Тёмный

Sylvia Plath reading her poems 1958 

thepostarchive
Подписаться 39 тыс.
Просмотров 251 тыс.
50% 1

Sylvia Plath, reading her poems in Springfield, MA on April, 18 1958
Sylvia Plath (October 27, 1932 - February 11, 1963) was an American poet, novelist, and short-story writer. Born in Boston, she studied at Smith College and Newnham College at the University of Cambridge before receiving acclaim as a poet and writer. She married fellow poet Ted Hughes in 1956, and they lived together in the United States and then in England. They had two children, Frieda and Nicholas, before separating in 1962. Plath was clinically depressed for most of her adult life, and was treated multiple times with electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). She took her own life in 1963.
Plath is credited with advancing the genre of confessional poetry and is best known for two of her published collections, The Colossus and Other Poems and Ariel, and The Bell Jar, a semi-autobiographical novel published shortly before her death. In 1982, she won a posthumous Pulitzer Prize for The Collected Poems.
Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.

Опубликовано:

 

25 фев 2018

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 295   
@baoli9589
@baoli9589 5 лет назад
0:43 Black Rook in Rainy Weather 2:39 The Lady And The Earthenware Head 5:00 Departure 8:50 The Disquieting Muses 14:00 Battle-Scene From The Comic Operatic Fantasy The Seafarer 15:31 On the Decline of Oracles
@tylerkaleolott
@tylerkaleolott 5 лет назад
fyi the poem at 5:00 is actually "the ghost's leavetaking" not "departure".
@cristimagda
@cristimagda 4 года назад
@@tylerkaleolott she literally said departure of the ghost
@tylerkaleolott
@tylerkaleolott 4 года назад
@@cristimagda True but "departure" is an entirely different poem of hers. The poem she calls "Departure of the Ghost" in this video was first published under the title "The Ghost's Leavtakaking" in her book The Colossus in 1960, a few years after this recording. She must have changed the name before printing or something?
@naierghasmi2764
@naierghasmi2764 2 года назад
Thanks ♥️
@cheri238
@cheri238 10 месяцев назад
​@naierghasmi2764 I have heard this before, but I did not know how to leave a comment. It is exhilarating to hear her voice reading her poetry. Thank you for this video. Edith Plath is one of my favorite poets, among many. Anne Sexton was brilliant. ❤ Ted and Edith blew sounds tainted with spitting words. What flows of exuberant streams between them burned skins bleeding, a twilight dawned, never extinguished even after death of dark sleep beauty deep scorching roars, legs in a fetal position of wounds on wooden floors.
@vprice509
@vprice509 Год назад
I love hearing Sylvia Plath reading her poetry. Poetry is meant to be heard. I'm grateful that we have recordings of her.
@cheri238
@cheri238 10 месяцев назад
@bryanmelton5538
@bryanmelton5538 26 дней назад
Me too she great and beautiful
@msicouldntthinkofafunnynam4770
@msicouldntthinkofafunnynam4770 2 года назад
her prose and voice is absolutely immaculate as is the poems themselves
@tgfabthunderbird1
@tgfabthunderbird1 4 года назад
Plath's use of the English language is something rarely encountered, and her voice conveys a confidence and authority. Yet, when we read her voluminous journals and letters (the former I find quite fascinating), we find a young woman trying to find her place in a world that is still dominated by men. She wants to be seen as feminine, yet challenge with her intelligence and power. Brilliant, and sadly tortured; best I think not to try and tear Plath apart, but to see her for the full person, and the gift she left behind.
@lisaeischens2352
@lisaeischens2352 3 года назад
And the woman she would have become without her tragic ending but then again, her words are all the more painful and raw when we know what ended her life. Sylvia had such a technical and elaborate vocabulary and I can get pulled in to a cadence that is somehow just the right pace for me to check that particular word, and then to ascribe the appropriate emotion that I feel should accompany it.Then, I get on Martian-Webster and see if I was even close.
@lazysingledaisybronwyn8105
@lazysingledaisybronwyn8105 2 года назад
Yes, sadly tortured, and not mentally insane at all, as is sometimes spoken about her. Indeed the world will have utmost poverty if they remove her words being read.
