Lyrics Tulips - Sylvia Plath
The
tulips
are
too
excitable,
it
is
winter
here.
Look
how
white
everything
is,
how
quiet,
how
snowed-in.
I
am
learning
peacefulness,
lying
by
myself
quietly
As
the
light
lies
on
these
white
walls,
this
bed,
these
hands.
I
am
nobody;
I
have
nothing
to
do
with
explosions.
I
have
given
my
name
and
my
day-clothes
up
to
the
nurses
And
my
history
to
the
anesthetist
and
my
body
to
surgeons.
They
have
propped
my
head
between
the
pillow
and
the
sheet-cuff
Like
an
eye
between
two
white
lids
that
will
not
shut.
Stupid
pupil,
it
has
to
take
everything
in.
The
nurses
pass
and
pass,
they
are
no
trouble,
They
pass
the
way
gulls
pass
inland
in
their
white
caps,
Doing
things
with
their
hands,
one
just
the
same
as
another,
So
it
is
impossible
to
tell
how
many
there
are.
My
body
is
a
pebble
to
them,
they
tend
it
as
water
Tends
to
the
pebbles
it
must
run
over,
smoothing
them
gently.
They
bring
me
numbness
in
their
bright
needles,
they
bring
me
sleep.
Now
I
have
lost
myself
I
am
sick
of
baggage——
My
patent
leather
overnight
case
like
a
black
pillbox,
My
husband
and
child
smiling
out
of
the
family
photo;
Their
smiles
catch
onto
my
skin,
little
smiling
hooks.
I
have
let
things
slip,
a
thirty-year-old
cargo
boat
Stubbornly
hanging
on
to
my
name
and
address.
They
have
swabbed
me
clear
of
my
loving
associations.
Scared
and
bare
on
the
green
plastic-pillowed
trolley
I
watched
my
teaset,
my
bureaus
of
linen,
my
books
Sink
out
of
sight,
and
the
water
went
over
my
head.
I
am
a
nun
now,
I
have
never
been
so
pure.
I
didn't
want
any
flowers,
I
only
wanted
To
lie
with
my
hands
turned
up
and
be
utterly
empty.
How
free
it
is,
you
have
no
idea
how
free——
The
peacefulness
is
so
big
it
dazes
you,
And
it
asks
nothing,
a
name
tag,
a
few
trinkets.
It
is
what
the
dead
close
on,
finally;
I
imagine
them
Shutting
their
mouths
on
it,
like
a
Communion
tablet.
The
tulips
are
too
red
in
the
first
place,
they
hurt
me.
Even
through
the
gift
paper
I
could
hear
them
breathe
Lightly,
through
their
white
swaddlings,
like
an
awful
baby.
Their
redness
talks
to
my
wound,
it
corresponds.
They
are
subtle:
they
seem
to
float,
though
they
weigh
me
down,
Upsetting
me
with
their
sudden
tongues
and
their
color,
A
dozen
red
lead
sinkers
round
my
neck.
Nobody
watched
me
before,
now
I
am
watched.
The
tulips
turn
to
me,
and
the
window
behind
me
Where
once
a
day
the
light
slowly
widens
and
slowly
thins,
And
I
see
myself,
flat,
ridiculous,
a
cut-paper
shadow
Between
the
eye
of
the
sun
and
the
eyes
of
the
tulips,
And
I
have
no
face,
I
have
wanted
to
efface
myself.
The
vivid
tulips
eat
my
oxygen.
Before
they
came
the
air
was
calm
enough,
Coming
and
going,
breath
by
breath,
without
any
fuss.
Then
the
tulips
filled
it
up
like
a
loud
noise.
Now
the
air
snags
and
eddies
round
them
the
way
a
river
Snags
and
eddies
round
a
sunken
rust-red
engine.
They
concentrate
my
attention,
that
was
happy
Playing
and
resting
without
committing
itself.
The
walls,
also,
seem
to
be
warming
themselves.
The
tulips
should
be
behind
bars
like
dangerous
animals;
They
are
opening
like
the
mouth
of
some
great
African
cat,
And
I
am
aware
of
my
heart:
it
opens
and
closes
Its
bowl
of
red
blooms
out
of
sheer
love
of
me.
The
water
I
taste
is
warm
and
salt,
like
the
sea,
And
comes
from
a
country
far
away
as
health.
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