Myra here.
As we continue our romance-filled January-February, I am excited to share the very first book I finished this year. Thank you to Kimberley Moran for hosting this week.
Felicity
Written by: Mary Oliver
Published by: Penguin Press, 2015
Borrowed from the Jurong West Public Library. Book photos taken by me.
There are 38 poems in all in this precious collection, divided into three themes: (1) The Journey, (2) Love, and one poem in (3) Felicity. If you are looking for a book that will provide a quiet balm – singing of hope and brimming with steadfast faith that isn’t self-righteous or quietly indignant, then this is the book for you.
I think what I like best about Mary Oliver’s poetry is how every verse includes the reader, invites them in to marvel at everything that she sees. It never makes the reader feel inadequate for not seeing the wonder that she sees. There is shared joy here, made more luminous with the knowledge that it isn’t always pretty, that it is a hard-won beauty – one that comes after brokenness, ugly truths, perhaps even heartbreak or a sense of loss.
My favourite title from this collection signifies all that and brought unbidden tears to my eyes, and my Poetry Friday offering to you all this Valentine season – because fragments of pain can create a multi-coloured mosaic of mirth, a quiet felicity that permeates, and spreads out into the world, tendrils of joy amidst “everything that was broken.” Sometimes love can be held and cherished despite of, and not always because of.
I took a photo of the page and edited the image using an iPhone app.
I received this book for Christmas, Myra – and cherish every poem in it. What a treasure!
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I love Mary Oliver’s work…thanks for featuring this! I hope more people will read her because of it.
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Thank you for doing in this post–and in all your posts–what you like best about Mary Oliver’s prowess: inviting the reader in without making the reader feel inadequate. Thank you! So much brokenness; so much hopefulness. Here’s to Felicity. God bless you!
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I love Mary Oliver’s work but haven’t seen this book yet. Just checked and am surprised to see our library doesn’t have it in the collection. I’m going to recommend they acquire it.
Thanks for the poem, and for the lovely way you shared it. Happy Valentine’s Day to you!
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“Made more luminous with the knowledge that it … is a hard-won beauty” — well said! I love “How can this be, but it is.”
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Thanks for sharing the poem and your thoughts about the book. I’ve yet to see this one and look forward to savoring each and every poem. 🙂
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I have this book, too, Myra, and have loved each poem, a bit at a time. I love the way you presented this poem, beautifully poignant. Thanks!
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Oh, I’m afraid I’m in the “haven’t seen this yet” camp, but your beautiful post will have me remedying that. Thank you for sharing, Myra, and wishing you graceful touches of those “Forever” moments this weekend and beyond. XO
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Myra, I love how you merged the two images. It’s quite evocative!
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I’m a Mary Oliver fan too–“honorary Poet Laureate of the Unitarian Universalists”–but this poem seems to strike out in a new and welcome direction. Thanks for the personalized view of this heavenly poem!
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Oh…that ending!
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Every time I go to Tattered Cover I pick up this book and read a few poems. So lovely. I want it. The poem you have chosen– so much truth, I think. That last line is just, just, um, I don’t think I have the right word. And I love the image you have paired with it. Gorgeous.
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The Oliver poem you shared highlights what I love about her work. And you named that quality so beautifully in your post: a “steadfast faith that isn’t self-righteous or quietly indignant.” Going off to purchase this gem!
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Hi, Myra. I loved reading about how this book, and this poem in particular, speaks to you. Your presentation of the poem makes it all the more compelling.
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The image complements the writing perfectly. Wow! “Luminous” is the perfect descriptor for this poem.
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