ Seven years, if you want to know.”
(67-74). It took me quite some time to realize that she indeed married a man
just like her father, who like a vampire, sucked the life out of her. But like
her father, she left her husband, and is trying to get rid of all memory of
him. I love the way Plath wrote about her husband in this poem. I love the
parallels she creates between her husband and her father, and how hard she is
trying to convey the message that she wants to be free of them and the memory
of them.
Although
the poem clearly says that Plath is
through, she never can be truly through because this poem will live on forever
since the moment she put it down on paper. I understand why Plath received so
much criticism from people during the time period the poem was written because
World War II and the Holocaust were fresh subjects and she was deemed somewhat
disrespectful because she compared her father and childhood to the Holocaust.
But I think it really was beautiful writing. She was trying to connect to
people, and make the poem so dramatic in the sense that people would be able to
understand and somewhat relate. Although it seems controversial, I think this
is an overall beautiful piece and is very intricately written.
Cassandra, I enjoyed reading your insights on Sylvia Plath’s poem and how this reveals to us much of her history and her emotional struggle. Someone like Edgar Allan Poe can create stories that arouse the imagination and ethical dilemmas. Plath however, writes poems that make the readers wonder the emotional pain that she went though; something we can only imagine even if we know what she went through.
ReplyDeleteAfter doing a little bit of research about her, I learn more about her life and sympathized more towards her despair. She was a smart woman, she earned a Fulbright Scholarship and she went to Smith College. She got her first poem published when she was eight years old and she won awards for her paintings as well. To shine a bit of light about her father, Otto Plath died a week and a half after Plath’s eighth birthday and he himself suffered from a minor depression after one of his friend died from lung cancer just previously. This made Plath feel ambivalent towards religion and from then on, her life went downhill.
One of her first attempt, she crawled under her house and tried to overdose on sleeping pills. She stayed there unfound for three days! Maybe that explains why one of the lines on her “Lady Lazarus” poem describes “They pick the worms off me like sticky pearls” (42). After this, Plath was sent to a psychiatric care where she received insulin shock treatment. Few things to consider, this was in the 50’s where medical care for anyone considered out of the ordinary (“mad”, “insane”, “gay”, “schizophrenic” and etc.) were treated harshly due to the lack of medical understanding. What insulin shock treatment means is that Plath is injected a high dosage of insulin daily that may put her in a coma for couple of days to weeks. These treatment themselves are so dark and terrifying themselves and they reveal to us that Plath experienced a “near insanity” event in her life per se.
She had worked as a receptionist in a hospital and this is where she started to build her writing career. Just imagine how she must feel that she is back in a hospital setting. While her husband went on tours and vacation, she had to take care of her sons. In fact, she had a miscarriage in 1961. All these are unfortunate, lonely, heartbreaking, and depressing events in her life that would make just about anyone go mad. One of her other suicide attempt was that she got into a car accident. Later, she then moved to a new house in the countryside taking care of her children while her husband is out and having an affair. In 1963, she was finally successful in her attempt when she locked herself in the kitchen and sealing all the doors with towels (her children are sleeping in their rooms) and she opened the oven and she died from carbon monoxide poisoning.
Plath’s life is just full of events that give us an idea of how it was like in the 50’s and 60’s towards those like her and women in general. It gives us a better understanding of her motives.
Sources - All information from above are taken from:
Sylviaplath.info - http://www.sylviaplath.info/biography.html
Wikipedia.com - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sylvia_Plath
About.com - http://bipolar.about.com/cs/celebs/a/sylviaplath.htm
Further Readings:
Rough Magic: A Biography of Sylvia Plath By Paul Alexander - Da Capo Press (2003) - Paperback