Mary Oliver Mash-Up Travel Poems

Traveling Lightly

Searching for a suitcase –
And here you may find me (“Tides”)
Checking the baggage specs
In the luggage section.

One or two things are all you need. (“One or Two Things”)
Good thing – twenty-inch carry-on
and a backpack will have to do.
I’m traveling lightly this trip!
 -Kim Johnson, using borrowed lines from the poetry of Mary Oliver, as noted

Mary Oliver Mashup Journey Poetry

                          

Traversing

It isn’t very far as highways lie (“Going to Walden”)
Traversing over land or sea or sky
The journey isn’t measured by the miles
But by the wondrous ways that it beguiles

I know I can walk through the world
Along the shore or under the trees (“I Happened to Be Standing”)
As brand new perspectives unfurl
Every moment this sojourn to seize

   -Kim Johnson, using borrowed lines from Mary Oliver’s poetry as noted

Mary Oliver Journey Verse 1, featuring borrowed lines from the poetry of Mary Oliver

Wanderlust

Now I am here, later I will be there. (“Life Story”)
So much to do and things I must prepare
Passport, suitcase, walking shoes, rain gear
Planning culmination of a full year

Running here, running there, excited (“The Storm”)
Wanderlust, travel dreams ignited
Itinerary, maps in backpack
Travel journal, pens to foster flash back.

-Kim Johnson, with borrowed lines from Mary Oliver’s poetry as noted

A Mary Oliver Mashup Pantoum Poem

 

I went out of the schoolhouse fast. (“Just As the Calendar Began to Say Summer”)

By fall I had healed somewhat but was summoned back. (“Just as the Calendar Began to Say Summer”)

And now you’ll be telling stories of my coming back. (“The First Time Percy Came Back”)

I wouldn’t persuade you from whatever you believe or whatever you don’t. (“I Happened to be Standing”)

 

By fall I had healed somewhat. (“Just as the Calendar Began to Say Summer”)

Death waits for me, I know it, around one corner or another.  (“Sometimes”)

I wouldn’t persuade you from whatever you believe. (“I Happened to be Standing”)

Is it necessary to say any more? (“Goldfinches”)

 

Death waits for me, I know it. (“Sometimes”)

I would rather eat mud and die. (“The Arrowhead”)

Is it necessary to say any more? (“Goldfinches”)

Isn’t this somewhat overplayed? (“From this River, When I was a Child, I used to Drink”)

 

I would rather eat mud. (“The Arrowhead”)

And now you’ll be telling stories. (“The First Time Percy Came Back”)

Isn’t this somewhat overplayed? (“From this River, when I was a Child, I used to Drink”)

I went out of the schoolhouse. (“Just as the Calendar Began to Say Summer”)

-Kim Johnson, using lines and variations of lines from the poetry of Mary Oliver

Mary Oliver Mashup – May 8, 2019
 
OM5 – Opportunities Mary Oliver Modestly Offers Me
 

Do you have a question that can’t be answered? (“From the Book of Time”)

I have refused to live locked in the orderly house of reasons and proofs. (“The World I Live In”)

Most of the world says no, no, it’s not possible. (“Do Stones Feel?)

Frankly, I prefer just to lounge under a tree. (“On Meditating, Sort Of”)

To sit down, like a weed among weeds, and rustle in the wind. (“Have You Ever Tried to Enter the Long Black Branches”)

Going to Walden is not so easy a thing – It is the slow and difficult trick of living and finding it where you are. (“Going to Walden”)

I am not even surprised that I can do this. (“Franz Marc’s Blue Horses”)

There is no end, believe me! to the inventions of summer, to the happiness your body is willing to bear. (“The Roses”)

By next week, the violets will be blooming. (“Drifting”)

-Kim Johnson, composed using borrowed lines from the poetry of Mary Oliver

Mary Oliver Mashup Poem – May 7, 2019

OM4 – Oxygen Mary Oliver Modestly Offers Me
 

You don’t ever know where a sentence will take you. (“Fox”)

The mind can seize both the instant and the memory. (“Winter at Herring Cove”)

There are things you can’t reach.  But you can reach out to them, and all day long. (“Where Does the Temple Begin, Where Does it End?”)

