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	<title>Poems About &#187; poetical works of anne sexton</title>
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		<title>Poem Cripples And Other Stories by anne sexton</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 03 Sep 2010 22:40:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poems c]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetical works of anne sexton]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[My doctor, the comedianI called you every timeand made you laugh yourselfwhen I wrote this silly rhyme&#8230;
     Each time I give [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>My doctor, the comedian<br />I called you every time<br />and made you laugh yourself<br />when I wrote this silly rhyme&#8230;</p>
<p>     Each time I give lectures<br />     or gather in the grants<br />     you send me off to boarding school<br />     in training pants.</p>
<p>God damn it, father-doctor,<br />I&#8217;m really thirty-six.<br />I see dead rats in the toilet.<br />I&#8217;m one of the lunatics.</p>
<p>Disgusted, mother put me<br />on the potty. She was good at this.<br />My father was fat on scotch.<br />It leaked from every orifice.</p>
<p>Oh the enemas of childhood,<br />reeking of outhouses and shame!<br />Yet you rock me in your arms<br />and whisper my nickname.</p>
<p>Or else you hold my hand<br />and teach me love too late.<br />And that&#8217;s the hand of the arm<br />they tried to amputate.</p>
<p>Though I was almost seven<br />I was an awful brat.<br />I put it in the Easy Wringer.<br />It came out nice and flat.</p>
<p>I was an instant cripple<br />from my finger to my shoulder.<br />The laundress wept and swooned.<br />My mother had to h old her.</p>
<p>I know I was a cripple.<br />Of course, I&#8217;d known it from the start.<br />My father took the crowbar<br />and broke the wringer&#8217;s heart.</p>
<p>The surgeons shook their heads.<br />They really didn&#8217;t know&#8211;<br />Would the cripple inside of me<br />be a cripple that would show?</p>
<p>My father was a perfect man,<br />clean and rich and fat.<br />My mother was a brilliant thing.<br />She was good at that.</p>
<p>You hold me in your arms.<br />How strange that you&#8217;re so tender!<br />Child-woman that I am,<br />you think that you can mend her.</p>
<p>As for the arm,<br />unfortunately it grew.<br />Though mother said a withered arm<br />would put me in Who&#8217;s Who.</p>
<p>For years she has described it.<br />She sang it like a hymn.<br />By then she loved the shrunken thing,<br />my little withered limb.</p>
<p>My father&#8217;s cells clicked each night,<br />intent on making money.<br />And as for my cells, they brooded,<br />little queens, on honey.</p>
<p>Oh boys too, as a matter of fact,<br />and cigarettes and cars.<br />Mother frowned at my w asted life.<br />My father smoked cigars.</p>
<p>My cheeks blossomed with maggots.<br />I picked at them like pearls.<br />I covered them with pancake.<br />I wound my hair in curls.</p>
<p>My father didn&#8217;t know me<br />but you kiss me in my fever.<br />My mother knew me twice<br />and then I had to leave her.</p>
<p>But those are just two stories<br />and I have more to tell<br />from the outhouse, the greenhouse<br />where you draw me out of hell.</p>
<p>Father, I am thirty-six,<br />yet I lie here in your crib.<br />I&#8217;m getting born again, Adam,<br />as you prod me with your rib.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-c/" title="poems c" rel="tag">poems c</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem Red Roses by anne sexton</title>
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		<comments>http://www.poemsabout.org/red-roses-anne-sexton/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Sep 2010 00:40:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[famous poems about rose]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Tommy is three and when he&#8217;s badhis mother dances with him.She puts on the record,&#8220;Red Roses for a Blue Lady&#8221;and throws him across the room.Mind [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tommy is three and when he&#8217;s bad<br />his mother dances with him.<br />She puts on the record,<br />&#8220;Red Roses for a Blue Lady&#8221;<br />and throws him across the room.<br />Mind you,<br />she never laid a hand on him.<br />He gets red roses in different places,<br />the head, that time he was as sleepy as a river,<br />the back, that time he was a broken scarecrow,<br />the arm like a diamond had bitten it,<br />the leg, twisted like a licorice stick,<br />all the dance they did together,<br />Blue Lady and Tommy.<br />You fell, she said, just remember you fell.<br />I fell, is all he told the doctors<br />in the big hospital.  A nice lady came<br />and asked him questions but because<br />he didn&#8217;t want to be sent away he said, I fell.<br />He never said anything else although he could talk fine.<br />He never told about the music<br />or how she&#8217;d sing and shout<br />holding him up and throwing him.</p>
<p>He pretends he is her ball.<br />He tries to fold up and bounce<br />but he squashes like fruit.<br />For he loves Blue Lady and the spots<br />of red  roses he gives her</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems-about-rose/" title="famous poems about rose" rel="tag">famous poems about rose</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-r/" title="poems r" rel="tag">poems r</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem The Break Away by anne sexton</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Aug 2010 03:56:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Your daisies have comeon the day of my divorce:the courtroom a cement box,a gas chamber for the infectious Jew in meand a perhaps land, a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Your daisies have come<br />on the day of my divorce:<br />the courtroom a cement box,<br />a gas chamber for the infectious Jew in me<br />and a perhaps land, a possibly promised land<br />for the Jew in me,<br />but still a betrayal room for the till-death-do-us—<br />and yet a death, as in the unlocking of scissors<br />that makes the now separate parts useless,<br />even to cut each other up as we did yearly<br />under the crayoned-in sun.<br />The courtroom keeps squashing our lives as they break<br />into two cans ready for recycling,<br />flattened tin humans<br />and a tin law,<br />even for my twenty-five years of hanging on<br />by my teeth as I once saw at Ringling Brothers.<br />The gray room:<br />Judge, lawyer, witness<br />and me and invisible Skeezix,<br />and all the other torn<br />enduring the bewilderments<br />of their division.</p>
<p>Your daisies have come<br />on the day of my divorce.<br />They arrive like round yellow fish,<br />sucking with love at the coral of our love.<br />Yet they wait,<br />in their short time,<br />like li ttle utero half-borns,<br />half killed, thin and bone soft.<br />They breathe the air that stands<br />for twenty-five illicit days,<br />the sun crawling inside the sheets,<br />the moon spinning like a tornado<br />in the washbowl,<br />and we orchestrated them both,<br />calling ourselves TWO CAMP DIRECTORS.<br />There was a song, our song on your cassette,<br />that played over and over<br />and baptised the prodigals.<br />It spoke the unspeakable,<br />as the rain will on an attic roof,<br />letting the animal join its soul<br />as we kneeled before a miracle&#8211;<br />forgetting its knife.</p>
<p>The daisies confer<br />in the old-married kitchen<br />papered with blue and green chefs<br />who call out pies, cookies, yummy,<br />at the charcoal and cigarette smoke<br />they wear like a yellowy salve.<br />The daisies absorb it all&#8211;<br />the twenty-five-year-old sanctioned love<br />(If one could call such handfuls of fists<br />and immobile arms that!)<br />and on this day my world rips itself up<br />while the country unfastens along<br />with its perjurin g king and his court.<br />It unfastens into an abortion of belief,<br />as in me&#8211;<br />the legal rift&#8211;<br />as on might do with the daisies<br />but does not<br />for they stand for a love<br />undergoihng open heart surgery<br />that might take<br />if one prayed tough enough.<br />And yet I demand,<br />even in prayer,<br />that I am not a thief,<br />a mugger of need,<br />and that your heart survive<br />on its own,<br />belonging only to itself,<br />whole, entirely whole,<br />and workable<br />in its dark cavern under your ribs.</p>
<p>I pray it will know truth,<br />if truth catches in its cup<br />and yet I pray, as a child would,<br />that the surgery take.</p>
<p>I dream it is taking.<br />Next I dream the love is swallowing itself.<br />Next I dream the love is made of glass,<br />glass coming through the telephone<br />that is breaking slowly,<br />day by day, into my ear.<br />Next I dream that I put on the love<br />like a lifejacket and we float,<br />jacket and I,<br />we bounce on that priest-blue.<br />We are as light as a cat&#8217;s ear<br />and it is saf e,<br />safe far too long!<br />And I awaken quickly and go to the opposite window<br />and peer down at the moon in the pond<br />and know that beauty has walked over my head,<br />into this bedroom and out,<br />flowing out through the window screen,<br />dropping deep into the water<br />to hide.</p>
<p>I will observe the daisies<br />fade and dry up<br />wuntil they become flour,<br />snowing themselves onto the table<br />beside the drone of the refrigerator,<br />beside the radio playing Frankie<br />(as often as FM will allow)<br />snowing lightly, a tremor sinking from the ceiling&#8211;<br />as twenty-five years split from my side<br />like a growth that I sliced off like a melanoma.</p>
<p>It is six P.M. as I water these tiny weeds<br />and their little half-life,<br />their numbered days<br />that raged like a secret radio,<br />recalling love that I picked up innocently,<br />yet guiltily,<br />as my five-year-old daughter<br />picked gum off the sidewalk<br />and it became suddenly an elastic miracle.</p>
<p>For me it was love found<br />like a diamon d<br />where carrots grow&#8211;<br />the glint of diamond on a plane wing,<br />meaning:  DANGER!  THICK ICE!<br />but the good crunch of that orange,<br />the diamond, the carrot,<br />both with four million years of resurrecting dirt,<br />and the love,<br />although Adam did not know the word,<br />the love of Adam<br />obeying his sudden gift.</p>
