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Sylvia Plath - SpiderSylvia Plath - Spider
Work rating: Medium


Anansi, black busybody of the folktales, You scuttle out on impulse Blunt in self-interest As a sledge hammer, as a man`s bunched fist, Yet of devils the cleverest To get your carousals told: You spun the cosmic web: you squint from center field. Last summer I came upon your Spanish cousin, Notable robber baron, Behind a goatherd`s hut: Near his small stonehenge above the ants` route, One-third ant-size, a leggy spot, He tripped an ant with a rope Scarcely visible. About and about the slope Of his redoubt he ran his nimble filament, Each time round winding that ant Tighter to the cocoon Already veiling the gray spool of stone From which coils, caught ants waved legs in Torpid warning, or lay still And suffered their livelier fellows to struggle. Then briskly scaled his altar tiered with tethered ants, Nodding in a somnolence Appalling to witness, To the barbarous outlook, from there chose His next martyr to the gross cause Of concupiscence. Once more With black alacrity bound round his prisoner. The ants—a file of comers, a file of goers— Persevered on a set course No scruple could disrupt, Obeying orders of instinct till swept Off-stage and infamously wrapped Up by a spry black deus Ex machina. Nor did they seem deterred by this.
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