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  1. Sylvia Plath wrote "Lady Lazarus" in 1962, during a creative burst of energy in the months before her death by suicide in 1963. The poem alludes to the biblical story of Lazarus, whom Jesus famously resurrected.

  2. Summary. ‘Lady Lazarus’ by Sylvia Plath ( Bio | Poems) is an exceptional piece describing a speaker who bears the burden of failed suicidal trials and discovers her new self at the last attempt. The poem begins directly with the main theme of this piece that is suicidal thoughts and death.

  3. Summary. "Lady Lazarus" is a poem commonly understood to be about suicide. It is narrated by a woman, and mostly addressed to an unspecified person. The narrator begins by saying she has "done it again." Every ten years, she manages to commit this unnamed act.

  4. Sylvia Plath wrote “Lady Lazarus” in 1962, during an intense burst of creative energy that shortly preceded her death by suicide, early in 1963. This creative burst led to the composition of many of Plath’s most famous poems, which were collected in the posthumous volume of 1965, Ariel.

  5. “Lady Lazarus” is one of Sylvia Plath’s most famous poems. The poem contains 28 stanzas, all of which ruminate on death, and this study guide contains multiple references to the Holocaust, violent death, and suicide.

  6. Apr 19, 2024 · Summary. The poem “Lady Lazarus” by Sylvia Plath is a powerful and haunting exploration of death, rebirth, and the endurance of suffering. The poem is narrated by a woman who has experienced multiple near-death experiences and resurrections, and is written in a dramatic monologue style.

  7. Mar 11, 2019 · Sylvia Plath wrote ‘Lady Lazarus’ in October 1962, only a few months before her suicide, and the poem is shot through with references to her previous suicide attempts. (Plath would kill herself in February 1963, in a London apartment she had decided to rent because W. B. Yeats had once lived there.

  8. Lady Lazarus. By Sylvia Plath. I have done it again. One year in every ten. I manage it—— A sort of walking miracle, my skin. Bright as a Nazi lampshade, My right foot. A paperweight, My face a featureless, fine. Jew linen. Peel off the napkin. O my enemy. Do I terrify?—— The nose, the eye pits, the full set of teeth? The sour breath.

  9. Analysis: “Lady Lazarus”. Throughout “Lady Lazarus,” the speaker describes her experiences with death and resurrection with a tone of cynical disdain. The title is a reference to the New Testament story of Lazarus, a dead man on whom Jesus performed a miracle by bringing him back to life.

  10. “Lady Lazarus” is an extraordinarily bitter dramatic monologue in twenty-eight tercets. The title ironically identifies a sort of human oxymoron, a female Lazarus—not the biblical male.