Topic: Vikingr Compendiums

NorseLady

Date: 2012-11-11 16:24 EST
I am the foundation of all business. I am the source of all prosperity. I am the parent of genius. I am the salt that gives life its savour. I laid the foundation of e'ery fortune. I can do more to advance youth than his own parents, be they e'er so wealthy. I must be loved before I can bestow my greatest blessings and achieve my greatest ends. Loved, I make life sweet, purposeful, and fruitful. I am represented in the humblest savings, in the largest block of investments. All progress springs from me.



~ I am work.

NorseLady

Date: 2012-11-11 16:32 EST
The larger the island of knowledge, the longer the shoreline of wonder. ~Ralph W Sockman

The lowest ebb is the turn of the tide. ~ Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

NorseLady

Date: 2012-11-11 17:12 EST
Red sky at night, sailor's delight. Red sky in morning, sailor's warning!

It is not the ship so much as the skillful sailing that assures the prosperous voyage. ~ George William Curtis

NorseLady

Date: 2012-11-13 07:19 EST
If it's brown, go around. If it's green, it's lean. If it's blue, go through.

If you don't know the knot ....tie a lot.

Storms make oaks take deeper roots. ~George Herbert

NorseLady

Date: 2012-11-13 07:26 EST
In a puff, spring a luff; in a lull, keep em full.

Seagulls paddling dead ahead, you should stop and scratch your head.

One hand to the ship and one to your arse!

NorseLady

Date: 2012-11-13 07:34 EST
Potato Navigation:

When sailing in fog send someone forward with a bucket of potatoes. E'ery minute or so have him heave one forward in the direction of travel.

If you hear a splash, proceed. If you don't ....tack!

NorseLady

Date: 2012-11-18 10:03 EST
The Sea will teach you what you did wrong.

The winds and the tides always favour the ablest mariner.

NorseLady

Date: 2012-11-20 14:37 EST
To challenge Seafaring Ulvs in any manner is seeking to do battle; a contest that will be accepted, and won.

NorseLady

Date: 2012-11-20 14:58 EST
You can't cross an ocean without leaving port.

Be resolute when wind and wave oppose you, but shorten sail when a fair wind blows too strong.

NorseLady

Date: 2012-11-26 00:16 EST
It isn't that life ashore is distasteful to me. But life at sea is better." ~Sir Francis Drake

The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist expects it to change; the realist adjusts the sails. ~W. A. Ward

NorseLady

Date: 2012-11-26 21:38 EST
Do right, and fear not.

Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do, than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover. ~Mark Twain

NorseLady

Date: 2012-12-05 10:16 EST
When in doubt, come about!

If the water is up to your neck, 'tis too late for swimming lessons!

NorseLady

Date: 2012-12-13 10:59 EST
I cannot not sail. ~E. B. White

There are only two colors to paint a boat, black or white, and only a fool would paint a boat black. ~Nathanael G. Herreshoff

NorseLady

Date: 2012-12-15 01:34 EST
Ships are the nearest things to dreams that hands have ever made. ~L.F. Herreshoff

To young men contemplating a voyage, I'd say go. ~Joshua Slocum

NorseLady

Date: 2012-12-15 01:39 EST
We didn't mean to go to Sea. ~Arthur Ransome

If you want to drown yourself, get your own boat.

After the boat sinks, e'eryone will know how she might have been saved.

NorseLady

Date: 2012-12-15 01:40 EST
Marriages performed by the kaptein of this vessel are godt for the duration of this voyage only.

NorseLady

Date: 2012-12-17 07:53 EST
There are three kinds of sailors. Those that have run aground, those that are about to run aground, and liars.

It takes as much work to build an ugly boat as it does to build a beautiful one. Why would you build an ugly boat?

NorseLady

Date: 2012-12-23 09:31 EST
Be sure we are in the ship, and the water is kept out of the vessel!

If the bow is in the tree we have run out of Sea!

NorseLady

Date: 2012-12-23 09:43 EST
The cure for all that ails a man is saltwater; in the form of sweat, tears or the sea.

Soon we shall be going off the deep end.

NorseLady

Date: 2012-12-23 09:48 EST
Do not forget, the Sea is always trying to kill you.

