Analysis Of Mad Girl's Love Song

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Sylvia Plath’s “Mad Girl’s Love Song” (1951), shows how the speaker was very drastically and negatively affected by the end of a relationship. The poem tells the thoughts of the heartbroken speaker and how the speaker is trying to create a type of comfort by coming up with different ways to try to feel better while possibly being mentally unstable and ill. This poem is written with great passion and deals with the darkness and sadness produced by heartbreak which then broadens to the subjects of fantasy, reality, and suicide. These subjects are demonstrated throughout the poem with the poet’s use of repetition, word choice, figurative language, and theme. The title of this poem gives the reader a lot of information without even beginning the …show more content…

“The stars go waltzing out in blue and red” (L.4) show both personification and imagery while also exposing sign of mental instability. Plath gives more depth to the poem by giving stars human qualities by describing them as dancing the waltz. With this quality the stars seem to have it also gives dreamlike and fantasy like imagery that the speaker is part of. This stanza also creates a scene where the speaker seems to be hallucinating with these colors and stars that are not really performing those actions. The next line which also shares imagery and personification is “And arbitrary blackness gallops in” (L.5) where darkness and death seems to be exposed while human qualities are also given to the blackness. Although these scenes that the speaker is explaining and experiencing seem to be fantasy like it also shows the reality that the speaker might be having suicidal thoughts. Insanity can also be seen when Plath refers to a different time when the speaker was with the lover and the speaker explains, “kissed me quite insane” (L.8) further showing how the lover turned her

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