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      瑪麗·奧利弗 詩(shī)選(英文)

       子夏書坊 2019-05-31

      Mary Oliver, 1935-2019

      Wild Geese 


      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. 


      Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine. 
      Meanwhile the world goes on. 
      Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain 
      are moving across the landscapes, 
      over the prairies and the deep trees, 
      the mountains and the rivers. 
      Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air, 
      are heading home again. 


      Whoever you are, no matter how lonely, 
      the world offers itself to your imagination, 
      calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting 
      over and over announcing your place 
      in the family of things. 

      Mockingbirds 

      This morning 
      two mockingbirds 
      in the green field 
      were spinning and tossing 

      the white ribbons 
      of their songs 
      into the air. 
      I had nothing 

      better to do 
      than listen. 
      I mean this 
      seriously. 

      In Greece, 
      a long time ago, 
      an old couple 
      opened their door 

      to two strangers 
      who were, 
      it soon appeared, 
      not men at all, 

      but gods. 
      It is my favorite story-- 
      how the old couple 
      had almost nothing to give 

      but their willingness 
      to be attentive-- 
      but for this alone 
      the gods loved them 

      and blessed them-- 
      when they rose 
      out of their mortal bodies, 
      like a million particles of water 

      from a fountain, 
      the light 
      swept into all the corners 
      of the cottage, 

      and the old couple, 
      shaken with understanding, 
      bowed down-- 
      but still they asked for nothing 

      but the difficult life 
      which they had already. 
      And the gods smiled, as they vanished, 
      clapping their great wings. 

      Wherever it was 
      I was supposed to be 
      this morning-- 
      whatever it was I said 

      I would be doing-- 
      I was standing 
      at the edge of the field-- 
      I was hurrying 

      through my own soul, 
      opening its dark doors-- 
      I was leaning out; 
      I was listening. 

      August 


      When the blackberries hang 
      swollen in the woods, in the brambles 
      nobody owns, I spend 

      all day among the high 
      branches, reaching 
      my ripped arms, thinking 

      of nothing, cramming 
      the black honey of summer 
      into my mouth; all day my body 

      accepts what it is. In the dark 
      creeks that run by there is 
      this thick paw of my life darting among 

      the black bells, the leaves; there is 
      this happy tongue. 
             

      The Kitten 

      More amazed than anything 
      I took the perfectly black 
      stillborn kitten 
      with the one large eye 
      in the center of its small forehead 
      from the house cat's bed 
      and buried it in a field 
      behind the house. 

      I suppose I could have given it 
      to a museum, 
      I could have called the local 
      newspaper. 

      But instead I took it out into the field 
      and opened the earth 
      and put it back 
      saying, it was real, 
      saying, life is infinitely inventive, 
      saying, what other amazements 
      lie in the dark seed of the earth, yes, 

      I think I did right to go out alone 
      and give it back peacefully, and cover the place 
      with the reckless blossoms of weeds. 

      Fall Song 

      Another year gone, leaving everywhere 
      its rich spiced residues: vines, leaves, 

      the uneaten fruits crumbling damply 
      in the shadows, unmattering back 

      from the particular island 
      of this summer, this Now, that now is nowhere 

      except underfoot, moldering 
      in that black subterranean castle 

      of unobservable mysteries—roots and sealed seeds 
      and the wanderings of water. This 

      I try to remember when time's measure 
      painfully chafes, for instance when autumn 

      flares out at the last, boisterous and like us longing 
      to stay—how everything lives, shifting 

      from one bright vision to another, forever 
      in these momentary pastures. 

      First Snow 

      The snow 
      began here 
      this morning and all day 
      continued, its white 
      rhetoric everywhere 
      calling us back to why, how, 
      whence such beauty and what 
      the meaning; such 
      an oracular fever! flowing 
      past windows, an energy it seemed 
      would never ebb, never settle 
      less than lovely! and only now, 
      deep into night, 
      it has finally ended. 
      The silence 
      is immense, 
      and the heavens still hold 
      a million candles; nowhere 
      the familiar things: 
      stars, the moon, 
      the darkness we expect 
      and nightly turn from. Trees 
      glitter like castles 
      of ribbons, the broad fields 
      smolder with light, a passing 
      creekbed lies 
      heaped with shining hills; 
      and though the questions 
      that have assailed us all day 
      remain—not a single 
      answer has been found— 
      walking out now 
      into the silence and the light 
      under the trees, 
      and through the fields, 
      feels like one. 

      Sleeping in the Forest 

      I thought the earth 
      remembered me, she 
      took me back so tenderly, arranging 
      her dark skirts, her pockets 
      full of lichens and seeds. I slept 
      as never before, a stone 
      on the riverbed, nothing 
      between me and the white fire of the stars 
      but my thoughts, and they floated 
      light as moths among the branches 
      of the perfect trees. All night 
      I heard the small kingdoms breathing 
      around me, the insects, and the birds 
      who do their work in the darkness. All night 
      I rose and fell, as if in water, grappling 
      with a luminous doom. By morning 
      I had vanished at least a dozen times 
      into something better. 

      The Sun 

      Have you ever seen 
      anything 
      in your life 
      more wonderful 

      than the way the sun, 
      every evening, 
      relaxed and easy, 
      floats toward the horizon 

      and into the clouds or the hills, 
      or the rumpled sea, 
      and is gone-- 
      and how it slides again 

      out of the blackness, 
      every morning, 
      on the other side of the world, 
      like a red flower 

      streaming upward on its heavenly oils, 
      say, on a morning in early summer, 
      at its perfect imperial distance-- 
      and have you ever felt for anything 

      such wild love-- 
      do you think there is anywhere, in any language, 
      a word billowing enough 
      for the pleasure 

      that fills you, 
      as the sun 
      reaches out, 
      as it warms you 

      as you stand there, 
      empty-handed-- 
      or have you too 
      turned from this world-- 

      or have you too 
      gone crazy 
      for power, 
      for things? 

      Breakage 

      I go down to the edge of the sea. 
      How everything shines in the morning light! 
      The cusp of the whelk, 
      the broken cupboard of the clam, 
      the opened, blue mussels, 
      moon snails, pale pink and barnacle scarred 
      and nothing at all whole or shut, but tattered, split, 
      dropped by the gulls onto the gray rocks and all the moisture gone. 
      It's like a schoolhouse 
      of little words, 
      thousands of words. 
      First you figure out what each one means by itself, 
      the jingle, the periwinkle, the scallop full of moonlight. 
      Then you begin, slowly, to read the whole story. 

      In Blackwater Woods 

      Look, the trees 
      are turning 
      their own bodies 
      into pillars 

      of light, 
      are giving off the rich 
      fragrance of cinnamon 
      and fulfillment, 

      the long tapers 
      of cattails 
      are bursting and floating away over 
      the blue shoulders 

      of the ponds, 
      and every pond, 
      no matter what its 
      name is, is 

      nameless now. 
      Every year 
      Everything 
      I have ever learned 

      in my lifetime 
      leads back to this: the fires 
      and the black river of loss 
      whose other side 

      is salvation, 
      whose meaning 
      none of us will ever know. 
      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. 
             

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