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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Sylvia Plath
Sylvia Plath
Sylvia Plath was born in Boston in 1932. Associated with the Confessional movement, she became the first poet to win a Pulitzer Prize posthumously...
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FURTHER READING
Poems About Birthdays
A Birthday
by Christina Rossetti
A Happy Birthday
by Ted Kooser
A Newborn Girl at Passover
by Nan Cohen
At Thirty
by Lynda Hull
Crossroads
by Joyce Sutphen
Fifty-Three
by Eileen Myles
Infant Joy
by William Blake
On His Seventy-fifth Birthday
by Walter Savage Landor
Poem at Thirty
by Michael Ryan
Poems About Daughters
A Little Tooth
by Thomas Lux
A Newborn Girl at Passover
by Nan Cohen
A Prayer for my Daughter
by W. B. Yeats
Achill
by Derek Mahon
Daughters in Poetry
by Eavan Boland
Daughters, 1900
by Marilyn Nelson
Father's Song
by Gregory Orr
For a Daughter Who Leaves
by Janice Mirikitani
Heart's Needle
by W. D. Snodgrass
Home After Three Months Away
by Robert Lowell
Interstate Highway
by James Applewhite
Ladders
by Elizabeth Alexander
Poems about Daughters
The Bistro Styx
by Rita Dove
The Pomegranate
by Eavan Boland
The Writer
by Richard Wilbur
Poems About Birth and Parenting
A Woman Waits for Me
by Walt Whitman
After Making Love We Hear Footsteps
by Galway Kinnell
Central Park, Carousel
by Meena Alexander
Curriculum Vitae
by Lisel Mueller
Daughter-Mother-Maya-Seeta
by Reetika Vazirani
Gods
by Michael Redhill
Honey
by Arielle Greenberg
Infant Joy
by William Blake
The Author to Her Book
by Anne Bradstreet
The Mother
by Gwendolyn Brooks
The Sick Child
by Robert Louis Stevenson
Tract
by William Carlos Williams
You Begin
by Margaret Atwood
Related Prose
Going for Motherlode: on Adrienne Rich’s Of Woman Born
by Miranda Field
Groundbreaking Book: Ariel by Sylvia Plath (1965)
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Morning Song  
by Sylvia Plath

Love set you going like a fat gold watch.
The midwife slapped your footsoles, and your bald cry
Took its place among the elements.

Our voices echo, magnifying your arrival.  New statue.
In a drafty museum, your nakedness
Shadows our safety.  We stand round blankly as walls.

I'm no more your mother
Than the cloud that distills a mirror to reflect its own slow
Effacement at the wind's hand.

All night your moth-breath
Flickers among the flat pink roses.  I wake to listen:
A far sea moves in my ear.

One cry, and I stumble from bed, cow-heavy and floral
In my Victorian nightgown.
Your mouth opens clean as a cat's.  The window square

Whitens and swallows its dull stars.  And now you try
Your handful of notes;
The clear vowels rise like balloons.



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From Ariel, published by Harper & Row, 1966. Copyright © 1966 by Ted Hughes. All rights reserved. Used by arrangement with HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.
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