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Today, on February 9th, 2010, the site contains 196 poets, 8,692 poems and 8,017 comments.
Mary Oliver - The Lark

And I have seen, 
at dawn, 
the lark 
spin out of the long grass 
and into the pink air - 
its wings, 
which are neither wide 
nor overstrong, 
fluttering - 
the pectorals 
ploughing and flashing 
for nothing but altitude - 
and the song 
bursting 
all the while 
from the red throat. 
And then he descends, 
and is sorry.
His little head hangs 
and he pants for breath 
for a few moments
among the hoops of the grass, 
which are crisp and dry, 
where most of his living is done - 
and then something summons him again
and up he goes, 
his shoulders working, 
his whole body almost collapsing and floating 
to the edges of the world. 
We are reconciled, I think, 
to too much.
Better to be a bird, like this one - 
an ornament of the eternal. 
As he came down once, to the nest of the grass, 
“Squander the day, but save the soul, ”
I heard him say. 

Added: Apr 13 2005 | Viewed: 1611 times | Comments (0)


The Lark - Comments and Information

Poet: Mary Oliver
Poem: The Lark

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