Sylvia Plath alleged Ted Hughes beat her two days before she miscarried their second child and that Hughes wanted her dead, unpublished letters reveal. The two accusations are among explosive claims in unseen correspondence written in the bitter aftermath of one of literature's most famous and destructive marriages.
Written between 18 February 1960 and 4 February 1963, a week before her death, the letters cover a period in Plath's life that has remained elusive to readers and scholars alike. While the American writer, who was living in England during that time, was a prolific letter writer and had kept detailed journals since the age of 11, after her death Hughes said his wife's journals from this time were lost, including the last volume, which he said he destroyed to protect their children, Frieda and Nicholas.