To be successful at sea we must keep things simple. ~R.D Culler

NorseLady

Date: 2012-12-23 09:50 EST
Hope is a thing with feathers That perches in the soul And sings a tune without words And never stops at all.

And sweetest, in the gale, is heard And sore must be the storm That could abash the little bird That keeps so many warm.

I've heard it in the chilliest land And on the strangest sea Yet, never, in extremity It asked a crumb of me.

~Emily Dickenson

NorseLady

Date: 2013-01-08 13:37 EST
Love many, trust few. Always paddle your own canoe. ~Billy Two-Rivers

There is nothing, simply nothing so much worth doing as simply messing about in boats. ~Wind in the Willows

NorseLady

Date: 2013-01-08 13:42 EST
Do not get blood on the sails!

Better being in a boat with a drink on the rocks than being in the drink with a boat on the rocks.

NorseLady

Date: 2013-01-09 23:52 EST
Though all rivers flow into it, the sea never overflows.

Nei matter how big the sea may be, sometimes two ships meet.

NorseLady

Date: 2013-01-10 08:28 EST
Don't build a new ship out of old wood.

The water that a ship sails on is the same water that swallows it up.

NorseLady

Date: 2013-01-10 08:35 EST
Ah! what pleasant visions haunt me As I gaze upon the sea! All the old romantic legends, All my dreams, come back to me.

Sails of silk and ropes of sandal, Such as gleam in ancient lore; And the singing of the sailors, And the answer from the shore!

Most of all, the Spanish ballad Haunts me oft, and tarries long, Of the noble Count Arnaldos And the sailor's mystic song.

Like the long waves on a sea-beach, Where the sand as silver shines, With a soft, monotonous cadence, Flow its unrhymed lyric lines:"

Telling how the Count Arnaldos, With his hawk upon his hand, Saw a fair and stately galley, Steering onward to the land;"

How he heard the ancient helmsman Chant a song so wild and clear, That the sailing sea-bird slowly Poised upon the mast to hear,

Till his soul was full of longing, And he cried, with impulse strong," "Helmsman! for the love of heaven, Teach me, too, that wondrous song!"

"Wouldst thou,"'so the helmsman answered, "Learn the secret of the sea" Only those who brave its dangers Comprehend its mystery!"

In each sail that skims the horizon, In each landward-blowing breeze, I behold that stately galley, Hear those mournful melodies;

Till my soul is full of longing For the secret of the sea, And the heart of the great ocean Sends a thrilling pulse through me.

~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

NorseLady

Date: 2013-01-15 16:25 EST
It is good rowing with the sail set.

Don't sail out farther than you can row back.

NorseLady

Date: 2013-01-15 16:29 EST
You know who the good seamen are when the storm comes.

You can't complain about the sea if you suffer a shipwreck for the second time.

NorseLady

Date: 2013-01-15 16:36 EST
O Captain! My Captain! Our fearful trip is done; The ship has weather'd every rack, the prize we sought is won; The port is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting, While follow eyes the steady keel, the vessel grim and daring: But O heart! heart! heart! O the bleeding drops of red, Where on the deck my Captain lies, Fallen cold and dead.

O Captain! My Captain! Rise up and hear the bells; Rise up"for you the flag is flung"for you the bugle trills; For you bouquets and ribbon'd wreaths?for you the shores a-crowding; For you they call, the swaying mass, their eager faces turning; Here Captain! dear father! This arm beneath your head; It is some dream that on the deck, You've fallen cold and dead.

My Captain does not answer, his lips are pale and still; My father does not feel my arm, he has no pulse nor will; The ship is anchor'd safe and sound, its voyage closed and done; From fearful trip, the victor ship, comes in with object won; Exult, O shores, and ring, O bells! But I, with mournful tread, Walk the deck my Captain lies, Fallen cold and dead.

~Walt Whitman

NorseLady

Date: 2013-01-15 16:40 EST
The sheets were frozen hard, and they cut the naked hand; The decks were like a slide, where a seamen scarce could stand; The wind was a nor"wester, blowing squally off the sea; And cliffs and spouting breakers were the only things a-lee.

