Anne Sexton
Home Course Calander Mrs. Dalloway Kate Chopin Margaret Atwood Biography Toni Morrison Maya Angelou Emily Dickinson Toni Morrison Sara Teasdale Anne Sexton

 

Up
Anne Sexton

Jump to:  Margaret Atwood Page  The Handmaid's Tale


Sexton


Anne Gray Harvey was born November 9, 1928 in Weston, Massachusetts.  She met Alfred Muller Sexton II (Kayo) at Garland School in Boston, and they eventually wed.  Through 1952 & 1953, Kayo found himself moving in and out of the navy, returning home after the birth of their daughter Linda.  Anne then began to suffer from major depression.  She soon after gave birth to their second child, Joyce, which led her deeper into her state of depression.  Anne went in and out of the hospital for psychiatric treatment following several suicide attempts.  While in the hospital, she was able to get a lot of writing done.  Sexton is described as a "confessional" poet, similar to other poets such as Robert Lowell and Sylvia Plath.  Anne committed suicide in 1974 at the age of 46, losing her battle with mental illness.

Selected Sexton Works


The Addict

Sleepmonger,
deathmonger,
with capsules in my palms each night,
eight at a time from sweet pharmaceutical bottles
I make arrangements for a pint-sized journey.
I'm the queen of this condition.
I'm an expert on making the trip
and now they say I'm an addict.
Now they ask why.
WHY!

Don't they know that I promised to die!
I'm keeping in practice.
I'm merely staying in shape.
The pills are a mother, but better,
every color and as good as sour balls.
I'm on a diet from death.

Yes, I admit
it has gotten to be a bit of a habit-
blows eight at a time, socked in the eye,
hauled away by the pink, the orange,
the green and the white goodnights.
I'm becoming something of a chemical
mixture.
that's it!
My supply
of tablets
has got to last for years and years.
I like them more than I like me.
It's a kind of marriage.
It's a kind of war where I plant bombs inside
of myself.
Yes
I try
to kill myself in small amounts,
an innocuous occupation.
Actually I'm hung up on it.
But remember I don't make too much noise.
And frankly no one has to lug me out
and I don't stand there in my winding sheet.
I'm a little buttercup in my yellow nightie
eating my eight loaves in a row
and in a certain order as in
the laying on of hands
or the black sacrament.
It's a ceremony
but like any other sport
it's full of rules.
It's like a musical tennis match where
my mouth keeps catching the ball.
Then I lie on; my altar
elevated by the eight chemical kisses.
What a lay me down this is
with two pink, two orange,
two green, two white goodnights.
Fee-fi-fo-fum-
Now I'm borrowed.
Now I'm numb.


 The Abortion

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, and then drove south.

Up past the Blue Mountains, where
Pennsylvania humps on endlessly,
wearing, like a crayoned cat, its green hair,

its roads sunken in like a gray washboard;
where, in truth, the ground cracks evilly,
a dark socket from which the coal has poured,


Somebody who should have been born
is gone.

the grass as bristly and stout as chives,
and me wondering when the ground would break,
and me wondering how anything fragile survives;

up in Pennsylvania, I met a little man,
not Rumpelstiltskin, at all, at all...
he took the fullness that love began.

Returning north, even the sky grew thin
like a high window looking nowhere.
The road was as flat as a sheet of tin.

Somebody who should have been born
is gone.

Yes, woman, such logic will lead
to loss without death. Or say what you meant,
you coward...this baby that I bleed.

 



Links

Anne Sexton: The Academy of American Poets

Anne Sexton - Biography and Poems by AmericanPoems.com

Anne Sexton

J.D. O., copyright 2002