@forestbirdgirl
@forestbirdgirl 2 года назад
I agree, it is all about the poetry, the poems, it is so important to listen and or read the words, the punctuation, the line breaks, it's all about the prosody and the words she chooses to express herself with. First and foremost we must stick to the work, not the woman's story, the poetry transcends gender.
@cchristinarrae
@cchristinarrae Год назад
beautifully written. i couldn’t have said it better 🥲
@Diaz.et.Pam.
@Diaz.et.Pam. Год назад
Very well said…
@Strollinkitn
@Strollinkitn 5 лет назад
The photo is of Barbara Laage, not Sylvia Plath.
@axiomist4488
@axiomist4488 4 года назад
Okey .
@yuelinli3527
@yuelinli3527 4 года назад
axiomist this is embarrassing!
@chortvozmite141
@chortvozmite141 3 года назад
Who ever is hot!
@MaximTendu
@MaximTendu 3 года назад
@@chortvozmite141 that's the spirit.
@arya-francescajenkins1865
@arya-francescajenkins1865 3 года назад
Silly not to have the actual image of S.P. What's with that?
@kwh9
@kwh9 2 года назад
The genius of her poetic visions…the genius…the depth and multiple layers of it…and the haunting voice with which she broadcasts it… I think she’s a shingling example of the few poets who can get so possessed by their poetry that their delivery can be just as good or better than however the readers experience the poetry in their imaginations. Her talent to me is supernatural.
@vickikondylas555
@vickikondylas555 5 лет назад
Sylvia Plath was introduced to me when I was a teenager little did I know the huge effect this sensitive woman would have in my long life !,,,thank you for this video,,,
@kierstenh9225
@kierstenh9225 4 месяца назад
Wow! Tell us MORE!
@sophiapan9535
@sophiapan9535 3 года назад
sylvia plath reel 1 0:43 black rook in rainy weather 2:39 the lady and the earthenware head 5:00 departure/ghost’s leavetaking 8:50 the disquieting muses 14:00 battle-scene from the comic operatic fantasy the seafarer 15:31 on the decline of oracles 18:07 the triumph of wit over suffering (21:20 conversation between plath and others) 22:07 on the difficulty of conjuring up a dryad (24:14 conversation) 25:22 november graveyard 26:38 sow 28:53 spinster reel 2 31:00 on the plethora of dryads 33:10 all the dead dears (35:04 conversation, copyright announcements, signing off) ted hughes 41:37 the men seeking experience enquires his way of a drop of water 44:20 the horses 47:07 famous poet 49:34 conversation 50:51 the jaguar 52:26 the dove-breeder 53:24 a modest proposal 55:07 meeting 56:17 conversation 57:19 wind 59:05 roarers in a ring 1:00:55 commentary, end
@tanishasjournal
@tanishasjournal 3 года назад
Absolute legend for the time stamps. Thank you
@eraserhead2063
@eraserhead2063 11 месяцев назад
Thanks for this, seriously
@cheri238
@cheri238 10 месяцев назад
​@@eraserhead2063 ❤
@Chrismacleod777
@Chrismacleod777 Год назад
Beautiful! Reminds me of Dylan Thomas the way she seems to taste and enjoy words! Remarkable poems! Thanks for posting! 🦋🍒🥰🍀😝🎶🎈🍇😀👍
@julialovesnancy81
@julialovesnancy81 4 года назад
i’ve never heard her voice until now! so beautiful! it’s like a hybrid of natalie portman as jackie kennedy and british! i love it!
@dianneholst3209
@dianneholst3209 4 года назад
eleanor rigby I wonder why Americans changed their lovely accent so quickly into something strange now.
@DaftSwank
@DaftSwank 4 года назад
It's called the "Trans-Atlantic Accent" and it's pure affectation that was fashionable through the 1960s . . . You won't find any region in the English-Speaking world (i.e. -- the UK and US) where this is genuinely native vernacular.
@nancyrose8028
@nancyrose8028 2 года назад
I started crying the first time I heard her. My heart just erupted with emotion and I couldn't contain it!
