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Sylvia Plath - Epitaph In Three PartsSylvia Plath - Epitaph In Three Parts
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(1) Rocking across the lapis lazuli sea comes a flock of bottle battleships each with a telegram addressed to me. ‘Destroy your mirror and avoid mishaps,’ chirps the first; ‘live on a silent island where the water blots out all footsteps.’ The second sings: ‘Receive no roving gallant who seeks to dally in the port till dawn, for your fate involves a dark assailant.’ The third cries out as all the ships go down: ‘There is more than one good way to drown.’ (2) In the air above my island flies a crowd of shining gulls that plunge to launch an accurate assault upon the eyes of the bold sailor falling under drench and hunger of the surf that plucks the land, devouring green gardens inch by inch. Blood runs in a glissando from the hand that lifts to consecrate the sunken man. Aloft, a lone gull halts upon the wind, announcing after glutted birds have flown: ‘There is more than one good way to drown.’ (3) Grasshopper goblins with green pointed ears caper on leafstalk legs across my doorsill, and mock the jangling rain of splintered stars. My room is a twittering gray box with a wall there and there and there again, and then a window which proves the sky sheer rigmarole that happens to conceal the lid of one enormous box of gray where god has gone and hidden all the bright angelic men. A wave of grass engraves upon the stone: ‘There is more than one good way to drown.’
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