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Wednesday, October 2, 2013

WATERFALL

Marcia Norwood
America's STORYTELLER
Telling Untold Stories in Photographs, Prose and Public Speaking

Waterfall 

    Cascade where
             flowing water 
                     drops abruptly 
                             and nearly vertically.

   An area where 
             running water 
                    falls down 
                             from a high place.


Copyright 2012 Marcia Norwood
  
Leisure is a form of silence,
not noiselessness. 
It is the silence of contemplation

such as occurs when we let our minds rest

on a rosebud,

a child at play,

a Divine mystery,

or a waterfall.



Bishop Fulton J. Sheen

(1895-1979)




Copyright 2012 Marcia Norwood




Copyright 2012 Marcia Norwood
Water is sometimes sharp and sometimes strong,
sometimes acid 
and sometimes bitter,
sometimes sweet 
and sometimes thick or thin,
sometimes it is seen bringing hurt or pestilence,
sometime health-giving,
sometimes poisonous. 

It suffers change into as many natures
as are the different places through which it passes.
And as the mirror changes with the colour of its subject,
so it alters with the nature of the place,
becoming noisome,
laxative,
astringent,
sulfurous,

salty,
incarnadined,
mournful,
raging,
angry,
red, yellow, green, black, blue,
greasy, fat or slim. 
 
Copyright 2012 Marcia Norwood
Sometimes it starts a conflagration,
sometimes it extinguishes one;
is warm and is cold,
carries away or sets down,
hollows out or builds up,
tears or establishes,
fills or empties,

raises itself or burrows down,
speeds or is still;
is the cause at times 
of life or death,
or increase or privation,
nourishes at times and at others does the contrary;
at times has a tang,
 at times is without savor,
sometimes submerging the valleys with great floods. 
In time and with water,
everything changes.




Leonardo di ser Piero da Vinci

(1452-1519)

Italian Renaissance painter, sculptor, architect, musician,
 mathematician, engineer, inventor, anatomist, 
geologist, cartographer, botanist and writer.





Copyright 2012 Marcia Norwood


As long as I live,
I'll hear waterfalls and birds and winds sing.
I'll interpret the rocks,
learn the language of flood,
storm, and the avalanche.
I'll acquaint myself with the glaciers and wild gardens,
and get as near the heart of the world as I can.
John Muir
(1838-1914)
 

Copyright 2012 Marcia Norwood


John Muir 
Scottish-born American naturalist, author, 
early advocate of preservation 
of wilderness in the United States; 
sometimes called the Father of the National Park System.   


Copyright 2012 Marcia Norwood


Copyright 2012 Marcia Norwood
Muir's vision of nature
as a treasured, 
God-given resource transcending its utilitarian value helped define the modern environmental and ecological movements.   

 

His letters, essays, and books telling of his adventures in nature were read by millions, and are still popular today.  He was an activist who hosted then President Theodore Roosevelt in the California backcountry, and helped save the Yosemite Valley and other wilderness areas.   




Copyright 2012 Marcia Norwood
He founded The Sierra Club, which remains a leading environmental organization.  Muir was concerned with the protection of nature both for the spiritual advancement of humanity, and as an affirmation of nature's inherent worth.   
  
He stressed human civilization's role as stewards of the environment, but more importantly - the need to dwell harmoniously within the matrix of nature.

"When we try to pick out anything by itself," Muir said, 
"we find it hitched to everything in the universe."
 
Faith, Megan, & Sarah holding Daisy Duke (Chinese Crested/Chihuahua) Copyright 2012 Marcia Norwood



The spiritual quality and enthusiasm toward nature expressed in his writing inspired readers, including presidents and congressmen, to take action to help preserve large nature areas. 



Muir was noted for being an ecological thinker, political spokesman, and religious prophet, whose writing became a personal guide into nature for countless individuals. 



Copyright 2012 Marcia Norwood

One of the best-known hiking trails in the U.S, 
the 211-mile John Muir Trail 
was named in his honor.   
Other places include 
Muir Woods National Monument, 
Muir Beach, 
John Muir College, 
Mount Muir, 
Camp Muir and 
Muir Glacier.







Biographer, Donald Worster,  
              says he believed
                  Muir's mission was  

                              "...saving the American soul

                                         from total surrender to materialism." 


John Muir appears on the California quarter.




 

CLICK on the links or
COPY & PASTE the links in your browser:  



 http://images.search.yahoo.com/search/images?_adv_prop=image&fr=mcafee&va=john+muir+california+quarter


http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/New_World_Encyclopedia:Terms_of_Use


Copyright 2013 Marcia Norwood


Thanks for stopping by!

Come back often, and bring a friend!

Marcia Norwood
America's STORYTELLER
Telling Untold Stories in Photographs, Prose and Public Speaking

 
Copyright 2012 Marcia Norwood





 











 

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