Important Features of Sylvia Plath’s Language and Style
All poetry questions will require a discussion of language and style. This may be asked for explicitly in the wording of the question, or implicitly in phrases such as ‘expertly crafted’, ‘innovative style’ or ‘eloquent poetry’. Always have a selection of quotations prepared on the various literary techniques a poet uses.
IMAGERY
important aspects of a poet’s style to discuss. Similes (comparisons that use ‘like’, ‘as’ or (descriptions of non-human objects that give them human characteristics) can all be help draw the reader in to a poem.
IMAGERY
Plath has a true gift for creating vivid imagery, which makes it easy for a reader to envisage what she is describing. For example:
‘On the stiff twig up there/ Hunches a wet black rook/ Arranging and rearranging its feathers in the rain.’ (‘Black Rook in Rainy Weather’)
This image is compelling due to Plath’s choice of the verb ‘hunches’. It allows us to picture exactly how the rook huddles into itself on the branch.
Plath’s description of herself here is particularly effective. The phrase ‘cow-heavy’ allows us to imagine how unglamorous her post-partum body and milk-swollen nightgown adds to this impression.
‘Our Lady of the Shipwrecked is striding toward the horizon,/ Her marble skirts blown back in two pink wings.’ (‘Finisterre’)
in the wind.
SIMILE
Plath often uses similes that make unusual comparisons that draw her readers into her poems, as they help us to picture what she pictures and to imagine what she imagines. For example:
‘Love set you going like a fat gold watch’ (‘Morning Song’)
This simile is particularly effective as ‘fat’ suggests a healthy, robust baby, ‘gold’ emphasises how precious the child is, while ‘watch’ alludes to the time-consuming task of caring for an infant.