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Nature Quotes by Emily Dickinson
- This is my letter to the world, that never wrote to me, the simple news that nature told, with tender majesty. Her message is committed,…
- Nature, like us is sometimes caught without her diadem.
- Nature is what we know - Yet have not art to say - So impotent our wisdom is To her simplicity.
- Further in Summer than the Birds Pathetic from the Grass A minor Nation celebrates Its unobtrusive Mass. No Ordinance be seen So gradual the Grace…
- There is no Silence in the Earth - so silent As that endured Which uttered, would discourage Nature And haunt the World.
- A color stands abroad on solitary hills that silence cannot overtake, but human nature feels.
- The career of flowers differs from ours only inaudibleness.
- What will the solemn Hemlock- What will the Oak tree say?
- A wounded deer leaps the highest.
- For love is immortality.
- To make a prairie it takes a clover and one bee, One clover, and a bee, And revery. The revery alone will do, If bees…
- How strange that nature does not knock, and yet does not intrude!
- Nature is a haunted house--but Art--is a house that tries to be haunted.
- Some keep the Sabbath going to church, I keep it staying at home, with a bobolink for a chorister, and an orchard for a dome.
- To see the Summer Sky Is Poetry, though never in a Book it lie— True Poems flee—
- When I sound the fairy call, gather here in silent meeiing, Chin to knee on the orchard wall, cooled with dew and cherries eating. Merry,…
More Nature Quotes
- By its very nature the beautiful is isolated from everything else. From beauty no road leads to reality. — Hannah Arendt
- The earth is the very quintessence of the human condition. — Hannah Arendt
- It is in the very nature of things human that every act that has once made its appearance and has been recorded… — Hannah Arendt
- All human actions have one or more of these seven causes: chance, nature, compulsions, habit, reason, passion, desire. — Aristotle
- All men by nature desire knowledge. — Aristotle
- In all things of nature there is something of the marvelous. — Aristotle
- Man is by nature a political animal. — Aristotle
- If one way be better than another, that you may be sure is nature's way. — Aristotle
- Nature does nothing in vain. — Aristotle
- For as the eyes of bats are to the blaze of day, so is the reason in our soul to the things… — Aristotle
- He who can be, and therefore is, another's, and he who participates in reason enough to apprehend, but not to have, is… — Aristotle
- The moral virtues, then, are produced in us neither by nature nor against nature. Nature, indeed, prepares in us the ground for… — Aristotle