Anne Sexton, Love Poems, 1969

    It Is A Spring Afternoon

    Everything here is yellow and green.
    Listen to its throat, its earthskin,
    the bone dry voices of the peepers
    as they throb like advertisements.
    The small animals of the woods
    are carrying their deathmasks
    into a narrow winter cave.
    The scarecrow has plucked out
    his two eyes like diamonds
    and walked into the village.
    The general and the postman
    have taken off their packs.
    This has all happened before
    but nothing here is obsolete.
    Everything here is possible.Because of this
    perhaps a young girl has laid down
    her winter clothes and has casually
    placed herself upon a tree limb
    that hangs over a pool in the river.
    She has been poured out onto the limb,
    low above the houses of the fishes
    as they swim in and out of her reflection
    and up and down the stairs of her legs.
    Her body carries clouds all the way home.
    She is overlooking her watery face
    in the river where blind men
    come to bathe at midday.Because of this
    the ground, that winter nightmare,
    has cured its sores and burst
    with green birds and vitamins.
    Because of this
    the trees turn in their trenches
    and hold up little rain cups
    by their slender fingers.
    Because of this
    a woman stands by her stove
    singing and cooking flowers.
    Everything here is yellow and green. Surely spring will allow
    a girl without a stitch on
    to turn softly in her sunlight
    and not be afraid of her bed.
    She has already counted seven
    blossoms in her green green mirror.
    Two rivers combine beneath her.
    The face of the child wrinkles.
    in the water and is gone forever.
    The woman is all that can be seen
    in her animal loveliness.
    Her cherished and obstinate skin
    lies deeply under the watery tree.
    Everything is altogether possible
    and the blind men can also see.