PoemRinging the Bells
Author / PoetAnne Sexton
TagsBells, Isolation, MentalHealth, Routine

And this is the way they ring
the bells in Bedlam
and this is the bell-lady
who comes each Tuesday morning
to give us a music lesson
and because the attendants make you go
and because we mind by instinct,
like bees caught in the wrong hive,
we are the circle of crazy ladies
who sit in the lounge of the mental house
and smile at the smiling woman
who passes us each a bell,
who points at my hand
that holds my bell, E flat,
and this is the gray dress next to me
who grumbles as if it were special
to be old, to be old,
and this is the small hunched squirrel girl
on the other side of me
who picks at the hairs over her lip,
who picks at the hairs over her lip all day,
and this is how the bells really sound,
as untroubled and clean
as a workable kitchen,
and this is always my bell responding
to my hand that responds to the lady
who points at me, E flat;
and although we are not better for it,
they tell you to go. And you do.

Anne Sexton
Anne Sexton
9 Nov 1928 - 4 Oct 1974
Region: North America
Period: Contemporary
Movement: Confessional
Awards: Pulitzer Prize for Poetry

more poems by Anne Sexton

Poem NameTopic
The Starry NightDeath, Night, Stars
Woman with GirdleAging, Body, Transformation
The KissComposer, Resurrection, Sensation
The Fury Of CocksGod, Morning, Power
The Fury Of OvershoesChildhood, Memories, Overshoes
Sylvia’s DeathDeath, Grief, Suicide
The AddictAddiction, Death, Pills
CinderellaCinderella, FairyTale, Irony
After AuschwitzAnger, Death, Despair

all poems by Anne Sexton

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