Knowledge

Tulips (poem)

Source 📝

101:
harshness of her perspective towards life. Barbara Hardy concurs, writing that the tulips are “inhabitants of the bizarre world of private irrational fantasy, even beyond the bridge of distorted science: they contrast with the whiteness of nullity and death, are like a baby, an African cat, is like her wound (a real red physical wound, stitched to heal, not to gape like opened tulips) and, finally, like her heart;” yet they, more than anything else, are what brings her back to life. It is safe to assume that without them, she would have remained ensconced in her bed, enjoying her lifelessness. The irony of the tulips is that they save her by torturing her, by forcing her to confront a truth that she otherwise would ignore in favor of the easier lifelessness. What this interpretation implies, then, is that the choice of life is necessarily a difficult and painful one, whereas death is not itself a choice but rather simply a refusal to continue living.
93:
been stripped away, and she feels pure and peaceful. The feelings suggested by her description of the room are hibernation, dormancy, and detachment. Here, she does not have a “self.” She does not have to worry about her family, the pressures of being a woman, her education, etc. Perhaps the harshest image in the poem is that of her husband and child in a picture frame. For the average reader, this is the image we expect to encourage an invalid towards life, but she considers it as simply another factor of annoying encouragement. The tulips thrust themselves in front of her with all of the brazenness of life. They not only watch her but also insist that she watch them. By bringing warmth and noise to the room, they demand she acknowledges the vivacity of life. One critic described the effect of the tulips on the speaker as the feeling one experiences when his or her leg begins to prickle with feeling after having fallen asleep.
97:
Finally, life returns with the taste of her hot tears; health is a ‘far away’ country but at least now it is remembered. The spell of the hospital room is broken.” In other words, she comes to realize that life is her natural state and that she will fight for it instinctively in the way her heart beats instinctively. Pamela Annas bases her argument on the organization of stanzas. She notes how, in the first four stanzas of the poem, the speaker “ the world of the hospital in the yearning tones of one who has already turned her back on it and knows it is slipping away,” and in the fifth, she begins referring to her wish to stay in the past tense. In other words, the verb tenses and tone suggest the speaker is slowly accepting her decision through the poem, rather than actively making the choice.
85:“Tulips” is a rich and evocative poem. Plath contrasts the whiteness and sterility of the hospital room with the liveliness of the tulips. Regarding the former, she explains “how white everything is, how quiet, how snowed-in.” There, she is “nobody” amidst a sea of faceless nurses who bring "no trouble." She is frequently numbed by medications, and has lost all of her "baggage." She is but a “thirty-year-old cargo boat” whose former life has disappeared. In other words, she treasures whiteness and sterility because they allow her an existence devoid of any self, in which she is defined by no more than the feeling she has at any particular moment. She has no context. 92:
The main tension in the poem, therefore, is between the speaker’s desire for the simplicity of death and the tulips’ encouragement toward life. What attracts her to the sterility of the hospital room is that it allows her to ignore the complications and pains of living. Her “loving associations” have
81:
