Authors: Mary Oliver
Tags: #Poetry, #American, #General, #Nature, #Environmental Conservation & Protection
Another Everyday Poem
Every day
I consider
the lilies—
how they are dressed—
and the ravens—
how they are fed—
and how each of these
is a miracle
of Lord-love
and of sorrow—
for the lilies
in their bright dresses
cannot last
but wrinkle fast
and fall,
and the little ravens
in their windy nest
rise up
in such pleasure
at the sight
of fresh meat
that makes their lives sweet—
and what a puzzle it is
that such brevity—
the lavish clothes,
the ruddy food—
makes the world
so full, so good.
Visiting the Graveyard
When I think of death
it is a bright enough city,
and every year more faces there
are familiar
but not a single one
notices me,
though I long for it,
and when they talk together,
which they do
very quietly,
it’s in an unknowable language—
I can catch the tone
but understand not a single word—
and when I open my eyes
there’s the mysterious field, the beautiful trees.
There are the stones.
Ocean
I am in love with Ocean
lifting her thousands of white hats
in the chop of the storm,
or lying smooth and blue, the
loveliest bed in the world.
In the personal life, there is
always grief more than enough,
a heart-load for each one of us
on the dusty road. I suppose
there is a reason for this, so I will be
patient, acquiescent. But I will live
nowhere except here, by Ocean, trusting
equally in all the blast and welcome
of her sorrowless, salt self.
With the Blackest of Inks
At night
the panther,
who is lean
and quick,
is only
a pair of eyes
and, with a yawn,
momentarily,
a long, pink tongue.
Mostly
he listens
as he walks
on the puffs
of his feet
as if
on a carpet
from Persia,
or leaps
into the branches
of a tree,
or swims
across the river,
or simply
stands in the grass
and waits.
Because, Sir,
you have given him,
for your own reasons,
everything that he needs:
leaves, food, shelter;
a conscience
that never blinks.
Invitation
Oh do you have time
to linger
for just a little while
out of your busy
and very important day
for the goldfinches
that have gathered
in a field of thistles
for a musical battle,
to see who can sing
the highest note,
or the lowest,
or the most expressive of mirth,
or the most tender?
Their strong, blunt beaks
drink the air
as they strive
melodiously
not for your sake
and not for mine
and not for the sake of winning
but for sheer delight and gratitude—
believe us, they say,
it is a serious thing
just to be alive
on this fresh morning
in this broken world.
I beg of you,
do not walk by
without pausing
to attend to this
rather ridiculous performance.
It could mean something.
It could mean everything.
It could be what Rilke meant, when he wrote:
You must change your life.
The Orchard
I have dreamed
of accomplishment.
I have fed
ambition.
I have traded
nights of sleep
for a length of work.
Lo, and I have discovered
how soft bloom
turns to green fruit
which turns to sweet fruit.
Lo, and I have discovered
all winds blow cold
at last,
and the leaves,
so pretty, so many,
vanish
in the great, black
packet of time,
in the great, black
packet of ambition,
and the ripeness
of the apple
is its downfall.
A River Far Away and Long Ago
The river
of my childhood,
that tumbled
down a passage of rocks
and cut-work ferns,
came here and there
to the swirl
and slowdown
of a pool
and I saw myself—
oh, clearly—
as I knelt at one—
then I saw myself
as if carried away,
as the river moved on.
Where have I gone?
Since then
I have looked and looked
for myself,
not sure
who I am, or where,
or, more importantly, why.
It’s okay—
I have had a wonderful life.
Still, I ponder
where that other is—
where I landed,
what I thought, what I did,
what small or even maybe meaningful deeds
I might have accomplished
somewhere
among strangers,
coming to them
as only a river can—
touching every life it meets—
that endlessly kind, that enduring.
Night Herons
Some herons | and that was the end of them |
were fishing | as far as we know— |
in the robes | though, what do we know |
of the night | except that death |
| |
at a low hour | is so everywhere and so entire— |
of the water’s body, | pummeling and felling, |
and the fish, I suppose, | or sometimes, |
were full | like this, appearing |
| |
of fish happiness | through such a thin door— |
in those transparent inches | one stab, and you’re through! |
even as, over and over, | And what then? |
the beaks jacked down | Why, then it was almost morning, |
| |
and the narrow | and one by one |
bodies were lifted | the birds |
with every | opened their wings |
quick sally, | and flew. |
Summer Story
When the hummingbird
sinks its face
into the trumpet vine,
into the funnels
of the blossoms,
and the tongue
leaps out
and throbs,
I am scorched
to realize once again
how many small, available things
are in this world
that aren’t
pieces of gold
or power—
that nobody owns
or could buy even
for a hillside of money—
that just
float about the world,
or drift over the fields,
or into the gardens,
and into the tents of the vines,
and now here I am
spending my time,
as the saying goes,
watching until the watching turns into feeling,
so that I feel I am myself
a small bird
with a terrible hunger,
with a thin beak probing and dipping
and a heart that races so fast
it is only a heartbeat ahead of breaking—
and I am the hunger and the assuagement,
and also I am the leaves and the blossoms,
and, like them, I am full of delight, and shaking.
The Teachers
Owl in the black morning,
mockingbird in the burning
slants of the sunny afternoon
declare so simply
to the world
everything I have tried but still
haven’t been able
to put into words,
so I do not go
far from that school
with its star-bright
or blue ceiling,
and I listen to those teachers,
and others too—
the wind in the trees
and the water waves—
for they are what lead me
from the dryness of self
where I labor
with the mind-steps of language—
lonely, as we all are
in the singular,
I listen hard
to the exuberances
of the mockingbird and the owl,
the waves and the wind.
And then, like peace after perfect speech,
such stillness.
Percy and Books (Eight)
Percy does not like it when I read a book.
He puts his face over the top of it and moans.
He rolls his eyes, sometimes he sneezes.
The sun is up, he says, and the wind is down.
The tide is out and the neighbor’s dogs are playing.
But Percy, I say. Ideas! The elegance of language!
The insights, the funniness, the beautiful stories
that rise and fall and turn into strength, or courage.
Books? says Percy. I ate one once, and it was enough.
Let’s go.