Jeri Leach

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The Magician's As...
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The Yellow Birds
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Jack Kerouac
“It seemed like a matter of minutes when we began rolling in the foothills before Oakland and suddenly reached a height and saw stretched out ahead of us the fabulous white city of San Francisco on her eleven mystic hills with the blue Pacific and its advancing wall of potato-patch fog beyond, and smoke and goldenness in the late afternoon of time.”
Jack Kerouac, On the Road

Mary Oliver
“Did you too see it, drifting, all night, on the black river?
Did you see it in the morning, rising into the silvery air -
An armful of white blossoms,
A perfect commotion of silk and linen as it leaned
into the bondage of its wings; a snowbank, a bank of lilies,
Biting the air with its black beak?
Did you hear it, fluting and whistling
A shrill dark music - like the rain pelting the trees - like a waterfall
Knifing down the black ledges?
And did you see it, finally, just under the clouds -
A white cross Streaming across the sky, its feet
Like black leaves, its wings Like the stretching light of the river?
And did you feel it, in your heart, how it pertained to everything?
And have you too finally figured out what beauty is for?
And have you changed your life?”
Mary Oliver, Swan: Poems and Prose Poems

William Shakespeare
“He that is proud eats up himself: pride is his own glass, his own trumpet, his own chronicle.”
William Shakespeare

Mary Oliver
“And that is just the point... how the world, moist and beautiful, calls to each of us to make a new and serious response. That's the big question, the one the world throws at you every morning. "Here you are, alive. Would you like to make a comment?”
Mary Oliver

Mary Oliver
“The poet must not only write the poem but must scrutinize the world intensely, or anyway that part of the world he or she has taken for subject. If the poem is thin, it is likely so not because the poet does not know enough words, but because he or she has not stood long enough among the flowers--has not seen them in any fresh, exciting, and valid way.”
Mary Oliver, A Poetry Handbook

year in books
Christo...
811 books | 62 friends

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731 books | 21 friends

Katy
243 books | 194 friends

Kaylie ...
214 books | 77 friends

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991 books | 332 friends

Angela ...
1,913 books | 86 friends

Peggy H...
2 books | 77 friends

Patrik
402 books | 23 friends

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