They heard the surf a-roaring before the break of day; But "twas only with the peep of light we saw how ill we lay. We tumbled every hand on deck instanter, with a shout, And we gave her the maintops"l, and stood by to go about.

All day we tacked and tacked between the South Head and the North; All day we hauled the frozen sheets, and got no further forth; All day as cold as charity, in bitter pain and dread, For very life and nature we tacked from head to head.

We gave the South a wider berth, for there the tide-race roared; But every tack we made we brought the North Head close aboard: So's we saw the cliffs and houses, and the breakers running high, And the coastguard in his garden, with his glass against his eye.

The frost was on the village roofs as white as ocean foam; The good red fires were burning bright in every "long-shore home; The windows sparkled clear, and the chimneys volleyed out; And I vow we sniffed the victuals as the vessel went about.

The bells upon the church were rung with a mighty jovial cheer; For it's just that I should tell you how (of all days in the year) This day of our adversity was blessed Christmas morn, And the house above the coastguard's was the house where I was born.

O well I saw the pleasant room, the pleasant faces there, My mother's silver spectacles, my father's silver hair; And well I saw the firelight, like a flight of homely elves, Go dancing round the china-plates that stand upon the shelves.

And well I knew the talk they had, the talk that was of me, Of the shadow on the household and the son that went to sea; And O the wicked fool I seemed, in every kind of way, To be here and hauling frozen ropes on blessed Christmas Day.

They lit the high sea-light, and the dark began to fall. "All hands to loose topgallant sails," I heard the captain call. "By the Lord, she'll never stand it," our first mate Jackson, cried. ..."It's the one way or the other, Mr. Jackson," he replied.

She staggered to her bearings, but the sails were new and good, And the ship smelt up to windward just as though she understood. As the winter's day was ending, in the entry of the night, We cleared the weary headland, and passed below the light.

And they heaved a mighty breath, every soul on board but me, As they saw her nose again pointing handsome out to sea; But all that I could think of, in the darkness and the cold, Was just that I was leaving home and my folks were growing old.

~Robert Louis Stevenson

NorseLady

Date: 2013-01-25 09:48 EST
He rose at dawn and, fired with hope, Shot o"er the seething harbour-bar, And reach'd the ship and caught the rope, And whistled to the morning star.

And while he whistled long and loud He heard a fierce mermaiden cry, "O boy, tho' thou are young and proud, I see the place where thou wilt lie.

"The sands and yeasty surges mix In caves about the dreary bay, And on thy ribs the limpet sticks, And in thy heart the scrawl shall play."

"Fool," he answer'd , 'death is sure To those that stay and those that roam, But I will nevermore endure To sit with empty hands at home.

"My mother clings about my neck, My sisters crying, "Stay for shame;" My father raves of death and wreck,- They are all to blame, they are all to blame.

"God help me! save I take my part Of danger on the roaring sea, A devil rises in my heart, Far worse than any death to me.?

~Alfred, Lord Tennyson

NorseLady

Date: 2013-01-25 09:52 EST
Sailing is like flirting with life" The feeling that the wind is driving you along" The feeling of achievement when you get off the water after the wind's been blowing a near gale, the feeling of achievement for making a boat be able to go when there is almost no wind! I love the way the wind fills the sail and the boat lists to the side and the bow cuts through the water. When I'm sailing, I'm working with nature. I become part of Creation' Fair winds!

~Albert Font

NorseLady

Date: 2013-02-02 16:45 EST
There is no wind that blows right for the sailor who doesn't know where the harbour is located.

NorseLady

Date: 2013-02-02 16:47 EST
One ship sails east and another sails west With the self-same winds that blow. Tis the set of the sail and not the gale Which determines the way they go. As the winds of the sea are the ways of fate As we voyage along through life, Tis the act of the soul that determines the goal, And not the calm or the strife.

~Ella Wheeler Wilcox

NorseLady

Date: 2013-02-02 17:00 EST
When the sea is calm, e'ery ship has a godt Kaptein.

A ship on the beach is a lighthouse to the sea.

NorseLady

Date: 2013-02-03 14:52 EST
Where water is the boss, there must the land obey.

The heart is but the beach beside the sea that is the world.

