All My Pretty Ones
                        
                            By Anne Sexton
                        
                    
                
                                                                
                            Father, this year’s jinx rides us apart
 where you followed our mother to her cold slumber;
 a second shock boiling its stone to your heart,   
 leaving me here to shuffle and disencumber   
 you from the residence you could not afford:   
 a gold key, your half of a woolen mill,
 twenty suits from Dunne’s, an English Ford,   
 the love and legal verbiage of another will,   
 boxes of pictures of people I do not know.
 I touch their cardboard faces. They must go.
 But the eyes, as thick as wood in this album,   
 hold me. I stop here, where a small boy
 waits in a ruffled dress for someone to come ...   
 for this soldier who holds his bugle like a toy   
 or for this velvet lady who cannot smile.   
 Is this your father’s father, this commodore
 in a mailman suit? My father, time meanwhile   
 has made it unimportant who you are looking for.   
 I’ll never know what these faces are all about.   
 I lock them into their book and throw them out.
 This is the yellow scrapbook that you began
 the year I was born; as crackling now and wrinkly   
 as tobacco leaves: clippings where Hoover outran   
 the Democrats, wiggling his dry finger at me
 and Prohibition; news where the Hindenburg went   
 down and recent years where you went flush   
 on war. This year, solvent but sick, you meant   
 to marry that pretty widow in a one-month rush.   
 But before you had that second chance, I cried   
 on your fat shoulder. Three days later you died.
 These are the snapshots of marriage, stopped in places.   
 Side by side at the rail toward Nassau now;
 here, with the winner’s cup at the speedboat races,   
 here, in tails at the Cotillion, you take a bow,
 here, by our kennel of dogs with their pink eyes,   
 running like show-bred pigs in their chain-link pen;   
 here, at the horseshow where my sister wins a prize;   
 and here, standing like a duke among groups of men.   
 Now I fold you down, my drunkard, my navigator,   
 my first lost keeper, to love or look at later.
 I hold a five-year diary that my mother kept   
 for three years, telling all she does not say   
 of your alcoholic tendency. You overslept,
 she writes. My God, father, each Christmas Day   
 with your blood, will I drink down your glass   
 of wine? The diary of your hurly-burly years   
 goes to my shelf to wait for my age to pass.   
 Only in this hoarded span will love persevere.   
 Whether you are pretty or not, I outlive you,
 bend down my strange face to yours and forgive you.
                
                    
                        Anne Sexton, “All My Pretty Ones” from The Complete Poems of Anne Sexton (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1981). Copyright © 1981 by Linda Gray Sexton and Loring Conant, Jr. Reprinted with the permission of Sterling Lord Literistic, Inc.
                    
                
            
                                                
                        
                            
                    
                        Source:
                        The Complete Poems of Anne Sexton
                                                                                                                                                                    (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1981)