The Life and Poetry of Sylvia Plath

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Paper 1
Paper 1
Section 1: 
 
Comprehending
Section 2: 
 
Composing
Paper 2
Paper 2
Section 1:
 
 The Single Text – 
Big Maggie, 
John B Keane.
Section 2: 
 
The Comparative Study
Section 3: 
 
Unseen poem and questions
  
Prescribed poem and questions
Prescribed poem and questions
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Poet: Sylvia Plath
 
Born Boston 1932
Exceled in school
Father died when she was 8 years old
– Plath experienced a loss of faith as a
result of this.
In 1941 Sylvia's first poem was printed
in the children's section of the Boston
Herald.
Attended Smith College in 1950 –
became editor of a magazine.
Had both successes and failures in her
publications – lead to a ‘high-low’ life
in which she often questioned her
own talents.
Poet: Sylvia Plath
 
Spent time in a psychiatric hospital (attempted suicide in 1953)
1955 Fulbright scholarship to Cambridge.
Meets poet Ted Hughes in Feb. 1956, they marry in June 1956...
Two children (Frieda
    and Nicholas) + cheating
    husband = rocky marriage!
 
Poet: Sylvia Plath
 
Plath continued to write powerful poetry however the strain of a
failed marriage and the weariness of a lifelong battle with depression
simply became too much for Plath.
In February of 1963 she took her own life.
She was 30 years old.
Sylvia Plath: Poems to cover
“Child”
“The Arrival of the Bee-Box”
“Poppies in July”
“CHILD”
By Sylvia Plath
“Child”
Read the text
General class discussion – first impressions.
Content of poem
Language
Themes
 
Pre-reading:
 
Context:
This poem was written in 1962 after the birth of Sylvia’s second child,
Nicholas.
Unfortunately the birth of this child coincided with a very painful time
for Plath, during which her marriage broke up.
Ted, moved to London with his lover, leaving a bitter Plath with two
children in Devon.
On top of Plath’s own mental anguish [over marriage breakdown] it
seems that her depression could also be classed as 
postpartum
.
[Symptoms include sadness, fatigue, changes in sleeping and eating
patterns, reduced libido, crying episodes, anxiety, and irritability. ]
Postpartum depression may lead mothers to be inconsistent with
childcare.
Women diagnosed with postpartum depression often focus more on
the negative events of childcare.
Plath in this poem begins in a positive light in Verse One, however,
relapses
 as the lyrics unfold.
“Child” by Sylvia Plath
The Poem
Your clear eye is the one absolutely beautiful thing.
I want to fill it with color and ducks,
The zoo of the new
Whose name you meditate--
April snowdrop, Indian pipe,
Little
 
Stalk without wrinkle,
Pool in which images
Should be grand and classical
 
Not this troublous
Wringing of hands, this dark
Ceiling without a star.
The 
poem begins 
poem begins 
with the
speaker (Plath) celebrating
the 
beauty of her child’s
eyes.
In the beginning, she is
hopeful to fill these eyes with
“colour and ducks” – to
stimulate her child’s
imagination [nurturing]
Nature/Natural referen
ces -
Flowers: white, innocent,
delicate, youthful “without
wrinkle”.
 Pool: naturally reflecting
positive, exuberant images
of the child’s fulfilled life.
Verse four sees a shift in mood: colours
fade to “dark...without a star”
The image of “troublous wringing of
hands” highlights the Plath’s frustration
and disenchantment with her mother-
role
The Title
 
Why is this poem entitled “Child”?
 
Entitled “Child”, it is a poem about a nameless child who has been brought into a
dark, uncertain yet beautiful world.
However, because of the relationship this child shares with his mother [who is
depressed] his existence also becomes dark and colourless.
Nameless  
unattached to her newborn child
Plath’s journal entry…
“I felt very proud of Nicholas, and fond. It had taken a night to be sure
I liked him...”
In 2009, aged 47, 
Nicholas, himself,
commited suicide.
Did he ever have a 
chance in life?
Language
Opening stanza
 uses joyful and
optimistic language
Her poetry is decorated, again, with
colour. Colour, for Plath in this
poem, represents living, vitality and
positivity: “colour and ducks”.
Colourless (“dark”) represents
depression.
“Child” by Sylvia Plath
The Poem
Your clear eye is the one absolutely beautiful thing.
I want to fill it with color and ducks,
The zoo of the new
Whose name you meditate--
April snowdrop, Indian pipe,
Little
 
Stalk without wrinkle,
Pool in which images
Should be grand and classical
 
Not this troublous
Wringing of hands, this dark
Ceiling without a star.
Language
 
The 
metaphor
 of “The zoo of the new” is so
rich with meaning; a world of variety, learning
and newness.
 
She uses a playful, childlike language in the
life she envisages for her child.
 
Image of the child: “April snowdrop, Indian
pipe” – flowers. What do they represent in
this poem?
 
Snowdrops are delicate white flowers, here it
represents the purity and innocence of the
young child.
 
