Poem - "Polly's Tree" by Sylvia Plath

"Polly's Tree" 
by Sylvia Plath


A dream tree, Polly's tree:


a thicket of sticks,

each speckled twig


ending in a thin-paned

leaf unlike any

other on it



or in a ghost flower

flat as paper and

of a color



vaporish as frost-breath,

more finical than

any silk fan



the Chinese ladies use

to stir robin's egg

air. The silver-



haired seed of the milkweed

comes to roost there, frail

as the halo



rayed round a candle flame,

a will-o'-the-wisp

nimbus, or puff



of cloud-stuff, tipping her

queer candelabrum.

Palely lit by



snuff-ruffed dandelions,

white daisy wheels and

a tiger faced



pansy, it glows. O it's

no family tree,

Polly's tree, nor



a tree of heaven, though

it marry quartz-flake,

feather and rose.



It sprang from her pillow

whole as a cobweb

ribbed like a hand,



a dream tree. Polly's tree

wears a valentine

arc of tear-pearled



bleeding hearts on its sleeve

and, crowning it, one

blue larkspur star.