<p>You, who sought me for nine years,<br />in stories made up in front of your naked mirror<br />or walking through rooms of fog women,<br />you trying to forget the mother<br />who built guilt with the lumber of a locked door<br />as she sobbed her soured mild and fed you loss<br />through the keyhole,<br />you who wrote out your own birth<br />and built it with your own poems,<br />your own lumber, your own keyhole,<br />into the trunk and leaves of your manhood,<br />you, who fell into my words, years<br />before you fell into me (the other,<br />both the Camp Director and the camper),<br />you who baited your hook with wide-awake dreams,<br />and calls and letters and once a luncheon,<br />and twice a reading by  me for you.<br />But I wouldn&#8217;t!</p>
<p>Yet this year,<br />yanking off all past years,<br />I took the bait<br />and was pulled upward, upward,<br />into the sky and was held by the sun&#8211;<br />the quick wonder of its yellow lap&#8211;<br />and became a woman who learned her own shin<br />and dug into her soul and found it full,<br />and you became a man who learned his won skin<br />and dug into his manhood, his humanhood<br />and found you were as real as a baker<br />or a seer<br />and we became a home,<br />up into the elbows of each other&#8217;s soul,<br />without knowing&#8211;<br />an invisible purchase&#8211;<br />that inhabits our house forever.</p>
<p>We were<br />blessed by the House-Die<br />by the altar of the color T.V.<br />and somehow managed to make a tiny marriage,<br />a tiny marriage<br />called belief,<br />as in the child&#8217;s belief in the tooth fairy,<br />so close to absolute,<br />so daft within a year or two.<br />The daisies have come<br />for the last time.<br />And I who have,<br />each year of my life,<br />spoken to the tooth fairy,<br />believing in her,<br /> even when I was her,<br />am helpless to stop your daisies from dying,<br />although your voice cries into the telephone:<br />Marry me!  Marry me!<br />and my voice speaks onto these keys tonight:<br />The love is in dark trouble!<br />The love is starting to die,<br />right now&#8211;<br />we are in the process of it.<br />The empty process of it.</p>
<p>I see two deaths,<br />and the two men plod toward the mortuary of my heart,<br />and though I willed one away in court today<br />and I whisper dreams and birthdays into the other,<br />they both die like waves breaking over me<br />and I am drowning a little,<br />but always swimming<br />among the pillows and stones of the breakwater.<br />And though your daisies are an unwanted death,<br />I wade through the smell of their cancer<br />and recognize the prognosis,<br />its cartful of loss&#8211;</p>
<p>I say now,<br />you gave what you could.<br />It was quite a ferris wheel to spin on!<br />and the dead city of my marriage<br />seems less important<br />than the fact that the daisies came weekly,<br />over and ov er,<br />likes kisses that can&#8217;t stop themselves.</p>
<p>There sit two deaths on November 5th, 1973.<br />Let one be forgotten&#8211;<br />Bury it!  Wall it up!<br />But let me not forget the man<br />of my child-like flowers<br />though he sinks into the fog of Lake Superior,<br />he remains, his fingers the marvel<br />of fourth of July sparklers,<br />his furious ice cream cones of licking,<br />remains to cool my forehead with a washcloth<br />when I sweat into the bathtub of his being.</p>
<p>For the rest that is left:<br />name it gentle,<br />as gentle as radishes inhabiting<br />their short life in the earth,<br />name it gentle,<br />gentle as old friends waving so long at the window,<br />or in the drive,<br />name it gentle as maple wings singing<br />themselves upon the pond outside,<br />as sensuous as the mother-yellow in the pond,<br />that night that it was ours,<br />when our bodies floated and bumped<br />in moon water and the cicadas<br />called out like tongues.</p>
<p>Let such as this<br />be resurrected in all men<br />whenever they mold thei r days and nights<br />as when for twenty-five days and nights you molded mine<br />and planted the seed that dives into my God<br />and will do so forever<br />no matter how often I sweep the floor.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-about-abortion/" title="poems about abortion" rel="tag">poems about abortion</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-t/" title="poems t" rel="tag">poems t</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem August 8th by anne sexton</title>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Jan 2010 03:56:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[And do not be indiscreet or unconventional. Play it safe.
Listen here. I&#8217;ve never played it safein spite of what the critics say.Ask my imaginary brother, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>And do not be indiscreet or unconventional. Play it safe.</p>
<p>Listen here. I&#8217;ve never played it safe<br />in spite of what the critics say.<br />Ask my imaginary brother, that waif,<br />that childhood best friend who comes to play<br />dress-up and stick-up and jacks and Pick-Up-Sticks,<br />bike downtown, stick out tongues at the Catholics.</p>
<p>Or form a Piss Club where we all go<br />in the bushes and peek at each other&#8217;s sex.<br />Pop-gunning the street lights like crows.<br />Not knowing what to do with funny Kotex<br />so wearing it in our school shoes. Friend, friend,<br />spooking my lonely hours you were there, but pretend.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-a/" title="poems a" rel="tag">poems a</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem The Fury Of Sunsets by anne sexton</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 05 Nov 2009 09:56:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Something cold is in the air, an aura of ice and phlegm. All day I&#8217;ve built a lifetime and now the sun sinks to undo [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Something <br />cold is in the air, <br />an aura of ice <br />and phlegm. <br />All day I&#8217;ve built <br />a lifetime and now <br />the sun sinks to <br />undo it. <br />The horizon bleeds <br />and sucks its thumb. <br />The little red thumb <br />goes out of sight. <br />And I wonder about <br />this lifetime with myself, <br />this dream I&#8217;m living. <br />I could eat the sky <br />like an apple <br />but I&#8217;d rather <br />ask the first star: <br />why am I here? <br />why do I live in this house? <br />who&#8217;s responsible? <br />eh?</p>

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		<title>Poem The Fury Of Flowers And Worms by anne sexton</title>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 17 Oct 2009 15:56:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Let the flowers make a journey on Monday so that I can see ten daisies in a blue vase with perhaps one red ant crawling [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Let the flowers make a journey <br />on Monday so that I can see <br />ten daisies in a blue vase <br />with perhaps one red ant <br />crawling to the gold center. <br />A bit of the field on my table, <br />close to the worms <br />who struggle blinding, <br />moving deep into their slime, <br />moving deep into God&#8217;s abdomen, <br />moving like oil through water, <br />sliding through the good brown. </p>
<p>The daisies grow wild <br />like popcorn. <br />They are God&#8217;s promise to the field. <br />How happy I am, daisies, to love you. <br />How happy you are to be loved <br />and found magical, like a secret <br />from the sluggish field. <br />If all the world picked daisies <br />wars would end, the common cold would stop, <br />unemployment would end, the monetary market <br />would hold steady and no money would float. </p>
<p>Listen world. <br />if you&#8217;d just take the time to pick <br />the white flowers, the penny heart, <br />all would be well. <br />They are so unexpected. <br />They are as good as salt. <br />If someone had brought them <br />to v an Gogh&#8217;s room daily <br />his ear would have stayed on. <br />I would like to think that no one would die anymore <br />if we all believed in daisies <br />but the worms know better, don&#8217;t they? <br />They slide into the ear of a corpse <br />and listen to his great sigh.</p>

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		<title>Poem The Red Dance by anne sexton</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Mar 2009 03:56:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[There was a girlwho danced in the city that night,that April 22nd,all along the Charles River.It was as if one hundred men were watchingor do [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There was a girl<br />who danced in the city that night,<br />that April 22nd,<br />all along the Charles River.<br />It was as if one hundred men were watching<br />or do I mean the one hundred eyes of God?<br />The yellow patches in the sycamores<br />glowed like miniature flashlights.<br />The shadows, the skin of them<br />were ice cubes that flashed<br />from the red dress to the roof.<br />Mile by mile along the Charles she danced<br />past the benches of lovers,<br />past the dogs pissing on the benches.<br />She had on a red, red dress<br />and there was a small rain<br />and she lifted her face to it<br />and thought it part of the river.<br />And cars and trucks went by<br />on Memorial Drive.<br />And the Harvard students in the brick<br />hallowed houses studied Sappho in cement rooms.<br />And this Sappho danced on the grass.<br />and danced and danced and danced.<br />It was a death dance.<br />The Larz Anderson bridge wore its lights<br />and many cars went by,<br />and a few students strolling under<br />their Coop umbrellas.<br />And a black  man who asked this Sappho the time,<br />the time, as if her watch spoke.<br />Words were turning into grease,<br />and she said, &#8220;Why do you lie to me?&#8221;<br />And the waters of the Charles were beautiful,<br />sticking out in many colored tongues<br />and this strange Sappho knew she would enter the lights<br />and be lit by them and sink into them.<br />And how the end would come -<br />it had been foretold to her -<br />she would aspirate swallowing a fish,<br />going down with God&#8217;s first creature<br />dancing all the way.</p>

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		<title>Poem Cinderella by anne sexton</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 14:35:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[You always read about it:the plumber with the twelve childrenwho wins the Irish Sweepstakes.From toilets to riches.That story.
