Anne Sexton

alt="anne sexton"
 

Anne Sexton, 1928–1974

Anne Sexton was born Anne Gray Harvey in Newton, Massachusetts, on November 9, 1928. She attended boarding school at Rogers Hall Lowell, Massachusetts, where she first started writing poetry. She attended Garland Junior College for one year and married Alfred Muller Sexton II at age nineteen. Sexton and her husband spent time in San Francisco before moving back to Massachusetts for the birth of their first daughter, Linda Gray Sexton, in 1953.

After her second daughter was born in 1955, Sexton was encouraged by her doctor to pursue an interest in poetry that she had developed in high school. In the fall of 1957, she joined writing groups in Boston that introduced her to many writers such as Maxine KuminRobert Lowell, and Sylvia Plath. She published her first two books, To Bedlam and Part Way Back (1960) and All My Pretty Ones (1962), with Houghton Mifflin.

In 1965, Sexton was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in London. She then went on to win the 1967 Pulitzer Prize in poetry for her third collection, Live or Die (Houghton Mifflin, 1966). In total, Sexton published nine volumes of poetry during her lifetime, including Love Poems (Houghton Mifflin, 1969), The Book of Folly (Houghton Mifflin, 1973) and The Awful Rowing Toward God (Houghton Mifflin, 9175). She also authored several children's books with Maxine Kumin.

Sexton received several major literary prizes including a Guggenheim Fellowship, the 1967 Shelley Memorial Prize, the 1962 Levinson Prize, and the Frost Fellowship to the Bread Loaf Writers Conference. She taught at Boston University and Colgate University, and died on October 4, 1974, in Weston, Massachusetts. Her papers are collected and housed at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin.

Selected Poems by ANNE SEXTON

  1. 45 Mercy Street

    by ANNE SEXTON

    In my dream,
    drilling into the marrow
    of my entire bone,
    my real dream,
    I'm walking up and down Beacon Hill
    searching for a street sign -
    namely MERCY STREET.
    Not there.

    I try the Back Bay.
    Not there.
    Not there.
    And yet I know the number.
    45 Mercy Street.
    I know the stained-glass window
    of the foyer,
    the three flights of the house
    with its parquet floors.
    I know the furniture and
    mother, grandmother, great-grandmother,
    the servants.
    I know the cupboard of Spode
    the boat of ice, solid silver,
    where the butter sits in neat squares
    like strange giant's teeth
    on the big mahogany table.
    I know it well.
    Not there.

    Where did you go?
    45 Mercy Street,
    with great-grandmother
    kneeling in her whale-bone corset
    and praying gently but fiercely
    to the wash basin,
    at five A.M.
    at noon
    dozing in her wiggy rocker,
    grandfather taking a nap in the pantry,
    grandmother pushing the bell for the downstairs maid,
    and Nana rocking Mother with an oversized flower
    on her forehead to cover the curl
    of when she was good and when she was...
    And where she was begat
    and in a generation
    the third she will beget,
    me,
    with the stranger's seed blooming
    into the flower called Horrid.

    I walk in a yellow dress
    and a white pocketbook stuffed with cigarettes,
    enough pills, my wallet, my keys,
    and being twenty-eight, or is it forty-five?
    I walk. I walk.
    I hold matches at street signs
    for it is dark,
    as dark as the leathery dead
    and I have lost my green Ford,
    my house in the suburbs,
    two little kids
    sucked up like pollen by the bee in me
    and a husband
    who has wiped off his eyes
    in order not to see my inside out
    and I am walking and looking
    and this is no dream
    just my oily life
    where the people are alibis
    and the street is unfindable for an
    entire lifetime.

    Pull the shades down -
    I don't care!
    Bolt the door, mercy,
    erase the number,
    rip down the street sign,
    what can it matter,
    what can it matter to this cheapskate
    who wants to own the past
    that went out on a dead ship
    and left me only with paper?

    Not there.

