A Thousand Mornings

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by Mary Oliver


  I can’t say much more, except that it all happened

  in silence and peaceful simplicity, and something that felt

  like the bliss of a certainty and a life lived

  in accordance with that certainty.

  I must remember this, I thought, as we fly back

  to America.

  Pray God I remember this.

  NOTE

  The poem “For I Will Consider My Dog Percy” is obviously derivative of Christopher Smart’s poem “For I Will Consider My Cat Jeoffry.” It is in no way an imitation except in style. Jeoffry wins entirely. But for a few days I simply stood upon the shoulders of that wondrous poem and began to think about Percy.

  The lines in italics, except for the exchange of names and altering of verb tense from present to past, are Christopher Smart’s own, and in that way are acknowledged to be so.

  M. O.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  My thanks to the editors of the following publications in which the listed poems previously appeared, some in slightly different form.

  APPALACHIA: “Foolishness? No, It’s Not”; “The Instant”

  BARK: “The First Time Percy Came Back”

  FIVE POINTS: “Hum, Hum”; “Poem of the One World”

  THE NEW YORK TIMES: “Lines Written in the Days of Growing Darkness”

  ORION: “Life Story”

  PARABOLA: “I Go Down to the Shore”; “After I Fall Down the Stairs at the Golden Temple”; “If I Were”; “And Bob Dylan Too”; “The Morning Paper”

  PORTLAND: “Today”

  SHENANDOAH: “Out of the Stump Rot Something”

  WILDERNESS: “Extending the Airport Runway”

  SELECT TITLES ALSO BY MARY OLIVER

  POETRY

  American Primitive

  Dream Work

  New and Selected Poems Volume One

  White Pine

  The Leaf and the Cloud

  What Do We Know

  Why I Wake Early

  New and Selected Poems Volume Two

  Swan

  PROSE

  Blue Pastures

  Winter Hours

  A Poetry Handbook

 

 

 


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