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  1. Há 4 dias · Sylvia Plath foi uma escritora icônica, conhecida por suas obras literárias que exploraram temas profundos e emocionais. Seu talento singular a consagrou como uma das autoras mais influentes de sua geração, e seu legado perdura até hoje.

  2. 18 de mai. de 2024 · The wind gagging my mouth with my own blown hair, Tearing off my voice, and the sea. Blinding me with its lights, the lives of the dead. Unreeling in it, spreading like oil. I tasted the malignity of the gorse, Its black spikes, The extreme unction of its yellow candle -flowers. They had an efficiency, a great beauty,

  3. 7 de mai. de 2024 · Sharing her more than 15 years of compelling research—including analysis of Sylvia Plath’s unpublished calendars, notebooks, scrapbooks, book annotations, and underlinings as well as published memoirs, biographies, letters, journals, and interviews with Plath and her husband, friends, and family—Plath scholar Julia Gordon-Bramer reveals Sylvia Plath’s enduring interest and active ...

  4. 18 de mai. de 2024 · Little Fugue. Cold clouds go over. Signal the blind, and are ignored. I like black statements. The featurelessness of that cloud, now! White as an eye all over! At my table on the ship. He felt for his food. His fingers had the noses of weasels.

  5. 2 de mai. de 2024 · Sylvia Plath > Quotes > Quotable Quote. Sylvia Plath. >. Quotes. > Quotable Quote. (?) “Yes, my consuming desire is to mingle with road crews, sailors and soldiers, barroom regulars—to be a part of a scene, anonymous, listening, recording—all this is spoiled by the fact that I am a girl, a female always supposedly in danger of assault and ...

  6. Há 6 dias · Sylvia Plath > Quotes > Quotable Quote. (?) “I hated men because they didn’t stay around and love me like a father: I could prick holes in them & show they were no father-material. I made them propose and then showed them they hadn’t a chance. I hated men because they didn’t have to suffer like a woman did. They could die or go to Spain.

  7. In a foreword for Ariel, Lowell admires Plath’s ability to turn what was customarily thought of as feminine “on its head.”. Writer Honor Moore describes Ariel as the beginning of a movement: “When Sylvia Plath’s Ariel was published in the United States in 1966, American women noticed. Not only women who ordinarily read poems, but ...