    I open my pocketbook,
    as women do,
    and fish swim back and forth
    between the dollars and the lipstick.
    I pick them out,
    one by one
    and throw them at the street signs,
    and shoot my pocketbook
    into the Charles River.
    Next I pull the dream off
    and slam into the cement wall
    of the clumsy calendar
    I live in,
    my life,
    and its hauled up
    notebooks.

  2. Her Kind

    by ANNE SEXTON

    I have gone out, a possessed witch,
    haunting the black air, braver at night;
    dreaming evil, I have done my hitch
    over the plain houses, light by light:
    lonely thing, twelve-fingered, out of mind.
    A woman like that is not a woman, quite.
    I have been her kind.

    I have found the warm caves in the woods,
    filled them with skillets, carvings, shelves,
    closets, silks, innumerable goods;
    fixed the suppers for the worms and the elves:
    whining, rearranging the disaligned.
    A woman like that is misunderstood.
    I have been her kind.

    I have ridden in your cart, driver,
    waved my nude arms at villages going by,
    learning the last bright routes, survivor
    where your flames still bite my thigh
    and my ribs crack where your wheels wind.
    A woman like that is not ashamed to die.
    I have been her kind.

  3. The Starry Night

    BY ANNE SEXTON

    That does not keep me from having a terrible need of—shall I say the word—religion. Then I go out at night to paint the stars.Vincent Van Gogh in a letter to his brother

    The town does not exist

    except where one black-haired tree slips

    up like a drowned woman into the hot sky.

    The town is silent. The night boils with eleven stars.

    Oh starry starry night! This is how

    I want to die.


    It moves. They are all alive.

    Even the moon bulges in its orange irons

    to push children, like a god, from its eye.

    The old unseen serpent swallows up the stars.

    Oh starry starry night! This is how

    I want to die:


    into that rushing beast of the night,

    sucked up by that great dragon, to split

    from my life with no flag,

    no belly,

    no cry.


  4. Wanting to Die

    by ANNE SEXTON

    Since you ask, most days I cannot remember.
    I walk in my clothing, unmarked by that voyage.
    Then the almost unnameable lust returns.

    Even then I have nothing against life.
    I know well the grass blades you mention,
    the furniture you have placed under the sun.

    But suicides have a special language.
    Like carpenters they want to know which tools.
    They never ask why build.

    Twice I have so simply declared myself,
    have possessed the enemy, eaten the enemy,
    have taken on his craft, his magic.

    In this way, heavy and thoughtful,
    warmer than oil or water,
    I have rested, drooling at the mouth-hole.

    I did not think of my body at needle point.
    Even the cornea and the leftover urine were gone.
    Suicides have already betrayed the body.

    Still-born, they don't always die,
    but dazzled, they can't forget a drug so sweet
    that even children would look on and smile.

    To thrust all that life under your tongue!--
    that, all by itself, becomes a passion.
    Death's a sad Bone; bruised, you'd say,

    and yet she waits for me, year after year,
    to so delicately undo an old wound,
    to empty my breath from its bad prison.

    Balanced there, suicides sometimes meet,
    raging at the fruit, a pumped-up moon,
    leaving the bread they mistook for a kiss,

    leaving the page of the book carelessly open,
    something unsaid, the phone off the hook
    and the love, whatever it was, an infection.

  5. Barefoot

    by ANNE SEXTON

    Loving me with my shows off
    means loving my long brown legs,
    sweet dears, as good as spoons;
    and my feet, those two children
    let out to play naked. Intricate nubs,
    my toes. No longer bound.
    And what's more, see toenails and
    all ten stages, root by root.
    All spirited and wild, this little
    piggy went to market and this little piggy
    stayed. Long brown legs and long brown toes.
    Further up, my darling, the woman
    is calling her secrets, little houses,
    little tongues that tell you.