@Whatarenargles
@Whatarenargles Год назад
​@@nancyrose8028 ikr!!! Reading the bell jar now and it feels like i know her personally but hearing her voice seems strange. Cant wait to read the remaining book in this voice
@EVZYL
@EVZYL 11 месяцев назад
Do listen to her reading of 'Daddy' - preceded by a short interview (BBC recording) - October 1962. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-paHmYyaY5XM.htmlsi=Vw1NjkccUmy44zIk
@alyssahansen1400
@alyssahansen1400 4 года назад
It has some pulsing, washing, continuous-like motion to it. Her recitation, I mean. Gives me an idea for how her writing feels. Feels... sounds.... well, you get the idea. Helps me understand the structure. Thank you Plath, and may you rest in peace.
@lisaeischens2352
@lisaeischens2352 3 года назад
I read my poetry and to me, my rhythm seems to always stay in the same rut. I’d be curious to hear how someone else would read me and thus, the dilemma I have is, Am I even a poet or a writer if only I read it? Would it exist without me and would it even make a sound if not for me willing it to the here, now, or then?
@lazysingledaisybronwyn8105
@lazysingledaisybronwyn8105 2 года назад
@@lisaeischens2352 There is such a thing as Poet Readers. They are extremely IMPORTANT and talented people. I hope you can find them. In San Francisco there was a group of them that got together to read. Amazing experience as if they channel the writers 'writing voice'.
@AntiActionFox
@AntiActionFox 10 месяцев назад
Just here paying my respects . I read her journals this summer. It had quite the effect on me
@doktorhulk
@doktorhulk 5 лет назад
It is absoutley great to have the recording man asking some questions in between. Wonderful to hear her answer.
@leeannpelletier4117
@leeannpelletier4117 5 лет назад
That laugh at 7:54 ! 😭🥰 I LOVE hearing the in-betweens here !! Thank you!!
@andrea384
@andrea384 Год назад
agreed!
@jennifermcmullin8030
@jennifermcmullin8030 Год назад
I love this. So very wonderful to hear Sylvia Plath's voice reading her poems. Love the casual conversation in between poems as well.
@leaf111
@leaf111 5 лет назад
8:35 her laugh is so beautiful
@Sttonkeoj
@Sttonkeoj 4 года назад
r o s e not really.
@rebit6511
@rebit6511 4 года назад
yes I agree, infectious and uplifting ~ good to know she had much happiness at times
@AsdfAsdf-mi6ks
@AsdfAsdf-mi6ks 4 года назад
It hurts to hear. Such a beautiful laugh taken by depression.
@jeandanielodonnncada
@jeandanielodonnncada 4 года назад
Sylvia is not using an affected "trans-Atlantic accent" in particular. She's a Bostonian of her time. I swear if I close my eyes this is like listening to a more eloquent version of my grandmother.
@topofthevillage
@topofthevillage 3 года назад
I wonder is she your grandma on your father's or mother's side and how about your parents? Why do they "lose" the accent?
@pinkpanther7030
@pinkpanther7030 3 года назад
In spite of her young age... why does she sound a bit old fashion I wonder. 😒
@joshuatrees797
@joshuatrees797 3 года назад
@@pinkpanther7030 Because she was highly educated and knew how to enunciate properly and beautifully. Not the, "Yeah-yeah-yeah-uh'kay" blather of many of today's young women.
@flanplan5903
@flanplan5903 3 года назад
You can see her slip into a more relaxed American accent/pronunciation around 7:53 or so, when she’s talking to someone else (presumably Ted I’m guessing) and her speech is a lot more rhotic.
@AH-wr1ir
@AH-wr1ir 2 года назад
I believe it's a "mid-atlantic" accent.
@telyscopes9550
@telyscopes9550 5 лет назад
her natural speaking voice was so different than the weird mid-atlantic accent she used to read her poems @7:50
@darby_hudson
@darby_hudson 4 года назад
i dislike poet voice affectation. its not so dissimilar to guitar face
@hegyesvivien3372
@hegyesvivien3372 4 года назад
I can't express how I adore her voice!!!
@forestbirdgirl
@forestbirdgirl 2 года назад
@@hegyesvivien3372 yes, both of them -in fact, all of them, me too
@riderbull5178
@riderbull5178 4 года назад
I could fall in love with her just by listening to her voice.
@jeff1source
@jeff1source 3 года назад
Jeesh, i thought i was the only one so smitten
@briansmith9455
@briansmith9455 3 года назад
She is really something. Such a drag that someone so perfect committed suicide. At the very least there is this.
