As quoted in "Shattered Identities and Contested Images: Reflections of Poetry and History in 20th-Century Vietnam" by Neil Jamieson, in Crossroads: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 7, No. 2, 1992, p. 86
        “The appeal to heaven breaks off.
The petals begin to fall, in self-forgiveness.
It is a flower. On this mountainside it is dying.”
    
    
    
    
        
        
        
            
            
        
        
        
        
        
        Flower Herding on Mount Monadnock (1976).
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Galway Kinnell 10
Poet 1927–2014Related quotes
 
                            
                        
                        
                        
                                
                                    “Life is a stream
On which we strew
Petal by petal the flower of our heart.”
                                
                                
                                
                                
                            
"Petals," from Dome of Many-Coloured Glass (1912).
 
                            
                        
                        
                        “You are a cosmic flower. Om chanting is the process of opening the psychic petals of that flower.”
OM Chanting and Meditation (2010) http://books.google.co.uk/books/about/OM_Chanting_and_Meditation.html?id=3KKjPoFmf4YC,
 
                            
                        
                        
                        “Discipline is the virtue that begins in obedience and flowers in self-control.”
Source: Doing Virtuous Business (Thomas Nelson, 2011), p. 32.
 
                            
                        
                        
                        
                                
                                    “Mountain-rose petals
Falling, falling, falling now…
Waterfall music”
                                
                                
                                
                                
                            
Source: Japanese Haiku
 
                            
                        
                        
                        
                                        
                                        January 5, 1856 
Journals (1838-1859)
                                    
 
        
     
                             
                             
                            