“A little water makes a sea, a small puff of wind a Tempest.”
Thomas Browne (1605–1682) English polymath
On Dreams
Canto V, lines 28–30 (tr. Charles S. Singleton).
The Divine Comedy (c. 1308–1321), Inferno
“A little water makes a sea, a small puff of wind a Tempest.”
Thomas Browne (1605–1682) English polymath
On Dreams
Henry Vaughan (1621–1695) Welsh author, physician and metaphysical poet
"The Seed Growing Secretly".
Silex Scintillans (1655)
Context: Tempests and windes and winter-nights
Vex not, that but One sees thee grow,
That One made all these lesser lights.
If those bright joys He singly sheds
On thee, were all met in one crown,
Both sun and stars would hide their heads;
And moons, though full, would get them down.
George William Russell (1867–1935) Irish writer, editor, critic, poet, and artistic painter
The Nuts of Knowledge (1903)
Context: We and it and all together flashing through the starry spaces
In a tempest dream of beauty lighting up the place of places.
Half our eyes behold the glory: half within the spirit's glow
Echoes of the noiseless revels and the will of beauty go.
By a hand of fire uplifted—to her star-strewn palace brought,
To the mystic heart of beauty and the secret of her thought:
Bruce Lee (1940–1973) Hong Kong-American actor, martial artist, philosopher and filmmaker
Source: Striking Thoughts (2000), p. 23
Letitia Elizabeth Landon (1802–1838) English poet and novelist
(2nd February 1822) Poetic Sketches, No.4
The London Literary Gazette, 1821-1822