Or the nursemaid,some luscious sweet from Denmarkwho captures [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>You always read about it:<br />the plumber with the twelve children<br />who wins the Irish Sweepstakes.<br />From toilets to riches.<br />That story.</p>
<p>Or the nursemaid,<br />some luscious sweet from Denmark<br />who captures the oldest son&#8217;s heart.<br />from diapers to Dior.<br />That story.</p>
<p>Or a milkman who serves the wealthy,<br />eggs, cream, butter, yogurt, milk,<br />the white truck like an ambulance<br />who goes into real estate<br />and makes a pile.<br />From homogenized to martinis at lunch.</p>
<p>Or the charwoman<br />who is on the bus when it cracks up<br />and collects enough from the insurance.<br />From mops to Bonwit Teller.<br />That story.</p>
<p>Once<br />the wife of a rich man was on her deathbed<br />and she said to her daughter Cinderella:<br />Be devout. Be good. Then I will smile<br />down from heaven in the seam of a cloud.<br />The man took another wife who had<br />two daughters, pretty enough<br />but with hearts like blackjacks.<br />Cinderella was their maid.<br />She slept on the sooty hearth each night<br />a nd walked around looking like Al Jolson.<br />Her father brought presents home from town,<br />jewels and gowns for the other women<br />but the twig of a tree for Cinderella.<br />She planted that twig on her mother&#8217;s grave<br />and it grew to a tree where a white dove sat.<br />Whenever she wished for anything the dove<br />would drop it like an egg upon the ground.<br />The bird is important, my dears, so heed him.</p>
<p>Next came the ball, as you all know.<br />It was a marriage market.<br />The prince was looking for a wife.<br />All but Cinderella were preparing<br />and gussying up for the event.<br />Cinderella begged to go too.<br />Her stepmother threw a dish of lentils<br />into the cinders and said: Pick them<br />up in an hour and you shall go.<br />The white dove brought all his friends;<br />all the warm wings of the fatherland came,<br />and picked up the lentils in a jiffy.<br />No, Cinderella, said the stepmother,<br />you have no clothes and cannot dance.<br />That&#8217;s the way with stepmothers.</p>
<p>Cinderella went to the tree at t he grave<br />and cried forth like a gospel singer:<br />Mama! Mama! My turtledove,<br />send me to the prince&#8217;s ball!<br />The bird dropped down a golden dress<br />and delicate little slippers.<br />Rather a large package for a simple bird.<br />So she went. Which is no surprise.<br />Her stepmother and sisters didn&#8217;t<br />recognize her without her cinder face<br />and the prince took her hand on the spot<br />and danced with no other the whole day.</p>
<p>As nightfall came she thought she&#8217;d better<br />get home. The prince walked her home<br />and she disappeared into the pigeon house<br />and although the prince took an axe and broke<br />it open she was gone. Back to her cinders.<br />These events repeated themselves for three days.<br />However on the third day the prince<br />covered the palace steps with cobbler&#8217;s wax<br />and Cinderella&#8217;s gold shoe stuck upon it.<br />Now he would find whom the shoe fit<br />and find his strange dancing girl for keeps.<br />He went to their house and the two sisters<br />were delighted because they had lovely f eet.<br />The eldest went into a room to try the slipper on<br />but her big toe got in the way so she simply<br />sliced it off and put on the slipper.<br />The prince rode away with her until the white dove<br />told him to look at the blood pouring forth.<br />That is the way with amputations.<br />They just don&#8217;t heal up like a wish.<br />The other sister cut off her heel<br />but the blood told as blood will.<br />The prince was getting tired.<br />He began to feel like a shoe salesman.<br />But he gave it one last try.<br />This time Cinderella fit into the shoe<br />like a love letter into its envelope.</p>
<p>At the wedding ceremony<br />the two sisters came to curry favor<br />and the white dove pecked their eyes out.<br />Two hollow spots were left<br />like soup spoons.</p>
<p>Cinderella and the prince<br />lived, they say, happily ever after,<br />like two dolls in a museum case<br />never bothered by diapers or dust,<br />never arguing over the timing of an egg,<br />never telling the same story twice,<br />never getting a middle-aged spread, <br />their darling smiles pasted on for eternity.<br />Regular Bobbsey Twins.<br />That story.</p>

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		<title>Poem Courage by anne sexton</title>
		<link>http://www.poemsabout.org/courage-anne-sexton/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 14:23:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[It is in the small things we see it.The child&#8217;s first step,as awesome as an earthquake.The first time you rode a bike,wallowing up the sidewalk.The [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It is in the small things we see it.<br />The child&#8217;s first step,<br />as awesome as an earthquake.<br />The first time you rode a bike,<br />wallowing up the sidewalk.<br />The first spanking when your heart<br />went on a journey all alone.<br />When they called you crybaby<br />or poor or fatty or crazy<br />and made you into an alien,<br />you drank their acid<br />and concealed it.</p>
<p>Later,<br />if you faced the death of bombs and bullets<br />you did not do it with a banner,<br />you did it with only a hat to<br />comver your heart.<br />You did not fondle the weakness inside you<br />though it was there.<br />Your courage was a small coal<br />that you kept swallowing.<br />If your buddy saved you<br />and died himself in so doing,<br />then his courage was not courage,<br />it was love; love as simple as shaving soap.</p>
<p>Later,<br />if you have endured a great despair,<br />then you did it alone,<br />getting a transfusion from the fire,<br />picking the scabs off your heart,<br />then wringing it out like a sock.<br />Next, my kinsman, you p owdered your sorrow,<br />you gave it a back rub<br />and then you covered it with a blanket<br />and after it had slept a while<br />it woke to the wings of the roses<br />and was transformed.</p>
<p>Later,<br />when you face old age and its natural conclusion<br />your courage will still be shown in the little ways,<br />each spring will be a sword you&#8217;ll sharpen,<br />those you love will live in a fever of love,<br />and you&#8217;ll bargain with the calendar<br />and at the last moment<br />when death opens the back door<br />you&#8217;ll put on your carpet slippers<br />and stride out.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems-about-courage/" title="famous poems about courage" rel="tag">famous poems about courage</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-c/" title="poems c" rel="tag">poems c</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem The Abortion by anne sexton</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 13:59:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Somebody who should have been born is gone. 
