seams of the clouds
it is a cloudy day today. how can it be wednesday already? why does march seem to be flying by so fast?
today i want to share another poem by anne sexton. i love her fairytale poems so much. that is all. a wednesday poem + some artwork to send you off...! have a lovely day.
images: alphonse mucha (1+2), margaret evans price (3+4), andy warhol (5+6+7), '50s paper dolls (8).
today i want to share another poem by anne sexton. i love her fairytale poems so much. that is all. a wednesday poem + some artwork to send you off...! have a lovely day.
from anne sexton's "cinderella"
once
the wife of a rich man was on her deathbed
and she said to her daughter cinderella:
be devout. be good. then i will smile
down from heaven in the seam of a cloud.
the man took another wife who had
two daughters, pretty enough
but with hearts like blackjacks.
cinderella was their maid.
she slept on the sooty hearth each night
and walked around looking like al jolson.
her father brought presents home from town,
jewels and gowns for the other women
but the twig of a tree for cinderella.
she planted that twig on her mother's grave
and it grew to a tree where a white dove sat.
whenever she wished for anything the dove
would drop it like an egg upon the ground.
the bird is important, my dears, so heed him.
next came the ball, as you all know.
it was a marriage market.
the prince was looking for a wife. all but cinderella were preparing
and gussying up for the big event.
cinderella begged to go too.
her stepmother threw a dish of lentils
into the cinders and said: pick them
up in an hour and you shall go.
the white dove brought all his friends;
all the warm wings of the fatherland came,
and picked up the lentils in a jiffy.
no, cinderella, said the stepmother,
you have no clothes and cannot dance.
that's the way with stepmothers.
cinderella went to the tree at the grave and cried forth like a gospel singer:
mama! mama! my turtledove,
send me to the prince's ball!
the bird dropped down a golden dress
and delicate little gold slippers.
rather a large package for a simple bird.
so she went. which is no surprise.
her stepmother and sisters didn't
recognize her without her cinder face
and the prince took her hand on the spot
and danced with no other the whole day.
as nightfall came she thought she'd better
get home. the prince walked her home
and she disappeared into the pigeon house
and although the prince took an axe and broke
it open she was gone. back to her cinders.
these events repeated themselves for three days.
however on the third day the prince covered the palace steps with cobbler's wax
and cinderella's gold shoe stuck upon it.
now he would find whom the shoe fit
and find his strange dancing girl for keeps.
he went to their house and the two sisters
were delighted because they had lovely feet.
the eldest went into a room to try the slipper on
but her big toe got in the way so she simply
sliced it off and put on the slipper.
the prince rode away with her until the white dove
told him to look at the blood pouring forth.
that is the way with amputations.
they don't just heal up like a wish.
the other sister cut off her heel
but the blood told as blood will.
the prince was getting tired.
he began to feel like a shoe salesman.
but he gave it one last try.
this time cinderella fit into the shoe
like a love letter into its envelope.
*
cinderella and the prince
lived, they say, happily ever after,
like two dolls in a museum case
never bothered by diapers or dust,
never arguing over the timing of an egg,
never telling the same story twice,
never getting a middle-aged spread,
their darling smiles pasted on for eternity.
regular bobbsey twins.
that story.
—
images: alphonse mucha (1+2), margaret evans price (3+4), andy warhol (5+6+7), '50s paper dolls (8).
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