in 1962. Ted Hughes stated that the poem was written about a bouquet of tulips Plath received as she recovered from an appendectomy in the hospital. The poem consists of nine seven-line stanzas and has no rhyme scheme. Its subject is relatively straightforward: a woman, recovering from a procedure in
100:
M.D. Uroff agrees, seeing the end of the poem as a tentative return to health, but also views the poem as an expression of the mind's ability to “generate hyperboles to torture itself.” In other words, he does not want the general interpretation – that the speaker chooses life – to distract from the
88:
The tulips work against her desire to "lie with hands turned up and be utterly empty.” She personifies them with excitability, loud breathing, and eyes that watch her as she rests. Her choice of adjectives – "excitable," "red," vivid" – all imbue them with a sense of liveliness. They are dangerous
96:
The choice she must make is to either embrace death or painfully return to life. Most critics seem to agree that she chooses the latter. Marjorie Perloff writes that “in her anxiety, equates the tulip petals with the ‘red blooms’ of her heart which insists on beating despite her desire for death.
56:
that it is "nominally free but has a subtle iambic base; the lines... ...move quietly and mellifluously; and a sense of hidden melody ('learning' / 'lying', 'lying by myself quietly', 'light lies', 'white walls') transforms casual remarks into memorable speech."
136:
is a black and white one into which red, which represents blood, the heart, and living is always an intrusion." Renée R. Curry takes this further by claiming the tulips signify "by their glorious and bold colors, glaring Otherness."
82:
a hospital, receives a bouquet of tulips that affront her with their glaring color and vividness. She details how they bother her, insisting she prefers to be left alone in the quiet whiteness of her room.
108:(presumably a gift) that interrupt her calm stay in the white hospital. During her stay at the hospital she has given up everything, including her identity, as expressed by the lines: 65:
Ted Hughes has stated "Tulips" was written about some flowers Plath received while in a hospital recovering from an appendectomy. Unlike many of her other
323: 429: 415: 89:
and alluring like an African cat. Even their color reminds her of her wound, which implicitly suggests it reminds her of her past.
77:“Tulips,” written on March 18, 1961, is one of Plath’s most beloved and critically acclaimed poems. It was originally published in 271: 515: 422: 505: 369: 264: 376: 237: 243: 165: 520: 344: 309: 257: 351: 8: 510: 484: 198:
The Collected Poems, Harper & Row, New York, 1981 Annotated by Stanford, Ann Folwell
477: 383: 179: 121:
She wishes to remain in a state of emptiness, but the flowers intrude upon this state:
104:
The speaker is in a hospital bed and describes her experience using an image of red
52:, totaling 63 lines, and follows no rhyme scheme. Richard Grey comments on the 458: 337: 184: 53: 423:
Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams: Short Stories, Prose, and Diary Excerpts
222:
White Women Writing White: H.D., Elizabeth Bishop, Sylvia plath, and Whiteness
499: 470: 452: 40:
published in 1965. The poem is written in nine stanzas in sixty-three lines.
36: 408: 390: 330: 302: 295: 280: 31: 464: 446: 69:
poems, "Tulips" was written long before her eventual suicide in 1963.
49: 249: 34:. The poem was written in 1961 and included in the collection 105: 117:
And my history to the anaesthetist and my body to surgeons.
28: 24: 115:
I have given my name and my day clothes up to the nurses
160: 158: 156: 154: 152: 150: 128:
To lie with my hands turned up and be utterly empty.