Just as the earth puckered its mouth, each bud puffing out from its knot,I changed my shoes, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Somebody who should have been born <br />is gone. </p>
<p>Just as the earth puckered its mouth, <br />each bud puffing out from its knot,<br />I changed my shoes, and then drove south. </p>
<p>Up past the Blue Mountains, where <br />Pennsylvania humps on endlessly,<br />wearing, like a crayoned cat, its green hair, </p>
<p>its roads sunken in like a gray washboard; <br />where, in truth, the ground cracks evilly, <br />a dark socket from which the coal has poured,</p>
<p>Somebody who should have been born<br />is gone. </p>
<p>the grass as bristly and stout as chives,<br />and me wondering when the ground would break, <br />and me wondering how anything fragile survives; </p>
<p>up in Pennsylvania, I met a little man,<br />not Rumpelstiltskin, at all, at all&#8230; <br />he took the fullness that love began. </p>
<p>Returning north, even the sky grew thin<br />like a high window looking nowhere.<br />The road was as flat as a sheet of tin. </p>
<p>Somebody who should have been born <br />is gone. </p>
<p>Yes, woman, such logic will  lead<br />to loss without death. Or say what you meant, <br />you coward&#8230;this baby that I bleed.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-about-abortion/" title="poems about abortion" rel="tag">poems about abortion</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-t/" title="poems t" rel="tag">poems t</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem Suicide Note by anne sexton</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 13:35:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;You speak to me of narcissism but I reply that it is a matter of my life&#8221; &#8211; Artaud
&#8220;At this time let me somehow bequeath [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8220;You speak to me of narcissism but I reply that it is <br />a matter of my life&#8221; &#8211; Artaud</p>
<p>&#8220;At this time let me somehow bequeath all the leftovers <br />to my daughters and their daughters&#8221; &#8211; Anonymous</p>
<p>Better, <br />despite the worms talking to <br />the mare&#8217;s hoof in the field; <br />better, <br />despite the season of young girls <br />dropping their blood; <br />better somehow <br />to drop myself quickly <br />into an old room. <br />Better (someone said) <br />not to be born <br />and far better <br />not to be born twice <br />at thirteen <br />where the boardinghouse, <br />each year a bedroom, <br />caught fire. </p>
<p>Dear friend, <br />I will have to sink with hundreds of others <br />on a dumbwaiter into hell. <br />I will be a light thing. <br />I will enter death <br />like someone&#8217;s lost optical lens. <br />Life is half enlarged. <br />The fish and owls are fierce today. <br />Life tilts backward and forward. <br />Even the wasps cannot find my eyes. </p>
<p>Yes, <br />eyes that were immediate once. <br />Eyes that have been truly  awake, <br />eyes that told the whole story— <br />poor dumb animals. <br />Eyes that were pierced, <br />little nail heads, <br />light blue gunshots. </p>
<p>And once with <br />a mouth like a cup, <br />clay colored or blood colored, <br />open like the breakwater <br />for the lost ocean <br />and open like the noose <br />for the first head. </p>
<p>Once upon a time <br />my hunger was for Jesus. <br />O my hunger! My hunger! <br />Before he grew old <br />he rode calmly into Jerusalem <br />in search of death. </p>
<p>This time <br />I certainly <br />do not ask for understanding <br />and yet I hope everyone else <br />will turn their heads when an unrehearsed fish jumps <br />on the surface of Echo Lake; <br />when moonlight, <br />its bass note turned up loud, <br />hurts some building in Boston, <br />when the truly beautiful lie together. <br />I think of this, surely, <br />and would think of it far longer <br />if I were not… if I were not <br />at that old fire. </p>
<p>I could admit <br />that I am only a coward <br />crying me me me <br />and not men tion the little gnats, the moths, <br />forced by circumstance <br />to suck on the electric bulb. <br />But surely you know that everyone has a death, <br />his own death, <br />waiting for him. <br />So I will go now <br />without old age or disease, <br />wildly but accurately, <br />knowing my best route, <br />carried by that toy donkey I rode all these years, <br />never asking, “Where are we going?” <br />We were riding (if I&#8217;d only known) <br />to this. </p>
<p>Dear friend, <br />please do not think <br />that I visualize guitars playing <br />or my father arching his bone. <br />I do not even expect my mother&#8217;s mouth. <br />I know that I have died before— <br />once in November, once in June. <br />How strange to choose June again, <br />so concrete with its green breasts and bellies. <br />Of course guitars will not play! <br />The snakes will certainly not notice. <br />New York City will not mind. <br />At night the bats will beat on the trees, <br />knowing it all, <br />seeing what they sensed all day.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems-about-suicide/" title="famous poems about suicide" rel="tag">famous poems about suicide</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-s/" title="poems s" rel="tag">poems s</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem &#8220;Daddy&#8221; Warbucks by anne sexton</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 13:11:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[In Memoriam
What&#8217;s missing is the eyeballsin each of us, but it doesn&#8217;t matterbecause you&#8217;ve got the bucks, the bucks, the bucks.You let me touch them, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In Memoriam</p>
<p>What&#8217;s missing is the eyeballs<br />in each of us, but it doesn&#8217;t matter<br />because you&#8217;ve got the bucks, the bucks, the bucks.<br />You let me touch them, fondle the green faces<br />lick at their numbers and it lets you be<br />my &#8220;Daddy!&#8221; &#8220;Daddy!&#8221; and though I fought all alone<br />with molesters and crooks, I knew your money<br />would save me, your courage, your &#8220;I&#8217;ve had<br />considerable experience as a soldier&#8230;<br />fighting to win millions for myself, it&#8217;s true.<br />But I did win,&#8221; and me praying for &#8220;our men out there&#8221;<br />just made it okay to be an orphan whose blood was no one&#8217;s,<br />whose curls were hung up on a wire machine and electrified,<br />while you built and unbuilt intrigues called nations,<br />and did in the bad ones, always, always,<br />and always came at my perils, the black Christs of childhood,<br />always came when my heart stood naked in the street<br />and they threw apples at it or twelve-day-old-dead-fish.</p>
<p>&#8220;Daddy!&#8221; &#8220;Daddy,&#8221; we all won that war,<br />when you sang me the m oney songs<br />Annie, Annie you sang<br />and I knew you drove a pure gold car<br />and put diamonds in you coke<br />for the crunchy sound, the adorable sound<br />and the moon too was in your portfolio,<br />as well as the ocean with its sleepy dead.<br />And I was always brave, wasn&#8217;t I?<br />I never bled?<br />I never saw a man expose himself.<br />No. No.<br />I never saw a drunkard in his blubber.<br />I never let lightning go in one car and out the other.<br />And all the men out there were never to come.<br />Never, like a deluge, to swim over my breasts<br />and lay their lamps in my insides.<br />No. No.<br />Just me and my &#8220;Daddy&#8221;<br />and his tempestuous bucks<br />rolling in them like corn flakes<br />and only the bad ones died.</p>
<p>But I died yesterday,<br />&#8220;Daddy,&#8221; I died,<br />swallowing the Nazi-Jap animal<br />and it won&#8217;t get out<br />it keeps knocking at my eyes,<br />my big orphan eyes,<br />kicking! Until eyeballs pop out<br />and even my dog puts up his four feet<br />and lets go<br />of his military secret<br />with his big red tongue<br /> flying up and down<br />like yours should have</p>
<p>as we board our velvet train.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems-about-dad/" title="famous poems about dad" rel="tag">famous poems about dad</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-d/" title="poems d" rel="tag">poems d</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem The Starry Night by anne sexton</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 12:47:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[That does not keep me from having a terrible need of &#8212; shall I say the word &#8212; religion. ThenI go out at night to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>That does not keep me from having a terrible need of &#8212; shall I say the word &#8212; religion. Then<br />I go out at night to paint the stars.</p>
<p>&#8211;Vincent Van Gogh in a letter to his brother</p>
<p>The town does not exist<br />except where one black-haired tree slips<br />up like a drowned woman into the hot sky.<br />The town is silent. The night boils with eleven stars.<br />Oh starry starry night! This is how<br />I want to die.</p>
<p>It moves. They are all alive.<br />Even the moon bulges in its orange irons<br />to push children, like a god, from its eye.<br />The old unseen serpent swallows up the stars.<br />Oh starry starry night! This is how<br />I want to die:</p>
<p>into that rushing beast of the night,<br />sucked up by that great dragon, to split<br />from my life with no flag,<br />no belly,<br />no cry.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems-about-star/" title="famous poems about star" rel="tag">famous poems about star</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-t/" title="poems t" rel="tag">poems t</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem Killing The Love by anne sexton</title>
		<link>http://www.poemsabout.org/killing-the-love-anne-sexton/</link>
		<comments>http://www.poemsabout.org/killing-the-love-anne-sexton/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 12:35:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poems k]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetical works of anne sexton]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I am the love killer,I am murdering the music we thought so special,that blazed between us, over and over.I am murdering me, where I kneeled [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I am the love killer,<br />I am murdering the music we thought so special,<br />that blazed between us, over and over.<br />I am murdering me, where I kneeled at your kiss.<br />I am pushing knives through the hands<br />that created two into one.<br />Our hands do not bleed at this,<br />they lie still in their dishonor.<br />I am taking the boats of our beds<br />and swamping them, letting them cough on the sea<br />and choke on it and go down into nothing.<br />I am stuffing your mouth with your<br />promises and watching<br />you vomit them out upon my face.<br />The Camp we directed?<br />I have gassed the campers.</p>
