Anne Sexton photographed by Gwendolyn Stewart, 1973 |
Yesterday marks the 44th anniversary of Anne Sexton’s suicide.
(9 November 1928, Newton, MA – 4 October 1974, Weston, MA)
“All I wanted was a little piece of life, to be married, to have children. I thought the nightmares, the visions, the demons would go away if there was enough love to put them down. […] But one can’t build little white picket fences to keep the nightmares out.”
–Anne Sexton, interviewed for the Paris Review, shortly after winning the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1967
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I have always admired her work and struck resonances in me that I don't quite understand . . .beyond mere words it is often so with poetry, don't you find?
“I have gone out, a possessed witch,
haunting the black air, braver at night;
dreaming evil, I have done my hitch
over the plain houses, light by light:
lonely thing, twelve-fingered, out of mind.
A woman like that is not a woman, quite.
I have been her kind.I have found the warm caves in the woods,
filled them with skillets, carvings, shelves,
closets, silks, innumerable goods;
fixed the suppers for the worms and the elves:
whining, rearranging the disaligned.
A woman like that is misunderstood.
I have been her kind.I have ridden in your cart, driver,
waved my nude arms at villages going by,
learning the last bright routes, survivor
where your flames still bite my thigh
and my ribs crack where your wheels wind.
A woman like that is not ashamed to die.
I have been her kind.”
– Anne Sexton, from The Complete Poems; “Her Kind”
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