@SagrenPillai
@SagrenPillai 3 года назад
i did
@lazysingledaisybronwyn8105
@lazysingledaisybronwyn8105 2 года назад
@@briansmith9455 I agree with you. She was perfect.
@satyapalsingh5190
@satyapalsingh5190 5 лет назад
Sylvia plath..she became the first poet to win a Pulitzer Prize posthumously for the collected poems
@dulciegibbons3334
@dulciegibbons3334 3 года назад
my favourite poet. just something else, to make me feel so much.
@WitoldBanasik
@WitoldBanasik 5 лет назад
Absolute marvel, diamont and gold all at once. Thank you Sylvia, thank you thepostarchive and thank you RU-vid...so much !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@c.dallasfloyd8639
@c.dallasfloyd8639 6 лет назад
That is NOT I repeat NOT Sylvia Plath in the photograph!!!!! Idk who that woman is but it certainly isn’t Sylvia!
@lea8046
@lea8046 6 лет назад
this makes me angry.. it should be her in the picture.
@mickeymorgan
@mickeymorgan 6 лет назад
No, it isn't Plath . . . but the model at least lured us to the audio treasure
@sebastiandoherty8890
@sebastiandoherty8890 6 лет назад
It's the actress Barbara Laage. Someone made this mistake years ago and people have incorrectly attributed this likeness to SP ever since.
@h.e.riddleton1373
@h.e.riddleton1373 5 лет назад
She is about fourteen or fifteen in the bikini picture where she is sunbathing in her back yard with the white house beside her... I don't think this is representative of her womanly suggestability, of her being a woman who is just beginning, at this point of the recording, as entering the realm of her larger I, her overpowering self-- the self that rocks the hardness of binaries... Why show her as a child? Why infantilize her while she sits in adolescence in a swimsuit? Either choose a picture for the time of the recording. Perhaps, the picture where she is at a party and she is blonde and wearing a scarf... or maybe just her as she sits beside Ted on the floor, waiting for him to read to her or the picture of her outside in Spain at her typewriter... The Hermes 2000, not the Royal... why a swimsuit? Why must we make her naked?
@flyingpotatoe1299
@flyingpotatoe1299 5 лет назад
mickey morgan Doesn’t matter, this is so disrespectful
@antant4055
@antant4055 4 года назад
I was two days old when you read these Sylvia
@dougaljohnson2696
@dougaljohnson2696 2 года назад
Beautiful poetry. She is buried near where I live... rest in peace
@johnfinnegan4252
@johnfinnegan4252 6 лет назад
A beautiful hour with Sylvia .Thank you
@h.e.riddleton1373
@h.e.riddleton1373 5 лет назад
It is not an hour with Sylvia... Twenty minutes are with Ted...
@8126kl
@8126kl 5 лет назад
this is absolutely great. Sylvia's poems before aeriel. too bad that there isn't any films of her.
@OllyBockus
@OllyBockus 3 месяца назад
That's a great photo of Sylvia Plath surrounded by all the books she wrote.
@andrewalbers8293
@andrewalbers8293 10 месяцев назад
I love you, Sylvia.
@theatheescapist7936
@theatheescapist7936 3 года назад
Thank you so much. This audio is awesome!
@nancyrose8028
@nancyrose8028 6 лет назад
I don't know how I can even begin to express my gratitude to you for posting this!! When I saw it today, I was so excited and filled with disbelief that I just sat here looking at it! I think I was afraid if I moved it might go away!😊 So, I had to calm myself before daring to click on it. My heart was pounding and I thought surely the video was a fake or some sort of misleading junk, as so many things on the internet are these days! So, I am really glad that I was wrong! (That's not her in the photo, is it?) That's partIy why I doubted. Even though she could sometimes look very different in past photos, I didn't think this looked like her. But, I may be wrong! Anyway, I have been reading, researching, and enjoying Sylvia Plath for years! I have all of her published works and all of her recordings that I could find! I knew of this one, but it hasn't been available to purchase or even to hear that I knew of! So, that is why I was so excited and ever so grateful when I saw it here!! I could discuss her and her works much longer, but I will end this simply by saying you have made this Plathian very happy! 😊 I love you, Sivvy!
@mickeymorgan
@mickeymorgan 6 лет назад
Right on, Nancy Rose . . . that picture is not Plath. Ever seen her artwork!?