<p>Now I am alone with the dead,<br />flying off bridges,<br />hurling myself like a beer can into the wastebasket.<br />I am flying like a single red rose,<br />leaving a jet stream<br />of solitude<br />and yet I feel nothing,<br />though I fly and hurl,<br />my insides are empty<br />and my face is as blank as a wall.</p>
<p>Shall I call the funeral director?<br />He could put our two bodies into one pink casket,<br />those bodies  from before,<br />and someone might send flowers,<br />and someone might come to mourn<br />and it would be in the obits,<br />and people would know that something died,<br />is no more, speaks no more, won&#8217;t even<br />drive a car again and all of that.</p>
<p>When a life is over,<br />the one you were living for,<br />where do you go?</p>
<p>I&#8217;ll work nights.<br />I&#8217;ll dance in the city.<br />I&#8217;ll wear red for a burning.<br />I&#8217;ll look at the Charles very carefully,<br />weraing its long legs of neon.<br />And the cars will go by.<br />The cars will go by.<br />And there&#8217;ll be no scream<br />from the lady in the red dress<br />dancing on her own Ellis Island,<br />who turns in circles,<br />dancing alone<br />as the cars go by.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-k/" title="poems k" rel="tag">poems k</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem Baby Picture by anne sexton</title>
		<link>http://www.poemsabout.org/baby-picture-anne-sexton/</link>
		<comments>http://www.poemsabout.org/baby-picture-anne-sexton/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 12:23:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poems b]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetical works of anne sexton]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[It&#8217;s in the heart of the grapewhere that smile lies.It&#8217;s in the good-bye-bow in the hairwhere that smile lies.It&#8217;s in the clerical collar of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It&#8217;s in the heart of the grape<br />where that smile lies.<br />It&#8217;s in the good-bye-bow in the hair<br />where that smile lies.<br />It&#8217;s in the clerical collar of the dress<br />where that smile lies.<br />What smile?<br />The smile of my seventh year,<br />caught here in the painted photograph.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s peeling now, age has got it,<br />a kind of cancer of the background<br />and also in the assorted features.<br />It&#8217;s like a rotten flag<br />or a vegetable from the refrigerator,<br />pocked with mold.<br />I am aging without sound,<br />into darkness, darkness.</p>
<p>Anne,<br />who are you?</p>
<p>I open the vein<br />and my blood rings like roller skates.<br />I open the mouth<br />and my teeth are an angry army.<br />I open the eyes<br />and they go sick like dogs<br />with what they have seen.<br />I open the hair<br />and it falls apart like dust balls.<br />I open the dress<br />and I see a child bent on a toilet seat.<br />I crouch there, sitting dumbly<br />pushing the enemas out like ice cream,<br />letting the whole brown world<br />turn into  sweets.</p>
<p>Anne,<br />who are you?</p>
<p>Merely a kid keeping alive.</p>

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		<title>Poem Anna Who Was Mad by anne sexton</title>
		<link>http://www.poemsabout.org/anna-who-was-mad-anne-sexton/</link>
		<comments>http://www.poemsabout.org/anna-who-was-mad-anne-sexton/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 12:11:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poems a]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetical works of anne sexton]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Anna who was mad,I have a knife in my armpit.When I stand on tiptoe I tap out messages.Am I some sort of infection?Did I make [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Anna who was mad,<br />I have a knife in my armpit.<br />When I stand on tiptoe I tap out messages.<br />Am I some sort of infection?<br />Did I make you go insane?<br />Did I make the sounds go sour?<br />Did I tell you to climb out the window?<br />Forgive. Forgive.<br />Say not I did.<br />Say not.<br />Say.</p>
<p>Speak Mary-words into our pillow.<br />Take me the gangling twelve-year-old<br />into your sunken lap.<br />Whisper like a buttercup.<br />Eat me. Eat me up like cream pudding.<br />Take me in.<br />Take me.<br />Take.</p>
<p>Give me a report on the condition of my soul.<br />Give me a complete statement of my actions.<br />Hand me a jack-in-the-pulpit and let me listen in.<br />Put me in the stirrups and bring a tour group through.<br />Number my sins on the grocery list and let me buy.<br />Did I make you go insane?<br />Did I turn up your earphone and let a siren drive through?<br />Did I open the door for the mustached psychiatrist<br />who dragged you out like a gold cart?<br />Did I make you go insane?<br />From the grave write me, Ann a!<br />You are nothing but ashes but nevertheless<br />pick up the Parker Pen I gave you.<br />Write me.<br />Write.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-a/" title="poems a" rel="tag">poems a</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem 45 Mercy Street by anne sexton</title>
		<link>http://www.poemsabout.org/45-mercy-street-anne-sexton/</link>
		<comments>http://www.poemsabout.org/45-mercy-street-anne-sexton/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 11:59:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[famous poems about grandfather]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[famous poems about grandmother]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poems 4]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetical works of anne sexton]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[In my dream, drilling into the marrow of my entire bone, my real dream, I&#8217;m walking up and down Beacon Hill searching for a street [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In my dream, <br />drilling into the marrow <br />of my entire bone, <br />my real dream, <br />I&#8217;m walking up and down Beacon Hill <br />searching for a street sign &#8212; <br />namely MERCY STREET. <br />Not there. </p>
<p>I try the Back Bay. <br />Not there. <br />Not there. <br />And yet I know the number. <br />45 Mercy Street. <br />I know the stained-glass window <br />of the foyer, <br />the three flights of the house <br />with its parquet floors. <br />I know the furniture and <br />mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, <br />the servants. <br />I know the cupboard of Spode <br />the boat of ice, solid silver, <br />where the butter sits in neat squares <br />like strange giant&#8217;s teeth <br />on the big mahogany table. <br />I know it well. <br />Not there. </p>
<p>Where did you go? <br />45 Mercy Street, <br />with great-grandmother <br />kneeling in her whale-bone corset <br />and praying gently but fiercely <br />to the wash basin, <br />at five A.M. <br />at noon <br />dozing in her wiggy rocker, <br />grandfather taking a nap in the pantry, <br />grandmother  pushing the bell for the downstairs maid, <br />and Nana rocking Mother with an oversized flower <br />on her forehead to cover the curl <br />of when she was good and when she was&#8230; <br />And where she was begat <br />and in a generation <br />the third she will beget, <br />me, <br />with the stranger&#8217;s seed blooming <br />into the flower called Horrid. </p>
<p>I walk in a yellow dress <br />and a white pocketbook stuffed with cigarettes, <br />enough pills, my wallet, my keys, <br />and being twenty-eight, or is it forty-five? <br />I walk. I walk. <br />I hold matches at street signs <br />for it is dark, <br />as dark as the leathery dead <br />and I have lost my green Ford, <br />my house in the suburbs, <br />two little kids <br />sucked up like pollen by the bee in me <br />and a husband <br />who has wiped off his eyes <br />in order not to see my inside out <br />and I am walking and looking <br />and this is no dream <br />just my oily life <br />where the people are alibis <br />and the street is unfindable for an <br />entire lifetime. </p>
<p>Pull th e shades down &#8212; <br />I don&#8217;t care! <br />Bolt the door, mercy, <br />erase the number, <br />rip down the street sign, <br />what can it matter, <br />what can it matter to this cheapskate <br />who wants to own the past <br />that went out on a dead ship <br />and left me only with paper? </p>
<p>Not there. </p>
<p>I open my pocketbook, <br />as women do, <br />and fish swim back and forth <br />between the dollars and the lipstick. <br />I pick them out, <br />one by one <br />and throw them at the street signs, <br />and shoot my pocketbook <br />into the Charles River. <br />Next I pull the dream off <br />and slam into the cement wall <br />of the clumsy calendar <br />I live in, <br />my life, <br />and its hauled up <br />notebooks.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems-about-grandfather/" title="famous poems about grandfather" rel="tag">famous poems about grandfather</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems-about-grandmother/" title="famous poems about grandmother" rel="tag">famous poems about grandmother</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-4/" title="poems 4" rel="tag">poems 4</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem Her Kind by anne sexton</title>
		<link>http://www.poemsabout.org/her-kind-anne-sexton/</link>
		<comments>http://www.poemsabout.org/her-kind-anne-sexton/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 11:35:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poems h]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetical works of anne sexton]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I have gone out, a possessed witch,haunting the black air, braver at night;dreaming evil, I have done my hitchover the plain houses, light by light:lonely [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I have gone out, a possessed witch,<br />haunting the black air, braver at night;<br />dreaming evil, I have done my hitch<br />over the plain houses, light by light:<br />lonely thing, twelve-fingered, out of mind.<br />A woman like that is not a woman, quite.<br />I have been her kind.</p>
<p>I have found the warm caves in the woods,<br />filled them with skillets, carvings, shelves,<br />closets, silks, innumerable goods;<br />fixed the suppers for the worms and the elves:<br />whining, rearranging the disaligned.<br />A woman like that is misunderstood.<br />I have been her kind.</p>
<p>I have ridden in your cart, driver,<br />waved my nude arms at villages going by,<br />learning the last bright routes, survivor<br />where your flames still bite my thigh<br />and my ribs crack where your wheels wind.<br />A woman like that is not ashamed to die.<br />I have been her kind.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-h/" title="poems h" rel="tag">poems h</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem The Kiss by anne sexton</title>
		<link>http://www.poemsabout.org/the-kiss-anne-sexton/</link>
