Poetry as a Rescue Remedy: Mary Oliver’s Snow Geese

DSC_0014SnowGeese122512_filteredMany of mary Oliver's poems make the connection between the loveliness of the world, the mystery and intrigue of birds, the rhythms of nature and of our lives, and those hard to name longings that murmur just below the surface of the routine and ordinary in our lives. She has the unusual gift of expressing deep contentment, but through the experience of surprise and unlooked for joy which tugs us away from the contented familiar to want newness. The great poets do this – they reassure and disturb, they keep us alert to our mortality and the one off opportunity that is our life; they prevent contentment becoming complacency, and teach us that delight may be the most serious thing we will ever feel. 
Snow Geese by Mary Oliver
Oh, to love what is lovely, and will not last!
What a task
to ask
of anything, or anyone,
yet it is ours,
and not by the century or the year, but by the hours.
One fall day I heard
above me, and above the sting of the wind, a sound
I did not know, and my look shot upward; it was
a flock of snow geese, winging it
faster than the ones we usually see,
and, being the color of snow, catching the sun
so they were, in part at least, golden. I
held my breath
as we do
sometimes
to stop time
when something wonderful
has touched us
as with a match,
which is lit, and bright,
but does not hurt
in the common way,
but delightfully,
as if delight
were the most serious thing
you ever felt.
The geese
flew on,
I have never seen them again.
Maybe I will, someday, somewhere.
Maybe I won't.
It doesn't matter.
What matters
is that, when I saw them,
I saw them
as through the veil, secretly, joyfully, clearly.

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