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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
6 pages in length. To appreciate Sylvia Plath is to recognize the various elements and components that make up her distinctive poetry, which serves to broaden one's appreciation of the written art form. That Plath incorporated her own personal problems into the literary prose for which she is so well known speaks volumes regarding the poet's distraught existence. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
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6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCSPlth.rtf
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appreciation of the written art form. That Plath incorporated her own personal problems into the literary prose for which she is so well known speaks volumes regarding the poets
distraught existence. The lucid and uncomplicated images she created with her seemingly elementary style were anything but; in fact, the complexity that resides within her characteristically simple prose, which
demonstrate a purity and precision like no other, are known only to those who can see beyond their fa?ade. Attention to outer detail and an unquenchable desire to portray
her inner pain, Plath favored a more simplistic approach to convey the immense pain and suffering she endured throughout her life. Utilizing the concepts of syllabic verse, imagery and
dialogue, the troubled poet cleverly and quite appropriately captured her audience with images of her own anguish. The use of syllabics in poetry
is not only functional in the overall shape of this unique form of self-expression, but it also represents the very essence of how such poetry is defined. Syllabic verse
establishes a pattern by which the number of syllables that appear in each line is not as important to the flow of the poetry as the stresses. It is
because of this particular styling that syllabic poems most often contain no rhyme or uniform number of lines; rather, the flow may appear sometimes choppy and less rhythmic when compared
with other, more traditional styles of poetry. In her poem Daddy, Plath captures most creatively the very essence of syllabic poetry. With extremely brief and concise metrical lines,
Plath offers the reader a glimpse into the struggle she underwent as a child under her fathers hand, eavesdropping upon her innermost thoughts. "Daddy, you can lie back now
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