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I cannot breathe, I cannot breathe any more, blue mind in which I have lived like a prisoner for thirty years, manic and lonely, barely daring to fill my lungs. Sylvia dear, it’s time to say goodbye. You’ve lived much too long—— marble-heavy, a bag full of God, frightening effigy with cracked lips silently holding your breath and a head in the feverish oven where it pours red over snow white with the children asleep in the next room I used to pray to recover you oh, you. In the American tongue, in the British town blinded white by the tongue of winter, winter, winter, but the sadness within is old. My British friend says there have been a dozen or two so I never could tell where you put your mouth, your pen and ink, I never could talk to you. The words trapped in my throat. Swallowed in a sea of tears I, I, I, I, I could hardly speak I thought every woman was she. and the looks pitiful the madness, the madness leaving me to be a lunatic. A lunatic to Daddy, Teddy, Mother. I began to write like a lunatic. I think I may well be a lunatic. The whites of my eyes, the memories of Boston are no longer full of light and truth with my average looks and mediocre mind and my Bible and my Bible I may be a bit of a lunatic. I have always been scared of you, with your books, your gobbledygoo. And your coifed curls and your German eye, mousy brown. Crazy girl, crazy girl, O You—— not sane but locked up so tight no eye could peep through. Every man enjoys a Mother, child suckling the breast, the mad mad mind of a madness like you. You stand tall and proud, Sylvia, in the pictures I have of you, a twitch in your hands instead of your eye but no less a devil for that, no not any less the deranged woman who shattered my fragile mind in a million pieces. I was scarcely a girl when I met you. At twenty I tried to die and get back, back, back to you. I thought even the bones would do but they pulled me into the spotlight, and painted a shiny new coat on me. And then I knew what to do. I made a model of you, a girl in blue with a look of despair. And a love of the noose and pills and I said I do, I do. So Sylvia, dear, I’m finally through. The telephone line is dead on this end, the voices just can’t hear through this madness. If they’ve killed the spirit, I’ve killed the body—— the ghost who said she was you and drank my blood for a year, ten years, if you must know. Sylvia, you can close your eyes now. There’s a gas in your brilliant, blue mind and the other women never liked you. They are praising your dead body. They always knew it was you. Sylvia, Sylvia, you witch, I’m through.
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Oct 21, 2015
Oct 21, 2015 at 3:09 AM UTC
Sylvia
I cannot breathe, I cannot breathe any more, blue mind in which I have lived like a prisoner for thirty years, manic and lonely, barely daring to fill my lungs. Sylvia dear, it’s time to say goodbye. You’ve lived much too long—— marble-heavy, a bag full of God, frightening effigy with cracked lips silently holding your breath and a head in the feverish oven where it pours red over snow white with the children asleep in the next room I used to pray to recover you oh, you. In the American tongue, in the British town blinded white by the tongue of winter, winter, winter, but the sadness within is old. My British friend says there have been a dozen or two so I never could tell where you put your mouth, your pen and ink, I never could talk to you. The words trapped in my throat. Swallowed in a sea of tears I, I, I, I, I could hardly speak I thought every woman was she. and the looks pitiful the madness, the madness leaving me to be a lunatic. A lunatic to Daddy, Teddy, Mother. I began to write like a lunatic. I think I may well be a lunatic. The whites of my eyes, the memories of Boston are no longer full of light and truth with my average looks and mediocre mind and my Bible and my Bible I may be a bit of a lunatic. I have always been scared of you, with your books, your gobbledygoo. And your coifed curls and your German eye, mousy brown. Crazy girl, crazy girl, O You—— not sane but locked up so tight no eye could peep through. Every man enjoys a Mother, child suckling the breast, the mad mad mind of a madness like you. You stand tall and proud, Sylvia, in the pictures I have of you, a twitch in your hands instead of your eye but no less a devil for that, no not any less the deranged woman who shattered my fragile mind in a million pieces. I was scarcely a girl when I met you. At twenty I tried to die and get back, back, back to you. I thought even the bones would do but they pulled me into the spotlight, and painted a shiny new coat on me. And then I knew what to do. I made a model of you, a girl in blue with a look of despair. And a love of the noose and pills and I said I do, I do. So Sylvia, dear, I’m finally through. The telephone line is dead on this end, the voices just can’t hear through this madness. If they’ve killed the spirit, I’ve killed the body—— the ghost who said she was you and drank my blood for a year, ten years, if you must know. Sylvia, you can close your eyes now. There’s a gas in your brilliant, blue mind and the other women never liked you. They are praising your dead body. They always knew it was you. Sylvia, Sylvia, you witch, I’m through.
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Oct 21, 2015
Oct 21, 2015 at 3:09 AM UTC
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