@briantyson6138
@briantyson6138 5 лет назад
How neat your response is. The dichotomy of this world is beyond my kin.
@elijahragland8498
@elijahragland8498 5 лет назад
this was the most wholesome comment ive ever read on this website.
@lazysingledaisybronwyn8105
@lazysingledaisybronwyn8105 2 года назад
I wish Nancy Rose could come back to talk with us. I've been looking for a poem I can't find now, about her being met by a professor then ______, then too many to count. ❤ This is the only poet that saves me in the soul of my mind-heart.
@nancyrose8028
@nancyrose8028 2 года назад
@@mickeymorgan Yes, I have a small book of her sketches. Love them, too!
@somethingyousaid5059
@somethingyousaid5059 4 года назад
I wish there was a recording of her reading her poem "Mad Girl's Love Song". I assume that there isn't.
@EVZYL
@EVZYL 11 месяцев назад
Thank you for this wonderful upload! Poetry should definitely be HEARD rather than just SEEN!
@bryanmelton5538
@bryanmelton5538 Месяц назад
So true her voice is beautiful
@bryanmelton5538
@bryanmelton5538 Месяц назад
Real makes u enjoy her poems
@taintedpills
@taintedpills 5 лет назад
it's absolutely lovely to listen to the poetess talking about her work while reading it
@vekkstar
@vekkstar 2 года назад
Poetess is an antiquated, sexist term. The word is poet.
@MrFrampo56
@MrFrampo56 Год назад
@@vekkstar Not in my world. She was a poetess ,just as Uma Thurman is an actress. We don’t have to bow to the PC brigade. Fascists!
@vekkstar
@vekkstar Год назад
@@MrFrampo56 It's not PC. Plath didn't refer to herself that way.
@MrFrampo56
@MrFrampo56 Год назад
@@vekkstar No, but I do , and always will.
@sophie2159
@sophie2159 5 лет назад
I fall asleep to this... its so nice
@ABronyNamedBurnie
@ABronyNamedBurnie 2 года назад
Anyone who is struggling, I struggle too. All who want to die, I wish that for myself as well. Please feel our kinship, please please take a moment for our strange mindsets to settle into their sullen ceremony. Instead, LIVE. Plath ceased but let the departure of our ghosts occur not idly but instead at its best time, not intentionally; because an intentional death is widely meaningless. Death means not a thing unless it comes on accident. If you know why, if you know when, if you know how, what then is there to learn? Continue. Continue. Continue. At all cost.
@rebit6511
@rebit6511 4 года назад
Astonishing find yesterday, thank you, thank you. Strange thing is I have written, very recently a short story about a daydream fantasy where I meet Sylvia Plath in my local library ..... and she recites some of her work and then we have a discussion ~ this recording is the reality of my daydream .... I can hardly believe it. Also I describe her 'reading' voice as being of needle sharp diction ~ and it is ~ but to now hear her natural speaking, everyday voice, tells me that she still had traces of her Massachusetts accent.... thank you again.
@lazysingledaisybronwyn8105
@lazysingledaisybronwyn8105 2 года назад
How fantastic! What a gift!
@Xnsmoke
@Xnsmoke 4 года назад
Such beauty, such craft. This is my passion.
@pamelapettit-holt1520
@pamelapettit-holt1520 5 лет назад
To some life is a bus ride that you must take everyday, the ride would not be such an ordeal if one could meet friends along the way. But friends are fair weather companions and we are again left to count ravens on wires and listen to the sirens and the squeaky brakes of the trolley as it slows for the hurried masses.
@riccardofurgoni4984
@riccardofurgoni4984 5 лет назад
... you and your voice, beautiful treasure...
@JuanBoscoSodi-po7zd
@JuanBoscoSodi-po7zd 10 месяцев назад
So touching I lovvvvvve this. Tranquil experience 😌
@Mark-Smeaton
@Mark-Smeaton 2 года назад
"I'd like my poems to be extremely musical and lyrical with a singing sound . . . ". I am smiling a Plath fan smile (I know that sounds a little corny). Within four years she would write some of the most musical poems ever composed.
@Mark-Smeaton
@Mark-Smeaton 2 года назад
Thank you so much for uploading. Plath sounds much more girlish and American than in her (two) 1960s interviews.
