A Conceptual Reading on Suffering in the Poems of St. John of the Cross and Sylvia Plath
Journal: International Journal of Science and Research (IJSR) (Vol.11, No. 7)Publication Date: 2022-07-05
Authors : Lalju P. J.;
Page : 1530-1532
Keywords : Suffering; otherworldliness; spiritual; encounter; misery;
Abstract
This study is planned to uncover the idea of experiencing in the sonnets of St. John of the cross and Sylvia Plath's importance making accounts inside her life's jigsaw of parts. Plath was picked as the subject which is as it should be: she is generally viewed as one of the most known and persuasive figures in 20th century Anglo-American culture and writing. Notwithstanding the way that she just had one book distributed. In the course of her life, she distributed "The Colossus," an assortment of sonnets, and "The Bell Jar," a novel, just as an abundance of short stories, sonnets, and journal sections. Her status as a strong and inventive voice was established by her letters, which were distributed after her passing. Additionally, St. John of the cross' Dark Night of the Soul alludes to a period in an individual's otherworldly life that is set apart by an emergency of confidence or profound worries around one's relationship with God, and which contains inborn highlights of profound development. This examination looks at how individuals who are encountering snapshots of uneasiness and misery don't view them as disarranged.
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Last modified: 2022-09-07 15:19:11