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Sylvia Plath (Сильвия Плат)


Vanity Fair


Through frost-thick weather
This witch sidles, fingers crooked, as if
Caught in a hazardous medium that might
Merely by its continuing
Attach her to heaven.

At eye's envious corner
Crow's-feet copy veining on a stained leaf;
Cold squint steals sky's color; while bruit
Of bells calls holy ones, her tongue
Backtalks at the raven

Claeving furred air
Over her skull's midden; no knife
Rivals her whetted look, divining what conceit
Waylays simple girls, church-going,
And what heart's oven

Craves most to cook batter
Rich in strayings with every amorous oaf,
Ready, for a trinket,
To squander owl-hours on bracken bedding,
Flesh unshriven.

Against virgin prayer
This sorceress sets mirrors enough
To distract beauty's thought;
Lovesick at first fond song,
Each vain girl's driven

To believe beyond heart's flare
No fire is, nor in any book proof
Sun hoists soul up after lids fall shut;
So she wills all to the black king.
The worst sloven

Vies with best queen over
Right to blaze as satan's wife;
Housed in earth, those million brides shriek out.
Some burn short, some long,
Staked in pride's coven.



Sylvia Plath's other poems:
  1. In Plaster
  2. The Snowman on the Moor
  3. Prologue to Spring
  4. Pheasant
  5. The Times Are Tidy


Poems of another poets with the same name (Стихотворения других поэтов с таким же названием):

  • Frederick Locker-Lampson (Фредерик Локер-Лэмпсон) Vanity Fair ("“Vanitas Vanitatum” has rung in the ears")

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