ireadintothings:

ramirezdahmerbundy:

Below is the last poem Ted Hughes ever wrote about his wife Sylvia Plath. It was written after her suicide and wasn’t found until 2010.

What happened that night? Your final night.
Double, treble exposure
Over everything. Late afternoon, Friday,
My last sight of you alive.
Burning your letter to me, in the ashtray,
With that strange smile. Had I bungled your plan?
Had it surprised me sooner than you purposed?
Had I rushed it back to you too promptly?
One hour later—-you would have been gone
Where I could not have traced you.
I would have turned from your locked red door
That nobody would open
Still holding your letter,
A thunderbolt that could not earth itself.
That would have been electric shock treatment
For me.
Repeated over and over, all weekend,
As often as I read it, or thought of it.
That would have remade my brains, and my life.
The treatment that you planned needed some time.
I cannot imagine
How I would have got through that weekend.
I cannot imagine. Had you plotted it all?

Your note reached me too soon—-that same day,
Friday afternoon, posted in the morning.
The prevalent devils expedited it.
That was one more straw of ill-luck
Drawn against you by the Post-Office
And added to your load. I moved fast,
Through the snow-blue, February, London twilight.
Wept with relief when you opened the door.
A huddle of riddles in solution. Precocious tears
That failed to interpret to me, failed to divulge
Their real import. But what did you say
Over the smoking shards of that letter
So carefully annihilated, so calmly,
That let me release you, and leave you
To blow its ashes off your plan—-off the ashtray
Against which you would lean for me to read
The Doctor’s phone-number.
                                                 My escape
Had become such a hunted thing
Sleepless, hopeless, all its dreams exhausted,
Only wanting to be recaptured, only
Wanting to drop, out of its vacuum.
Two days of dangling nothing. Two days gratis.
Two days in no calendar, but stolen
From no world,
Beyond actuality, feeling, or name.

My love-life grabbed it. My numbed love-life
With its two mad needles,
Embroidering their rose, piercing and tugging
At their tapestry, their bloody tattoo
Somewhere behind my navel,
Treading that morass of emblazon,
Two mad needles, criss-crossing their stitches,
Selecting among my nerves
For their colours, refashioning me
Inside my own skin, each refashioning the other
With their self-caricatures,

Their obsessed in and out. Two women
Each with her needle.

                                       That night
My dellarobbia Susan. I moved
With the circumspection
Of a flame in a fuse. My whole fury
Was an abandoned effort to blow up
The old globe where shadows bent over
My telltale track of ashes. I raced
From and from, face backwards, a film reversed,
Towards what? We went to Rugby St
Where you and I began.
Why did we go there? Of all places
Why did we go there? Perversity
In the artistry of our fate
Adjusted its refinements for you, for me
And for Susan. Solitaire
Played by the Minotaur of that maze
Even included Helen, in the ground-floor flat.
You had noted her—-a girl for a story.
You never met her. Few ever met her,
Except across the ears and raving mask
Of her Alsatian. You had not even glimpsed her.
You had only recoiled
When her demented animal crashed its weight
Against her door, as we slipped through the hallway;
And heard it choking on infinite German hatred.

That Sunday night she eased her door open
Its few permitted inches.
Susan greeted the black eyes, the unhappy
Overweight, lovely face, that peeped out
Across the little chain. The door closed.
We heard her consoling her jailor
Inside her cell, its kennel, where, days later,
She gassed her ferocious kupo, and herself.

Susan and I spent that night
In our wedding bed. I had not seen it
Since we lay there on our wedding day.
I did not take her back to my own bed.
It had occurred to me, your weekend over,
You might appear—-a surprise visitation.
Did you appear, to tap at my dark window?
So I stayed with Susan, hiding from you,
In our own wedding bed—-the same from which
Within three years she would be taken to die
In that same hospital where, within twelve hours,
I would find you dead.
                                                  Monday morning
I drove her to work, in the City,
Then parked my van North of Euston Road
And returned to where my telephone waited.

What happened that night, inside your hours,
Is as unknown as if it never happened.
What accumulation of your whole life,
Like effort unconscious, like birth
Pushing through the membrane of each slow second
Into the next, happened
Only as if it could not happen,
As if it was not happening. How often
Did the phone ring there in my empty room,
You hearing the ring in your receiver—-
At both ends the fading memory
Of a telephone ringing, in a brain
As if already dead. I count
How often you walked to the phone-booth
At the bottom of St George’s terrace.
You are there whenever I look, just turning
Out of Fitzroy Road, crossing over
Between the heaped up banks of dirty sugar.
In your long black coat,
With your plait coiled up at the back of your hair
You walk unable to move, or wake, and are
Already nobody walking
Walking by the railings under Primrose Hill
Towards the phone booth that can never be reached.
Before midnight. After midnight. Again.
Again. Again. And, near dawn, again.

At what position of the hands on my watch-face
Did your last attempt,
Already deeply past
My being able to hear it, shake the pillow
Of that empty bed? A last time
Lightly touch at my books, and my papers?
By the time I got there my phone was asleep.
The pillow innocent. My room slept,
Already filled with the snowlit morning light.
I lit my fire. I had got out my papers.
And I had started to write when the telephone
Jerked awake, in a jabbering alarm,
Remembering everything. It recovered in my hand.
Then a voice like a selected weapon
Or a measured injection,
Coolly delivered its four words
Deep into my ear: ‘Your wife is dead.’

