Friday, August 30, 2019
Analysing Slyvia Plathââ¬â¢s ââ¬ÅMushroomââ¬Â Poem Essay
The poem ââ¬Å"Mushroomâ⬠discusses the persistent struggle as the central theme. The lines that depicts the struggle are ââ¬Å"our hammers, our rams, earless and eyeless, perfectly voicelessâ⬠as personified by the mushrooms. Plathââ¬â¢s made use of allusions in the form of the last stanza ââ¬Å"our footââ¬â¢s in the doorâ⬠The structure of the poem has 23 lines, with nursery rhyme quality along with many repetitions of phrasing and sounds to depict fertility. Plath used the style of poem for younger children. The persona of the poem is the author herself who had two failed suicidal attempts and re-evaluated by the persona in the poem either from a perspective of a rebellious present. The literary devices used in the poem are personification, metaphor and allusion. Plath personified mushrooms by giving them human characteristics, found in the lines of ââ¬Å"earless and eyeless, perfectly voicelessâ⬠. The author also used metaphor of the mushrooms as tables, together with their meekness. The subject mushrooms, as a metaphor for people who are often underestimated people. The poem also showed the allusion of found in the last line ââ¬Å"our footââ¬â¢s in the doorâ⬠based o the Beatitude ââ¬Å"the meek shall inherit the earth. â⬠It conveys the dilemma of the oppressed (or mushroom) wherein personification of the poor and voiceless are found as mushrooms. The overall meaning of the poem for contemporary reading audience is to know how to have a deep desire to gain power and control regardless of how oppressed, struggling these people are. Works Cited Plath, Sylvia, The Journals of Sylvia Plath, edited Karen V. Kukil, Faber and Faber, London, 2000.
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