EK Tan
484011617
American Poetry
Two Views of a Cavader Room
The poem Two Views of a Cavader Room discusses on the
controversy of death and love. The poem is divided into two parts. The first
part resembles a scene in Sylvia Plath's Novel The Bell Jar. The poem pictures a
female visitor whom is in a cavader observing the dissection of four bodies. The
bodies are the depictions of death as an unpleasant element, for the four dead
bodies are "black as burnt turkey / Already half unstrung." Not only are the
bodies not intact, "vinegary fume / Of the death vats" which is irritating smell
soaked throughout the bodies. While the students in the laboratory (described as
white-smocked boys) start with their work of dissection, the female visitor
inspects the head of a cavader, the head was "caved in;" thus, she could not
make out anything from there. All she can describe is that the head is a "rubble
of skull plates and old leather. From the head she perceives death as a skull
without a face. Even the string used to hold the head and body together is
described as "sallow," having a pale, lifeless color, which implies death.
As the poem moves to the second stanza, the visitor's
attention deviates to the jars in the room. The jars contain fetuses having an
absolute different image as compared to the four dead bodies. The description of
fetuses as "snail-nosed babies " portrays a sense of fantasy. Though the fetuses
are dead beings, they seem to be able to "moon and glow" in the still, enclosed
room; this image and that of the dead bodies coincide to present Two Views of a
Cavader Room.
The last line in the stanza has "he" giving the visitor
"the cut-out heart" of one of the body. "He" according to the novel of Sylvia
Plath should be the medical student boyfriend of the female visitor. This action
of "he" implies the presentation of a dead by "real" heart to the visitor. The
"comparison of the heart as "a cracked heirloom" further enhances the importance
of the heart, in a lifeless and horrifying atmosphere.
The second part of the poem has the attention set on a
painting by Brueghel, named The Triumph of Death. The painting is a "panorama of
smoke and slaughter." However, the speaker's focus is on a pair of lovers, whom
are depicted in the right lower corner of the painting. Seemingly the lovers are
not at all affected by the havoc surrounding, they are described as "Two people
only are blind to the carrion army." Death is not a threat at all, for love is
much more puissant. The exploration of the body as compared to the first part of
the poem is much tender. The man "sings in the direction / Of her bare
shoulder"; the woman, on the other hand, is "Fingering a leaflet of music, over
him." Death is the explorer in the first part of the poem, while love is the one
in the second part. Even though Death has their song shadowed, they will not be
able to notice it with the presence of love. Music, which has a connotation
meaning of harmony, faces the corruption of Death whom too holds a fiddle in his
hand. Nonetheless, Death here is again depicted using the image of a head.
The speaker then comments on the lovers in the last line of this stanza that
"These Flemish lovers flourish; not for long." The poem does not end here, it
follows on with the contradiction of the speaker's own words in the previous
line. The speaker says that the desolated "little country" which implies the
world created by the lovers, however, will be spared for it's "Foolish,
delicate" existence "in the lower right hand corner" of the painting. This is
because of the idea of the power of art brought out by the speaker. It is the
power of art, besides Love, that protects the lovers from the threat of death;
the "little country" is "stalled in paint." Obviously, the title of the
painting, The Triumph of Death is ironic.
The juxtaposition of the two descriptions relevantly reflects each other. The
lover in the painting could actually be compared to the visitor and the "he" who
hands the "true" heart to her. Both present a pleasant and warm image of love
contradicting death, within the encroachment of death. If the painting is the
source of preservation for "the little country," Sylvia Plath's poem should be
the preservation for the affectionate gesture of love seen in the horrifying
Cavader room. In conclusion, we can the parts of the poem are actually the Two
Views of a Cavader Room.
The poem is formless, yet in certain order. There are
both two stanzas in each part of the poem; nine lines in the first stanza, eight
line in the second. Not only there is no rhyme in the poem, the length of each
line is not in specific order.
Sylvia Plath is successful in stressing the strength of
love. The part on the preservation of the essence of morality reminds me of
Keat's Ode to a Grecian Urn.
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