Reignite Your Spark with The Burnout Solution
An empowering guide to understanding the causes of burnout, recovering your energy, and rebuilding a balanced life.

Johns Hopkins UniversityEst. 1876
America’s First Research University
Stasis in darkness.
Then the substanceless blue
Pour of tor and distances.
God’s lioness,
How one we grow,
Pivot of heels and knees!
By the end of the poem the speaker does indeed announce, “And I/ Am the arrow,// The dew that flies/ Suicidal . . . .” The event referenced here should not be the confirmation of what we, sadly, already know to be true, but rather the live wire strung between metaphor and metamorphosis that is the poem, or even the deft topple of “I” into “Am” via the line break. That the poem has thirty-one lines, which, poignantly enough, is one more than the thirty brief years of the poet, is an observation that, like the title, would also link it to biography. But again it would be something I would only want to arrive at after full immersion into the poem’s words, after experiencing the energy of its “drive/ Into the red// Eye, the cauldron of morning.” Plath’s last poem, “Edge,” begins with the pronouncement that “The woman is perfected,” which is often quoted as another blatant suicidal premonition. Whenever I read it, however, I am always reminded of Sean Connery’s line in a wonderful B-movie called The Red Tent: “Perfection is death; nothing grows in it.” This, to me, has always been the problem with our jumping to narrow biographical or psychological readings of Plath’s poems, for they “perfect” or deaden them by turning them into mere evidentiary build up to her final end. Meanwhile, my eye drifts down to that final poem’s final two stanzas, where calmly, almost serenelyThe moon has nothing to be sad about,
Staring from her hood of bone.
She is used to this sort of thing.
Her blacks crackle and drag.
Plath’s own “blacks crackle and drag” in the inked pages of her poems, and, at their best, they are as alive today as then. We are the ones left to keep up with what she rightly named in “Words” the “indefatigable hoof-taps,” still galloping at full speed within them. We would do well to tap into such kinetic vigor when reading her work.