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The Circle Of Nature.
All, thou gentle one, lies embraced in thy kingdom; the graybeardBack to the days of his youth, childish and child-like, returns.
Friedrich Schiller
On Taste.
---------Taste is from heaven,An inspiration nature can't bestow;Though nature's beauties, where a taste is given,Warm the ideas of the soul to flowWith that intense, enthusiastic glowThat throbs the bosom, when the curious eyeGlances on beauteous things that give delight,Objects of earth, or air, or sea, or sky,That bring the very senses in the sightTo relish what we see:--but all is nightTo the gross clown--nature's unfolded book,As on he blunders, never strikes his eye;Pages of landscape, tree, and flower, and brook,Like bare blank leaves, he turns unheeded by.
John Clare
Mother Nature.
Beautiful mother is busy all day,So busy she neither can sing nor say;But lovely thoughts, in a ceaseless flow,Through her eyes, and her ears, and her bosom go--Motion, sight, and sound, and scent,Weaving a royal, rich content. When night is come, and her children sleep,Beautiful mother her watch doth keep;With glowing stars in her dusky hairDown she sits to her music rare;And her instrument that never fails,Is the hearts and the throats of her nightingales.
George MacDonald
God in Nature.
We see our Father's hand in all around;In summer's sun, and in cold winter's snow,In leafy wood, on grassy-covered ground,In showers that fall and icy blasts that blow.And when we see the light'ning's flash, and hearThe thunder's roar, majestically grand,A heavenly voice says, "Christian, do not fear,'Tis but the working of thy Father's hand."
W. M. MacKeracher
Alone With Nature.
The rain came suddenly, and to the shoreI paddled, and took refuge in the wood,And, leaning on my paddle, there I stoodIn mild contentment watching the downpour,Feeling as oft I have felt heretofore,Rooted in nature, that supremest moodWhen all the strength, the peace, of solitude,Sink into and pervade the being's core.And I have thought, if man could but abateHis need of human fellowship, and find Himself through Nature, healing with her balmThe world's sharp wounds, and growing in her state,What might and greatness, majesty of mind, Sublimity of soul and Godlike calm!
Not In The Lucid Intervals Of Life
Not in the lucid intervals of lifeThat come but as a curse to party-strife;Not in some hour when Pleasure with a sighOf languor puts his rosy garland by;Not in the breathing-times of that poor slaveWho daily piles up wealth in Mammon's caveIs Nature felt, or can be; nor do words,Which practiced talent readily affords,Prove that her hand has touched responsive chords;Nor has her gentle beauty power to moveWith genuine rapture and with fervent loveThe soul of Genius, if he dare to takeLife's rule from passion craved for passion's sake;Untaught that meekness is the cherished bentOf all the truly great and all the innocent.But who is innocent? By grace divine,Not otherwise, O Nature! we are thine,Through good and evil thine, in just deg...
William Wordsworth
The Seen and The Unseen
Nature is but the outward vestibuleWhich God has placed before an unseen shrine,The Visible is but a fair, bright valeThat winds around the great Invisible;The Finite -- it is nothing but a smileThat flashes from the face of Infinite;A smile with shadows on it -- and 'tis sadMen bask beneath the smile, but oft forgetThe loving Face that very smile conceals.The Changeable is but the broidered robeEnwrapped about the great Unchangeable;The Audible is but an echo, faint,Low whispered from the far Inaudible;This earth is but an humble acolyteA-kneeling on the lowest altar-stepOf this creation's temple, at the MassOf Supernature, just to ring the bellAt Sanctus! Sanctus! Sanctus! while the worldPrepares its heart for consecration's hour....
Abram Joseph Ryan
To An Independent Preacher
In harmony with Nature? Restless fool,Who with such heat dost preach what were to thee,When true, the last impossibility;To be like Nature strong, like Nature cool:Know, man hath all which Nature hath, but more,And in that more lie all his hopes of good.Nature is cruel; man is sick of blood:Nature is stubborn; man would fain adore:Nature is fickle; man hath need of rest:Nature forgives no debt, and fears no grave;Man would be mild, and with safe conscience blest.Man must begin, know this, where Nature ends;Nature and man can never be fast friends.Fool, if thou canst not pass her, rest her slave
Matthew Arnold
The Worship Of Nature
The harp at Nature's advent strungHas never ceased to play;The song the stars of morning sungHas never died away.And prayer is made, and praise is given,By all things near and far;The ocean looketh up to heaven,And mirrors every star.Its waves are kneeling on the strand,As kneels the human knee,Their white locks bowing to the sand,The priesthood of the sea!They pour their glittering treasures forth,Their gifts of pearl they bring,And all the listening hills of earthTake up the song they sing.The green earth sends its incense upFrom many a mountain shrine;From folded leaf and dewy cupShe pours her sacred wine.The mists above the morning rillsRise white as wings of prayer;The altar...
