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Anne SextonA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides that feature detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, quotes, and essay topics.
The poem’s preoccupation with loss reveals the thematic significance the transitory nature of a moment in time. The opening of the poem puts this theme on display, declaring in the first line, “it was a moment” (Line 1). Although the reader is unable to understand what “it” means, the loss of the moment feels important. Even while the moment was happening, Sexton describes it as a “moment / to clutch at for a moment” (Lines 1-2). The verb “clutch” evokes desperation, as if the moment itself contained the reason for its loss. A moment must exist briefly and then pass, and the poem communicates the transitory nature of time as a primary theme from its first stanza.
The third stanza reinforces the theme as it opens with a description of time: “For forty years this experimental / woodland grew” (Lines 12-13). The “forty years” evoke a human life lived until middle age. Regardless of specific connotations, the years the transplanted trees spent slowly growing, “their lives / filed out in exile” (Lines 15-16), mirrors the speaker’s years of alienation.
The poem’s conclusion advocates for a way to combat the loss of time. The speaker insists that the moment they experienced is now “butchered from time” (Line 31), so they “must tell of [it] quickly / before we lose the sound” (Lines 32-33).
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By Anne Sexton
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