A poem dedicated to Sylvia Plath; my muse, mentor, and mother-figure of poetry |
“Sylvia” by Danielle Piper Bloom Go to now, you blonde devil-muse! Hang your hide against the hierarchy host! That stiff wood that is wood-stiff Though wish it well to be softened Beacons for the life of me And I cannot baste it. You are a time-worm, the weak withe-pulp That will in a day be confident! I was never less a widow than you, For always you seemed a thing more mutable than me With no husband to kiss away the tears, the fears. Even I have more a companion than you! He ended the day you came my way, with much stronger The words than he. And how he devised you for that much! You are no egotist, though your poetry speaks us so! What a despicable way to portray those away, For the dead feel the ache of the angry living, And you, my friend, are the center for that! Oh beautiful blonde! Oh careless dead! How is it you end no chariot for me; no merchant-desk? You spoke all death an art, but oh, how wrong you were! It is living that is the skill, and how you wronged the will To do that land-mark which holds me to my poetry and yours In that comity of current affairs! And if only that affair were yours, My beautiful blonde! My blonde devil-muse! |