John Greenleaf Whittier
Nature's Hymn To The Deity
All nature owns with one accordThe great and universal Lord:The sun proclaims him through the day,The moon when daylight drops away,The very darkness smiles to wearThe stars that show us God is there,On moonlight seas soft gleams the skyAnd "God is with us" waves reply.Winds breathe from God's abode "we come,"Storms louder own God is their home,And thunder yet with louder call,Sounds "God is mightiest over all";Till earth right loath the proof to missEchoes triumphantly "He is,"And air and ocean makes reply,God reigns on earth, in air and sky.All nature owns with one accordThe great and universal Lord:Insect and bird and tree and flower--The witnesses of every hour--Are pregnant with his prophesyAnd "Go...
To The Planet Venus
What strong allurement draws, what spirit guides,Thee, Vesper! brightening still, as if the nearerThou com'st to man's abode the spot grew dearerNight after night? True is it Nature hidesHer treasures less and less. Man now presidesIn power, where once he trembled in his weakness;Science advances with gigantic strides;But are we aught enriched in love and meekness?Aught dost thou see, bright Star! of pure and wiseMore than in humbler times graced human story;That makes our hearts more apt to sympathiseWith heaven, our souls more fit for future glory,When earth shall vanish from our closing eyes,Ere we lie down in our last dormitory?
Upon Man
Man is composed here of a twofold part;The first of nature, and the next of art;Art presupposes nature; nature, shePrepares the way for man's docility.
Robert Herrick
Nature's Lullaby. - A Mountain Nocturne
In forest shade my couch is made. And there I calmly lie,With thought confined in pensive mind, And contemplate the sky;I wonder if the frowning cliff, The valley and the wood,Or rugged freaks of mountain peaks, Enjoy their solitude.The heavens hold a sphere of gold, A full and placid moon,Suspended high, in cloudless sky, With constellations strewn;Its mellow beam, on rill and stream, In silvery sheen I see;Before its light, the shades of night As evil spirits, flee.In space afar, a shooting star, With swift, uncertain course,In dazzling sparks its passage marks, As it expends its force;The mountains bare reflect its glare Of weird, unearthly light,And e'en the sk...
Alfred Castner King
Nature's Darling
Sweet comes the morningIn Nature's adorning,And bright shines the dew on the buds of the thorn,Where Mary Ann ramblesThrough the sloe trees and brambles;She's sweeter than wild flowers that open at morn;She's a rose in the dew;She's pure and she's true;She's as gay as the poppy that grows in the corn.Her eyes they are bright,Her bosom's snow white,And her voice is like songs of the birds in the grove.She's handsome and bonny,And fairer than any,And her person and actions are Nature's and love.She has the bloom of all roses,She's the breath of sweet posies,She's as pure as the brood in the nest of the dove.Of Earth's fairest daughters,Voiced like falling waters,She walks down the meadows, than blossoms more fa...
To Outer Nature
Show thee as I thought theeWhen I early sought thee,Omen-scouting,All undoubtingLove alone had wrought thee -Wrought thee for my pleasure,Planned thee as a measureFor expoundingAnd resoundingGlad things that men treasure.O for but a momentOf that old endowment -Light to gailySee thy dailyIrised embowment!But such re-adorningTime forbids with scorning -Makes me see thingsCease to be thingsThey were in my morning.Fad'st thou, glow-forsaken,Darkness-overtaken!Thy first sweetness,Radiance, meetness,None shall re-awaken.Why not sempiternalThou and I? Our vernalBrightness keeping,Time outleaping;Passed the hodiernal!
Thomas Hardy
Pure Element Of Waters!
Pure element of waters! wheresoe'erThou dost forsake thy subterranean haunts,Green herbs, bright flowers, and berry-bearing plants,Rise into life and in thy train appear:And, through the sunny portion of the year,Swift insects shine, thy hovering pursuivants:And, if thy bounty fail, the forest pants;And hart and hind and hunter with his spear,Languish and droop together. Nor unfeltIn man's perturbed soul thy sway benign;And, haply, far within the marble beltOf central earth, where tortured Spirits pineFor grace and goodness lost, thy murmurs meltTheir anguish, and they blend sweet songs with thine.
Nature's Labels. A Fragment.
In vain we fondly strive to traceThe soul's reflection in the face;In vain we dwell on lines and crosses,Crooked mouth or short proboscis;Boobies have looked as wise and brightAs Plato or the Stagirite:And many a sage and learned skullHas peeped through windows dark and dull.Since then, though art do all it can,We ne'er can reach the inward man,Nor (howsoe'er "learned Thebans" doubt)The inward woman, from without,Methinks 'twere well if nature could(And Nature could, if Nature would)Some pithy, short descriptions writeOn tablets large, in black and white,Which she might hang about our throttles,Like labels upon physic-bottles;And where all men might read--but stay--As dialectic sages say,The argument most apt and ample
Thomas Moore
Natural Religion
Up through the mystic deeps of sunny airI cried to God - 'O Father, art Thou there?'Sudden the answer, like a flute, I heard:It was an angel, though it seemed a bird.
Richard Le Gallienne