“Oh to be a pear tree – any tree in bloom! With kissing bees singing of the beginning of the world!”
Zora Neale Hurston book Their Eyes Were Watching God
Source: Their Eyes Were Watching God
Musketaquid http://www.emersoncentral.com/poems/musketaquid.htm, st. 5 <br class="br">1840s, Poems (1847)
“Oh to be a pear tree – any tree in bloom! With kissing bees singing of the beginning of the world!”
Zora Neale Hurston book Their Eyes Were Watching God
Source: Their Eyes Were Watching God
Joaquin Miller (1837–1913) American judge
Epigraph, Ch. 2 : Twenty Carats Fine.
Shadows of Shasta (1881)
Context: A thousand miles of mighty wood
Where thunder-storms stride fire-shod;
A thousand flowers every rod,
A stately tree on every rood;
Ten thousand leaves on every tree,
And each a miracle to me;
And yet there be men who question God!
Marilyn Ferguson (1938–2008) American writer
The Aquarian Conspiracy (1980), Chapter Eleven, Spiritual Adventure: Connection to the Source
Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882) American philosopher, essayist, and poet
1840s, Essays: First Series (1841), Self-Reliance
“If Atomes are as small, as small can bee,
They must in quantity of Matter all agree.”
Margaret Cavendish The Blazing World
'The weight of Atomes', in The Atomic Poems of Margaret (Lucas) Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle, from her Poems, and Fancies, 1653, an electronic edition. Edited with an introduction by Leigh Tillman Partington. http://womenwriters.digitalscholarship.emory.edu/toc.php?id=atomic
William Winwood Reade (1838–1875) British historian
Source: The Martyrdom of Man (1872), Chapter II, "Religion", pp. 143-4.