Two Campers in Cloud Country
Two Campers in Cloud Country - context Summary
Trip to Canada, 1956
Written from Sylvia Plath’s travels in Canada with Ted Hughes, the poem records a wilderness escape that foregrounds vast landscape and human smallness. Plath contrasts tame, cultivated Boston with an untamed ‘‘last frontier’ where clouds, rocks, and color overwhelm domestic concerns. The poem frames solitude and physical removal as a reset: ordinary tools, history, and social roles momentarily lose meaning, leaving the speakers exposed, numbed, and intimately attentive to elemental surroundings.
Read Complete Analyses(Rock Lake, Canada) In this country there is neither measure nor balance To redress the dominance of rocks and woods, The passage, say, of these man-shaming clouds. No gesture of yours or mine could catch their attention, No word make them carry water or fire the kindling Like local trolls in the spell of a superior being. Well, one wearies of the Public Gardens: one wants a vacation Where trees and clouds and animals pay no notice; Away from the labeled elms, the tame tea-roses. It took three days driving north to find a cloud The polite skies over Boston couldn't possibly accommodate. Here on the last frontier of the big, brash spirit The horizons are too far off to be chummy as uncles; The colors assert themselves with a sort of vengeance. Each day concludes in a huge splurge of vermilions And night arrives in one gigantic step. It is comfortable, for a change, to mean so little. These rocks offer no purchase to herbage or people: They are conceiving a dynasty of perfect cold. In a month we'll wonder what plates and forks are for. I lean to you, numb as a fossil. Tell me I'm here. The Pilgrims and Indians might never have happened. Planets pulse in the lake like bright amoebas; The pines blot our voices up in their lightest sighs. Around our tent the old simplicities sough Sleepily as Lethe, trying to get in. We'll wake blank-brained as water in the dawn.
 
					
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