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Naturalist Poet Mary Oliver Reminded Us to be Devoted to Life
When one of poet Mary Oliverโs beloved dogs died, she retraced the steps through the forests where theyโd walked together, dragging branches, bark and leaves to cover the dogโs paw prints that remained in the sand, โso they would last, would keep from the wind for a long time,โ she wrote in her 2016 book Upstream. โThen, overnight, after maybe three weeks, in a dazzling, rearranging rain, they were gone.โ
Itโs the kind of sceneโthe precise natural details charting a loss, mapping the breaking of a heartโthat has won Oliver the loyalty of her many, many fans. And the kind of ode to the transience of life on Earth that makes us grateful that her writing will continue, even as we mourn her passing yesterday.
Born in 1935 in Ohio, Oliver survived a childhood characterized by abuse and neglect, finding solace in both literature and nature. She found comfortโand her writing voiceโduring her long walks in the wilderness. And for six decades, her own words shared that solace with countless readers, earning her many awards, including a Pulitzer and a National Book Award.
If youโre familiar with just one line of Mary Oliverโs poetry, Iโd bet money itโs the ending of โThe Summer Day,โ where she asks, โTell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?โ Odds are, youโve at least seen it on Instagram or Pinterestโor a cute decorative wall hanging. Itโs the type of lineโso perfect for pop consumptionโthat made Oliver beloved, but also vulnerable to criticism.
I wonโt pretend to be a poetry critic. I wonโt even pretend I read poetry regularly. But Iโm a fan of Oliverโs writing partly because those qualities that might make it a target for critical distasteโits simplicity and earnestness, and focus on the natural worldโare exactly what I think the world needs a little more of right now.
In a moment where deep cultural divisions, climate change,ย and ecological destruction could easily weigh a sensitive person down into darkness, Oliver has the boldness to speak of a lightโโMaybe faith, but not a shaped faithโonly, say, a gesture, or a continuum of gestures. But probably it is closer to hope, that is more active, and far messier than faith must be. Faith, as I imagine it, is tensile, and cool, and has no need of words. Hope, I know, is a fighter and a screamer.โ
When itโs easy to read headlines, frown at our bank accounts, get depressed and feel helpless or full of blame, Oliverโs exhortation, in Upstream, to โnot, ever, give anyone else the responsibility for your life,โ feels particularly sharp. Itโs a call to personal emotional responsibility. And also a sweet release.
In one of her most famous poems, โWild Geese,โ Oliver contrasts the sensation of deep, personal human despair with theโpotentially indifferentโwilds of nature: the โclear pebbles of the rainโ moving across the landscape, the wild geese, โhigh in the clean blue air are heading home again.โ But instead of leaving the reader alone as a desperate observer, she pulls them out, welcoming them into the embracing wild:
โWhoever you are, no matter how lonely,
the world offers itself to your imagination,
calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and excitingโ
over and over announcing your place
in the family of things.โ
While attention, as a commodity, seems to be in extremely short supply, Oliverโs quiet noticing of the minutia of pure existence feels exceptionally rare, and very important. She notices the goldfinches, gathered for a musical battle (in โInvitationโ):
โbelieve us, they say,
it is a serious thing
just to be alive
on this fresh morning
in the broken world โฆโ
As we hurry through our days, faces bowed to screens, what do we notice? โAttention is the beginning of devotion,โ Oliver wrote. Which begs the question, what are we giving our attention to?
Perhaps the greatest gift a writer could give to a reader is simply to help them noticeโto pay attentionโthat they are alive. If thatโs the case, many of us have received a very special gift from Mary Oliver.