The Woodberry Poetry Room, located in Lamont Library at Harvard, holds typescripts of five poems by Sylvia Plath. The poems are all "addressed" 337 Elm Street in the top right corner. This was her residence at Northampton, Mass. from 1957-1958.
The poems are:
"The Disquieting Muses"
"Poem for Paul Klee's 'Perseus: The Triumph of Wit Over Suffering'"
"The Earthenware Head"
"Departure of the Ghost"
"On the Decline of Oracles"
It is possible these are the typescripts for a reading she gave on 13 June 1958 at the Woodberry Poetry Room, but one of the poems, "Poem for Paul Klee's 'Perseus: The Triumph of Wit Over Suffering'" was not read at the time. (It was also not read on her second reading there on 22 February 1959.) I think these many be somehow connected to the poems she read for Lee Anderson in April 1958, as all five were read at that time.
"The Disquieting Muses" has at least one typographical error, but I have not yet closely examined the rest.
The poems are:
"The Disquieting Muses"
"Poem for Paul Klee's 'Perseus: The Triumph of Wit Over Suffering'"
"The Earthenware Head"
"Departure of the Ghost"
"On the Decline of Oracles"
It is possible these are the typescripts for a reading she gave on 13 June 1958 at the Woodberry Poetry Room, but one of the poems, "Poem for Paul Klee's 'Perseus: The Triumph of Wit Over Suffering'" was not read at the time. (It was also not read on her second reading there on 22 February 1959.) I think these many be somehow connected to the poems she read for Lee Anderson in April 1958, as all five were read at that time.
"The Disquieting Muses" has at least one typographical error, but I have not yet closely examined the rest.