All of this had been made possible due to the fact that with every man, or every ten men or every million people killed by the Nazis, the prisoner community only grew stronger and more indifferent to the thought of dying.
A reason for why Plath chose to refer to the Holocaust in her poem would be that she considered the occurrence to be one of the worst acts of violence done by man. Thus she would relate to the Holocaust in her poem to present people with the passion of her feelings at the time.
Nevertheless, with all the brave people who stood strong when others would have run and hide, Plath shows that the Holocaust did indeed affect Jewish people everywhere. The scars of the Holocaust are still visible, according to Plath, with the woman in the poem still recalling, and being haunted by the disaster. The human capacity to remain strong in case of danger is similar to that of an animal, having the instinct to act and thus stay almost untouchable when regarding physical pain. The fact that the woman in the poem starts to hurt only after the danger is over demonstrates that along with the passing of a threat, humans start to realize the gravity of the situation.
Considering that Plath did indeed wrote the poem with reference to herself, at the time that she wrote it, she did not have a very good opinion about her physical appearance, as she tells about a skinny woman with bright-colored skin. Even with the fact that she did not consider herself to being perfect, she had been certain that her mind had been perfectly clear, as a result of winning the fight with herself after the several attempts of suicide which she had in her real life. Plath metaphorically mentions her suicide attempts in the poem but, according to her, the failed tries of taking her own life had...
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