The Indian pipe is also white and delicate
looking. But this is also the first hint of
darkness in the poem because this flower
lives in the darkest part of the forest. It feeds
on the decaying matter of other plants. It may
represent how Plath felt she was drawing the
happiness out of her own child.
Language
 
Alliteration
 “w” in stanza three – “without wrinkle” captures the smoothness and
clarity of newborn skin and juxtaposes the lone “wringing of hands” in the final
stanza which captures the poet’s sense of bewilderment.
 
Assonance
 [repetition of vowels]: ‘colour and ducks, the zoo of the new’.
Note the ‘u’ sound repeated four times here: the ‘ou’ in ‘colour’, the ‘u’ in ‘ducks’,
the ‘oo’ in ‘zoo’ and the ‘ew’ of ‘new’. This musical touch gestures towards a
nursery rhyme effect/ the cooing of a baby.
Language
 
Return of the 
broad vowel sounds
 in the final stanza: “troublous”,
“dark”, “without”, “star”
 
Tercets
 (3 line stanzas) are linked together by a series of run-on lines.
This use of 
enjambment
 allows Plath to create a soothing, gentle and
almost “rockabye” momentum.
Task:
There are 2 very different and distinct sets of emotions in this poem.
Draw a column page.
Write “Positive” over in the left-hand column and “Negative” over in
the right.
Divide the main words and phrases in this poem into the 2 columns.
At the bottom of the page, write down whether the poem left you
with positive or negative feelings overall.
Task: Complete Table
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2014 Ordinary Level Paper – Prescribed Poetry
2014 Ordinary Level Paper – Prescribed Poetry
(a) What feelings are expressed by the poet in the first three stanzas of this
poem?     Support your answer with reference to the poem.
(10) 
(P.Q.E X2)
(P.Q.E X2)
(b) What feelings are expressed by the poet in the last stanza of this poem?
Support your answer with reference to the poem.
(10) 
(P.Q.E X2)
(P.Q.E X2)
(c) Choose two lines or phrases from the poem that appeal to you and
explain    your choice.
(10)   
(ELABORATE 2 EXPLANATIONS)
(ELABORATE 2 EXPLANATIONS)
 Answer ONE of the following: [Each part
carries 20 marks]
(i) You have been asked to make a short video to accompany a reading of
this    poem on YouTube.  Describe some of the images, colours, music,
sound    effects, etc. that you would use as a background to the reading and
explain your choices 
based on your knowledge of the poem.   (5
PARAGRAPHS)
 (ii)  Which of the following word or words would you choose to describe
the language used by the poet in this poem?   (4 PARAGRAPHS) –
(BRAINSTORM/SPIDER DIAGRAM BEFORE YOU BEGIN)
  
 Unusual                   Descriptive                Appealing
Support your answer with reference to the poem.
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Sylvia Plath, a renowned poet, faced significant challenges in her personal life, including the loss of her father at a young age and struggles in her marriage. Despite her talent and successes, she battled with depression and ultimately took her own life at the age of 30. Plath's poems, such as "Child" and "The Arrival of the Bee-Box," reflect her inner turmoil and raw emotions, making her a significant figure in modern poetry.


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  1. English Leaving Certificate Exam Papers English Leaving Certificate Exam Papers Paper 1 Section 1: Comprehending Section 2: Composing Paper 2 Section 1: Section 2: The Comparative Study Section 3: Unseen poem and questions Prescribed poem and questions The Single Text Big Maggie, John B Keane.

  2. Poetry Poetry

  3. Poet: Sylvia Plath Born Boston 1932 Exceled in school Father died when she was 8 years old Plath experienced a loss of faith as a result of this. In 1941 Sylvia's first poem was printed in the children's section of the Boston Herald. Attended Smith College in 1950 became editor of a magazine. Had both successes and failures in her publications lead to a high-low life in which she often questioned her own talents.

  4. Poet: Sylvia Plath Spent time in a psychiatric hospital (attempted suicide in 1953) 1955 Fulbright scholarship to Cambridge. Meets poet Ted Hughes in Feb. 1956, they marry in June 1956... Two children (Frieda and Nicholas) + cheating husband = rocky marriage!

  5. Poet: Sylvia Plath Plath continued to write powerful poetry however the strain of a failed marriage and the weariness of a lifelong battle with depression simply became too much for Plath. In February of 1963 she took her own life. She was 30 years old.

  6. Sylvia Plath: Poems to cover Child The Arrival of the Bee-Box Poppies in July

  7. CHILD By Sylvia Plath

  8. Child Read the text General class discussion first impressions. Content of poem Language Themes

  9. Pre-reading: Context: This poem was written in 1962 after the birth of Sylvia s second child, Nicholas. Unfortunately the birth of this child coincided with a very painful time for Plath, during which her marriage broke up. Ted, moved to London with his lover, leaving a bitter Plath with two children in Devon.

  10. On top of Plaths own mental anguish [over marriage breakdown] it seems that her depression could also be classed as postpartum. [Symptoms include sadness, fatigue, changes in sleeping and eating patterns, reduced libido, crying episodes, anxiety, and irritability. ]

  11. Postpartum depression may lead mothers to be inconsistent with childcare. Women diagnosed with postpartum depression often focus more on the negative events of childcare. Plath in this poem begins in a positive light in Verse One, however, relapses as the lyrics unfold.

