KK Texture used – chase
Linking to Texture Tuesday
great colors! very nice shot
wonderful shot – so bright and cheery
love the brightness – beautiful shot
Great job – nice colos!
I’m so in love with this TT Quote -edition ♥ Your entry is wonderful. Perfect pic and quote!!! So simple yet impressive!
I too love that quote, and your photo really captured the feeling of summer, lovely
Great quote! It goes well with the photo too.
Superb Quote. X
Wonderful colors and a beautiful qoute. Kind regards, Synnöve
that is a great one.
Beautiful shot and I love the subtle use of the texture. The quote is beautiful, will have to remember that one.
Thanks for sharing. Kathy
Oh, I see. These flowers are the mouths of the earth.
Pat, I have never read that quote before, I love it! I also love the flower colors you captured.
A favorite quote of mine, Pat — and the flowers are so pretty.
Fabulous…That is a favoured quote very close to my heart and your accompanying photo is perfect for it! Beautifully done!
This can be contagious! Especially in summer! Love that quote Pat, thanks.
I love this Pat! You chose a perfect quote for such a beautiful image.
Loving that quote Pat, and what a joyful Summer photo x
Love the quote and love the photo! Awesome!
Although the quotation is often excerpted on the Internet to the four-word version you cited, the statement is from the poem “Hamatreya,” which you can read at
http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/184627
If you’d like a brief analysis of the poem, you can find it at
http://www.cliffsnotes.com/study_guide/literature/thoreau-emerson-transcendentalism/emersons-hamatreya/summary-analysis.html
I think you’ll agree that the original context gives the statement quite a different meaning from the one conveyed by the words in isolation.
Steve Schwartzman http://portraitsofwildflowers.wordpress.com
Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:
You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out / Change )
You are commenting using your Twitter account. ( Log Out / Change )
You are commenting using your Facebook account. ( Log Out / Change )
Connecting to %s
Notify me of follow-up comments via email.
Notify me of new posts via email.
Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.
Join 263 other followers
Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.
great colors! very nice shot
wonderful shot – so bright and cheery
love the brightness – beautiful shot
Great job – nice colos!
I’m so in love with this TT Quote -edition ♥ Your entry is wonderful. Perfect pic and quote!!! So simple yet impressive!
I too love that quote, and your photo really captured the feeling of summer, lovely
Great quote! It goes well with the photo too.
Superb Quote. X
Wonderful colors and a beautiful qoute.
Kind regards, Synnöve
that is a great one.
Beautiful shot and I love the subtle use of the texture. The quote is beautiful, will have to remember that one.
Thanks for sharing.
Kathy
Oh, I see.
These flowers are the mouths of the earth.
Pat, I have never read that quote before, I love it! I also love the flower colors you captured.
A favorite quote of mine, Pat — and the flowers are so pretty.
Fabulous…That is a favoured quote very close to my heart and your accompanying photo is perfect for it! Beautifully done!
This can be contagious! Especially in summer! Love that quote Pat, thanks.
I love this Pat!
You chose a perfect quote for such a beautiful image.
Loving that quote Pat, and what a joyful Summer photo x
Love the quote and love the photo! Awesome!
Although the quotation is often excerpted on the Internet to the four-word version you cited, the statement is from the poem “Hamatreya,” which you can read at
http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/184627
If you’d like a brief analysis of the poem, you can find it at
http://www.cliffsnotes.com/study_guide/literature/thoreau-emerson-transcendentalism/emersons-hamatreya/summary-analysis.html
I think you’ll agree that the original context gives the statement quite a different meaning from the one conveyed by the words in isolation.
Steve Schwartzman
http://portraitsofwildflowers.wordpress.com