		<comments>http://www.poemsabout.org/the-kiss-anne-sexton/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 11:23:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poems t]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetical works of anne sexton]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[My mouth blooms like a cut.I&#8217;ve been wronged all year, tediousnights, nothing but rough elbows in themand delicate boxes of Kleenex calling crybabycrybaby , you [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>My mouth blooms like a cut.<br />I&#8217;ve been wronged all year, tedious<br />nights, nothing but rough elbows in them<br />and delicate boxes of Kleenex calling crybaby<br />crybaby , you fool!</p>
<p>Before today my body was useless.<br />Now it&#8217;s tearing at its square corners.<br />It&#8217;s tearing old Mary&#8217;s garments off, knot by knot<br />and see &#8212; Now it&#8217;s shot full of these electric bolts.<br />Zing! A resurrection!</p>
<p>Once it was a boat, quite wooden<br />and with no business, no salt water under it<br />and in need of some paint. It was no more<br />than a group of boards. But you hoisted her, rigged her.<br />She&#8217;s been elected.</p>
<p>My nerves are turned on. I hear them like<br />musical instruments. Where there was silence<br />the drums, the strings are incurably playing. You did this.<br />Pure genius at work. Darling, the composer has stepped<br />into fire.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-t/" title="poems t" rel="tag">poems t</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem Wanting To Die by anne sexton</title>
		<link>http://www.poemsabout.org/wanting-to-die-anne-sexton/</link>
		<comments>http://www.poemsabout.org/wanting-to-die-anne-sexton/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 11:11:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[famous poems about suicide]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poems w]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetical works of anne sexton]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[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 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Since you ask, most days I cannot remember.<br />I walk in my clothing, unmarked by that voyage.<br />Then the almost unnameable lust returns.</p>
<p>Even then I have nothing against life.<br />I know well the grass blades you mention,<br />the furniture you have placed under the sun.</p>
<p>But suicides have a special language.<br />Like carpenters they want to know which tools.<br />They never ask why build.</p>
<p>Twice I have so simply declared myself,<br />have possessed the enemy, eaten the enemy,<br />have taken on his craft, his magic.</p>
<p>In this way, heavy and thoughtful,<br />warmer than oil or water,<br />I have rested, drooling at the mouth-hole.</p>
<p>I did not think of my body at needle point.<br />Even the cornea and the leftover urine were gone.<br />Suicides have already betrayed the body.</p>
<p>Still-born, they don&#8217;t always die,<br />but dazzled, they can&#8217;t forget a drug so sweet<br />that even children would look on and smile.</p>
<p>To thrust all that life under your tongue!&#8211;<br />that, all by itself, bec omes a passion.<br />Death&#8217;s a sad Bone; bruised, you&#8217;d say,</p>
<p>and yet she waits for me, year after year,<br />to so delicately undo an old wound,<br />to empty my breath from its bad prison.</p>
<p>Balanced there, suicides sometimes meet,<br />raging at the fruit, a pumped-up moon,<br />leaving the bread they mistook for a kiss,</p>
<p>leaving the page of the book carelessly open,<br />something unsaid, the phone off the hook<br />and the love, whatever it was, an infection.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems-about-suicide/" title="famous poems about suicide" rel="tag">famous poems about suicide</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-w/" title="poems w" rel="tag">poems w</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem Cigarettes And Whiskey And Wild, Wild Women by anne sexton</title>
		<link>http://www.poemsabout.org/cigarettes-and-whiskey-and-wild-wild-women-anne-sexton/</link>
		<comments>http://www.poemsabout.org/cigarettes-and-whiskey-and-wild-wild-women-anne-sexton/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 10:23:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poems c]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[(from a song)
Perhaps I was born kneeling,born coughing on the long winter,born expecting the kiss of mercy,born with a passion for quicknessand yet, as things [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>(from a song)</p>
<p>Perhaps I was born kneeling,<br />born coughing on the long winter,<br />born expecting the kiss of mercy,<br />born with a passion for quickness<br />and yet, as things progressed,<br />I learned early about the stockade<br />or taken out, the fume of the enema.<br />By two or three I learned not to kneel,<br />not to expect, to plant my fires underground<br />where none but the dolls, perfect and awful,<br />could be whispered to or laid down to die.</p>
<p>Now that I have written many words,<br />and let out so many loves, for so many,<br />and been altogether what I always was—<br />a woman of excess, of zeal and greed,<br />I find the effort useless.<br />Do I not look in the mirror,<br />these days,<br />and see a drunken rat avert her eyes?<br />Do I not feel the hunger so acutely<br />that I would rather die than look<br />into its face?<br />I kneel once more,<br />in case mercy should come<br />in the nick of time.</p>

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		<title>Poem Admonitions To A Special Person by anne sexton</title>
		<link>http://www.poemsabout.org/admonitions-to-a-special-person-anne-sexton/</link>
		<comments>http://www.poemsabout.org/admonitions-to-a-special-person-anne-sexton/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 10:11:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poems a]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetical works of anne sexton]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Watch out for power,for its avalanche can bury you,snow, snow, snow, smothering your mountain.
Watch out for hate,it can open its mouth and you&#8217;ll fling yourself [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Watch out for power,<br />for its avalanche can bury you,<br />snow, snow, snow, smothering your mountain.</p>
<p>Watch out for hate,<br />it can open its mouth and you&#8217;ll fling yourself out<br />to eat off your leg, an instant leper.</p>
<p>Watch out for friends,<br />because when you betray them,<br />as you will,<br />they will bury their heads in the toilet<br />and flush themselves away.</p>
<p>Watch out for intellect,<br />because it knows so much it knows nothing<br />and leaves you hanging upside down,<br />mouthing knowledge as your heart<br />falls out of your mouth.</p>
<p>Watch out for games, the actor&#8217;s part,<br />the speech planned, known, given,<br />for they will give you away<br />and you will stand like a naked little boy,<br />pissing on your own child-bed.</p>
<p>Watch out for love<br />(unless it is true,<br />and every part of you says yes including the toes),<br />it will wrap you up like a mummy,<br />and your scream won&#8217;t be heard<br />and none of your running will end.</p>
<p>Love? Be it man. Be it woman.<br />It must b e a wave you want to glide in on,<br />give your body to it, give your laugh to it,<br />give, when the gravelly sand takes you,<br />your tears to the land. To love another is something<br />like prayer and can&#8217;t be planned, you just fall<br />into its arms because your belief undoes your disbelief.</p>
<p>Special person,<br />if I were you I&#8217;d pay no attention<br />to admonitions from me,<br />made somewhat out of your words<br />and somewhat out of mine.<br />A collaboration.<br />I do not believe a word I have said,<br />except some, except I think of you like a young tree<br />with pasted-on leaves and know you&#8217;ll root<br />and the real green thing will come.</p>
<p>Let go. Let go.<br />Oh special person,<br />possible leaves,<br />this typewriter likes you on the way to them,<br />but wants to break crystal glasses<br />in celebration,<br />for you,<br />when the dark crust is thrown off<br />and you float all around<br />like a happened balloon.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-a/" title="poems a" rel="tag">poems a</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem Angels Of The Love Affair by anne sexton</title>
		<link>http://www.poemsabout.org/angels-of-the-love-affair-anne-sexton/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 09:59:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[famous poems about grandfather]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poems a]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetical works of anne sexton]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;Angels of the love affair, do you know that other,the dark one, that other me?&#8221;
1. ANGEL OF FIRE AND GENITALS
Angel of fire and genitals, do [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8220;Angels of the love affair, do you know that other,<br />the dark one, that other me?&#8221;</p>
<p>1. ANGEL OF FIRE AND GENITALS</p>
<p>Angel of fire and genitals, do you know slime,<br />that green mama who first forced me to sing,<br />who put me first in the latrine, that pantomime<br />of brown where I was beggar and she was king?<br />I said, &#8220;The devil is down that festering hole.&#8221;<br />Then he bit me in the buttocks and took over my soul.<br />Fire woman, you of the ancient flame, you<br />of the Bunsen burner, you of the candle,<br />you of the blast furnace, you of the barbecue,<br />you of the fierce solar energy, Mademoiselle,<br />take some ice, take come snow, take a month of rain<br />and you would gutter in the dark, cracking up your brain.</p>
<p>Mother of fire, let me stand at your devouring gate<br />as the sun dies in your arms and you loosen it&#8217;s terrible weight.</p>
<p>2. ANGEL OF CLEAN SHEETS</p>
<p>Angel of clean sheets, do you know bedbugs?<br />Once in the madhouse they came like specks of cinnamon<br /> as I lay in a choral cave of drugs,<br />as old as a dog, as quiet as a skeleton.<br />Little bits of dried blood. One hundred marks<br />upon the sheet. One hundred kisses in the dark.<br />White sheets smelling of soap and Clorox<br />have nothing to do with this night of soil,<br />nothing to do with barred windows and multiple locks<br />and all the webbing in the bed, the ultimate recoil.<br />I have slept in silk and in red and in black.<br />I have slept on sand and, on fall night, a haystack.</p>
<p>I have known a crib. I have known the tuck-in of a child<br />but inside my hair waits the night I was defiled.</p>
<p>3. ANGEL OF FLIGHT AND SLEIGH BELLS</p>
