April 30, 2007

National Poetry Month: Mary Oliver

I figured I'd end my National Poetry Month extravaganza (although I might keep going with it, I've had a lot of fun, and a lot of cool new readers have found their way to me because of the poetry posts) with one of my favorite poems of all time.

In Blackwater Woods
by Mary Oliver

Look, the trees
are turning
their own bodies
into pillars


of light,
are giving off the rich
fragrance of cinnamon
and fulfillment,


the long tapers
of cattails
are bursting and floating away over
the blue shoulders


of the ponds,
and every pond,
no matter what its
name is, is


nameless now.
Every year
everything
I have ever learned


in my lifetime
leads back to this: the fires
and the black river of loss
whose other side


is salvation,
whose meaning
none of us will ever know.
To live in this world


you must be able
to do three things:
to love what is mortal;
to hold it


against your bones knowing
your own life depends on it;
and, when the time comes to let it go,
to let it go.




Other National Poetry month posts

Alfred, Lord Tennyson

Rumi

Anne Sexton

Edna St. Vincent Millay

Robert Browning

Wallace Stevens

Emily Dickinson

William Blake

John Keats

Seamus Heaney

Geoffrey Chaucer

Ben Jonson

Herman Melville

William Butler Yeats

P.G. Wodehouse

Christopher Smart

John Milton

Shel Silverstein

Gerard Manley Hopkins

Michael Blumenthal

Christopher Marlowe

Emily Bronte

Thomas Hardy

Edward Lear

W.H. Auden

Posted by sheila