HERONS IN WINTER IN THE FROZEN MARSH Mary Oliver p. 1990* ============================================ All winter two blue herons hunkered in the frozen marsh, like two columns of blue smoke. What they ate I can't imagine, unless it was the small laces of snow that settled in the ruckus of the cattails, or the glazed windows of ice under the tired pitchforks of their feet-- so the answer is they ate nothing, and nothing good could come of that. They were mired in nature, and starving. Still, every morning they shrugged the rime from their shoulders, and all day they stood to attention in the stubbled desolation. I was filled with admiration, sympathy, and, of course, empathy. It called for a miracle. Finally the marsh softened, and their wings cranked open revealing the old blue light, so that I thought: how could this possibly be the blunt, dark finish? First one, then the other, vanished into the ditches and upheavals. All spring, I watched the rising blue-green grass, above its gleaming and substantial shadows, toss in the breeze, like wings. ======== * from _House_of_Light_, 1990 (--Note: the original poem is center-justified.) ======== ========