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  • Wuthering Heights
    BY
    Sylvia Plath



    The horizons ring me like faggots,
    Tilted and disparate, and always unstable.
    Touched by a match, they might warm me,
    And their fine lines singe
    The air to orange
    Before the distances they pin evaporate,
    Weighting the pale sky with a soldier color.
    But they only dissolve and dissolve
    Like a series of promises, as I step forward.

    There is no life higher than the grasstops
    Or the hearts of sheep, and the wind
    Pours by like destiny, bending
    Everything in one direction.
    I can feel it trying
    To funnel my heat away.
    If I pay the roots of the heather
    Too close attention, they will invite me
    To whiten my bones among them.

    The sheep know where they are,
    Browsing in their dirty wool-clouds,
    Gray as the weather.
    The black slots of their pupils take me in.
    It is like being mailed into space,
    A thin, silly message.
    They stand about in grandmotherly disguise,
    All wig curls and yellow teeth
    And hard, marbly baas.

    I come to wheel ruts, and water
    Limpid as the solitudes
    That flee through my fingers.
    Hollow doorsteps go from grass to grass;
    Lintel and sill have unhinged themselves.
    Of people and the air only
    Remembers a few odd syllables.
    It rehearses them moaningly:
    Black stone, black stone.

    The sky leans on me, me, the one upright
    Among all horizontals.
    The grass is beating its head distractedly.
    It is too delicate
    For a life in such company;
    Darkness terrifies it.
    Now, in valleys narrow
    And black as purses, the house lights
    Gleam like small change.

       
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