EILEEN TABIOS Engages
Like a Fat Gold Watch: Meditations on Sylvia Plath and Living,
edited by Christine Hamm
(Fat Gold Watch Press,
Brooklyn, 2018)
One of my first thoughts about this anthology is how it’s so
well-conceived. Like a Fat Gold Watch,
edited by Christine Hamm, presents poems and “meditations on Sylvia Plath and
Living” so that most of the poems are introduced by the poets' reflections on
Plath’s significance to them. It’s a useful format as the reader then can
compare the poet’s “meditation” to the subsequent poem(s). The book also
presents a variety of viewpoints—including many that no doubt will be new to
many readers—thus expanding the scope for how we may view Plath. (An example is
presented in this issue as Galatea
Resurrects reprints Tasha R. Cotter’s engagement with three Plath poems
HERE.)
The anthology’s presentation of these diverse views also
shows the reductiveness of the historical linkage by past critics/readers
between Plath’s biography and her poems—most notably and horrifically
exemplified by Ted Hughes’ editing of Plath’s Ariel which contributed to the simplistic idea of Plath as
“depressive” (to quote J. Hope Stein who adds—for this, appropriately—“Fuck
him.”) That is, Plath had conceived of the Ariel
manuscript as ending with the poem “Wintering” which ends with the word
“spring.” As such did not fit Hughes’ desired “narrative arc,” according to
Hamm, he reordered the poems in the manuscript, including ending with a poem
about death, “Edge,” which ends up presenting Ariel as “a feverishly written
suicide note.” It’s this redress that
gives another layer of satisfaction to reading through Like a Fat Gold Watch.
Here are some examples of how various poets’ meditations
affected their poetry. Veronica Wong
states:
(click on all images to enlarge)
Wong’s meditation is followed by her poem “The Woods” which
begins
We are witches, murderers,
candy-eating usurpers. Hanging
mirrors on walls we multiple
dark mouths until hundreds of Os
morph back at us. Like the moon, we
fill
with things that echo
That brief excerpt alone indicates the power—a “controlled
fury,” too—in her marvelous poem. Here’s another excerpt: “We make ourselves
dense / like rum cake.” Indeed, it’s a testament to Plath’s influence that so
many of the poems written “after” her are vibrant and vivid with their power,
e.g. the poems of Ivy Alvarez (“…I gather the wood to me / splinters in my
mouth / the hoard I chew // and spit”), Liz Kicak (“…the slow slide of your
tongue / licking the residuck stick / from your lips. The haunt of wings / and
sugar in your throat”), and Juliet Cook (“He purged me like a decapitated spread
shot; / a moldy magpie slot when I used
to be a slit”), among others.
Heather Lenz notes that her poems “relate to my perception
of Plath—her extraordinary talent, her enormous strength and vision that have
added so much to the literary world and to the lives of creative women
especially.” Here is Lenz’s deeply-felt poem-response to Plath’s life and work:
Amanda Auchter also presents an interesting way of crafting
poems “after” Plath. She says:
Here is her cento with sources noted:
It’s certainly moving to be reminded of the scope of Plath’s
effect. Monique Roussell, for instance,
“has been strongly influenced by Sylvia Plath since she was an undergrad at the
age of 18. Roussel says Plath “allowed her to speak in ways ‘only the dark
knows’” and such is evidenced in her poem, “The Truth a Poet Can Tell.” Here
are its first two stanzas:
My father is a poet.
He composes sonnets
from behind the wheel of a
schoolbus,
although he does not know they are
sonnets.
His is the poetry of two wives:
one, a jezebel,
the second a nurse to his stroke.
It is the poetry of too much drink,
a shortness of breath,
then the grip of God’s hand about
the throat,
and a falling.
I was also glad to see the reproduction of the 5-page artist
book you know her (2010) by Angela
Simione. Here’s one of its pages
To see the artist book transcription as visual art lends a
welcome dimension to Simione’s powerful verse-poem:
The introduction to the work of Simione, a
multi-disciplinary artist and writer, says about Plath’s influence:
Indeed, I find the poets’ articulations of what Plath’s
poems mean to them to be as engaging as the poets’ own poems. Here are more examples:
Rebecca Loudon:
This is an immensely satisfying read, whether or not you’re
a Sylvia Plath fan. Kudos to the editor Christine Hamm, and to the anthology
poets for having paid attention—a trait that, of course, is useful for creating
excellent poems.
*****
Eileen Tabios is the editor of Galatea Resurrects (GR). She loves books and has released over 50 collections of poetry, fiction, essays, and experimental biographies from publishers in nine countries and cyberspace. Her 2018 poetry collections include HIRAETH: Tercets From the Last Archipelago, MURDER DEATH RESURRECTION: A Poetry Generator, and TANKA: Vol. 1. She is the inventor of the poetry form “hay(na)ku” which will be the focus of a 15-year anniversary celebration at the San Francisco Public Library in 2018. More information is available at http://eileenrtabios.com.