Soliloquy of the Solipsist
Soliloquy of the Solipsist - meaning Summary
Solipsism and Imagined Control
The poem presents a speaker who claims solitary, godlike control over perception and the existence of others. Through repeated I-statements she describes shrinking houses, dimming colors and the power to make people "die" by blinking, turning intimacy into acts of creation or dismissal. The tone mixes wry omnipotence with isolation, probing whether others are independent or products of a lonely mind. This echoes Plathian themes of control and inner turmoil.
Read Complete AnalysesI? I walk alone; The midnight street Spins itself from under my feet; When my eyes shut These dreaming houses all snuff out; Through a whim of mine Over gables the moon's celestial onion Hangs high. I Make houses shrink And trees diminish By going far; my look's leash Dangles the puppet-people Who, unaware how they dwindle, Laugh, kiss, get drunk, Nor guess that if I choose to blink They die. I When in good humor, Give grass its green Blazon sky blue, and endow the sun With gold; Yet, in my wintriest moods, I hold Absolute power To boycott any color and forbid any flower To be. I Know you appear Vivid at my side, Denying you sprang out of my head, Claiming you feel Love fiery enough to prove flesh real, Though it's quite clear All you beauty, all your wit, is a gift, my dear, From me.
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