The poem delves into the paradoxes of bullfighting, a practice steeped in tradition and ritual, but also inherently violent and brutal. Plath's mention of "ceremony" and "routine" reveals the human attempt to give order and formality to the act of killing. The picador, "obese, dark-faced," is "rich" in "yellows, tassels, pompons, braid," adding a layer of lavish presentation to the grim act he performs. Yet, Plath does not shy away from pointing out the flaws in the execution: "the ritual death each time botched among dropped capes, ill-judged stabs." In terms of structure, the poem employs a style that mimics the unfolding events in a bullfight. The lines are structured in a way that reflects the tension and drama of the act. Long phrases are punctuated by short, impactful lines, creating a rhythmic tension akin to the dance of the bullfighter and the bull. This structure also serves to reinforce the poem's thematic tensions between the ceremonial and the chaotic, the beautiful and the grotesque. The poem reaches a climax in the lines "Instinct for art began with the bull's horn lofting in the mob's / Hush a lumped man-shape." Here, the bullfight transcends its earthbound brutality to become something approaching art, a spectacle captivating enough to hush a rowdy crowd. The line "The whole act formal, fluent as a dance" encapsulates this paradox, as does the phrase "Blood faultlessly broached redeemed the sullied air, the earth's grossness." In this way, "The Goring" explores the complex interplay between beauty and brutality, ritual and instinct, art and violence. Plath captures the dichotomies inherent in bullfighting-a sport that strives for grace and artistic expression, even as it culminates in the crude reality of death. And so, we are left to ponder the unsettling question: Can something be both brutal and beautiful? Plath seems to suggest that it can, but at a cost that is both compelling and disturbing to confront. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...EBB by EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY OF AN ORCHARD by KATHARINE TYNAN PEARLS OF THE FAITH: 9. AL-HATHIM by EDWIN ARNOLD THE QUEEN IN FRANCE; AN ANCIENT SCOTTISH BALLAD by WILLIAM EDMONSTOUNE AYTOUN THE CONTRAST; THE STORMY SIDE by LEVI BISHOP J.K.; SOLDIER OF FORTUNE by BERTON BRALEY GLENDEN'S DREAM by EMILY JANE BRONTE THE THIRD OF NOVEMBER, 1861 by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT A POETICAL VERSION OF A LETTER, FROM THE EARL OF ESSEX TO SOUTHAMPTON by JOHN BYROM |