    There is no one else but us
    in this house on the land spit.
    The sea wears a bell in its navel.
    And I'm your barefoot wench for a
    whole week. Do you care for salami?
    No. You'd rather not have a scotch?
    No. You don't really drink. You do
    drink me. The gulls kill fish,
    crying out like three-year-olds.
    The surf's a narcotic, calling out,
    I am, I am, I am
    all night long. Barefoot,
    I drum up and down your back.
    In the morning I run from door to door
    of the cabin playing chase me.
    Now you grab me by the ankles.
    Now you work your way up the legs
    and come to pierce me at my hunger mark

  6. Cinderella

    by ANNE SEXTON

    You always read about it:
    the plumber with the twelve children
    who wins the Irish Sweepstakes.
    From toilets to riches.
    That story.
    Or the nursemaid,
    some luscious sweet from Denmark
    who captures the oldest son's heart.
    from diapers to Dior.
    That story.
    Or a milkman who serves the wealthy,
    eggs, cream, butter, yogurt, milk,
    the white truck like an ambulance
    who goes into real estate
    and makes a pile.
    From homogenized to martinis at lunch.
    Or the charwoman
    who is on the bus when it cracks up
    and collects enough from the insurance.
    From mops to Bonwit Teller.
    That story.
    Once
    the wife of a rich man was on her deathbed
    and she said to her daughter Cinderella:
    Be devout. Be good. Then I will smile
    down from heaven in the seam of a cloud.
    The man took another wife who had
    two daughters, pretty enough
    but with hearts like blackjacks.
    Cinderella was their maid.
    She slept on the sooty hearth each night
    and walked around looking like Al Jolson.
    Her father brought presents home from town,
    jewels and gowns for the other women
    but the twig of a tree for Cinderella.
    She planted that twig on her mother's grave
    and it grew to a tree where a white dove sat.
    Whenever she wished for anything the dove
    would drop it like an egg upon the ground.
    The bird is important, my dears, so heed him.
    Next came the ball, as you all know.
    It was a marriage market.
    The prince was looking for a wife.
    All but Cinderella were preparing
    and gussying up for the event.
    Cinderella begged to go too.
    Her stepmother threw a dish of lentils
    into the cinders and said: Pick them
    up in an hour and you shall go.
    The white dove brought all his friends;
    all the warm wings of the fatherland came,
    and picked up the lentils in a jiffy.
    No, Cinderella, said the stepmother,
    you have no clothes and cannot dance.
    That's the way with stepmothers.
    Cinderella went to the tree at the grave
    and cried forth like a gospel singer:
    Mama! Mama! My turtledove,
    send me to the prince's ball!
    The bird dropped down a golden dress
    and delicate little slippers.
    Rather a large package for a simple bird.
    So she went. Which is no surprise.
    Her stepmother and sisters didn't
    recognize her without her cinder face
    and the prince took her hand on the spot
    and danced with no other the whole day.
    As nightfall came she thought she'd better
    get home. The prince walked her home
    and she disappeared into the pigeon house
    and although the prince took an axe and broke
    it open she was gone. Back to her cinders.
    These events repeated themselves for three days.
    However on the third day the prince
    covered the palace steps with cobbler's wax
    and Cinderella's gold shoe stuck upon it.
    Now he would find whom the shoe fit
    and find his strange dancing girl for keeps.
    He went to their house and the two sisters
    were delighted because they had lovely feet.
    The eldest went into a room to try the slipper on
    but her big toe got in the way so she simply
    sliced it off and put on the slipper.
    The prince rode away with her until the white dove
    told him to look at the blood pouring forth.
    That is the way with amputations.
    They just don't heal up like a wish.
    The other sister cut off her heel
    but the blood told as blood will.
    The prince was getting tired.
    He began to feel like a shoe salesman.
    But he gave it one last try.
    This time Cinderella fit into the shoe
    like a love letter into its envelope.
    At the wedding ceremony
    the two sisters came to curry favor
    and the white dove pecked their eyes out.
    Two hollow spots were left
    like soup spoons.
    Cinderella and the prince
    lived, they say, happily ever after,
    like two dolls in a museum case
    never bothered by diapers or dust,
    never arguing over the timing of an egg,
    never telling the same story twice,
    never getting a middle-aged spread,
    their darling smiles pasted on for eternity.
    Regular Bobbsey Twins.
    That story.

