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The Colossus
by Sylvia Plath
- I shall never get you put together entirely,
- Pieced, glued, and properly jointed.
- Mule-bray, pig-grunt and bawdy cackles
- Proceed from your great lips.
- It's worse than a barnyard.
- Perhaps you consider yourself an oracle,
- Mouthpiece of the dead, or of some god or
- other.
- Thirty years now I have labored
- To dredge the silt from your throat.
- I am none the wiser.
- Scaling little ladders with glue pots and pails
- of lysol
- I crawl like an ant in mourning
- Over the weedy acres of your brow
- To mend the immense skull plates and clear
- The bald, white tumuli of your eyes.
- A blue sky out of the Oresteia
- Arches above us. O father, all by yourself
- You are pithy and historical as the Roman
- Forum.
- I open my lunch on a hill of black cypress.
- Your fluted bones and acanthine hair are
- littered
- In their old anarchy to the horizon-line.
- It would take more than a lightning-stroke
- To create such a ruin.
- Nights, I squat in the cornucopia
- Of your left ear, out of the wind,
- Counting the red stars and those of plum-
- color.
- The sun rises under the pillar of your tongue.
- My hours are married to shadow.
- No longer do I listen for the scrape of a keel
- On the blank stones of the landing.
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