147: 113:I am nobody; I have nothing to do with explosions. 497: 265: 324:Two Lovers and a Beachcomber by the Real Sea 272: 258: 126:I didn't want any flowers, I only wanted 430:Superman and Paula Brown's New Snowsuit 48:"Tulips" is written in nine seven-line 498: 416:Letters Home: Correspondence 1950–1963 43: 253: 246:, at Modern American Poetry Society 132:Eileen Aird remarks: "The world of 13: 14: 532: 231: 279: 211:. New York: HarperCollins, 1975. 209:Sylvia Plath: Her Life and Work 214: 201: 192: 172: 1: 140: 516:Poems published posthumously 370:The Colossus and Other Poems 7: 180:""Tulips," by Sylvia Plath" 72: 10: 537: 224:. New York" Praeger, 2000. 60: 439: 400: 361: 287: 166:"Modern American Poetry" 506:Poetry by Sylvia Plath 130: 119: 310:The Munich Mannequins 124: 111: 345:Mad Girl's Love Song 244:Critiques on "Tulips 240:on Poetry Foundation 16:Poem by Sylvia Plath 485:Sylvia Plath effect 44:Style and structure 384:Crossing the Water 362:Poetry collections 493: 492: 528: 401:Prose and novels 274: 267: 260: 251: 250: 225: 220:Curry, Renee R. 218: 212: 205: 199: 196: 190: 189: 188:. 31 March 1962. 176: 170: 169: 162: 536: 535: 531: 530: 529: 527: 526: 525: 496: 495: 494: 489: 459:Nicholas Hughes 435: 396: 357: 283: 278: 234: 229: 228: 219: 215: 206: 202: 197: 193: 178: 177: 173: 164: 163: 148: 143: 127: 122: 116: 114: 109: 75: 63: 46: 17: 12: 11: 5: 534: 524: 523: 521:American poems 518: 513: 508: 491: 490: 488: 487: 482: 474: 468: 462: 456: 450: 443: 441: 437: 436: 434: 433: 426: 419: 412: 404: 402: 398: 397: 395: 394: 387: 380: 373: 365: 363: 359: 358: 356: 355: 348: 341: 334: 327: 320: 313: 306: 299: 291: 289: 285: 284: 277: 276: 269: 262: 254: 248: 247: 241: 233: 232:External links 230: 227: 226: 213: 207:Aird, Eileen. 200: 191: 185:The New Yorker 171: 145: 144: 142: 139: 79:The New Yorker 74: 71: 62: 59: 45: 42: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 533: 522: 519: 517: 514: 512: 509: 507: 504: 503: 501: 486: 483: 480: 479: 475: 472: 471:Aurelia Plath 469: 466: 463: 460: 457: 454: 453:Frieda Hughes 451: 448: 445: 444: 442: 438: 431: 427: 425: 424: 420: 418: 417: 413: 411: 410: 406: 405: 403: 399: 393: 392: 388: 386: 385: 381: 379: 378: 374: 372: 371: 367: 366: 364: 360: 353: 352:The Applicant 349: 346: 342: 339: 335: 332: 328: 325: 321: 318: 314: 311: 307: 304: 300: 297: 293: 292: 290: 286: 282: 275: 270: 268: 263: 261: 256: 255: 252: 245: 242: 239: 236: 235: 223: 217: 210: 204: 195: 187: 186: 181: 175: 167: 161: 159: 157: 155: 153: 151: 146: 138: 135: 129: 123: 118: 110: 107: 102: 98: 94: 90: 86: 83: 80: 70: 68: 58: 55: 51: 41: 39: 38: 33: 30: 26: 22: 476: 421: 414: 409:The Bell Jar 407: 391:Winter Trees 389: 382: 375: 368: 331:Lady Lazarus 316: 281:Sylvia Plath 221: 216: 208: 203: 194: 183: 174: 133: 131: 125: 120: 112: 103: 99: 95: 91: 87: 84: 78: 76: 66: 64: 47: 35: 32:Sylvia Plath 27:by American 20: 18: 481:(2003 film) 511:1965 poems 500:Categories 465:Otto Plath 455:(daughter) 447:Ted Hughes 141:References 449:(husband) 473:(mother) 467:(father) 238:"Tulips" 73:Analysis 440:Related 61:Context 50:stanzas 23:" is a 478:Sylvia 317:Tulips 106:tulips 21:Tulips 461:(son) 377:Ariel 338:Ennui 303:Daddy 296:Ariel 288:Poems 134:Ariel 67:Ariel 54:verse 37:Ariel 29:poet 25:poem 502:: 182:. 149:^ 432:" 428:" 354:" 350:" 347:" 343:" 340:" 336:" 333:" 329:" 326:" 322:" 319:" 315:" 312:" 308:" 305:" 301:" 298:" 294:" 273:e 266:t 259:v 168:. 19:"

Index

poem
poet
Sylvia Plath
Ariel
stanzas
verse
tulips






"Modern American Poetry"
""Tulips," by Sylvia Plath"
The New Yorker
"Tulips"
Critiques on "Tulips
v
t
e
Sylvia Plath
Ariel
Daddy
The Munich Mannequins
Tulips
Two Lovers and a Beachcomber by the Real Sea
Lady Lazarus
Ennui
Mad Girl's Love Song

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.