Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Wording For Mens Sweaters

The Double Image


In November, thirty years old.

're still small, you have only three years.

We look at the yellow leaves go queer,

swirl in the rain in winter,

fall and crouched. And I remember

the past three autumns you did not here.

They said I would have never recovered.

I tell you what you never really know:

guesswork medical

explaining the brain will never be real

as these leaves torn down.



I, who have twice tried to kill myself,

I gave you a nickname

just arrived in the months of whining;

then a fever thee gasping throat

and I moved like a pantomime

around your little head.

bad angels have told me. The fault,

said, was mine. They were spies

as witches in the head green to ruin

like a broken faucet;

as if he had ruined his stomach flooded and submerged the cradle,

an old debt that I had to take.



Death was easier than I thought.

The day I gave you life returned safely

I let the witches away my guilty soul.

I pretended to be dead

until white men knackered me from the poison,

without arms and put me from washed

the rigamarole of talking boxes and electric beds.

I laughed to see me put in irons in that hotel.

Today the yellow leaves

are exhausted. I wonder where they go.

I tell you today that he believed in himself, or surrendered.



Today, my little girl, Joy,

love your being where she now lives.

There is no special God to reach, or if there is,

then why have I done to grow elsewhere.

You do not recognize my voice

when I came home to find you.

All the superlatives

of Christmas trees and mistletoe future

not help you know the holidays that you lost.

In the time did not love myself

I came to visit you on the sidewalks shoveled,

kept me for a glove.

After this was again the snow.



2.



They sent me letters with your news

cucivo moccasins and I'd never used.

When I began to put up with me

went to be with his mother. Too late,

too late, "said the witch, to be with his mother.

not I left.

But I am a portrait done.



partial return of the asylum in

came to my mother's house in Gloucester.

And here's how I came to clipping,

and that's how I came to losing it.

My mother said, the suicide I can not give forgiveness.

You never could.

But she made me a portrait.



I lived as a guest angry,

partially mended, baby exorbitant.

I remember that my mother did her best.

He took me to Boston for me to change the cut.

Smile like your mother, "said the capocciante.

It seemed interesting.

But I am a portrait done.



There was a church where I grew up,

we were there in white cabinets inchiavati

as the chorus of sailors, or Puritans, regimented.

My father passed and saucer for alms.

They said the witches, too late to be forgiven.

And I was not really forgiven.

But a portrait of me from that.



3.



That summer irrigation revenues arched

coastal rain on the grass.

We talked of drought

while the corroded by salt meadow

sweetened again.

to spend time mowing grass

the morning and I did do a portrait,

staring at the smile in formalities.

I've sent the little drawing of a rabbit,

and a postcard with the number one Motif

as if it were normal

be a mother and be gone.



They hung the portrait in the cold light

the north side, which suits me well,

to make me feel good.

Only my mother fell ill.

I turned away, as if death contagious

as if death is reflected,

as if my dying had eroded.

In August you were two, but it was certainly the calculation of days.

On September looked at me in the face

and told me that I had attacked the cancer.

The rolling hills cut them

and I still did not answer.



4.



That winter she came

partial return

the sterile suite

doctors, nauseating

cruise X-ray

arithmetic cells gone wild.

Partial intervention

arm fat, poor prognosis,

I heard them say.



During the storms marine

she had to do the portrait.

cave mirror,

hanging on the south side;

a couple of smiles, a copy of her features.

And you like me unknown

my face, you wore it.

After all, you were mine.



I wintered in Boston,

married without children,

anything sweet share,

with witches by side.

I lost your childhood,

another attempted suicide,

just the second hotel of the seals.

made me an April Fool.

We laughed together, it was good.



5.



For the last time dismissed me from

May 1;

degree in mental cases,

with the consent of the analyst,

finished a book of verse,

the typewriter and the stock exchanges.



That summer I learned to forgive life

in my seven rooms,

went on the swan boats, the market,

answer the phone,

like a good wife offered him a drink,

I love between petticoats and August tan.



And you were coming every weekend. No, chin.

You came rarely. I pretended that you were there

butterfly girl, slut

cheek jelly,

three years of disobedience,

beautiful but unknown.



And I had to learn

because I wanted to die rather than love,

because I was hurt your innocence,

accumulation and why the blame

as a young intern

reveals the symptoms and some evidence.



That October day we went to Gloucester

the red hills reminded me

the fur of red fox torn

where I played as a child,

still like a bear, a tent,

a great cave laughing, red fur fox.



We passed the nursery for fish,

the shack where they sell the bait,

Pigeon Cove, Yacht Club,

Squall Hill, to the house waiting

still, the beach house.

And two portraits are hung on opposite walls.



6.



the north side of my smile in its place is fixed

stands in the shadows my bony face.

posavo While there what I had dreamed

all of me in the eyes waiting

the young face, the area of \u200b\u200bthe smile,

trap for foxes.



the south side of his smile in place is fixed

withered withered cheeks as orchids;

my mocking mirror, my love ousted,

my first image. I peeps from the portrait

the head of death petrified

I had overcome.



The artist looked at the turn;

you smile in the framed canvases

before choosing the first roads to be separated.

The red fox fur was to be burned.

I rot on the wall

like Dorian Grey.



And this was a cave mirror,

a woman split that attaches

as if time had froze

- two ladies sat in umber -

You gave a kiss to her grandmother,

and she cried.



7.



I could not keep

except the weekend. Every time you came

clutching the little drawing of the rabbit

that I had sent. For the last time

unpack your suitcase. We touch without contact.

The first time you asked my name.

he will remain forever. Forget

that knocked clashing like puppets

hanging from wires. It was not love

reduced to the weekend.

you scrape your knee, you learn my name,

teetering on the sidewalk crying and calling.

call me mom and I still remember my mother,

than elsewhere on the outskirts of Boston, died.



I remember you called it Joy

to call you joy.

You came as a guest embarrassed

then, all wrapped wet wonder

heavy on my breast.

I needed you. I did not want a male,

only a girl, a baby mouse lactose,

always loved, always exuberant

the house itself. We called it Joy.

I, that I was never certain of being female,

I needed another life,

a ' other image to remember.

And this was my more serious fault;

you could not cure or lenirla.

I've done for me.

Anne Sexton

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