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On the morning of Monday, 25 May 1964, following a ‘very pleasant, well organised and enjoyable’ flight, 38 Australian police stepped from their specially chartered Qantas Boeing 707, City of Brisbane, onto the tarmac at Nicosia International Airport, in the capital of Cyprus. It had been a long flight, ‘the longest [day] of my life’, wrote First Constable John Owens. Their landing had been delayed while the pilot ‘flew the length of the island several times’ waiting for the mist to lift. Finally on the ground at 7am, Owens recalled, ‘the Cyprus air was noticeably hot and moist – a marked contrast to the early morning frosts of Canberra, which we had left 24 hours before’.
Elaine Feinstein provides an expert and first-hand account of Plath’s last months in London, which spans her search for a flat in November of 1962 and her final move to the city in December of that year. This is the period during which Plath wrote her final poems, and Feinstein’s biography of Plath’s time in London help us to understand better the context out of which these poems emerged.
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