Sometimes there are no rules. (“Three Things to Remember”)

We shake with joy, we shake with grief. (“We Shake with Joy”)

Sometimes the river murmurs, sometimes it raves. (“At the River Clarion”)

On a cot by an open window, I lie and remember. (“No Voyage”)

Prayers fly from all directions. God no doubt understands them all. (“Whistling Swans”)

Sleep comes its little while. (“An Old Story”)

On a cot by an open window. (“No Voyage”)

 …….

One day you knew what you had to do and began. (“The Journey”)

    -Kim Johnson, composed with lines from poetry by Mary Oliver

Mary Oliver Mashup Poem – May 6, 2019
 
 
 
OM3 – Observations Mary Oliver Modestly Offers Me
 

Look! Look! (“The Egret”)

Look, and look again. (“To Begin With, the Sweet Grass”)

How dull we grow from hurrying here and there! (“Going to Walden”)

No doubt clocks are ticking loudly all over the world. (“Softest of Mornings”)

The years to come – this is a promise – will grant you ample time. (“Terns”)

Fields everywhere invite you into them. (“Have You Ever Tried to Enter the Long Black Branches”)

You have a life – just imagine that! (“To Begin With, the Sweet Grass”)

The past is the past, and the present is what your life is and you are capable of choosing what that will be. (“Mornings at Blackwater”)

Wild sings the bird of the heart in the forests of our lives. (“Wild, Wild”)

The birds who own nothing – the reason they can fly! (“Storage”)

So listen to them and watch them, singing as they fly. (“Whistling Swans”)

A poem should always have birds in it. (“Singapore”)

For each of us, there is the daily life. Let us live it, gesture by gesture. (“At the River Clarion”)

When the thumb of fear lifts, we are so alive! (“May”)

Truly, we live with mysteries too marvelous to be understood. (“Mysterious, Yes”)

We are nourished by the mystery. (“The Fish”)

   -Kim Johnson, composed with borrowed lines from the poetry of Mary Oliver

Mary Oliver Mashup – May 5

OM2 – Opinions Mary Oliver Modestly Offers Me
 

You do not have to be good. (“Wild Geese”)

In every heart, there is a coward and a procrastinator. (“The Kookaburras”)

That’s scary, plain scary! (“You Never Know Where a Conversation is Going to Go”)

Remember, you can’t fix everything in the world for everybody. (“Show Time”)

It does no good to bark at the television. (“Show Time”)

Each of us wears a shadow. (“The Pond”)

Sometimes breaking the rules is just extending the rules. (“Three Things to Remember”)

Whoever you are, no matter how lonely, the world offers itself to your imagination. (“Wild Geese”)

A lifetime isn’t long enough for the beauty of this world and the responsibilities of your life. (“Flare”)

How important it is to walk along, not in haste but slowly looking at everything and calling out. (“Yes! No!”)

Nothing you understand will be sweeter or more binding than this deepest affinity between your eyes and the world. (“Terns”)

One or two things are all you need. (“One or Two Things”)

In every heart, there is a god of flowers, just waiting to come out of its cloud and lift its wings. (The Kookaburras”)

Eternity is not later, or in any unfindable place. (“From the Book of Time”)

Gladness gleams all the way to the grave. (“Honey Locust”)

“Thank you” should appear somewhere. (“I Have Just Said”)

Joy is not made to be a crumb. (“Don’t Hesitate”)

How necessary it is to have opinions. (“Yes! No!”)
                           -Kim Johnson, using borrowed lines from Mary Oliver’s poetry

Mary Oliver Mash-Up – May 4th
 
 
 
OM 1 – Orienteering Mary Oliver Modestly Offers Me
 
 
Listen, are you breathing just a little, and calling it a life? (“Have You Ever Tried to Enter the Long Black Branches”)

