2.SO MUCH HAPPINESS

“So Much Happiness” is a beautiful poem by Naomi Shihab Nye. The poem presents happiness as a powerful, free-flowing feeling that cannot be controlled, contained, or fully explained.

The poet begins by saying that it is difficult to know what to do with too much happiness. Sadness is easier to understand because it gives us something definite to deal with. When we are sad, we feel as if there is a wound to heal or broken pieces to collect. Sadness has weight, shape, and pain.

But happiness is different. It does not stay in one place. It floats freely and moves as it wishes. The poet compares happiness to something that lands on the roof of another house, sings for a while, and then disappears. Happiness does not demand anything from us. It simply exists and fills us.

The poem also says that true happiness is strong enough to survive difficult conditions. Even if a person moves from a peaceful tree house to a noisy and dusty place near a quarry, happiness may still remain. This shows that happiness does not always depend on perfect surroundings.

The poet then gives life to ordinary things. Coffee cake, ripe peaches, the floor that needs sweeping, soiled linen, and scratched records are all seen as part of life. Happiness makes us love even the ordinary and imperfect things around us.

Finally, the poet says that happiness is too large to be contained within one person. It flows out of us into everything we touch. We cannot take credit for it, just as the night sky does not take credit for the moon. The night sky simply holds and shares the moon. In the same way, a happy person naturally shares happiness with the world.

The poem teaches us that happiness is not possession or achievement. It is a gift that passes through us and spreads to others. True happiness makes life meaningful, even in ordinary and difficult situations.

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