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Alexis's Reviews > Love Poems

Love Poems by Anne Sexton
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it was amazing

I love this book of poems (and have for many years) because of one poem it contains which has a grace and beauty and truth that I recognize and admire and that breaks my heart each time I really think about it. I hope that despite a messy (if only for its failure to be epic or stormy or contented and sweet) past love-life I will never know the pain that the the speaker of this poem knows. I hope that this poem, if nothing else, will remind me to secure my heart from loving men such as these, regardless of who or what they are married to.

Finally, I am also reminded in reading this poem that I love what it suggests positively about marriage or love. That one could be a have to have. Be indelible. That life has that to offer some of us, if not all of us, if not the voice of this poem:

"For My Lover, Returning To His Wife"

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

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Reading Progress

Finished Reading
June 28, 2007 – Shelved

Comments Showing 1-3 of 3 (3 new)

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message 1: by Gareth (last edited Aug 25, 2016 08:26PM) (new)

Gareth There ought to be a function for reviewing reviews Alexis, 5 stars without a doubt! I too adore this poem - it is one to slowly tear out of the book, fold the ragged edges inwards, creasing the sheet perfectly in half with thumb nail, then secretly place in the pocket of a passeer by or your closest friend - no-one inbetween would do.


message 2: by Alexis (last edited Aug 25, 2016 08:26PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Alexis I think that was your review of my review. I was too carefully instructed about the inviolable perfection of books by librarians as a child to be able to revel in tearing out pages but I revel in your revelry. For me, they must be carefully tended and curated. If returned ruined or close to it, as my WHITE NOISE returned to me from Hawaii, then so be it- they have a greater history. But I myself cannot rip or tear a book on purpose.

I should expect such audacity and daring from a boy like you- who reads books as he sees fit and refuses to read front to back as the authors expect. Brava!


message 3: by Mari (new)

Mari Gareth & Alexis,
I don't know either of you, but I am so glad both of you wrote what you did about this tremendous poem - I first encountered it too young, in middle school, yet even then it burned me. Thank you for reminding me of its perma-stain beauty.
--Mari (friend of Renee's)


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