Angela Bigler > Angela's Quotes

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  • #1
    Sjón
    “I have seen the universe! It is made of poems!”
    Sjon, The Blue Fox

  • #2
    “Poetry is a life-cherishing force. For poems are not words, after all, but fires for the cold, ropes let down to the lost, something as necessary as bread in the pockets of the hungry.”
    Mary Oliver, A Poetry Handbook

  • #3
    “If you suddenly and unexpectedly feel joy, don’t hesitate. Give in to it. There are plenty of lives and whole towns destroyed or about to be. We are not wise, and not very often kind. And much can never be redeemed. Still life has some possibility left. Perhaps this is its way of fighting back, that sometimes something happened better than all the riches or power in the world. It could be anything, but very likely you notice it in the instant when love begins. Anyway, that’s often the case. Anyway, whatever it is, don’t be afraid of its plenty. Joy is not made to be a crumb. (Don't Hesitate)”
    Mary Oliver, Swan: Poems and Prose Poems

  • #4
    “So every day
    I was surrounded by the beautiful crying forth
    of the ideas of God,
    one of which was you.”
    Mary Oliver

  • #5
    “I read the way a person might swim, to save his or her life. I wrote that way too.”
    Mary Oliver, Wild Geese

  • #6
    “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.”
    Mary Oliver, New and Selected Poems, Volume One

  • #7
    “the stars began to burn
    through the sheets of clouds,
    and there was a new voice
    which you slowly
    recognized as your own”
    Mary Oliver

  • #8
    “And that is just the point... how the world, moist and beautiful, calls to each of us to make a new and serious response. That's the big question, the one the world throws at you every morning. "Here you are, alive. Would you like to make a comment?”
    Mary Oliver

  • #9
    “But I also say this: that light is an invitation to happiness, and that happiness, when it's done right, is a kind of holiness, palpable and redemptive. ”
    Mary Oliver

  • #10
    “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 river bed,
    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.”
    Mary Oliver

  • #11
    “Because of the dog's joyfulness, our own is increased. It is no small gift. It is not the least reason why we should honor as well as love the dog of our own life, and the dog down the street, and all the dogs not yet born. What would the world be like without music or rivers or the green and tender grass? What would this world be like without dogs?”
    Mary Oliver, Dog Songs: Poems
    tags: dogs

  • #12
    “The sweetness of dogs (fifteen)

    What do you say, Percy? I am thinking
    of sitting out on the sand to watch
    the moon rise. Full tonight.
    So we go

    and the moon rises, so beautiful it
    makes me shudder, makes me think about
    time and space, makes me take
    measure of myself: one iota
    pondering heaven. Thus we sit,

    I thinking how grateful I am for the moon’s
    perfect beauty and also, oh! How rich
    it is to love the world. Percy, meanwhile,
    leans against me and gazes up into
    my face. As though I were
    his perfect moon.”
    Mary Oliver, Swan: Poems and Prose Poems

  • #13
    “Still, what I want in my life
    is to be willing
    to be dazzled—
    to cast aside the weight of facts

    and maybe even
    to float a little
    above this difficult world.
    I want to believe I am looking

    into the white fire of a great mystery.
    I want to believe that the imperfections are nothing—
    that the light is everything—that it is more than the sum
    of each flawed blossom rising and falling. And I do.”
    Mary Oliver, House of Light

  • #14
    “Listen, whatever you see and love—
    that’s where you are.”
    Mary Oliver, Dog Songs: Poems
    tags: home, love

  • #15
    “Poem (the spirit likes to dress up)

    The spirit
    likes to dress up like this:
    ten fingers,
    ten toes,

    shoulders, and all the rest
    at night
    in the black branches,
    in the morning

    in the blue branches
    of the world.
    It could float, of course,
    but would rather

    plumb rough matter.
    Airy and shapeless thing,
    it needs
    the metaphor of the body,

    lime and appetite,
    the oceanic fluids;
    it needs the body’s world,
    instinct

    and imagination
    and the dark hug of time,
    sweetness
    and tangibility,

    to be understood,
    to be more than pure light
    that burns
    where no one is –

    so it enters us –
    in the morning
    shines from brute comfort
    like a stitch of lightning;

    and at night
    lights up the deep and wondrous
    drownings of the body
    like a star.”
    Mary Oliver, Dream Work

  • #16
    “I want to write something
    so simply
    about love
    or about pain
    that even
    as you are reading
    you feel it
    and as you read
    you keep feeling it
    and though it be my story
    it will be common,
    though it be singular
    it will be known to you
    so that by the end
    you will think—
    no, you will realize—
    that it was all the while
    yourself arranging the words,
    that it was all the time
    words that you yourself,
    out of your heart
    had been saying.”
    Mary Oliver, Evidence: Poems



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