-
Gallery
Artist’s Quotation
You come to nature with all her theories, and she knocks them all flat. ~Renoir
-
Book Recommendations
Sign-up For RSS Feed
Tags
Alistair Heseltine The Lone Ranger Louise Gluck Water Hyacinth Fractals Evaporation Cristians In The Visual Arts National Poetry Month Seagull.To Win Cara Barer Kathleen Adcock Sunset Art Theodore Roethke WineKIng Galleries Susan Springer Cowboy Junkies Photocrati Western Sunsets Bamian caves Dylan Covers Vladimir Tatlin Silent World Glass art I Shall Be Released Nancy Henry London The Shirt Movie Paperclay Interview Mixed Media Lightroom 3 Pane e tulipani Love In Black And White Donald Hall Vespers Holbrook AZ Paper Cutting Art and Christianity Self Image Dillon Gallery The Shadow Earth Day Backwards Americana Peter Callesen MOMA Jess Lopez-King Ocean Otherwise William Stafford Trinity Art Conference Nature Dale Chihuly PBS Pixie Foudre Animated Short Ed Knippers At The End Of Paths Not Taken Daniel Hoffman Troy DeArmitt Chip Cain Flickr Angela Mellor In Camera Ann Ginsburgh Hofkin Body Image Ethics in Photography Makoto Fujimura Brooklyn POW Flirtation The Streets Mathew's House Project Train Station Wendy Cope Word Player Piano White Winter Hymnal Pencil Art Portrait James Deahl Reading Animals Bonnie Ferrill Roman Christian Rock Michael Kenna Harriet Tubman Tina Dico Lane Smith Ted Kooser Angela Shaw Jane Kenyon If It Be Your Will Boy and Girl Photo Contest Robert Hayden onOne Poverty WILLIAM AARNES Makato Fujimura Short Film 50 People John Bisbee Silent Music Ox Cart Man Sky King Art Theft. Piano Netflix Wordle Naomi Shihab Nye Acadamy Awards weaving Hearts and Minds Bird Arizona Sunsets Fleet Foxes Sunset Winds H. PALMER HALL Mary Louise Parker Scotland Holocaust Kelli Russell Agodon Film Posters paper sculpture Environment They Sit Together on the Porch Wendell Berry John Leax Beach Afghanistan Ocean Waves One Simple Question Girl Cezanne John F. Kennedy John Keats Children in a Field Africa Pause Foreign Films Emily Dickinson Mark Strand Hiram Larew Bob Dylan Rita Dove White As Diamonds by Madeleine L'Engle The List Oscars Pablo Neruda New Yourk City Denise Levertov Calvin College Animated Poetry Billy Collins Legos NEA OTR Rhina P. Espaillat Peggy Noonan Facebook Psalm 34:8 Roger Mitchell Nick Brandt Poetry sculpture Carl Sandburg Sunsets John Donne Jennifer Maestre Poet Laureate B&W Word Art Monet The search Boy Robert Haas Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens New York Japanese Artist Alicia Keys Alice N. Persons Arthur and Yu The Air That I Breathe Michael Nichols Color Walker Percy Bryce Alan Flurie Hardly Art The Fat Man Larry Norman Kumi Yamashita Love And As If The Rain Jon Pineda basketry Video Olga's Gallery Prisoner of words Floyd Skloot photography Black History Bread and Tulips Count To Ten Rachel Zucker William Blake Jack Smart Everyman Photo Contest Poetry Out Loud Wire Sculpture Find Work Katja Mater Rilke Science New Video musician Macmillan Ottawa A SONNET FOR NAPALM Text Art memories Old Time Radio William Doreski J Tillman Trinity Arts Conference Waiting Film New Water Philip Larkin Olivier Beaudoin Black and White Random Art Green Living Creative Textures Terry Evans Kevin Young Dance Sharon Chmielarz Square Halo Degas Typolution Math Biscuit Camera Toss Music 1 Question Nathan Sawaya Webb Sisters Biblical art Jewish Perfecr Suite 6 Ben Zion Shadow art Cisco Kid An Wine Family Art Conference Samuel Bak Kindly Sigur Rós Dennis Sampson Marc Chagall Birthday Leonard Cohen Robert Burns Georges Rouault Nail Art Snow I See Mark Doty Katrina Robert Frost National Geographic Flower Scholastics books Alela Diane Van Gogh Bianca Rossini
Tag Archives: Naomi Shihab Nye
The List
A man told me he had calculated
the exact number of books
he would be able to read before he died
by figuring the average number
of books he read per month
and his probable earth span,
(averaging how long
his dad and grandpa had lived,
adding on a few years since he
exercised more than they did).
Then he made a list of necessary books,
nonfiction mostly, history, philosophy,
fiction, and poetry from different time periods
so there wouldn’t be large gaps in his mind.
He had given up frivolous reading entirely.
There are only so many days.
Oh, I felt sad to hear such an organized plan.
What about the books that aren’t written yet,
the books his friends might recommend
that aren’t on the list,
the yummy magazine that might fall
into his hand at a silly moment after all?
What about the mystery search
through the delectable library shelves?
I felt the heartbeat of forgotten precious books
calling for his hand.

Recent Comments