The Disquieting Muses | |
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Publisher | William Heinemann Ltd. |
Publication date | 1960 |
Media type | Print (hardback) |
Lines | 56 (seven stanzas) |
"The Disquieting Muses" is a poem by Sylvia Plath first appearing in the 1960 collection The Colossus and Other Poems published by William Heinemann, Ltd. [1]
"The Disquieting Muses" was among the eight poems Plath wrote in winter and spring of 1958 during a period of inspired creativity. [2] [3] Fellow poet and spouse Ted Hughes reported that she was writing as much as 12-hours "at a stretch ... too excited to sleep." [4]
In a note referencing these "eight poems," Plath exalted at the quality of her recent work:
I think I have written poems that qualify me to be The Poetess of America (as Ted will be the poet of England and her dominions). Who rivals? Well, in history - Sappho, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Christina Rossetti, Amy Lowell, Emily Dickinson, Edna St. Vincent Millay - all dead. Now: Edith Sitwell & Marianne Moore, the aging giantesses & poetic godmothers. Phyllis McGinley is out—light verse: she's sold herself. Rather: May Swenson, Isabella Gardner, & most close Adrienne Cecile Rich—who will soon be eclipsed by these with poems: I am eager, chafing, sure of my gift, wanting only to train & teach it—I'll count the magazines and the money I break open with these eight poems from now on. We'll see. [5]
Literary critic Edward Butscher declared "The Disquieting Muses" the genesis of Plath's "artist self." [6]
"The Disquieting Muses" includes a reference to Plath's childhood in Winthrop, Massachusetts when a category 3 hurricane struck the area in September 1938: "windows bellied in / like bubbles about to break." Almost six-years-of-age at the time, Plath retained vivid memories of a storm that killed 564 people and injured 1,700. Winthrope and other communities suffered significant property damage. [7]
The theme and title for the poem is derived from the painting by Italian artist Giorgio de Chirico entitled The Disquieting Muses (1918). [8] Reading the poem on a BBC radio programme, Plath explained the significance of the title:
All through the poem, I have in mind the enigmatic figures in this painting—the three terrible faceless dressmaker's dummies in classical gowns ... the dummies suggest a twentieth-century version of other sinister trios of women - the Three Fates, the witches of Macbeth , Thomas De Quincey's sisters of madness. [9]
Biographer Caroline King Barnard locates the poem's theme in the familiar realm of a daughter's discontents with her upbringing - emphatically directed at her mother. [10]
In each of its seven stanzas Plath registers a malediction. Barnard offers the first of the stanzas in which the disquieting muses appear at "the left side" of the infant daughter's crib:
Mother, mother, what illbred aunt
Or what disfigured and unsightly
Cousin did you so unwisely keep
Unasked to my christening, that she
Sent these ladies in her stead
With heads like darning-eggs to nod
And nod and nod at foot and head
And at the left side of my crib? [11] [12]
Barnard points out that despite its commonplace theme, familiar to daughters and mothers alike, "the strength of the conviction is not diminished by its lack of uniqueness." [11]