May

May
by Mary Oliver

What lay on the road was no mere handful of snake. It was the copperhead at last, golden under the street lamp. I hope to see everything in this world before I die. I knelt on the road and stared. Its head was wedge-shaped and fell back to the unexpected slimness of a neck. The body itself was thick, tense, electric. Clearly this wasn’t black snake looking down from the limbs of a tree, or green snake, or the garter, whizzing over the rocks. Where these had, oh, such shyness, this one had none. When I moved a little, it turned and clamped its eyes on mine; then it jerked toward me. I jumped back and watched as it flowed on across the road and down into the dark. My heart was pounding. I stood a while, listening to the small sounds of the woods and looking at the stars. After excitement we are so restful. When the thumb of fear lifts, we are so alive.

Poem: May

Poem: May Day

Poem: May 26 1969: The Grievance

Poem: May Evening in Central Park

Poem: Anna May Wong has Breakfast at Tiffany’s

Poem: There may be Chaos still around the World

Poem: May-Day at Sea

Poem: For May Swenson

Poem: May Moon

Poem: this beginning may have always meant this end

May Swenson

Spring poems

May