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Poem by Sylvia Plath Sonnet to Time Today we move in jade and cease with garnet amid the clicking jewelled clocks that mark our years. Death comes in a casual steel car, yet we vaunt our days in neon, and scorn the dark. But outside the diabolic steel of this most plastic-windowed city, I can hear the lone wind raving in the gutter, his voice crying exclusion in my ear. So cry for the pagan girl left picking olives beside a sun-blue sea, and mourn the flagon raised to toast a thousand kings, for all gives sorrow: weep for the legendary dragon. Time is a great machine of iron bars that drains eternally the milk of stars. Sylvia Plath Sylvia Plath's other poems: 1673 Views |
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