1. Journal of a Nobody: The Lark by Mary Oliver →

    And I have seen, 
    at dawn, 
    the lark 
    spin out of the long grass 
    and into the pink air - 
    its wings, 
    which are neither wide 
    nor overstrong, 
    fluttering - 
    the pectorals 
    ploughing and flashing 
    for nothing but altitude - 
    and the song 
    bursting 
    all the while 
    from the red throat. 
    And then he descends, 
    and is sorry.
    His little head hangs 
    and he pants for breath 
    for a few moments
    among the hoops of the grass, 
    which are crisp and dry, 
    where most of his living is done - 
    and then something summons him again
    and up he goes, 
    his shoulders working, 
    his whole body almost collapsing and floating 
    to the edges of the world. 
    We are reconciled, I think, 
    to too much.
    Better to be a bird, like this one - 
    an ornament of the eternal. 
    As he came down once, to the nest of the grass, 
    “Squander the day, but save the soul, ”
    I heard him say.

Notes

  1. queuea reblogged this from journalofanobody and added:
    And I have seen, at dawn, the lark spin out of the long grass and into the pink air - its wings, which are neither wide...
  2. christinasanantonio reblogged this from journalofanobody
  3. chasingtailfeathers said: “Squander the day, but save the soul, ” My motto for life.
  4. journalofanobody posted this