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 She sends me news of blue jays, frost, Of stars and now the harvest moon
 That rides above the stricken hills.
 Lightly, she speaks of cold, of pain,
 And lists what is already lost.
 Here where my life seems hard and slow,
 I read of glowing melons piled
 Beside the door, and baskets filled
 With fennel, rosemary and dill,
 While all she could not gather in
 Or hid in leaves, grow black and falls.
 Here where my life seems hard and strange,
 I read her wild excitement when
 Stars climb, frost comes, and blue jays sing.
 The broken year will make no change
 Upon her wise and whirling heart; -
 She knows how people always plan
 To live their lives, and never do.
 She will not tell me if she cries.
 
 I touch the crosses by her name;
 I fold the pages as I rise,
 And tip the envelope, from which
 Drift scraps of borage, woodbine, rue.
 
 Mary Oliver
 
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