Welcome Morning by Ann Sexton

  peacockandroostercropped.jpg

 

There is joy

in all:

in the hair I brush each morning,

in the Cannon towel, newly washed,

that I rub my body with each morning,

in the chapel of eggs I cook

each morning,

in the outcry from the kettle

that heats my coffee

each morning,

in the spoon and the chair

that cry “hello there, Anne”

each morning,

in the godhead of the table

that I set my silver, plate, cup upon

each morning.

All this is God,

right here in my pea-green house

each morning

and I mean,

though often forget,

to give thanks

to faint down by the kitchen table

in a prayer of rejoicing

as the holy birds at the kitchen window

peck into their marriage of seeds.

So while I think of it,

let me paint a thank-you on my palm

for this God, this laughter of the morning,

lest it go unspoken.

The Joy that isn’t shared, I’ve heard,

dies young.

Anne Sexton,  The Awful Rowing Toward God, Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 1975

I loved this poem upon first reading. It comes as a grace note in the reflective, often anguished, poems collected in The Awful Rowing Toward God.  Sexton wrote the poems in 20 days after a priest told her “God is in your typewriter.” The book was published posthumously, after her suicide. It’s important to me to know that amongst her despairing moments,  Sexton knew joy and celebrated it.

A Peacock, A Rooster 1250s-1260s, Getty detail from A Peacock, A Rooster, 1250-1260, courtesy of Getty Museum