The Double Image
                        
                            By Anne Sexton
                        
                    
                
                                                                
                            1.
 I am thirty this November.
 You are still small, in your fourth year.
 We stand watching the yellow leaves go queer,
 flapping in the winter rain,
 falling flat and washed. And I remember
 mostly the three autumns you did not live here.
 They said I’d never get you back again.
 I tell you what you’ll never really know:
 all the medical hypothesis
 that explained my brain will never be as true as these
 struck leaves letting go.
 I, who chose two times
 to kill myself, had said your nickname
 the mewling months when you first came;
 until a fever rattled
 in your throat and I moved like a pantomime
 above your head. Ugly angels spoke to me. The blame,
 I heard them say, was mine. They tattled
 like green witches in my head, letting doom
 leak like a broken faucet;
 as if doom had flooded my belly and filled your bassinet,
 an old debt I must assume.
 Death was simpler than I’d thought.
 The day life made you well and whole
 I let the witches take away my guilty soul.
 I pretended I was dead
 until the white men pumped the poison out,
 putting me armless and washed through the rigamarole
 of talking boxes and the electric bed.
 I laughed to see the private iron in that hotel.
 Today the yellow leaves
 go queer. You ask me where they go. I say today believed
 in itself, or else it fell.
 Today, my small child, Joyce,
 love your self’s self where it lives.
 There is no special God to refer to; or if there is,
 why did I let you grow
 in another place. You did not know my voice
 when I came back to call. All the superlatives
 of tomorrow’s white tree and mistletoe
 will not help you know the holidays you had to miss.
 The time I did not love
 myself, I visited your shoveled walks; you held my glove.
 There was new snow after this.
 2.
 They sent me letters with news
 of you and I made moccasins that I would never use.
 When I grew well enough to tolerate
 myself, I lived with my mother. Too late,
 too late, to live with your mother, the witches said.
 But I didn’t leave. I had my portrait
 done instead.
 Part way back from Bedlam
 I came to my mother’s house in Gloucester,
 Massachusetts. And this is how I came
 to catch at her; and this is how I lost her.
 I cannot forgive your suicide, my mother said.
 And she never could. She had my portrait
 done instead.
 I lived like an angry guest,
 like a partly mended thing, an outgrown child.
 I remember my mother did her best.
 She took me to Boston and had my hair restyled.
 Your smile is like your mother’s, the artist said.
 I didn’t seem to care. I had my portrait
 done instead.
 There was a church where I grew up
 with its white cupboards where they locked us up,
 row by row, like puritans or shipmates
 singing together. My father passed the plate.
 Too late to be forgiven now, the witches said.
 I wasn’t exactly forgiven. They had my portrait
 done instead.
 3.
 All that summer sprinklers arched
 over the seaside grass.
 We talked of drought
 while the salt-parched
 field grew sweet again. To help time pass
 I tried to mow the lawn
 and in the morning I had my portrait done,
 holding my smile in place, till it grew formal.
 Once I mailed you a picture of a rabbit
 and a postcard of Motif number one,
 as if it were normal
 to be a mother and be gone.
 They hung my portrait in the chill
 north light, matching
 me to keep me well.
 Only my mother grew ill.
 She turned from me, as if death were catching,
 as if death transferred,
 as if my dying had eaten inside of her.
 That August you were two, but I timed my days with doubt.
 On the first of September she looked at me
 and said I gave her cancer.
 They carved her sweet hills out
 and still I couldn’t answer.
 4.
 That winter she came
 part way back
 from her sterile suite
 of doctors, the seasick
 cruise of the X-ray,
 the cells’ arithmetic
 gone wild. Surgery incomplete,
 the fat arm, the prognosis poor, I heard
 them say.
 During the sea blizzards
 she had her
 own portrait painted.
 A cave of mirror
 placed on the south wall;
 matching smile, matching contour.
 And you resembled me; unacquainted
 with my face, you wore it. But you were mine
 after all.
 I wintered in Boston,
 childless bride,
 nothing sweet to spare
 with witches at my side.
 I missed your babyhood,
 tried a second suicide,
 tried the sealed hotel a second year.
 On April Fool you fooled me. We laughed and this
 was good.
 5.
 I checked out for the last time
 on the first of May;
 graduate of the mental cases,
 with my analyst’s okay,
 my complete book of rhymes,
 my typewriter and my suitcases.
 All that summer I learned life
 back into my own
 seven rooms, visited the swan boats,
 the market, answered the phone,
 served cocktails as a wife
 should, made love among my petticoats
 and August tan. And you came each
 weekend. But I lie.
 You seldom came. I just pretended
 you, small piglet, butterfly
 girl with jelly bean cheeks,
 disobedient three, my splendid
 stranger. And I had to learn
 why I would rather
 die than love, how your innocence
 would hurt and how I gather
 guilt like a young intern
 his symptoms, his certain evidence.
 That October day we went
 to Gloucester the red hills
 reminded me of the dry red fur fox
 coat I played in as a child; stock-still
 like a bear or a tent,
 like a great cave laughing or a red fur fox.
 We drove past the hatchery,
 the hut that sells bait,
 past Pigeon Cove, past the Yacht Club, past Squall’s
 Hill, to the house that waits
 still, on the top of the sea,
 and two portraits hung on the opposite walls.
 6.
 In north light, my smile is held in place,
 the shadow marks my bone.
 What could I have been dreaming as I sat there,
 all of me waiting in the eyes, the zone
 of the smile, the young face,
 the foxes’ snare.
 In south light, her smile is held in place,
 her cheeks wilting like a dry
 orchid; my mocking mirror, my overthrown
 love, my first image. She eyes me from that face,
 that stony head of death
 I had outgrown.
 The artist caught us at the turning;
 we smiled in our canvas home
 before we chose our foreknown separate ways.
 The dry red fur fox coat was made for burning.
 I rot on the wall, my own
 Dorian Gray.
 And this was the cave of the mirror,
 that double woman who stares
 at herself, as if she were petrified
 in time — two ladies sitting in umber chairs.
 You kissed your grandmother
 and she cried.
 7.
 I could not get you back
 except for weekends. You came
 each time, clutching the picture of a rabbit
 that I had sent you. For the last time I unpack
 your things. We touch from habit.
 The first visit you asked my name.
 Now you stay for good. I will forget
 how we bumped away from each other like marionettes
 on strings. It wasn’t the same
 as love, letting weekends contain
 us. You scrape your knee. You learn my name,
 wobbling up the sidewalk, calling and crying.
 You call me mother and I remember my mother again,
 somewhere in greater Boston, dying.
 I remember we named you Joyce
 so we could call you Joy.
 You came like an awkward guest
 that first time, all wrapped and moist
 and strange at my heavy breast.
 I needed you. I didn’t want a boy,
 only a girl, a small milky mouse
 of a girl, already loved, already loud in the house
 of herself. We named you Joy.
 I, who was never quite sure
 about being a girl, needed another
 life, another image to remind me.
 And this was my worst guilt; you could not cure
 nor soothe it. I made you to find me.
                
                    
                        Anne Sexton, “The Double Image” from The Complete Poems of Anne Sexton, published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. Copyright © 1981 by Linda Gray Sexton and Loring Conant, Jr. Reprinted with the permission of Sll/Sterling Lord Literistic, Inc.
                    
                
            
                                                
                        
                            
                    
                        Source:
                        The Complete Poems of Anne Sexton
                                                                                                                                                                    (Houghton Mifflin, 1981)