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MARY OLIVER QUOTES II

I am not very hopeful about the Earth remaining as it was when I was a child. It's already greatly changed. But I think when we lose the connection with the natural world, we tend to forget that we're animals, that we need the Earth. And that can be devastating.

MARY OLIVER, "Maria Shriver Interviews the Famously Private Poet Mary Oliver," O Magazine, Mar. 2011

All night
the dark buds of dreams
open
richly.
In the center
of every petal
is a letter,
and you imagine
if you could only remember
and string them all together
they would spell the answer.

MARY OLIVER, "Dreams," Dream Work

A dog comes to you and lives with you in your own house, but you do not therefore own her, as you do not own the rain, or the trees, or the laws which pertain to them.... A dog can never tell you what she knows from the smells of the world, but you know, watching her, that you know almost nothing.

MARY OLIVER, "Her Grave," New and Selected Poems, vol. 1

There is nothing better than work. Work is also play, children know that. Children play earnestly as if it were work. But people grow up, and they work with a sorrow upon them. It's duty. But I feel writing is work, and I feel it's also play - bound together.

MARY OLIVER, The Christian Science Monitor, Dec. 9, 1992

I didn't know I was a recluse. I mean, I know many people in Provincetown—fishermen, Portuguese people, young people. If the plumber says, "How's your work goin'?" I'm very easy with that. But if somebody I don't know comes to town and calls me up and says, "I love your work. I'm here for three days, could I take you to lunch?"—well, that is something I can't do. It's hard to meet a stranger—you give of yourself—and if I did that, I'd want to do it well. I'd have to leave my desk, or the woods, and I don't want to.

MARY OLIVER, "Maria Shriver Interviews the Famously Private Poet Mary Oliver," O Magazine, Mar. 2011

Poetry is one of the ancient arts, and it began, as did all the fine arts, within the original wilderness of the earth. Also, it began through the process of seeing, and feeling, and hearing, and smelling, and touching, and then remembering--I mean remembering in words--what these perceptual experiences were like, while trying to describe the endless invisible fears and desires of our inner lives.

MARY OLIVER, A Poetry Handbook

Keep some room in your heart for the unimaginable.

MARY OLIVER, "Evidence," Evidence

I know several lives worth living,

MARY OLIVER, "Humpbacks," The Truro Bear and Other Adventures: Poems and Essays

It's very important to write things down instantly, or you can lose the way you were thinking out a line. I have a rule that if I wake up at 3 in the morning and think of something, I write it down. I can't wait until morning—it'll be gone.

MARY OLIVER, "Maria Shriver Interviews the Famously Private Poet Mary Oliver," O Magazine, Mar. 2011

You want to cry aloud for your mistakes. But to tell the truth the world doesn't need any more of that sound.

MARY OLIVER, "The Poet With His Face in His Hands," New and Selected Poems, vol. 2

I know
death is the fascinating snake
under the leaves, sliding
and sliding; I know
the heart loves him too, can't
turn away, can't
break the spell. Everything
wants to enter the slow thickness,
aches to be peaceful finally and at any cost.
Wants to be stone.

MARY OLIVER, "Members of the Tribe," Dream Work

Poetry is a serious business; literature is the apparatus through which the world tries to keep intact its important ideas and feelings.

MARY OLIVER, A Poetry Handbook

I used up a lot of pencils.

MARY OLIVER, "Maria Shriver Interviews the Famously Private Poet Mary Oliver," O Magazine, Mar. 2011

Nobody, of course, is kind
or mean
for a simple reason.

MARY OLIVER, "Dogfish," Dream Work

Life is much the same
when it's going well--
resonant
and unremarkable.
But who,
not under disaster's seal,
can understand what life is like
when it begins to crumble?

MARY OLIVER, "Storm in Massachusetts, September 1982," Dream Work

So every day I was surrounded by the beautiful crying forth of the ideas of God, one of which was you.

MARY OLIVER, "So Every Day," Red Bird

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.

MARY OLIVER, "In Blackwater Woods," American Primitive

Listen. Are you breathing just a little and calling it a life?

MARY OLIVER, "Have You Ever Tried to Enter the Long Black Branches?", West Wind

Every day I see or hear something that more or less kills me with delight, that leaves me like a needle in the haystack of light.

MARY OLIVER, "Mindful," Why I Wake Early

You do not have to be good.
You do not have to walk on your knees
for a hundred miles through the desert, repenting.
You only have to let the soft animal of your body
love what it loves.

MARY OLIVER, "Wild Geese," Dream Work

Oh, yesterday, that one, we all cry out. Oh, that one! How rich and possible everything was! How ripe, ready, lavish, and filled with excitement--how hopeful we were on those summer days, under the clean, white racing clouds. Oh, yesterday!

MARY OLIVER, "Three Prose Poems", New and Selected Poems

Snow was falling,
so much like stars
filling the dark trees
that one could easily imagine
its reason for being was nothing more
than prettiness

MARY OLIVER, "Snowy Night", What Do We Know: Poems and Prose Poems

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