PoemThe Fury Of Overshoes
Author / PoetAnne Sexton
TagsChildhood, Memories, Overshoes, Transition

They sit in a row
outside the kindergarten,
black, red, brown, all
with those brass buckles.
Remember when you couldn’t
buckle your own
overshoe
or tie your own
overshoe
or tie your own shoe
or cut your own meat
and the tears
running down like mud
because you fell off your
tricycle?
Remember, big fish,
when you couldn’t swim
and simply slipped under
like a stone frog?
The world wasn’t
yours.
It belonged to
the big people.
Under your bed
sat the wolf
and he made a shadow
when cars passed by
at night.
They made you give up
your nightlight
and your teddy
and your thumb.
Oh overshoes,
don’t you
remember me,
pushing you up and down
in the winter snow?
Oh thumb,
I want a drink,
it is dark,
where are the big people,
when will I get there,
taking giant steps
all day,
each day
and thinking
nothing of it?

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
Sylvia’s DeathDeath, Grief, Suicide
The AddictAddiction, Death, Pills
Ringing the BellsBells, Isolation, MentalHealth
CinderellaCinderella, FairyTale, Irony
After AuschwitzAnger, Death, Despair

all poems by Anne Sexton

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