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The arrival of the bee box

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The arrival of the bee box .. In 1962 Plath and Hughes decided to take up bee keeping. The primary metaphor in the poem is the Bee Box itself. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The arrival of the bee box


1
The arrival of the bee box..
  • In 1962 Plath and Hughes decided to take up bee
    keeping.
  • The primary metaphor in the poem is the Bee Box
    itself.
  • On one level its just a box full of bees.
  • On another, deeper level, it may represent
    Plaths inner self, her subconscious, her mind.
  • Lots of intense, disturbing imagery suggesting
    lots of inner angst and turmoil.
  • The box is locked, inaccessible, dangerous,
    chaotic.
  • She is drawn to and repelled by the box.
  • Plath tries to assert her control over the box /
    bees, does she succeed?
  • 7 five line stanzas. Follwed by a single,
    isolated line.

2
Stanzas 1 - 3
  • Straightforward opening a simple description of
    the box,
  • Followed immediately by images of death and
    deformity and the reference to noisenot the
    assonant I in din in it.
  • The box is locked, inaccessible. And whats
    inside is dangerous.
  • She cant keep away from itit fascinates her.
  • There are no windows.This may be a metaphor for
    her inability to really understand whats going
    on inside herself. She is essentially blind to
    whats going on inside. Blindness has always been
    associated with lack of understanding.
  • Next she closely examines the box. She senses the
    oppressive atmosphere inside. Note the
    disturbing, dark imagery.
  • She looks into the little grid but cant actuall
    see anything, its dark, dark.
  • Instead she has a vague sense of whats inside.
    Its very claustrophobic. Note the repetition of
    black and the deliberate clumsiness of angrily
    clambering.
  • The bees are aggressive and menacing.

3
Stanzas 4 - 6
  • Plath is horrified most of all by the noise
    inside the box. Does this refer to her own
    internal chaos? This is often the experience of
    someone suffering from anxiety or depression.
    Its like a Roman mob! Individually managable,
    but my god, collectively terrifying.
  • Note the brilliant unintelligible syllables
    whose sound mimics the very thing being
    described.
  • Stanza 5 shows the speaker wrestling for
    control over the bees. The din is furious
    Latin. She says she can send them back or
    let them die. Is this self-destructive. If
    the box represents her mind and the bees , her
    chaotic thoughts, does the death of the bees
    represent the loss of her mind? Insanity? A
    series of statements seeking control. (24/25)
  • Then the tone seems to relax a little. She
    begins to wonder. The imagery is more attractive,
    less threatening. She thinks about simply
    opening the box and letting them out, whilst,
    interestingly, she turns into a tree. The
    gentler imagery (the laburnum / blond collonades
    / petticoats of the cherry) masks a darker
    possibility turning into a tree may represent
    loss of personal identity. Becoming a tree, she
    is no longer a person.

4
Final stanza and last line
  • Plath continues to reassure herself that all may
    be well. She reasons that the bees may ignore
    her because she is no source of honey. She is
    not something, she tells us, that they can feed
    on.
  • why (therefore) should they turn on me.
  • Note the imagery used heremoon suit refers to a
    bee-keepers suit. Funeral veil refers to the
    special veiled head covering bee keepers wear
    when attending bees. But why funeral veil?
    Again, the language / imagery suggests the
    possibility of something darker, more painful at
    work.
  • She will be sweet God and set them free. But
    what exactly does setting free mean. What if
    we consider that it is God who has power over
    life and death.
  • The box is only temporary..could we substitute
    mindor.life for box?

5
Concluding points
  • This poem could be read on a purely literal
    level. But knowing how everything is symbolised
    in Plaths work the box may be regarded as a
    metaphor for the poets unconscious mind and the
    angry, threatening bees as the dark, destructive
    aspects of her own personality.
  • This suggest, then, that Plath was both drawn
    to.and afraid of exploring the depths of her
    psyche because this wuld involve unleashing the
    terrible demons that lurked within.
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