The imagery used in this poem helps the reader to picture the author as nonhuman, and doing nonhuman activities. When Sexton describes feeding the creatures in the forest, such as the worms and elves, she creates a nonhuman and unordinary character. Even though this character seems inhuman and odd, one can analyze the poem and realize that Anne Sexton is referring to her own life and personal experiences. When Sexton states that she “fixed the suppers for the worms and the elves: whining, rearranging the disaligned,” she is describing how she made dinner for her
The imagery used in this poem helps the reader to picture the author as nonhuman, and doing nonhuman activities. When Sexton describes feeding the creatures in the forest, such as the worms and elves, she creates a nonhuman and unordinary character. Even though this character seems inhuman and odd, one can analyze the poem and realize that Anne Sexton is referring to her own life and personal experiences. When Sexton states that she “fixed the suppers for the worms and the elves: whining, rearranging the disaligned,” she is describing how she made dinner for her