  12. The poem begins with the speaker (Plath) celebrating the beauty of her child s eyes. In the beginning, she is hopeful to fill these eyes with colour and ducks to stimulate her child s imagination [nurturing] Nature/Natural references - Flowers: white, innocent, delicate, youthful without wrinkle . Pool: naturally reflecting positive, exuberant images of the child s fulfilled life. Child by Sylvia Plath The Poem Your clear eye is the one absolutely beautiful thing. I want to fill it with color and ducks, The zoo of the new Whose name you meditate-- April snowdrop, Indian pipe, Little Stalk without wrinkle, Pool in which images Should be grand and classical Verse four sees a shift in mood: colours fade to dark...without a star Not this troublous Wringing of hands, this dark Ceiling without a star. The image of troublous wringing of hands highlights the Plath s frustration and disenchantment with her mother- role

  13. The Title Why is this poem entitled Child ? Entitled Child , it is a poem about a nameless child who has been brought into a dark, uncertain yet beautiful world. However, because of the relationship this child shares with his mother [who is depressed] his existence also becomes dark and colourless. Nameless unattached to her newborn child

  14. Plaths journal entry I felt very proud of Nicholas, and fond. It had taken a night to be sure I liked him... In 2009, aged 47, Nicholas, himself, commited suicide. Did he ever have a chance in life?

  15. Language Child by Sylvia Plath The Poem Your clear eye is the one absolutely beautiful thing. I want to fill it with color and ducks, The zoo of the new Opening stanza uses joyful and optimistic language Whose name you meditate-- April snowdrop, Indian pipe, Little Her poetry is decorated, again, with colour. Colour, for Plath in this poem, represents living, vitality and positivity: colour and ducks . Colourless ( dark ) represents depression. Stalk without wrinkle, Pool in which images Should be grand and classical Not this troublous Wringing of hands, this dark Ceiling without a star.

  16. Language The metaphor of The zoo of the new is so rich with meaning; a world of variety, learning and newness. She uses a playful, childlike language in the life she envisages for her child. Image of the child: April snowdrop, Indian pipe flowers. What do they represent in this poem? Snowdrops are delicate white flowers, here it represents the purity and innocence of the young child. The Indian pipe is also white and delicate looking. But this is also the first hint of darkness in the poem because this flower lives in the darkest part of the forest. It feeds on the decaying matter of other plants. It may represent how Plath felt she was drawing the happiness out of her own child.

  17. Language Alliteration w in stanza three without wrinkle captures the smoothness and clarity of newborn skin and juxtaposes the lone wringing of hands in the final stanza which captures the poet s sense of bewilderment. Assonance [repetition of vowels]: colour and ducks, the zoo of the new . Note the u sound repeated four times here: the ou in colour , the u in ducks , the oo in zoo and the ew of new . This musical touch gestures towards a nursery rhyme effect/ the cooing of a baby.

  18. Language Return of the broad vowel sounds in the final stanza: troublous , dark , without , star Tercets (3 line stanzas) are linked together by a series of run-on lines. This use of enjambment allows Plath to create a soothing, gentle and almost rockabye momentum.

  19. Task: There are 2 very different and distinct sets of emotions in this poem. Draw a column page. Write Positive over in the left-hand column and Negative over in the right. Divide the main words and phrases in this poem into the 2 columns. At the bottom of the page, write down whether the poem left you with positive or negative feelings overall.

  20. Task: Complete Table Child Key Point Quote Explain Theme Mental anguish Not this troublous/Wringing of hands The poet describes her distress and despair by giving us an image of her twisting her hands with upset. She doesn t feel that she can provide what her child needs and this fills her with terrible mental anguish. Tone (Feeling, mood, atmosphere) Feelings of joy and admiration Technique (The way the poet uses language) Metaphor

  21. Complete Exam Question: Complete Exam Question: 2014 Ordinary Level Paper Prescribed Poetry

  22. 2014 Ordinary Level Paper Prescribed Poetry (a) What feelings are expressed by the poet in the first three stanzas of this poem? Support your answer with reference to the poem. (10) (P.Q.E X2) (b) What feelings are expressed by the poet in the last stanza of this poem? Support your answer with reference to the poem. (10) (P.Q.E X2) (c) Choose two lines or phrases from the poem that appeal to you and explain your choice. (10) (ELABORATE 2 EXPLANATIONS)

  23. Answer ONE of the following: [Each part carries 20 marks] (i) You have been asked to make a short video to accompany a reading of this poem on YouTube. Describe some of the images, colours, music, sound effects, etc. that you would use as a background to the reading and explain your choices based on your knowledge of the poem. (5 PARAGRAPHS) (ii) Which of the following word or words would you choose to describe the language used by the poet in this poem? (4 PARAGRAPHS) (BRAINSTORM/SPIDER DIAGRAM BEFORE YOU BEGIN) Unusual Descriptive Appealing Support your answer with reference to the poem.

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