<p>Angel of flight and sleigh bells, do you know paralysis,<br />that ether house where your arms and legs are cement?<br />You are as still as a yardstick. You have a doll&#8217;s kiss.<br />The brain whirls in a fit. The brain is not evident.<br />I have gone to that same place without a germ or a stroke.<br />A little solo act&#8211;that lady with the brain that broke.</p>
<p>In  this fashion I have become a tree.<br />I have become a vase you can pick up or drop at will,<br />inanimate at last. What unusual luck! My body<br />passively resisting. Part of the leftovers. Part of the kill.<br />Angels of flight, you soarer, you flapper, you floater,<br />you gull that grows out of my back in the drreams I prefer,</p>
<p>stay near. But give me the totem. Give me the shut eye<br />where I stand in stone shoes as the world&#8217;s bicycle goes by.</p>
<p>4. ANGEL OF HOPE AND CALENDARS</p>
<p>Angel of hope and calendars, do you know despair?<br />That hole I crawl into with a box of Kleenex,<br />that hole where the fire woman is tied to her chair,<br />that hole where leather men are wringing their necks,<br />where the sea has turned into a pond of urine.<br />There is no place to wash and no marine beings to stir in.</p>
<p>In this hole your mother is crying out each day.<br />Your father is eating cake and digging her grave.<br />In this hole your baby is strangling. Your mouth is clay.<br />Your eyes are made  of glass. They break. You are not brave.<br />You are alone like a dog in a kennel. Your hands<br />break out in boils. Your arms are cut and bound by bands</p>
<p>of wire. Your voice is out there. Your voice is strange.<br />There are no prayers here. Here there is no change.</p>
<p>5. ANGEL OF BLIZZARDS AND BLACKOUTS</p>
<p>Angle of blizzards and blackouts, do you know raspberries,<br />those rubies that sat in the gree of my grandfather&#8217;s garden?<br />You of the snow tires, you of the sugary wings, you freeze<br />me out. Leet me crawl through the patch. Let me be ten.<br />Let me pick those sweet kisses, thief that I was,<br />as the sea on my left slapped its applause.</p>
<p>Only my grandfather was allowed there. Or the maid<br />who came with a scullery pan to pick for breakfast.<br />She of the rols that floated in the air, she of the inlaid<br />woodwork all greasy with lemon, she of the feather and dust,<br />not I. Nonetheless I came sneaking across the salt lawn<br />in bare feet and jumping-jack pajamas in the s pongy dawn.</p>
<p>Oh Angel of the blizzard and blackout, Madam white face,<br />take me back to that red mouth, that July 21st place.</p>
<p>6. ANGEL OF BEACH HOUSES AND PICNICS</p>
<p>Angel of beach houses and picnics, do you know solitaire?<br />Fifty-two reds and blacks and only myslef to blame.<br />My blood buzzes like a hornet&#8217;s nest. I sit in a kitchen chair<br />at a table set for one. The silverware is the same<br />and the glass and the sugar bowl. I hear my lungs fill and expel<br />as in an operation. But I have no one left to tell.</p>
<p>Once I was a couple. I was my own king and queen<br />with cheese and bread and rosé on the rocks of Rockport.<br />Once I sunbathed in the buff, all brown and lean,<br />watching the toy sloops go by, holding court<br />for busloads of tourists. Once I called breakfast the sexiest<br />meal of the day. Once I invited arrest</p>
<p>at the peace march in Washington. Once I was young and bold<br />and left hundreds of unmatched people out in the cold.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems-about-grandfather/" title="famous poems about grandfather" rel="tag">famous poems about grandfather</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-a/" title="poems a" rel="tag">poems a</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem The Ballad Of The Lonely Masturbator by anne sexton</title>
		<link>http://www.poemsabout.org/the-ballad-of-the-lonely-masturbator-anne-sexton/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 09:35:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[famous poems about ballad]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[The end of the affair is always death. She&#8217;s my workshop. Slippery eye, out of the tribe of myself my breath finds you gone. I [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The end of the affair is always death. <br />She&#8217;s my workshop. Slippery eye, <br />out of the tribe of myself my breath <br />finds you gone. I horrify <br />those who stand by. I am fed. <br />At night, alone, I marry the bed. <br />Finger to finger, now she&#8217;s mine. <br />She&#8217;s not too far. She&#8217;s my encounter. <br />I beat her like a bell. I recline <br />in the bower where you used to mount her. <br />You borrowed me on the flowered spread. <br />At night, alone, I marry the bed. <br />Take for instance this night, my love, <br />that every single couple puts together <br />with a joint overturning, beneath, above, <br />the abundant two on sponge and feather, <br />kneeling and pushing, head to head. <br />At night, alone, I marry the bed. <br />I break out of my body this way, <br />an annoying miracle. Could I <br />put the dream market on display? <br />I am spread out. I crucify. <br />My little plum is what you said. <br />At night, alone, I marry the bed. <br />Then my black-eyed rival came. <br />The lady of water, rising on the beach, <br /> a piano at her fingertips, shame <br />on her lips and a flute&#8217;s speech. <br />And I was the knock-kneed broom instead. <br />At night, alone, I marry the bed. <br />She took you the way a women takes <br />a bargain dress off the rack <br />and I broke the way a stone breaks. <br />I give back your books and fishing tack. <br />Today&#8217;s paper says that you are wed. <br />At night, alone, I marry the bed. <br />The boys and girls are one tonight. <br />They unbutton blouses. They unzip flies. <br />They take off shoes. They turn off the light. <br />The glimmering creatures are full of lies. <br />They are eating each other. They are overfed. <br />At night, alone, I marry the bed.</p>

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		<title>Poem The Nude Swim by anne sexton</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 09:23:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poems t]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[On the southwest side of Capriwe found a little unknown grottowhere no people were and weentered it completelyand let our bodies lose alltheir loneliness.
All the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On the southwest side of Capri<br />we found a little unknown grotto<br />where no people were and we<br />entered it completely<br />and let our bodies lose all<br />their loneliness.</p>
<p>All the fish in us<br />had escaped for a minute.<br />The real fish did not mind.<br />We did not disturb their personal life.<br />We calmly trailed over them<br />and under them, shedding<br />air bubbles, little white<br />balloons that drifted up<br />into the sun by the boat<br />where the Italian boatman slept<br />with his hat over his face.</p>
<p>Water so clear you could<br />read a book through it.<br />Water so buoyant you could<br />float on your elbow.<br />I lay on it as on a divan.<br />I lay on it just like<br />Matisse&#8217;s Red Odalisque.<br />Water was my strange flower,<br />one must picture a woman<br />without a toga or a scarf<br />on a couch as deep as a tomb.</p>
<p>The walls of that grotto<br />were everycolor blue and<br />you said, &#8220;Look! Your eyes<br />are seacolor.  Look!  Your eyes<br />are skycolor.&#8221;  And my eyes<br />shut down as if they were< br>suddenly ashamed.</p>

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		<title>Poem The Addict by anne sexton</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 09:11:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Sleepmonger,deathmonger,with capsules in my palms each night,eight at a time from sweet pharmaceutical bottlesI make arrangements for a pint-sized journey.I&#8217;m the queen of this condition.I&#8217;m [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sleepmonger,<br />deathmonger,<br />with capsules in my palms each night,<br />eight at a time from sweet pharmaceutical bottles<br />I make arrangements for a pint-sized journey.<br />I&#8217;m the queen of this condition.<br />I&#8217;m an expert on making the trip<br />and now they say I&#8217;m an addict.<br />Now they ask why.<br />WHY!</p>
<p>Don&#8217;t they know that I promised to die!<br />I&#8217;m keeping in practice.<br />I&#8217;m merely staying in shape.<br />The pills are a mother, but better,<br />every color and as good as sour balls.<br />I&#8217;m on a diet from death.</p>
<p>Yes, I admit<br />it has gotten to be a bit of a habit-<br />blows eight at a time, socked in the eye,<br />hauled away by the pink, the orange,<br />the green and the white goodnights.<br />I&#8217;m becoming something of a chemical<br />mixture.<br />that&#8217;s it!<br />My supply<br />of tablets<br />has got to last for years and years.<br />I like them more than I like me.<br />It&#8217;s a kind of marriage.<br />It&#8217;s a kind of war where I plant bombs inside<br />of myself.<br />Yes<br />I try<br />to kill myself in small amou nts,<br />an innocuous occupation.<br />Actually I&#8217;m hung up on it.<br />But remember I don&#8217;t make too much noise.<br />And frankly no one has to lug me out<br />and I don&#8217;t stand there in my winding sheet.<br />I&#8217;m a little buttercup in my yellow nightie<br />eating my eight loaves in a row<br />and in a certain order as in<br />the laying on of hands<br />or the black sacrament.<br />It&#8217;s a ceremony<br />but like any other sport<br />it&#8217;s full of rules.<br />It&#8217;s like a musical tennis match where<br />my mouth keeps catching the ball.<br />Then I lie on; my altar<br />elevated by the eight chemical kisses.<br />What a lay me down this is<br />with two pink, two orange,<br />two green, two white goodnights.<br />Fee-fi-fo-fum-<br />Now I&#8217;m borrowed.<br />Now I&#8217;m numb.</p>

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		<title>Poem Briar Rose (Sleeping Beauty) by anne sexton</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 08:47:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[famous poems about rose]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poems b]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Considera girl who keeps slipping off,arms limp as old carrots,into the hypnotist&#8217;s trance,into a spirit worldspeaking with the gift of tongues.She is stuck in the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Consider<br />a girl who keeps slipping off,<br />arms limp as old carrots,<br />into the hypnotist&#8217;s trance,<br />into a spirit world<br />speaking with the gift of tongues.<br />She is stuck in the time machine,<br />suddenly two years old sucking her thumb,<br />as inward as a snail,<br />learning to talk again.<br />She&#8217;s on a voyage.<br />She is swimming further and further back,<br />up like a salmon,<br />struggling into her mother&#8217;s pocketbook.<br />Little doll child,<br />come here to Papa.<br />Sit on my knee.<br />I have kisses for the back of your neck.<br />A penny for your thoughts, Princess.<br />I will hunt them like an emerald.</p>
