From the Book of Time
by: Mary Oliver
1.
I rose this morning early as usual, and went to my desk.
But it's spring,
and the thrush is in the woods,
somewhere in the twirled branches, and he is singing.
And so, now, I am standing by the open door.
And now I am stepping down onto the grass.
I am touching a few leaves.
I am noticing the way the yellow butterflies
move together, in a twinkling cloud, over the field.
And I am thinking: maybe just looking and listening
is the real work.
Maybe the world, without us,
is the real poem.
2.
For how many years have you gone through the house
shutting the windows,
while the rain was still five miles away
and veering, o plum-colored clouds, to the north
away from you
and you did not even know enough
to be sorry,
you were glad
those silver sheets, with the occasional golden staple,
were sweeping on, elsewhere,
violent and electric and uncontrollable--
and will you find yourself, o lonely leaf, and will you
dash finally, frantically,
to the windows and haul them open and lean out
to the dark, silvered sky, to everything
that is beyond capture, shouting
I'm here, I'm here! Now, now, now, now, now.
3.
I dreamed
I was traveling
from one country
to another
jogging
on the back
of a white horse
whose hooves
were the music
of dust and gravel
whose halter
was made of the leafy braids
of flowers,
whose name
was Earth.
And it never
grew tired
though the sun
went down
like a thousand roses
and the stars
put their white faces
in front of the black branches
above us
and then
there was nothing around us
but water
and the white horse
turned suddenly
like a bolt of white cloth
opening
under the cloth-cutter's deft hands
and became a swan.
Its red tongue
flickered out
as it perceived
my great surprise
my huge and unruly pleasure
my almost unmanageable relief.
4.
"'Whoever shall be guided so far toward the mysteries of love, by contemplating beautiful things rightly in due order, is approaching the last grade. Suddenly he will behold a beauty marvelous in its nature,
that very Beauty, Socrates, for the sake of which all the earlier hardships had been borne: in the first place, everlasting, and never being born nor perishing, neither increasing nor diminishing, secondly, not beautiful here and ugly there, not beautiful now and ugly then, not beautiful in one direction and ugly in another direction, not beautiful in one place and ugly in another place. Again, this beauty will not show itself like a face or hands or any bodily thing at all, nor as a discourse or a science, nor indeed as residing in anything, as in a living creature or in earth or heaven or anything else, but being by itself with itself always in simplicity; while all the beautiful things elsewhere partake of this beauty in such a manner, that when they are born and perish it becomes neither less nor more and nothing at all happens to it . . . '"
5.
What secrets fly out of the earth
when I push the shovel-edge,
when I heave the dirt open?
And if there are no secrets
what is that smell that sweetness rising?
What is my name,
o what is my name
that I may offer it back
to the beautiful world?
Have I walked
long enough
where the sea breaks raspingly
all day and all night upon the pale sand?
Have I admired sufficiently the little hurricane
of the humming bird?
the heavy
thumb
of the blackberry?
the falling star?
6.
Count the roses, red and fluttering.
Count the roses, wrinkled and salt.
Each with its yellow lint at the center.
Each with its honey pooled and ready.
Do you have a question that can't be answered?
Do the stars frighten you by their heaviness
and their endless number?
Does it bother you, that mercy is so difficult to
understand?
For some souls it's easy; they lie down on the sand
and are soon asleep.
For others, the mind shivers in its glacial palace,
and won't come.
Yes, the mind takes a long time, is otherwise occupied
than by happiness, and deep breathing.
Now, in the distance, some bird is singing.
And now I have gathered six or seven deep red,
half-opened cups of petals between my hands,
and now I have put my face against them
and now I am moving my face back and forth, slowly,
against them.
The body is not much more than two feet and a tongue.
Come to me, says the blue sky, and say the word.
And finally even the mind comes running, like a wild thing,
and lies down in the sand.
Eternity is not later, or in any unfindable place.
Roses, roses, roses, roses.
7.
Even now
I remember something
the way a flower
in a jar of water
remembers its life
in the perfect garden
the way a flower
in a jar of water
remembers its life
as a closed seed
the way a flower in a jar of water
steadies itself
remembering itself
long ago
the plunging roots
the gravel the rain
the glossy stem
the wings of the leaves
the swords of the leaves
rising and clashing
for the rose of the sun
the salt of the stars
the crown of the wind
the beds of the clouds
the blue dream
the unbreakable circle.
My puppy loves to stand guard. One of her favorite perches in the house is by the living room window where she presses her nose against the glass and won't be distracted. She notices everything--the mailman, chipmunks and blue jays, coming rain or snow, rabbits nosing through clover. Her body literally shakes with the effort of rapt attention.
My puppy is the exact opposite of Oliver in this poem. The poet abandons her desk and pen, gets distracted. Instead of writing a draft of a poem, she is out her open door, stepping into the dewy grass. Observing. Absorbing. And she comes to a realization: "Maybe the world, without us, / is the real poem." Maybe her real work as a poet is not scribbling in a notebook. Maybe it's throwing open the windows of her house to everything--plum-colored clouds and lonely leaves and the hurricane of the hummingbird and roses, roses, roses.
A poet notices. Records. Allows herself to be distracted by the beauty (or ugliness) in front of her eyes. The wide, wide world is the poem. Anything that Oliver writes (or that I write) is just a meager attempt to plagiarize what the world has already written.
That means that my puppy is reading the poem of the world when she is at her window station. She gets it. Each leaf that moves, each cloud scudding by, each blade of grass is just another line in the unbreakable circle.
Maybe that's why Walt Whitman was constantly changing Leaves of Grass, revising and eliminating, expanding and shrinking. He was simply looking out his window and telling us what he saw.
Maybe Saint Marty needs to spend more time barking at the squirrels.
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