Sylvia Plath

Elm

For Ruth Fainlight

I know the bottom, she says. I know it with my great tap root:
It is what you fear.
I do not fear it: I have been there.
 
Is it the sea you hear in me,
Its dissatisfactions?
Or the voice of nothing, that was your madness?
 
Love is a shadow.
How you lie and cry after it
Listen: these are its hooves: it has gone off, like a horse.
 
All night I shall gallop thus, impetuously,
Till your head is a stone, your pillow a little turf,
Echoing, echoing.
 
Or shall I bring you the sound of poisons?
This is rain now, this big hush.
And this is the fruit of it: tin—white, like arsenic.
 
I have suffered the atrocity of sunsets.
Scorched to the root
My red filaments burn and stand, a hand of wires.
 
Now I break up in pieces that fly about like clubs.
A wind of such violence
Will tolerate no bystanding: I must shriek.
 
The moon, also, is merciless: she would drag me
Cruelly, being barren.
Her radiance scathes me. Or perhaps I have caught her.
 
I let her go. I let her go
Diminished and flat, as after radical surgery.
How your bad dreams possess and endow me.
 
I am inhabited by a cry.
Nightly it flaps out
Looking, with its hooks, for something to love.
 
I am terrified by this dark thing
That sleeps in me;
All day I feel its soft, feathery turnings, its malignity.
 
Clouds pass and disperse.
Are those the faces of love, those pale irretrievables?
Is it for such I agitate my heart?
 
I am incapable of more knowledge.
What is this, this face
So murderous in its strangle of branches? —
 
Its snaky acids hiss.
It petrifies the will. These are the isolate, slow faults
That kill, that kill, that kill.
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