@elijahragland8498
@elijahragland8498 5 лет назад
her words are so soothing but im too high to understand any of it.
@Eden7garden
@Eden7garden 4 года назад
Me too buddy
@somethingyousaid5059
@somethingyousaid5059 4 года назад
I have a very low center of gravity is all.
@ryanjeanes5253
@ryanjeanes5253 4 года назад
I can only understand it high.
@MooseCall
@MooseCall 3 года назад
Wow, you're so cool.
@mjchiba663
@mjchiba663 3 года назад
@@SpoonLegend I'm very impressed at your analysis of Sylvia Plath. You should be proud of yourself. I'm certain that you could write that kind of poetry and do everything that she did. I mean, why would it be difficult to write the kind of poems that influence the world of poetry even to this day? :)
@AFaceintheCrowd01
@AFaceintheCrowd01 3 года назад
Red Comet brought me here. Engrossing, illuminating bio. Don’t be frightened - it has pictures.
@DrDelightful1909
@DrDelightful1909 8 месяцев назад
thank you xxxxx very inspiring xxxx
@storiesreviews2203
@storiesreviews2203 5 лет назад
greatest treasure on RU-vid
@Plathianloner
@Plathianloner 6 лет назад
What a GEM!!
@yggdrasil9039
@yggdrasil9039 6 лет назад
Wow, I've only ever heard the BBC recordings made in the UK in the early 60s. This is amazing, thank you for uploading. Where on earth did you find this?
@tatianadekun435
@tatianadekun435 5 лет назад
Yess, Like a blessing
@deathvalley69sy
@deathvalley69sy 2 года назад
My biggest inspiration in writing
@costcofreezers
@costcofreezers 3 года назад
pure art.
@sakoura0510
@sakoura0510 5 лет назад
I wish i could be as good as this poet i can only wish
@blackstonpoetrymusic8744
@blackstonpoetrymusic8744 5 лет назад
You and me both....
@neilpower60
@neilpower60 4 года назад
I wouldn't really, not if it meant being tortured as she was
@TylerJMartino
@TylerJMartino Год назад
Nothing more interesting and beautiful then this. If I could go back, I would try an save her. Tell her that bad days can turn into good, and it's ok to have negative thoughts. Its how we deal with those thoughts. She had so much more to offer. I just think there were too many things going on, and she never learned how to deal well with her emotions. Sleeping pills were sustaining her on most days. Sleep deprivation can lead to the most awful thoughts, especially if they are there to begin with... Rest in Heaven Sylvia.
@lisaletto7337
@lisaletto7337 2 года назад
Am reading a new book about her life, Red Comet. Hearing her voice makes it even more fascinating.
@lazysingledaisybronwyn8105
@lazysingledaisybronwyn8105 2 года назад
Wow, good to know. Do comets survive the best? :) May she never be a supernova! She already did the Gurgling Master award. Take her off the Circuit, oh Skeleton Dreamer.
@Beeisokay444
@Beeisokay444 8 месяцев назад
I absolutely adore Sylvia
@Amajastarr
@Amajastarr Год назад
I’m going to listen to her read these
@kenlawrence1530
@kenlawrence1530 5 лет назад
what a remarkable voice
@abdelrahmanmustafa8937
@abdelrahmanmustafa8937 2 месяца назад
Im gonna buy ur whole collection
@angbuxton
@angbuxton 6 лет назад
11:46: "i found it really impossible...writing and teaching..." 12:07: "eating and sleeping when it happens, but writing most of the time"
@mgenthbjpafa6413
@mgenthbjpafa6413 5 лет назад
Writing, fucking, eating, doing social nets, posting on stackoverflow___
@jimnewcombe7584
@jimnewcombe7584 3 года назад
A rare and early reading by Ted Hughes begins 40 mins in. It's curious to note the difference in his style of delivery here - more declamatory and sonorous than later in life, even if it's true that his first two books were more musical than what came later.
@aurorarockets
@aurorarockets 5 лет назад
Someone wrote on one of my monologue videos that I would portray Sylvia Plath very well. Honestly, I didn't know who she was. I've been searching her for a few hours now, though, and I have to say, being a poet/writer myself, she is quite a beautiful role model and that comment on my video is a divine compliment.
