The IllusIon of “happIly ever afTer” In anne
sexTon’s CInderella
The poem “Cinderella” by Anne Sexton is a darkly ironic version of the
classic fairy tale, depriving it of innocence and revealing the illusions of the idea of
“happily ever after.” Instead of praising magic, love, and virtue, Sexton criticizes
society in its fascination with instant wealth, romanticism, and unrealistic beauty.
Sexton makes her arguments about the fairy tale through repetition, sarcasm, and
disturbing imagery that they are cultural lies that promote passive hopefulness and
denial of the truth of human suffering and imperfection. This poem eventually
presents happiness, not as a state of meaningful emotion, but as a big performance
that is maintained to be shown.
Sexton starts the poem with a listing of some various rags-to-riches tales that
reflect Cinderella. These brief tales, like “the plumber with the twelve children,
who wins the Irish Sweepstakes,” are built in order to create the pattern of the
miraculous success that is exaggerated and impersonal (Sexton). All instances are
closed with the same coded sentence, "That story," to underline the familiarity and
stereotyping of such fantasies. Through this repetition, Sexton implies that these
stories are retold myths, as opposed to real-life depictions. The opening makes the