Have You Ever Tried to Enter the Long Black Branches
by Mary Oliver
from West
Wind: Poems and Prose Poems
| Have you ever tried to enter the long black branches | |
| of other lives --- | |
| tried to imagine what the crisp fringes, full of honey, | |
| hanging | |
| from the branches of the young locust trees, in early morning, | |
| feel like? | |
| Do you think this world was only an entertainment for you? | |
| Never to enter the sea and notice how the water divides | |
| with perfect courtesy, to let you in! | |
| Never to lie down on the grass, as though you were the grass! | |
| Never to leap to the air as you open your wings over | |
| the dark acorn of your heart! | |
| No wonder we hear, in your mournful voice, the complaint | |
| that something is missing from your life! | |
| Who can open the door who does not reach for the latch? | |
| Who can travel the miles who does not put one foot | |
| in front of the other, all attentive to what presents itself | |
| continually? | |
| Who will behold the inner chamber who has not observed | |
| with admiration, even with rapture, the outer stone? | |
| Well, there is time left -- | |
| fields everywhere invite you into them. | |
| And who will care, who will chide you if you wander away | |
| from wherever you are, to look for your soul? | |
| Quickly, then, get up, put on your coat, leave your desk! | |
| To put one's foot into the door of the grass, which is | |
| the mystery, which is death as well as life, and | |
| not be afraid! | |
| To set one's foot in the door of death, and be overcome | |
| with amazement! | |
| To sit down in front of the weeds, and imagine | |
| god the ten-fingered, sailing out of his house of straw, | |
| nodding this way and that way, to the flowers of the | |
| present hour, | |
| to the song falling out of the mockingbird's pink mouth, | |
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to the tippets of the honeysuckle, that have opened |
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| in the night | |
| To sit down, like a weed among weeds, and rustle in the wind! | |
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| Listen, are you breathing just a little, and calling it a life? | |
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While the soul, after all, is only a window, |
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| and the opening of the window no more difficult | |
| than the wakening from a little sleep | |
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| Only last week I went out among the thorns and said | |
| to the wild roses: | |
| deny me not, | |
| but suffer my devotion. | |
| Then, all afternoon, I sat among them. Maybe | |
| I even heard a curl or tow of music, damp and rouge red, | |
| hurrying from their stubby buds, from their delicate watery bodies. | |
| For how long will you continue to listen to those dark shouters, | |
| caution and prudence? | |
| Fall in! Fall in! | |
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| A woman standing in the weeds. | |
| A small boat flounders in the deep waves, and what's coming next | |
| is coming with its own heave and grace. | |
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| Meanwhile, once in a while, I have chanced, among the quick things, | |
| upon the immutable. | |
| What more could one ask? | |
| And I would touch the faces of the daises, | |
| and I would bow down | |
| to think about it. | |
| That was then, which hasn't ended yet. | |
| Now the sun begins to swing down. Under the peach-light, | |
| I cross the fields and the dunes, I follow the ocean's edge. | |
| I climb, I backtrack. | |
| I float. | |
| I ramble my way home. | |