Tag: Mary Oliver

  • The Lightness of Abigail Carroll

    The Lightness of Abigail Carroll

    She has a knack for going to the deep and sometimes difficult heart of things without flinching and yet returning with something like uplift and joy. There is a lightness verging on flight to her images and words. And a reassuring faithfulness in her discipline of witness.

  • So You Want to Write Poetry…

    So You Want to Write Poetry…

    Come for the instruction in how to write poems. Stay for the poetry that flows from Mary Oliver like an undiminished spring. “Poetry is a life-cherishing force. And it requires a vision—a faith, to use an old-fashioned term. Yes, indeed. For poems are not words, after all, but fires for the cold, ropes let down…

  • Why You Should Not Underestimate Mary Oliver

    Mary Oliver gave me a great gift, though it only came after her death in January. I had often heard her name in sermons and with hushed awe among my tribe at the Festival of Faith and Writing. But I always thought her a bit too tame. She wrote a book on dogs! How domestic!…

  • Call It Forever: Poetry

    Call It Forever: Poetry

    ‘Every day has something in it whose name is Forever.’ —Mary Oliver, ‘Everything That Was Broken’   Poets are not being imprecise when they finger God with other names. It’s just that they’re gobsmacked at the plenitude of Her appearances. In a lover or a creature or a wind-sparked memory or a laden scent, She…

  • Silence, Poetry & the Salvation of Seamus Heaney

    Silence, Poetry & the Salvation of Seamus Heaney

     A Review of Christian Wiman’s He Held Radical Light The poet Seamus Heaney paused in the middle of dinner and leaned over to make a confession to Christian Wiman, who was, at the time, the editor of Poetry magazine. Knowing Wiman to be a Christian not only in name, Heaney admitted that he “felt caught between…