LENGHT OF MOONThen the golden hourWill tick its lastAnd the flame will go down in the flower.A briefer length of moonWill mark the sea-line and the yellow dune.Then we may think of this, yetThere will be something forgottenAnd something we should forget.It will be like all things we know:A stone will fail; a rose is sure to go.It will be quiet then and we may stay long at the picket gateBut there will be less to say. Arna Bontemps
Cigarettes And Whiskey And Wild, Wild Women(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 progressed,I learned early about the stockadeor taken out, the fume of the enema.By two or three I learned not to kneel,not to expect, to plant my fires undergroundwhere none but the dolls, perfect and awful,could be whispered to or laid down to die.Now that I have written many words,and let out so many loves, for so many,and been altogether what I always was—a woman of excess, of zeal and greed,I find the effort useless.Do I not look in the mirror,these days,and see a drunken rat avert her eyes?Do I not feel the hunger so acutelythat I would rather die than lookinto its face?I kneel once more,in case mercy should comein the nick of time.
Anne Sexton.