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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Robert Lowell
Robert Lowell
Robert Lowell was born in 1917 into one of Boston's oldest and most prominent families. He attended Harvard College for two years before transferring to Kenyon College, where he studied poetry under John...
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FURTHER READING
Poems About Anniversaries
Couple Sharing a Peach
by Molly Peacock
Earth Tremors Felt in Missouri
by Mona Van Duyn
Francesco and Clare
by David St. John
I Married You
by Linda Pastan
My Wife
by Robert Louis Stevenson
Orpheus
by Robert Kelly
The Anniversary
by John Donne
The Elephant is Slow to Mate
by D.H. Lawrence
The Storm
by Theodore Roethke
To My Dear and Loving Husband
by Anne Bradstreet
Poems About Breakups and Divorce
A Book Of Music
by Jack Spicer
After Love
by Sara Teasdale
Donal Óg
by Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory
Failing and Flying
by Jack Gilbert
Family Reunion
by Jeredith Merrin
from The Aeneid ["So, you traitor"]
by Virgil
Heart's Needle
by W. D. Snodgrass
I May After Leaving You Walk Quickly or Even Run
by Matthea Harvey
One Art
by Elizabeth Bishop
Remember
by Christina Rossetti
The Gift
by Sara Teasdale
The Primer
by Christina Davis
This Was Once a Love Poem
by Jane Hirshfield
To Earthward
by Robert Frost
When We Two Parted
by George Gordon Byron
Why should a foolish marriage vow
by John Dryden
Related Prose
Groundbreaking Book: Life Studies by Robert Lowell (1959)
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Man and Wife  
by Robert Lowell

Tamed by Miltown, we lie on Mother's bed;

the rising sun in war paint dyes us red;
in broad daylight her gilded bed-posts shine,
abandoned, almost Dionysian.
At last the trees are green on Marlborough Street,
blossoms on our magnolia ignite
the morning with their murderous five days' white.
All night I've held your hand,
as if you had
a fourth time faced the kingdom of the mad--
its hackneyed speech, its homicidal eye--
and dragged me home alive. . . .Oh my Petite,
clearest of all God's creatures, still all air and nerve:
you were in our twenties, and I,
once hand on glass
and heart in mouth,
outdrank the Rahvs in the heat
of Greenwich Village, fainting at your feet--
too boiled and shy
and poker-faced to make a pass,
while the shrill verve
of your invective scorched the traditional South.

Now twelve years later, you turn your back.
Sleepless, you hold
your pillow to your hollows like a child;
your old-fashioned tirade--
loving, rapid, merciless--
breaks like the Atlantic Ocean on my head.



From Selected Poems by Robert Lowell, published by Farrar, Straus & Giroux, Inc. Copyright © 1976, 1977 by Robert Lowell. Used by permission.
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