Friday, February 5, 2010

Blossom

It is far too early to offer a poem that anticipates spring, but I found this delicious little tidbit tonight and thought it was worth sharing. May it bring some warmth and cheer to all of you who are slogging through the damp drudgery of winter.

In April
the ponds open
like black blossoms,
the moon
swims in every one;
there’s fire
everywhere: frogs shouting
their desire,
their satisfaction. What
we know: that time
chops at us all like an iron
hoe, that death
is a state of paralysis. What
we long for: joy
before death, nights
in the swale - everything else
can wait but not
this thrust
from the root
of the body. What
we know: we are more
than blood - we are more
than our hunger and yet
we belong
to the moon and when the ponds
open, when the burning
begins the most
thoughtful among us dreams
of hurrying down
into the black petals
into the fire,
into the night where time lies shattered
into the body of another.

Mary Oliver

2 comments:

  1. Wow; that will warm you up, all right! Haven't seen this one before. What an extraordinary last sentence; the poem itself seems to be hurrying down through it. Thanks for sharing!

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  2. I am beginning to adore Mary Oliver. Thank you for sharing!

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