Sylvia Plath

The Eye-mote

The Eye-mote - meaning Summary

Vision Marred Identity Unsettled

The poem describes a sudden eye injury that transforms pleasant vision into distorted, persistent pain and altered perception. The mote becomes a focal metaphor for how a small physical wound upends memory, identity and time. The speaker mourns the self "before" the injury—before medical intervention and the narrowing of experience—and registers a dreamlike invocation of Oedipus to signal blindness as both literal affliction and existential loss.

Read Complete Analyses

Blameless as daylight I stood looking At a field of horses, necks bent, manes blown, Tails streaming against the green Backdrop of sycamores. Sun was striking White chapel pinnacles over the roofs, Holding the horses, the clouds, the leaves Steadily rooted though they were all flowing Away to the left like reeds in a sea When the splinter flew in and stuck my eye, Needling it dark. Then I was seeing A melding of shapes in a hot rain: Horses warped on the altering green, Outlandish as double-humped camels or unicorns, Grazing at the margins of a bad monochrome, Beasts of oasis, a better time. Abrading my lid, the small grain burns: Red cinder around which I myself, Horses, planets and spires revolve. Neither tears nor the easing flush Of eyebaths can unseat the speck: It sticks, and it has stuck a week. I wear the present itch for flesh, Blind to what will be and what was. I dream that I am Oedipus. What I want back is what I was Before the bed, before the knife, Before the brooch-pin and the salve Fixed me in this parenthesis; Horses fluent in the wind, A place, a time gone out of mind.

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