@dewilew2137
@dewilew2137 4 года назад
aurora.rockets 🖤
@lazysingledaisybronwyn8105
@lazysingledaisybronwyn8105 2 года назад
And your name is Aurora? Do you have red hair by any chance? :) Oh boy, it is a divine compliment! Please let us know if you do a film as Her! She said she felt she was channeling someone. I feel she was channeling "The Beginning Before You" sort of primordial Mother. Aurora is a perfect name!
@MrFrampo56
@MrFrampo56 Год назад
You’re a poet and you’d never heard of Sylvia Plath ? Really ? Unbelievable, literally!
@aurorarockets
@aurorarockets Год назад
@@MrFrampo56 I know, crazy right? I guess to be a poet you don't necessarily need to know all the other poets out there. It's art. You just make what you feel.
@becwilson655
@becwilson655 6 лет назад
Could you please post a list of the poems Plath's reading?
@jeff.s.7160
@jeff.s.7160 3 года назад
She has a beautiful speaking voice and laugh.
@6a66y69
@6a66y69 2 года назад
Ugh yes queen! 👑
@Nepente333
@Nepente333 5 лет назад
Does that picture really matter?. I mean, ok, it's not her, so what?. Can't you just stay away from stupid details and listen to what she wrote and read?, to what the interviewer asked her?. I'm a writer and I freaking love reading. I'm telling you, this woman had such an incredible sense of reality, truth and passion... it blows my mind. Reminds me SO MUCH of Alejandra Pizarnik (if you don't know her, you MUST read what Pizarnik wrote; she also committed suicide, at the age of 36). It's truly vexing to me to read so many comments about a bloody picture instead of what she created: pure art.
@MrFrampo56
@MrFrampo56 Год назад
Yes it is fucking important! It’s unbelievable that there’s a photo of another woman. It’s utterly ridiculous.
@coolfairy555
@coolfairy555 2 года назад
I hate that I learned about ted Hughes at school instead of her. The UK needs to realise her importance
@Gothicfarm
@Gothicfarm 10 месяцев назад
I love her laugh
@mikemeserve5767
@mikemeserve5767 2 года назад
One of the major poets
@RR_DM
@RR_DM 3 месяца назад
Quite a posh and articulate voice this narrator has; I wouldn't wan...
@LEVENTSELEVE686
@LEVENTSELEVE686 2 года назад
I really loved The Bell Jar. In fact, it's probably my favorite novel. However, I can't seem to understand her poems (or any poems for that matter). Can anyone give me tips on how to read poetry?
@mathsisdeadtomenow
@mathsisdeadtomenow 2 года назад
just search the poems name and the word 'analysis' you'll find lots of articles, paper, videos and comments that have people deciphering it
@LEVENTSELEVE686
@LEVENTSELEVE686 2 года назад
@@mathsisdeadtomenow Thanks, that's a nice suggestion! Normally I'd feel pretty icky about needing to use the Internet to read poems, but I guess I need to shove my ego to bypass this poetry illiteracy.
@johnballs4107
@johnballs4107 4 года назад
How is it that she wasn't accepted into Harvard for the writing seminar? I really wonder why she wasn't admitted given her level of talent.
@lazysingledaisybronwyn8105
@lazysingledaisybronwyn8105 2 года назад
Harvard is not that great, actually. There was NO PLACE for her!!!! except for The Land of Health!!!
@Mark-Smeaton
@Mark-Smeaton 2 года назад
Well, she won a scholarship to Cambridge - arguably that was more prestigious if you care about such things. She postponed doing a PhD but probably would have eventually, had she lived.
@Tomiekawakami1987
@Tomiekawakami1987 13 дней назад
Angel.
@cerealonmytoast7035
@cerealonmytoast7035 4 года назад
Preparing for literature coursework and therefore the search for audio books begins
@cesarvillafane6351
@cesarvillafane6351 3 года назад
I would like to hear her poem "Pursuit".
@nightknight669
@nightknight669 4 года назад
22:13 On the Difficulty of Conjuring up a Dryad
@phnification
@phnification 6 месяцев назад
Where was this recording made? Was it made specifically for the poetry archive at the library of congress?
@artiste335
@artiste335 3 года назад
That is not a photo of Sylvia Plath.
