Topic > "The Applicant" by Sylvia Sylviah by Sylvia Plath

It's as if the speaker is saying his last words to sell this "woman" short. “It works, there's nothing wrong. You've got a hole, it's a You have an eye, it's an image, my boy, it's your last resort understand to the reader that the speaker is actually talking about a woman and not an object he is trying to sell, because human beings tend to marry human beings and not objects an image” represents the expectations of married women and how they are there to serve their husbands. Here we finally concluded that the speaker is definitely talking to a male, and usually men are married to a woman is clarified by attributing to “it” feminine characteristics such as “stop crying”, saying that she knows how to cook and sew and talks a lot and asks at the beginning if she has rubber breasts. Although the speaker still refers to what we assume as a woman, as an “it,” metaphorically objectifying women as not even