The Moth, The Mountains, The Rivers by Mary Oliver

 
Who can guess the luna's sadness who lives so
briefly? Who can guess the impatience of stone
longing to be ground down, to be part again of
something livelier? Who can imagine in what
heaviness the rivers remember their original
clarity?

Strange questions, yet I have spent worthwhile
time with them. And I suggest them to you also,
that your spirit grow in curiosity, that your life
be richer than it is, that you bow to the earth as
you feel how it actually is, that we- so cleaver, and
ambitious, and selfish, and unrestrained- are only
one design of the moving, the vivacious many. 

~ from A Thousand Mornings (Penguin, 2012)

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Rain Makes Its Own Night by Anne Michaels

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Don’t Tell A Soul by Osip Mandelstam