Ti; 



MAft 1^ 1926 



c- . ,M r» 



kV 



^ Jl'^(^^^/'<-^^^ 



'• Stand stiic anJ onsuirr the 7V on droits rcorks of God." 



Job. 



'- O XiituiY ! Ill ! HHiv do I not name thee God ? 'Art thou Jtot the living 



garment of God,'' " 



CarlylE. 



" The harp at Nature's advent strung, 



Has 7iever ceased to play ; 

 Tlie song the stars of morning sung, 

 Has never died axi^avy 



'^Science lives only in quiet places^ 

 and with odd people, mostly poor^ 



WHITTIER. 



Rusk IN. 



" Nature smiles as sweet, I ween, 

 To Shepherds as to Kings." 



Burns. 



" In every landscape the point of astonishment is the 7neeting of the sky 

 ana the earth, and that is seen from the first hillock as well as from the top 

 of the Alleghanies." 



Emerson. 



" What.' dull, lohen earth, air, and water are alike mysteries to you, 

 and when as you stretch out your hand you do not touch anything the pro- 

 perties of -which you have mastered ; when all the time Nature is inviting you 

 to talk earnestly with her, to understand her, to subdue her^ and to he blessed 

 by her I Go a7uay, man : learn sotnething, do something, understand some- 

 thing, and let me hear no more of your dul/iess.^* 



Arthur Helps. 



