Wednesday, September 12, 2012

The Swan by Mary Oliver

Across the wide waters
  something comes
    floating—a slim
       and delicate

ship, filled
  with white flowers—
    and it moves
       on its miraculous muscles

as though time didn't exist,
  as though bringing such gifts
    to the dry shore
       was a happiness

almost beyond bearing.
  And now it turns its dark eyes,
    it rearranges
       the clouds of its wings,

it trails
  an elaborate webbed foot,
    the color of charcoal.
       Soon it will be here.

Oh, what shall I do
  when that poppy-colored beak
    rests in my hand?
       Said Mrs. Blake of the poet:

I miss my husband's company—
  he is so often
    in paradise.
       Of course! the path to heaven

doesn't lie down in flat miles.
  It's in the imagination
    with which you perceive
       this world,

and the gestures
  with which you honor it.
    Oh, what will I do, what will I say, when those
       white wings
          touch the shore?

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