At the Lake
A fish leaps
like a black
pin --
then -- when the starlight
strikes its side --
like a silver pin.
In an
instant
the fish's spine
alters the fierce line of rising
and it curls a little
--
the head, like scalloped tin,
plunges back,
and it's
gone.
This is, I think,
what
holiness is:
the natural world,
where every moment is full
of the passion to keep
moving.
Inside every mind
there's a hermit's cave
full of
light,
full of snow,
full of
concentration.
I've knelt there,
and so have you,
hanging on
to what you
love,
to what is lovely.
The lake's
shining sheets
don't make
a ripple now,
and the stars
are going off to their blue
sleep,
but the words are in place
--
and the fish leaps, and leaps again
from the black plush of the
poem,
that breathless space.
~ Mary Oliver ~
(White
Pine)
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