Jane Mead Quote

The Originof what happened is not in language—of this much I am certain.Six degrees south, six east—and you have it: the birdwith the blue feathers, the brown bird—same white breasts, same scalyankles. The waves between us—house light and transform motioninto the harboring of sounds in language.Where there is newsprintthe fact of desire is turned from again—and again. Just the sensethat what remains might well be held up—later, as an ending.Twice I have walked through this life—once for nothing, oncefor facts: fairy-shrimp in the vernal pool—glassy-winged sharp-shooteron the failing vines. Count me—among the animals, their smallcommitted calls.—Count me among

Jane Mead

The Originof what happened is not in language—of this much I am certain.Six degrees south, six east—and you have it: the birdwith the blue feathers, the brown bird—same white breasts, same scalyankles. The waves between us—house light and transform motioninto the harboring of sounds in language.Where there is newsprintthe fact of desire is turned from again—and again. Just the sensethat what remains might well be held up—later, as an ending.Twice I have walked through this life—once for nothing, oncefor facts: fairy-shrimp in the vernal pool—glassy-winged sharp-shooteron the failing vines. Count me—among the animals, their smallcommitted calls.—Count me among

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About Jane Mead

Jane Mead (August 13, 1958 – September 8, 2019) was an American poet and the author of five poetry collections. Her last volume was To the Wren: Collected & New Poems 1991-2019 (Alice James Books, 2019). Her honors included fellowships from the Lannan and Guggenheim foundations and a Whiting Award. Her poems appeared in literary journals and magazines including Ploughshares, Electronic Poetry Review, The American Poetry Review, The New York Times, the Virginia Quarterly Review, and The Antioch Review and in anthologies including The Best American Poetry 1990.
Born in Baltimore, Mead lived in Cambridge, Massachusetts, until she was twelve. Her father taught ichthyology at Harvard University. After Cambridge, she moved around a great deal with her mother and stepfather, who was a journalist, living in New Mexico, London, and Cambridge, England. She graduated from Vassar College and from Syracuse University and the University of Iowa. She taught and was Poet-in-Residence at Wake Forest University.
After her father died in 2003, Mead managed the family ranch in Napa County, Northern California. She taught at New England College and co-owned Prairie Lights in Iowa City, Iowa.
Mead died September 8, 2019, in Napa, from cancer.