Quote:There could well be those references, nas. There was also some speculation she had an abortion when she was still trying to keep her marriage to Ted secret. Yes, miscarriage is a fear and the poem does not, from what I can see other than the title, address the fact that Nick was born, it is all about the pregnancy. Quite possibly, with her state of mind, that fear may have been heightened and factored into the poem. At the moment I couldn't truly tell one way or the other.
i think that this may be the point where we have to stop with regards to the bio and finish with the poem itself. The logic of the poem dictates that we have attributed so much biography into the poem (which undoubtly she would have as well in order to write it, but probably didn't mean for everyone to hop on line and dissect it as we have) that we have turned this piece into a semi-biography and while she is methodical like that with her work, that may not have been her intent.
Nick probably isn't the candlestick now that i look at it again. i crossed my wires with regards to the miners usage of flame, and the gas co.'s desire for blue flame. That was my mistake. i linked it to Nick and her prevailing notion of his 'purity'. If followed to a logical conclusion, the flame yellows and 'encourages' later on in the poem, how does that indicate an improvement using my thesis. It doesn't. i am more than happy to be wrong about that and move on. The first line is crucial to interpreting the metaphors and symbols. Given that i am miner, then all of this afterwards. The cave and miner are the blueprints (so to speak).
i think a key to the N's mentality is not as much fear as we have assigned to the poem, but S2 that reminds us of 'dead boredom exuding from the earthen womb'. i am usually not afraid and bored at the same time. Fear motivates and preoccupies my thoughts, boredom (which i seldom have because the world is full of so much to know...never mind the transitory nature of that knowledge...)does not.
Terence, i agree with you about the idea of the calcium cave refering to her pelvis/skeletal frame. That is where i took it the first time i read this beast. But, reading the vehicle literally for a moment, newts are semi-aquatic, while fish are fully aquatic. i am convinced that nothing in this poem is filler, so what is each of those creatures tenor (i.e. what do the newts and the fish represent)?
Newts make me think of eggs or ova, and the fish....well...?!
Yet, there is the issue of communion from her live toes. Now what? i thought that this references to the draw/leech on her body to create and sustain a child. On the first read i read it too literally and thought she was darning the church for failing her (which i think i mentioned early on), i can't support that theory now.
Okay, i am going to double-back on my idea about the flame. Let me explain where i went with it before and you all can tell me how off base i am.
The blue flame represents the pure, oxygen efficent flame. This is Nick in the body of the N/Plath.
Before S7, everything is cold and deathly. Depressing to say the least. But, in S7-8 we are given....
Its first communion out of my live toes.
The candle
Gulps and recovers its small altitude,
Its yellows hearten.
O love, how did you get here?
O embryo As the embryo grows and she can feel it and acknowledge it, she begins to love it...hearten=encourage.
After this point in the poem, the N loves the baby, no more boredom, she sees the world as a mother-to-be and all the wonder that comes with it. Especially the preoccupation of getting things ready for it's arrival. The spaces in the last stanza, the emptiness, relies on him. Again, his saviour. That is where my thought on the candle goes. Blue is efficent, but efficent is not usually emotional or empathic, yellow fire is wild, raw, romantic and empathic. That is where i was going with it. That is why i thought the flame was Nick. i could be wrong. i have been wrong before and i'll be wrong again.
~tim