Last Letter - Ted Hughes

(via allthenight-tide)

highwayaisle:

“As a silkworm spins its cocoon  I spin my own night  I reel off the night to build a room  Under the deep-violet-colored starry night  I burn a light just for myself  and build a small egg-shaped world  The daytime is there for everybody  That’s when I work forgetting everything  At night everyone recedes to distant places  All things visible become invisible  and for pampered me  gently thoughtfully melt into the darkness  Inside a world for myself alone  I gleam just as mosses and fireflies do  Wishing to live out a good life  to deepen my heart’s desire to yearn for the beautiful  I weave a few quiet lines  with my fingers still soiled from my daytime work”

highwayaisle:

“As a silkworm spins its cocoon
I spin my own night
I reel off the night to build a room
Under the deep-violet-colored starry night
I burn a light just for myself
and build a small egg-shaped world

The daytime is there for everybody
That’s when I work forgetting everything
At night everyone recedes to distant places
All things visible become invisible
and for pampered me
gently thoughtfully melt into the darkness

Inside a world for myself alone
I gleam just as mosses and fireflies do
Wishing to live out a good life
to deepen my heart’s desire to yearn for the beautiful
I weave a few quiet lines
with my fingers still soiled from my daytime work”

(Source: moscow, via gnostix1)

XUÂN

Swan. Juan. Zoon/Zan/Zun. June. Shoo-in. Exxon. These are all the ways her name is not pronounced.

“Ah,” says the teacher, with a philanthropic nod, “small world! I once met a man who lost his right foot in jungle combat. And I have a cousin named Sue Ann.”

Once upon a time, she imagined a best friend named Xavier. They would start a club, taking advantage of all the coolness of X (X-Men, X-ray vision, X marks the spot). They would become great alphabetic snobs. They would build a treehouse with a massive X for a door. There would be a top-secret password containing several Xs. There would be a motto with words like “X-clusive” and “X-travagant.” No one else would even dream of joining without proof of a cross-your-heart, birth-certificated X.

Once upon a time, her name had belonged to a poet. Barefoot, brilliant, a river of jet-black hair. Dared any scholar in the empire to match her, line for line. Foolish men tried and failed. Professors hid their flushed faces. Mandarins scurried off, silken robes askew. Dozens of wishful boys crowded her doorstep, stammering and blushing and buckling at the knees. She doused them with ice water and sent them home. Wrote five perfect verses for each meek word they attempted. Left an X of wet ink glistening at the bottom of every scroll.

Soon, Shane, Sun. X-You-In.

X is a buzz. A shock. A shrill stain of dissonance. But also X is a hush. A private breath, a slow melt. The rustle of new leaves. The long bright arc of moon. The silvering start.

© 2009 Kim-An Lieberman

sycamore:

No more knuckling under, groaning, moaning: one gets used to pain. This hurts. Not being perfect hurts. Having to bother about work in order to eat & have a house hurts. So what. It’s about time. This is the month which ends a quarter of a century for me, lived under the shadow of fear: fear that I would fall short of some abstract perfection: I have often fought, fought & won, not perfection, but an acceptance of myself as having a right to live on my own human, fallible terms.

-Sylvia Plath (via dementes/tellherlies/digitalbath/slightlydrunk/lifeincolor/leforettt)

hopesichord:

I think if you lifted my heart to your ear you could probably hear the ocean.  I have this dream of being whole.  Of not going to sleep wanting.  But, still, sometimes, when the wind is warm or the crickets sing, I dream of a love that even time will lie down and be still for.
- Practical Magic

hopesichord:

I think if you lifted my heart to your ear you could probably hear the ocean.  I have this dream of being whole.  Of not going to sleep wanting.  But, still, sometimes, when the wind is warm or the crickets sing, I dream of a love that even time will lie down and be still for.

- Practical Magic

powerless

isntlifejuicy:

Another poem I compiled a couple years ago:


Would you rewrite the streets?
retrace
reform
rewind
Snaking and suspending
Dipping and descending

Intersecting
at even the most
infinite expanse

Would you cast out the rain?
pulsing
pacing
pausing
Spilling out and sobbing
Thawing out and throbbing

Where clouds of damp
matter lick
the road’s vast domain

Would you enable time?
flying
falling
fleeting
Lapsing by and leaping
Kidnapping and keeping

With moments
stored like
jam(med) in jars.

This Time
was never
ours.

To Dorothy, Marvin Bell

poetry365:

You are not beautiful, exactly.
You are beautiful, inexactly.
You let a weed grow by the mulberry
And a mulberry grow by the house.
So close, in the personal quiet
Of a windy night, it brushes the wall
And sweeps away the day till we sleep.

A child said it, and it seemed true:
“Things that are lost are all equal.”
But it isn’t true. If I lost you,
The air wouldn’t move, nor the tree grow.
Someone would pull the weed, my flower.
The quiet wouldn’t be yours. If I lost you,
I’d have to ask the grass to let me sleep.

The Art of Poetry

If, as the sound says,
A city ambulance rips open the night,
Then in its wake,
The brother and sister buckeyes
Slap eachother in an aftershower.
On the way down,
Happy to be flying for a moment,
The fire under their skin
Looking for a companion fire
Under the skin of the earth.
And they thud on the pavement.

If, as the sound says,
Then I learned to listen to the call
Of your wild skin late in life.
The little fireworks in your feet
Before getting ready for bed,
The potential sensation of your scent,
Which never quite leaves the mud.
The little hot stairs I follow up
FOr the lovely joining and parting,
In the same moment.

If, as the sound says,
My son’s latest art-work

Hisses and drips from the oven.
Melted beyond shape,
Then whatever it was, having lived
For a moment,
Is now burned into something else.
And my son has the child-skill
To call it the buffalo
With the broken neck.

-Lee Bassett