The Sleepers Poem by Sylvia Plath

The Sleepers

Rating: 4.7


No map traces the street
Where those two sleepers are.
We have lost track of it.
They lie as if under water
In a blue, unchanging light,
The French window ajar

Curtained with yellow lace.
Through the narrow crack
Odors of wet earth rise.
The snail leaves a silver track;
Dark thickets hedge the house.
We take a backward look.

Among petals pale as death
And leaves steadfast in shape
They sleep on, mouth to mouth.
A white mist is going up.
The small green nostrils breathe,
And they turn in their sleep.

Ousted from that warm bed
We are a dream they dream.
Their eyelids keep up the shade.
No harm can come to them.
We cast our skins and slide
Into another time.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Shaun Cronick 01 July 2019

Brilliant and under-rated poem.God Bless you Sylvia.

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Sylvia Plath

Sylvia Plath

Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts
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