“Canst thou not see adown the silver cloudland streaming
Rivers of faery light, dewdrop on dewdrop falling,
Starfire of silver flames, lighting the dark beneath?
And what enraptured hosts burn on the dusky heath!
Come thou away with them, for Heaven to Earth is calling.”
The Nuts of Knowledge (1903)
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George William Russell134
Irish writer, editor, critic, poet, and artistic painter 1867–1935Related quotes
“Poor indeed must thou be, if around thee
Thou no ray of light and joy canst throw”
Harriet Winslow Sewall (1819–1889) American poet
Why thus longing? reported in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919).
Ella Wheeler Wilcox (1850–1919) American author and poet
Give
Poetry quotes, New Thought Pastels (1913)
Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792–1822) English Romantic poet
The Sensitive Plant http://www.kalliope.org/digt.pl?longdid=shelley2003060601 (1820), Pt. I, st. 1
“Time's corrosive dewdrop eats
The giant warrior to a crust
Of earth in earth and rust in rust.”
Francis Turner Palgrave (1824–1897) English poet and critic
"A Danish Barrow".
John Tillotson (1630–1694) Archbishop of Canterbury
Sermon 62: On the Education of Children, in The Works of Dr. John Tillotson (1772) edited by Thomas Birch, Vol 3, p. 197; this is more commonly quoted as modernized and paraphrased by John Charles Ryle, Anglican Bishop of Liverpool (1880–1900): "To give children good instruction, and a bad example, is but a beckoning to them with the head to show them the way to heaven, while we take them by the hand and lead them in the way to hell."
Baruch Spinoza (1632–1677) Dutch philosopher
William Boulting, in Giordano Bruno: His Life, Thought, and Martyrdom (1916) online excerpt http://www.class.uidaho.edu/mickelsen/texts/Bruno's%20Eroici.htm <br class="br">Context: Of Bruno, as of Spinoza, it may be said that he was "God-intoxicated." He felt that the Divine Excellence had its abode in the very heart of Nature and within his own body and spirit. Indwelling in every dewdrop as in the innumerable host of heaven, in the humblest flower and in the mind of man, he found the living spirit of God, setting forth the Divine glory, making the Divine perfection and inspiring with the Divine love.
“Give all thou canst; high Heaven rejects the lore
Of nicely calculated less or more.”
William Wordsworth (1770–1850) English Romantic poet
Part III, No. 43 - Inside of King's College Chapel, Cambridge.
Ecclesiastical Sonnets (1821)