  7. Song For A Lady

    by ANNE SEXTON

    On the day of breasts and small hips
    the window pocked with bad rain,
    rain coming on like a minister,
    we coupled, so sane and insane.
    We lay like spoons while the sinister
    rain dropped like flies on our lips
    and our glad eyes and our small hips.

    "The room is so cold with rain," you said
    and you, feminine you, with your flower
    said novenas to my ankles and elbows.
    You are a national product and power.
    Oh my swan, my drudge, my dear wooly rose,
    even a notary would notarize our bed
    as you knead me and I rise like bread.

  8. A Curse Against Elegies

    by ANNE SEXTON

    Oh, love, why do we argue like this?
    I am tired of all your pious talk.
    Also, I am tired of all the dead.
    They refuse to listen,
    so leave them alone.
    Take your foot out of the graveyard,
    they are busy being dead.

    Everyone was always to blame:
    the last empty fifth of booze,
    the rusty nails and chicken feathers
    that stuck in the mud on the back doorstep,
    the worms that lived under the cat’s ear
    and the thin-lipped preacher
    who refused to call
    except once on a flea-ridden day
    when he came scuffing in through the yard
    looking for a scapegoat.
    I hid in the kitchen under the ragbag.

    I refuse to remember the dead.
    And the dead are bored with the whole thing.
    But you — you go ahead,
    go on, go on back down
    into the graveyard,
    lie down where you think their faces are;
    talk back to your old bad dreams.

  9. Again and Again and Again

    by ANNE SEXTON

    You said the anger would come back
    just as the love did.

    I have a black look I do not
    like. It is a mask I try on.
    I migrate toward it and its frog
    sits on my lips and defecates.
    It is old. It is also a pauper.
    I have tried to keep it on a diet.
    I give it no unction.

    There is a good look that I wear
    like a blood clot. I have
    sewn it over my left breast.
    I have made a vocation of it.
    Lust has taken plant in it
    and I have placed you and your
    child at its milk tip.

    Oh the blackness is murderous
    and the milk tip is brimming
    and each machine is working
    and I will kiss you when
    I cut up one dozen new men
    and you will die somewhat,
    again and again.

  10. Menstruation at Forty

    by ANNE SEXTON

    I was thinking of a son.
    The womb is not a clock
    nor a bell tolling,
    but in the eleventh month of its life
    I feel the November
    of the body as well as of the calendar.
    In two days it will be my birthday
    and as always the earth is done with its harvest.
    This time I hunt for death,
    the night I lean toward,
    the night I want.
    Well then–
    It was in the womb all along.

    I was thinking of a son …
    You! The never acquired,
    the never seeded or unfastened,
    you of the genitals I feared,
    the stalk and the puppy’s breath.
    Will I give you my eyes or his?
    Will you be the David or the Susan?
    (Those two names I picked and listened for.)
    Can you be the man your fathers are–
    the leg muscles from Michelangelo,
    hands from Yugoslavia
    somewhere the peasant, Slavic and determined,
    somewhere the survivor bulging with life–
    and could it still be possible,
    all this with Susan’s eyes?

    All this without you–
    two days gone in blood.
    I myself will die without baptism,
    a third daughter they didn’t bother.
    My death will come on my name day.
    What’s wrong with the name day?
    It’s only an angel of the sun.
    Woman,
    weaving a web over your own,
    a thin and tangled poison.
    Scorpio,
    bad spider–
    die!

    My death from the wrists,
    two name tags,
    blood worn like a corsage
    to bloom
    one on the left and one on the right —
    It’s a warm room,
    the place of the blood.
    Leave the door open on its hinges!

    Two days for your death
    and two days until mine.

    Love! That red disease–
    year after year, David, you would make me wild!
    David! Susan! David! David!
    full and disheveled, hissing into the night,
    never growing old,
    waiting always for you on the porch …
    year after year,
    my carrot, my cabbage,
    I would have possessed you before all women,
    calling your name,
    calling you mine.