<p>Come be my snooky<br />and I will give you a root.<br />That kind of voyage,<br />rank as a honeysuckle.<br />Once<br />a king had a christening<br />for his daughter Briar Rose<br />and because he had only twelve gold plates<br />he asked only twelve fairies<br />to the grand event.<br />The thirteenth fairy,<br />her fingers as long and thing as straws,<br />her eyes burnt by cigarettes,<br />her uterus an empty tea cup,<br />arrived with an evil gift.<br />She made this prophecy:<br />The princess shall prick herself<br />on a spinning wheel in her fifteenth year<br />and then fall down dead.<br />Kaputt!<br />The court fell silent.<br />The king looked like Munch&#8217;s Scream<br />Fairies&#8217; prophecies,<br />in times like those,<br />held water.<br />However the twelfth fairy<br />had a certain kind of eraser<br />and thus she mitigated the curse<br />changing that death<br />into a hundred-year sleep.</p>
<p>The king ordered every spinning wheel<br />exterminated and exorcised.<br />Briar Rose grew to be a goddess<br />and each night the king<br />bit the hem of her gown<br />to keep her safe.<br />He fastened the moon up<br />with a safety pin<br />to give her perpetual light<br />He forced every male in the court<br />to scour his tongue with Bab-o<br />lest they poison the air she dwelt in.<br />Thus she dwelt in his odor.<br />Rank as honeysuckle.</p>
<p>On her fifteenth birthday<br />she pricked her finger<br />on a charred spinning wheel<br />and the clocks stopped.<br />Yes indeed . She went to sleep.<br />The king and queen went to sleep,<br />the courtiers, the flies on the wall.<br />The fire in the hearth grew still<br />and the roast meat stopped crackling.<br />The trees turned into metal<br />and the dog became china.<br />They all lay in a trance,<br />each a catatonic<br />stuck in a time machine.<br />Even the frogs were zombies.<br />Only a bunch of briar roses grew<br />forming a great wall of tacks<br />around the castle.<br />Many princes<br />tried to get through the brambles<br />for they had heard much of Briar Rose<br />but they had not scoured their tongues<br />so they were held by the thorns<br />and thus were crucified.<br />In due time<br />a hundred years passed<br />and a prince got through.<br />The briars parted as if for Moses<br />and the prince found the tableau intact.<br />He kissed Briar Rose<br />and she woke up crying:<br />Daddy! Daddy!<br />Presto! She&#8217;s out of prison!<br />She married the prince<br />and all went well<br />except for the fear &#8211;<br />the fear of sleep.</p>
<p>Briar Rose<br />was an insomniac&#8230;< br>She could not nap<br />or lie in sleep<br />without the court chemist<br />mixing her some knock-out drops<br />and never in the prince&#8217;s presence.<br />If if is to come, she said,<br />sleep must take me unawares<br />while I am laughing or dancing<br />so that I do not know that brutal place<br />where I lie down with cattle prods,<br />the hole in my cheek open.<br />Further, I must not dream<br />for when I do I see the table set<br />and a faltering crone at my place,<br />her eyes burnt by cigarettes<br />as she eats betrayal like a slice of meat.</p>
<p>I must not sleep<br />for while I&#8217;m asleep I&#8217;m ninety<br />and think I&#8217;m dying.<br />Death rattles in my throat<br />like a marble.<br />I wear tubes like earrings.<br />I lie as still as a bar of iron.<br />You can stick a needle<br />through my kneecap and I won&#8217;t flinch.<br />I&#8217;m all shot up with Novocain.<br />This trance girl<br />is yours to do with.<br />You could lay her in a grave,<br />an awful package,<br />and shovel dirt on her face<br />and she&#8217;d never call back: Hello there!<br />But if you kiss ed her on the mouth<br />her eyes would spring open<br />and she&#8217;d call out: Daddy! Daddy!<br />Presto!<br />She&#8217;s out of prison.</p>
<p>There was a theft.<br />That much I am told.<br />I was abandoned.<br />That much I know.<br />I was forced backward.<br />I was forced forward.<br />I was passed hand to hand<br />like a bowl of fruit.<br />Each night I am nailed into place<br />and forget who I am.<br />Daddy?<br />That&#8217;s another kind of prison.<br />It&#8217;s not the prince at all,<br />but my father<br />drunkeningly bends over my bed,<br />circling the abyss like a shark,<br />my father thick upon me<br />like some sleeping jellyfish.<br />What voyage is this, little girl?<br />This coming out of prison?<br />God help &#8211;<br />this life after death?</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems-about-rose/" title="famous poems about rose" rel="tag">famous poems about rose</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-b/" title="poems b" rel="tag">poems b</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem Housewife by anne sexton</title>
		<link>http://www.poemsabout.org/housewife-anne-sexton/</link>
		<comments>http://www.poemsabout.org/housewife-anne-sexton/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 08:23:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[famous poems about wife]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poems h]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetical works of anne sexton]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Some women marry houses.It&#8217;s another kind of skin; it has a heart, a mouth, a liver and bowel movements.The walls are permanent and pink.See how [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Some women marry houses.<br />It&#8217;s another kind of skin; it has a heart, <br />a mouth, a liver and bowel movements.<br />The walls are permanent and pink.<br />See how she sits on her knees all day, <br />faithfully washing herself down.<br />Men enter by force, drawn back like Jonah<br />into their fleshy mothers.<br />A woman is her mother.<br />That&#8217;s the main thing.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems-about-wife/" title="famous poems about wife" rel="tag">famous poems about wife</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-h/" title="poems h" rel="tag">poems h</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem For My Lover, Returning To His Wife by anne sexton</title>
		<link>http://www.poemsabout.org/for-my-lover-returning-to-his-wife-anne-sexton/</link>
		<comments>http://www.poemsabout.org/for-my-lover-returning-to-his-wife-anne-sexton/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 08:11:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[famous poems about wife]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poems f]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetical works of anne sexton]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[She is all there. She was melted carefully down for you and cast up from your childhood, cast up from your one hundred favorite aggies. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>She is all there. <br />She was melted carefully down for you <br />and cast up from your childhood, <br />cast up from your one hundred favorite aggies. <br />She has always been there, my darling. <br />She is, in fact, exquisite. <br />Fireworks in the dull middle of February <br />and as real as a cast-iron pot. <br />Let&#8217;s face it, I have been momentary. <br />vA luxury. A bright red sloop in the harbor. <br />My hair rising like smoke from the car window. <br />Littleneck clams out of season. <br />She is more than that. She is your have to have, <br />has grown you your practical your tropical growth. <br />This is not an experiment. She is all harmony. <br />She sees to oars and oarlocks for the dinghy, <br />has placed wild flowers at the window at breakfast, <br />sat by the potter&#8217;s wheel at midday, <br />set forth three children under the moon, <br />three cherubs drawn by Michelangelo, <br />done this with her legs spread out <br />in the terrible months in the chapel. <br />If you glance up, the children are there <br />like delicate  balloons resting on the ceiling. <br />She has also carried each one down the hall <br />after supper, their heads privately bent, <br />two legs protesting, person to person, <br />her face flushed with a song and their little sleep. <br />I give you back your heart. <br />I give you permission &#8212; <br />for the fuse inside her, throbbing <br />angrily in the dirt, for the bitch in her <br />and the burying of her wound &#8212; <br />for the burying of her small red wound alive &#8212; <br />for the pale flickering flare under her ribs, <br />for the drunken sailor who waits in her left pulse, <br />for the mother&#8217;s knee, for the stocking, <br />for the garter belt, for the call &#8212; <br />the curious call <br />when you will burrow in arms and breasts <br />and tug at the orange ribbon in her hair <br />and answer the call, the curious call. <br />She is so naked and singular <br />She is the sum of yourself and your dream. <br />Climb her like a monument, step after step. <br />She is solid. <br />As for me, I am a watercolor. <br />I wash off.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems-about-wife/" title="famous poems about wife" rel="tag">famous poems about wife</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-f/" title="poems f" rel="tag">poems f</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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		<title>Poem Buying The Whore by anne sexton</title>
		<link>http://www.poemsabout.org/buying-the-whore-anne-sexton/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 12 Feb 2009 07:59:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>love poems</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[famous poems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poems b]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetical works of anne sexton]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[You are the roast beef I have purchasedand I stuff you with my very own onion.
You are a boat I have rented by the hourand [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>You are the roast beef I have purchased<br />and I stuff you with my very own onion.</p>
<p>You are a boat I have rented by the hour<br />and I steer you with my rage until you run aground.</p>
<p>You are a glass that I have paid to shatter<br />and I swallow the pieces down with my spit.</p>
<p>You are the grate I warm my trembling hands on,<br />searing the flesh until it&#8217;s nice and juicy.</p>
<p>You stink like my Mama under your bra<br />and I vomit into your hand like a jackpot<br />its cold hard quarters.</p>

	Poems tags: <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/famous-poems/" title="famous poems" rel="tag">famous poems</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poems-b/" title="poems b" rel="tag">poems b</a>, <a href="http://www.poemsabout.org/the/poetical-works-of-anne-sexton/" title="poetical works of anne sexton" rel="tag">poetical works of anne sexton</a><br />
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