Consider the orderliness of the world. (“Flare”)

Consider the other kingdoms. (“The Other Kingdoms”)

Come with me into the woods. (“Bazougey”)

Sit now very quietly in some lovely, wild place and listen to the silence. (“A Lesson from James Wright”)

Notice something you have never noticed before. (“Flare”)

Do your best. (“Ropes”)

Have you noticed? (“Ghosts”)

Live with the beetle, and the wind. (“Flare”)

Imagine everything you can imagine, then keep on going. (“At the River Clarion”)

Keep some room in your heart for the unimaginable. (“Evidence”)

I want you to fill your hands with the mud, like a blessing. (“Rice”)

Accept the miracle. (“Logos”)

Let God and the world know you are grateful that the gift has been given. (“The Gift”)

Visit the garden. (“To Begin With, the Sweet Grass”)

Count the roses, red and fluttering. (“From the Book of Time”)

If you suddenly and unexpectedly feel joy, don’t hesitate.  Give in to it. (“Don’t Hesitate)

Just keep on liking things. And praying. (“You Never Know Where a Conversation is Going to Go”)

Be good-natured and untidy in your exuberance. (“Flare”)

In the glare of your mind, be modest. (“Flare”)

Pay attention. Be astonished. Tell about it. (“Sometimes”)

Things! Burn them, burn them! (Storage)

Eat, drink, be happy.  (“Logos”)

Eat bread and understand conflict. Drink water and understand delight. (“To Begin With, the Sweet Grass”)

Love yourself. Then forget it. Then love the world. (“To Begin With, the Sweet Grass”)

Scatter your flowers over the graves, and walk away. (“Flare”)

Think about what it is that music is trying to say. (“Drifting”)

Put your lips to the world and live your life. (“Mornings at Blackwater”)
  -Kim Johnson, using borrowed lines from selected poems by Mary Oliver

 

Mary Oliver Mashup Month – May 3

Mary Oliver credits Christopher Smart for his original poem “For I Will Consider My Cat Jeoffrey,”
(Jubilate Agno, Fragment B) and uses his framework for a mirror poem in “For I Will Consider My Dog Percy.”  As a Mary Oliver Mashup for May 3, I use her framework for a mirror poem as well.

For I Will Consider My Dog Fitz
For I will consider my dog Fitz.
For he was rescued with a broken leg and road rash.
For he is of the tribe of Schnauzer.
For his rescue name was Henry, like the transcendental Thoreau.
For his name now is Fitz, like the reckless partier F. Scott Fitzgerald.  

For his uncle calls him Rorschach, like the ink blot he appears to be in photographs.

For he is not photogenic.
For he will bite the finger that points at him.
For he goes wayward if let off his leash outdoors.
For he runs from scissors.
For he is far too dignified for silly play.
For he is appalled and offended by rough play.
For he squeal-barks and whines like a baby girl when he sees a deer or squirrel in his yard.
For his humans have to spell the words D-E-E-R and S-Q-U-I-R-R-E-L.
For he taught his brother Boo to lift his leg when sprinkling.
For he also taught his brother Boo to catch popcorn in mid-air.
For he kneads and nooks his toys to soothe himself.
For he camps out on the back of the couch.
For he prefers to be outdoors with his nose to the ground, digging a hole and smelling everything.
For he scratches off after his business like four match-heads that won’t ignite.
For his breath is worse than a truckload of rotting goat carcasses.
For Greenies have not cured his Halitosis.
For he is a silent stalker who strikes his brother Boo without warning.
For he will devour unattended dinner plates.
For he is a food hog.
For he eagerly awaits his treats at established intervals throughout the day.
For he is fed breakfast in bed on weekends.
For he will snap at anyone who gets too close to his female human.
For he naps on the purse shelf in his female human’s closet.
For he throws himself against the door in excitement when his humans arrive home. 
For he demands physical attention by rooting hands with his nose.
For he is loved and adored and nurtured like the sweet baby that he is.
 

-Kim Johnson