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Poetry by Mary Oliver

Poetry by Mary Oliver

作者: 听君一席话001 | 来源:发表于2018-12-19 09:19 被阅读19次

    Poetry By Mary Oliver

    The Journey

    One day you finally knew

    what you had to do, and began,

    though the voices around you

    kept shouting

    their bad advice--

    though the whole house

    began to tremble

    and you felt the old tug

    at your ankles.

    "Mend my life!"

    each voice cried.

    But you didn't stop.

    You knew what you had to do,

    though the wind pried

    with its stiff fingers

    at the very foundations,

    though their melancholy

    was terrible.

    It was already late

    enough, and a wild night,

    and the road full of fallen

    branches and stones.

    But little by little,

    as you left their voices behind,

    the stars began to burn

    through the sheets of clouds,

    and there was a new voice

    which you slowly

    recognized as your own,

    that kept you company

    as you strode deeper and deeper

    into the world,

    determined to do

    the only thing you could do--

    determined to save

    the only life you could save.

    Wild Geese

    You do not have to be good.

    You do not have to walk on your knees

    for a hundred miles through the desert repenting.

    You only have to let the soft animal of your body

    love what it loves.

    Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.

    Meanwhile the world goes on.

    Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain

    are moving across the landscapes,

    over the prairies and the deep trees,

    the mountains and the rivers.

    Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,

    are heading home again.

    Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,

    the world offers itself to your imagination,

    calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting 

    over and over announcing your place

    in the family of things.

    Sleeping in the Forest

    I thought the earth remembered me,

    she took me back so tenderly,

    arranging her dark skirts, her pockets

    full of lichens and seeds.

    I slept as never before, a stone on the river bed,

    nothing between me and the white fire of the stars

    but my thoughts, and they floated light as moths

    among the branches of the perfect trees.

    All night I heard the small kingdoms

    breathing around me, the insects,

    and the birds who do their work in the darkness.

    All night I rose and fell, as if in water,

    grappling with a luminous doom. By morning

    I had vanished at least a dozen times

    into something better.

    from Sleeping In The Forest by Mary Oliver

    © Mary Oliver

    Back To Poetry Index

    Photo by: 123rf.com

    List of Poems:

    The Journey

    Sleeping In the Forest

    Wild Geese

    Poem (the spirit likes to dress up)

    Morning Poem

    The Swan

    Bone

    Song of the Builders

    Where Does The Dance Begin....

    Poem (the spirit likes to dress up)

    The spirit

      likes to dress up like this:

      ten fingers,

      ten toes,

    shoulders, and all the rest

      at night

      in the black branches,

        in the morning

    in the blue branches

      of the world.

      It could float, of course,

        but would rather

    plumb rough matter.

      Airy and shapeless thing,

      it needs

        the metaphor of the body,

    lime and appetite,

      the oceanic fluids;

      it needs the body's world,

        instinct

    and imagination

      and the dark hug of time,

      sweetness

        and tangibility,

    to be understood,

      to be more than pure light

      that burns

        where no one is --

    so it enters us --

      in the morning

      shines from brute comfort

        like a stitch of lightning;

    and at night

      lights up the deep and wondrous

      drownings of the body

        like a star.

    Morning Poem

    Every morning

    the world

    is created.

    Under the orange

    sticks of the sun

    the heaped

    ashes of the night

    turn into leaves again

    and fasten themselves to the high branches ---

    and the ponds appear

    like black cloth

    on which are painted islands

    of summer lilies.

    If it is your nature

    to be happy

    you will swim away along the soft trails

    for hours, your imagination

    alighting everywhere.

    And if your spirit

    carries within it

    the thorn

    that is heavier than lead ---

    if it's all you can do

    to keep on trudging ---

    there is still

    somewhere deep within you

    a beast shouting that the earth

    is exactly what it wanted ---

    each pond with its blazing lilies

    is a prayer heard and answered

    lavishly,

    every morning,

    whether or not

    you have ever dared to be happy,

    whether or not

    you have ever dared to pray.

    from Dream Work (1986) by Mary Oliver

    © Mary Oliver

    The Swan

    Did you too see it, drifting, all night, on the black river?

    Did you see it in the morning, rising into the silvery air -

    An armful of white blossoms,

    A perfect commotion of silk and linen as it leaned

    into the bondage of its wings; a snowbank, a bank of lilies,

    Biting the air with its black beak?

    Did you hear it, fluting and whistling

    A shrill dark music - like the rain pelting the trees - like a waterfall

    Knifing down the black ledges?

    And did you see it, finally, just under the clouds -

    A white cross Streaming across the sky, its feet

    Like black leaves, its wings Like the stretching light of the river?

    And did you feel it, in your heart, how it pertained to everything?

    And have you too finally figured out what beauty is for?

    And have you changed your life?

    Song of the Builders

    On a summer morning

    I sat down

    on a hillside

    to think about God -

    a worthy pastime.

    Near me, I saw

    a single cricket;

    it was moving the grains of the hillside

    this way and that way.

    How great was its energy,

    how humble its effort.

    Let us hope

    it will always be like this,

    each of us going on

    in our inexplicable ways

    building the universe.

    from Why I Wake Early (2004)

    Bone

    1.

    Understand, I am always trying to figure out

    what the soul is,

    and where hidden,

    and what shape

    and so, last week,

    when I found on the beach

    the ear bone

    of a pilot whale that may have died

    hundreds of years ago, I thought

    maybe I was close

    to discovering something

    for the ear bone

    2.

    is the portion that lasts longest

    in any of us, man or whale; shaped

    like a squat spoon

    with a pink scoop where

    once, in the lively swimmer's head,

    it joined its two sisters

    in the house of hearing,

    it was only

    two inches long

    and thought: the soul

    might be like this

    so hard, so necessary

    3.

    yet almost nothing.

    Beside me

    the gray sea

    was opening and shutting its wave-doors,

    unfolding over and over

    its time-ridiculing roar;

    I looked but I couldn't see anything

    through its dark-knit glare;

    yet don't we all know, the golden sand

    is there at the bottom,

    though our eyes have never seen it,

    nor can our hands ever catch it

    4.

    lest we would sift it down

    into fractions, and facts

    certainties

    and what the soul is, also

    I believe I will never quite know.

    Though I play at the edges of knowing,

    truly I know

    our part is not knowing,

    but looking, and touching, and loving,

    which is the way I walked on,

    softly,

    through the pale-pink morning light.

    from Why I Wake Early (2004)

    Where Does the Dance Begin, Where Does It End?

    Don't call this world adorable, or useful, that's not it.

    It's frisky, and a theater for more than fair winds.

    The eyelash of lightning is neither good nor evil.

    The struck tree burns like a pillar of gold.

    But the blue rain sinks, straight to the white

    feet of the trees

    whose mouths open.

    Doesn't the wind, turning in circles, invent the dance?

    Haven't the flowers moved, slowly, across Asia, then Europe,

    until at last, now, they shine

    in your own yard?

    Don't call this world an explanation, or even an education.

    When the Sufi poet whirled, was he looking

    outward, to the mountains so solidly there

    in a white-capped ring, or was he looking

    to the center of everything: the seed, the egg, the idea

    that was also there,

    beautiful as a thumb

    curved and touching the finger, tenderly,

    little love-ring,

    as he whirled,

    oh jug of breath,

    in the garden of dust?

    -from Why I Wake Early (2004)

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