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  1. There’s a stake in your fat black heart. And the villagers never liked you. They are dancing and stamping on you. They always knew it was you. Daddy, daddy, you bastard, I’m through. Notes: First published in Ariel , 1965. Reprinted in The Collected Poems, 1981. Sylvia Plath, “Daddy” from Collected Poems.

  2. Daddy BY SYLVIA PLATH You do not do, you do not do Any more, black shoe In which I have lived like a foot For thirty years, poor and white, Barely daring to breathe or Achoo. Daddy, I have had to kill you. You died before I had time—— Marble-heavy, a bag full of God, Ghastly statue with one gray toe Big as a Frisco seal

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  4. In which I have lived like a foot. For thirty years, poor and white, Barely daring to breathe or Achoo. Daddy, I have had to kill you. You died before I had time—. Marble-heavy, a bag full of God, Ghastly statue with one gray toe. Big as a Frisco seal.

    • “Daddy” Summary.
    • “Daddy” Themes. Gender and Oppression. Where this theme appears in the poem: Lines 1-80. Power and Myth-Making. Lines 1-5.
    • Line-by-Line Explanation & Analysis of “Daddy” Lines 1-5. You do not ... ... breathe or Achoo. Lines 6-10. Daddy, I have ... a Frisco seal. Lines 11-15. And a head ...
    • “Daddy” Symbols. Blackness. Where this symbol appears in the poem: Line 2: “black shoe” Lines 46-47: “Not God but a swastika / So black no sky could squeak through.”
    • Summary
    • Poetic Techniques
    • Themes
    • Analysis, Stanza by Stanza
    • Conclusion

    ‘Daddy‘ by Sylvia Plath uses emotional, and sometimes, painful metaphorsto depict the poet’s own opinion of her father. The poem begins with the speakerdescribing her father in several different, striking ways. He is, at once, a “black shoe” she was trapped within, a vampire, a fascist and a Nazi. While alive, and since his death, she has been trap...

    Plath makes use of a number of poetic techniques in ‘Daddy’ these include enjambment, metaphor, simile, and juxtaposition. The former, juxtaposition, is used when two contrasting objects or ideas are placed in conversation with one another in order to emphasize that contrast. A poet usually does this in order to speak on a larger theme of their tex...

    In regards to the most important themes in ‘Daddy’, one should consider the conversation Plath has in the text about the oppressive nature of her father/daughter relationship. The theme of freedom from oppression, or from captivity is prevalent throughout this text, and others Plath wrote. Despite her father’s death, she was obviously still held ra...

    Stanza One

    In this first stanza of ‘Daddy’, the speaker reveals that the subject of whom she speaks is no longer there. This is why she says and repeats, “You do not do”. The following line is rather surprising, as it does not express loss or sadness. On the contrary, it begins to reveal the nature of this particular father-daughter relationship. The speaker compares her father to a “black shoe”. It seems like a strange comparisonuntil the third line reveals that the speaker herself has felt “like a foo...

    Stanza Two

    In the second stanza of ‘Daddy’, the speaker reveals her own personal desire to kill her father. The first line states, “I have had to kill you”. The next line goes on to explain that the speaker actually did not have time to kill her father, because he died before she could manage to do it. She does not make this confession regretfully or sorrowfully. Rather, she calls him “a bag full of God” which suggests that her view of her father as well as her view of God was one of fear and trepidatio...

    Stanza Three

    Here, looking at her dead father, the speaker describes the gorgeous scenery of the Atlantic Ocean and the beautiful area of “Nauset”. However, she also uses the word “freakish” to precede her descriptions of the beautiful Atlantic Ocean. This reveals that even though her father may have been a beautiful specimen of a human being, she knew personally that there was something awful about him. In the final two lines of this stanza, the speaker reveals that at one point during her father’s sickn...

    Sylvia Plath (biography) begins ‘Daddy’ with her present understanding of her father and the kind of man that he was. She then offers readers some background explanation of her relationship with her father. As ‘Daddy’ progresses, the readers begins to realize that the speaker has not always hated her father. She has not always seen him as a brute, ...

  5. The poem ‘Daddy’ dates from 1962 when she began to fantasise her father as a Nazi and to see herself as a kind of Jew: while neither of these things was ‘true’, the ideas helped her get at some aspects of the relationship. Her father Dr Otto Plath was no Nazi. He had in fact fled Germany just before the war.

  6. 1 viewer 106.8K views. 60 Contributors. Daddy Lyrics. You do not do, you do not do. Any more, black shoe. In which I have lived like a foot. For thirty years, poor and white, Barely daring to...

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