
“It's wonderful to be alive and to walk on earth.”
Talk at Stonehill College (2002)
Written on hearing the News of the Death of Napoleon; reported in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)
“It's wonderful to be alive and to walk on earth.”
Talk at Stonehill College (2002)
Bodhi Tree lecture (1999)
Context: The Goddess religion asserts that the earth is alive, and that everything on the earth is part of a living being. We believe that you can celebrate life in many different images and forms, that life moves in cycles of birth and growth and death and rebirth, and that the same spirit moves through nature, through the cycles of the seasons, through the birth and growth and death of plants and animals, and through our lives as human beings. There is a multiplicity of images that you can draw upon for understanding and power, but the reason we focus on the goddess is partly to counterbalance the 5,000 years worth of focus on male holy images, and partly to affirm that bringing life into the world is sacred. Our goal is not to get out of the world or to get out of life, but to integrate it, to celebrate it, to embrace it fully, and to embrace all the different cycles within it
aśaraṇaśaraṇa praṇatabhayadaraṇa
dharaṇibharaharaṇa dharaṇitanayāvaraṇa
janasukhakaraṇa taraṇikulabharaṇa
kamalamṛducaraṇa dvijāṅganāsamuddharaṇa ।
tribhuvanabharaṇa danujakulamaraṇa
niśitaśaraśaraṇa dalitadaśamukharaṇa
bhṛgubhavacātakanavīnajaladhara rāma
vihara manasi saha sītayā janābharaṇa ॥
Śrībhārgavarāghavīyam
“Alas for love, if thou wert all,
And naught beyond, O Earth!”
The Graves of a Household, st. 8.
Generation X (1991)
De Forest Says Space Travel Is Impossible https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=KXhfAAAAIBAJ&sjid=my8MAAAAIBAJ&pg=3288,6595098&dq=all-that-constitutes-a-wild-dream-worthy-of-jules-verne&hl=en, Lewiston Morning Tribune via Associated Press, February 25, 1957
“O poor mortals, how ye make this earth bitter for each other.”
Pt. I, Bk. V, ch. 5.
1830s, The French Revolution. A History (1837)
“O vanity! you are the lever by means of which Archimedes wished to lift the earth!”
A Hero of Our Time (1840; rev. 1841)
“O happy earth,
Whereon thy innocent feet doe ever tread!”
Canto 10, stanza 9
The Faerie Queene (1589–1596), Book I
“O pray the earth enfold
Our life-sick hearts and turn them into dust.”
A Last Word (1899).