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ee cummings:
i thank You
somewhere i have never travelled
in Just-

Thomas Centolella:
Misterioso

Louise Gluck:
Formaggio

Jane Kenyon:
Happiness
Otherwise
Learning in the First Grade

Bukowski:
One for old snaggletooth
i met a genius
the worst and the best

Nikki Giovanni:
Photography

Mary Oliver:
Mindful

Leonard Cohen:
Interview

George Eliot:
Middlemarch

Margaret Atwood:
Sleep

Borges:
Ajedrez
La escritura del dios

Rebecca Seiferle:
Seraphim

ntozake shange:
no assistance

Pablo Neruda:
Book of Questions XIV

Billy Collins:
Litany

Nora Ephron:
Remarks to Wellesley College Class of 1996

Arundhati Roy:
Buy One, Get One Free

George Packer:
The Way We Live Now

Carl Mayer:
The pile theory


tenets

parables
     

Jane Kenyon - Happiness

There's just no accounting for happiness,
or the way it turns up like a prodigal
who comes back to the dust at your feet
having squandered a fortune far away.

And how can you not forgive?
You make a feast in honor of what
was lost, and take from its place the finest
garment, which you saved for an occasion
you could not imagine, and you weep night and day
to know that you were not abandoned,
that happiness saved its most extreme form
for you alone.

No, happiness is the uncle you never
knew about, who flies a single-engine plane
onto the grassy landing strip, hitchhikes
into town, and inquires at every door
until he finds you asleep midafternoon
as you so often are during the unmerciful
hours of your despair.

It comes to the monk in his cell.
It comes to the woman sweeping the street
with a birch broom, to the child
whose mother has passed out from drink.
It comes to the lover, to the dog chewing
a sock, to the pusher, to the basket maker,
and to the clerk stacking cans of carrots
in the night.
                   It even comes to the boulder
in the perpetual shade of pine barrens,
to rain falling on the open sea,
to the wineglass, weary of holding wine.