@xinying_14
@xinying_14 3 года назад
Who is watching in 2021
@duncescotus2342
@duncescotus2342 3 года назад
Down with Orwell Up with Plath (a very short poem): Down with Orwell, up with Plath Down with Satire, up with wrath
@OllyBockus
@OllyBockus 3 месяца назад
'Plath' doesn't rhyme with 'wrath'.
@robertcronin6603
@robertcronin6603 3 года назад
Why is a photo of someone else being used as backdrop to Sylvia's reading? Why not Sylvia, herself? Seems a tad disrespectful...but that's just me.
@robertbongiovanni8219
@robertbongiovanni8219 4 года назад
Cool
@lilygrant5644
@lilygrant5644 4 года назад
for the love of god change the photo
@RajendraSingh-bh8zf
@RajendraSingh-bh8zf 3 года назад
Please amplify the sound.
@brian_nirvana
@brian_nirvana 5 лет назад
i love you.
@brian_nirvana
@brian_nirvana 3 года назад
dammit Sylvia, I still love you a year ago I loved you still do!
@ihatemickiegee
@ihatemickiegee Год назад
but why is it not a picture of sylvia
@melissasmind2846
@melissasmind2846 Месяц назад
Noted
@Briannajo_world
@Briannajo_world 5 лет назад
she sounds like the voice of Alice from Alice in Wonderland from 1951
@NaughtyVampireGod
@NaughtyVampireGod 4 года назад
Very stupid to have a photo of someone other than Sylvia b/c you will have people doubting that it's actually her voice. Some youtubers are complete fools. Inexplicable. Just fix it. But they won't b/c they are proud of the 100K views - which isn't all that amazing for a video which has been up for over two years on a well-known person.
@IHateTheSims
@IHateTheSims Год назад
That image is not of Sylvia plath
@peterteachesmusic5582
@peterteachesmusic5582 3 года назад
Oh I fucking love you
@holybats
@holybats 2 года назад
@ethneclark7281
@ethneclark7281 3 года назад
12:14
@lenafan492
@lenafan492 2 года назад
Is that Plath in the photo? The face seems different.
@pritiyadav8526
@pritiyadav8526 Год назад
No
@lemoncalippo1554
@lemoncalippo1554 Год назад
28:45
@lemoncalippo1554
@lemoncalippo1554 Год назад
45:00
@connynielson8686
@connynielson8686 3 года назад
is that ted hughes voice...i didnt know he was scottish? !
@OllyBockus
@OllyBockus 3 месяца назад
Yes, his reading does seem slightly affected, from his natural Yorkshire tones..not exactly 'Scottish', more generally 'Celtic', perhaps influenced by Dylan Thomas? ( I swear, as I was writing this, that they all started mentioning Thomas...spooky coincidence)
@insomnia3201
@insomnia3201 3 года назад
that photo is not Plath!!!±
@athirashajirocks
@athirashajirocks 5 лет назад
That's not Sylvia Plath!!
@LaViadellaCreativita
@LaViadellaCreativita 4 года назад
The girl in photo is NOT SYLVIA PLATH, she's Barbara Laage, French actress. The photo is from 1946 and SP was only 14 while BL was clearly older (26). This is an unbelievable mistake, they're totally different.
@BerfnGuzel
@BerfnGuzel 12 дней назад
I listen only sylvia
@hegyesvivien3372
@hegyesvivien3372 4 года назад
Okay.. I'm blind so I absolutely don't care who this woman is on the pic.. 2. I'm Hungarian so absolutely can't understand her deep poetry.. I just adore her cute lovely sexi voice!! :DD
Далее
Mary Oliver reads from A Thousand Mornings
41:58
Просмотров 282 тыс.
Sylvia Plath Interview.
14:11
Просмотров 388 тыс.
Finger Heart - Fancy Refill (Inside Out Animation)
00:30
THE TREASURE, a Short Story by Somerset Maugham
39:41
101 Poems. Anthology, (various). Read by Ted Hughes.
2:38:52
Sylvia Plath reads her best poems
14:03
Просмотров 6 тыс.
W.B Yeats' best poems
16:25
Просмотров 172 тыс.
helena bonham carter reading poems for 18 minutes
18:42
Sylvia Plath reads Plath.
32:04
Просмотров 28 тыс.
Finger Heart - Fancy Refill (Inside Out Animation)
00:30