Rain, and then
the cool pursed
lips of the wind
draw them
out of the ground -
red and yellow skulls
pummeling upward
through leaves,
through grasses,
through sand; astonishing
in their suddenness,
their quietude,
their wetness, they appear
on fall mornings, some
balancing in the earth
on one hoof
packed with poison,
others billowing
chunkily, and delicious -
those who know
walk out to gather, choosing
the benign from flocks
of glitterers, sorcerers,
russulas,
panther caps,
shark-white death angels
in their town veils
looking innocent as sugar
but full of paralysis:
to eat
is to stagger down
fast as mushrooms themselves
when they are done being perfect
and overnight
slide back under the shining
fields of rain.
--By Mary Oliver, from American Primitive, Back Bay Books, 1983.
Mary Oliver, an "indefatigable guide to the natural world" according
writer Maxine Kumin, was born in 1935 in Cleveland, Ohio. She has
written numerous volumes of poetry and prose and was awarded the
Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1983 and the National Book Award in 1992.
She lives and writes in Provincetown, Massachusetts.