  11. Love Letter Written In A Burning Building

    by ANNE SEXTON

    I am in a crate, the crate that was ours,
    full of white shirts and salad greens,
    the icebox knocking at our delectable knocks,
    and I wore movies in my eyes,
    and you wore eggs in your tunnel,
    and we played sheets, sheets, sheets
    all day, even in the bathtub like lunatics.
    But today I set the bed afire
    and smoke is filling the room,
    it is getting hot enough for the walls to melt,
    and the icebox, a gluey white tooth.

    I have on a mask in order to write my last words,
    and they are just for you, and I will place them
    in the icebox saved for vodka and tomatoes,
    and perhaps they will last.
    The dog will not.  Her spots will fall off.
    The old letters will melt into a black bee.
    The night gowns are already shredding
    into paper, the yellow, the red, the purple.
    The bed — well, the sheets have turned to gold —
    hard, hard gold, and the mattress
    is being kissed into a stone.

    As for me, my dearest Foxxy,
    my poems to you may or may not reach the icebox
    and its hopeful eternity,
    for isn’t yours enough?
    The one where you name
    my name right out in P.R.?
    If my toes weren’t yielding to pitch
    I’d tell the whole story —
    not just the sheet story
    but the belly-button story,
    the pried-eyelid story,
    the whiskey-sour-of-the-nipple story —
    and shovel back our love where it belonged.

    Despite my asbestos gloves,
    the cough is filling me with black and a red powder seeps through my
    veins,
    our little crate goes down so publicly
    and without meaning it, you see, meaning a solo act,
    a cremation of the love,
    but instead we seem to be going down right in the middle of a Russian
    street,
    the flames making the sound of
    the horse being beaten and beaten,
    the whip is adoring its human triumph
    while the flies wait, blow by blow,
    straight from United Fruit, Inc.

  12. More Than Myself

    by ANNE SEXTON

    Not that it was beautiful,
    but that, in the end, there was
    a certain sense of order there;
    something worth learning
    in that narrow diary of my mind,
    in the commonplaces of the asylum
    where the cracked mirror
    or my own selfish death
    outstared me . . .
    I tapped my own head;
    it was glass, an inverted bowl.
    It’s small thing
    to rage inside your own bowl.
    At first it was private.
    Then it was more than myself.

  13. The Fury Of Sunsets

    by ANNE SEXTON

    Something
    cold is in the air,
    an aura of ice
    and phlegm.
    All day I’ve built
    a lifetime and now
    the sun sinks to
    undo it.
    The horizon bleeds
    and sucks its thumb.
    The little red thumb
    goes out of sight.
    And I wonder about
    this lifetime with myself,
    this dream I’m living.
    I could eat the sky
    like an apple
    but I’d rather
    ask the first star:
    why am I here?
    why do I live in this house?
    who’s responsible?
    eh?

  14. Red Roses

    by ANNE SEXTON

    Tommy is three and when he’s bad
    his mother dances with him.
    She puts on the record,
    “Red Roses for a Blue Lady”
    and throws him across the room.
    Mind you,
    she never laid a hand on him.
    He gets red roses in different places,
    the head, that time he was as sleepy as a river,
    the back, that time he was a broken scarecrow,
    the arm like a diamond had bitten it,
    the leg, twisted like a licorice stick,
    all the dance they did together,
    Blue Lady and Tommy.
    You fell, she said, just remember you fell.
    I fell, is all he told the doctors
    in the big hospital.  A nice lady came
    and asked him questions but because
    he didn’t want to be sent away he said, I fell.
    He never said anything else although he could talk fine.
    He never told about the music
    or how she’d sing and shout
    holding him up and throwing him.

    He pretends he is her ball.
    He tries to fold up and bounce
    but he squashes like fruit.
    For he loves Blue Lady and the spots
    of red roses he gives her.

 
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