NorseLady

Date: 2013-02-08 15:54 EST
The sea is never still. It pounds on the shore Restless as a young heart, Hunting.

The sea speaks And only the stormy hearts Know what it says: It is the face of a rough mother speaking.

The sea is young. One storm cleans all the hoar And loosens the age of it. I hear it laughing, reckless.

They love the sea, Men who ride on it And know they will die Under the salt of it

Let only the young come, Says the sea.

Let them kiss my face And hear me. I am the last word And I tell Where storms and stars come from.

~Carl Sandburg

NorseLady

Date: 2013-02-09 15:29 EST
He that is embarked with the devil must sail with him.

The ship that will not obey the helm will have to obey the rocks.

NorseLady

Date: 2013-02-09 15:53 EST
Hvis du er p? skipet mitt du frykter brann mer enn vann!

Translation: If you are on my ship you fear fire more than water!

NorseLady

Date: 2013-02-09 16:02 EST
Oh for the breath of the briny deep, And the tug of a bellying sail, With the sea-gull's cry across the sky And a passing boatman's hail. For, be she fierce or be she gay, The sea is a famous friend alway.

Ho! For the plains where the dolphins play, And the bend of the mast and spars, And a fight at night with the wild sea-sprite When the foam has drowned the stars. And, pray, what joy can the landsman feel Like the rise and fall of a sliding keel"

Fair is the mead; the lawn is fair And the birds sing sweet on the lea; But echo soft of a song aloft Is the strain that pleases me; And swish of rope and ring of chain Are music to men who sail the main.

Then, if you love me, let me sail While a vessel dares the deep; For the ship's wife, and the breath of life Are the raging gales that sweep; And when I'm done with the calm and blast, A slide o"er the side, and rest at last.

~Paul Laurence Dunbar

NorseLady

Date: 2013-02-13 13:34 EST
There are people that fish and those who just disturb the water.

If the seawater were hotter we could catch boiled fish.

NorseLady

Date: 2013-02-14 01:41 EST
Don't bargain for fish which are still in the water.

There are finer fish in the sea than have ever been caught.

NorseLady

Date: 2013-02-15 10:12 EST
N"r spurt, "Hva nyheter fra havet?" Fisken svarte, "Jeg har mye " si, men mitt munn er full av vann."

Translation: When asked, "What news from the sea?" The fish replied, "I have a lot to say, but my mouth is full of water."

NorseLady

Date: 2013-02-21 16:32 EST
Vann kan gj're uten fisk, fisk kan ikke gj're uten vann.

Translation: Water can do without fish, fish cannot do without water.

NorseLady

Date: 2013-02-21 16:41 EST
N"r et stort fart"y har "pnet en vei er det lett for en liten en til f"lge.

Translation: When a large vessel has opened a way it is easy for a small one to follow.

NorseLady

Date: 2013-02-21 16:51 EST
I In a solitude of the sea Deep from human vanity, And the Pride of Life that planned her, stilly couches she.

II Steel chambers, late the pyres Of her salamandrine fires, Cold currents thrid, and turn to rhythmic tidal lyres.

III Over the mirrors meant To glass the opulent The sea-worm crawls " grotesque, slimed, dumb, indifferent.

IV Jewels in joy designed To ravish the sensuous mind Lie lightless, all their sparkles bleared and black and blind.

V Dim moon-eyed fishes near Gaze at the gilded gear And query: "What does this vaingloriousness down here?" ...

VI Well: while was fashioning This creature of cleaving wing, The Immanent Will that stirs and urges everything

VII Prepared a sinister mate For her " so gaily great " A Shape of Ice, for the time far and dissociate.

VIII And as the smart ship grew In stature, grace, and hue, In shadowy silent distance grew the Iceberg too.

IX Alien they seemed to be; No mortal eye could see The intimate welding of their later history,

X Or sign that they were bent By paths coincident On being anon twin halves of one august event,

XI Till the Spinner of the Years Said "Now!? And each one hears, And consummation comes, and jars two hemispheres.

~Thomas Hardy

NorseLady

Date: 2013-03-23 13:22 EST
I must go down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky, And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by, And the wheel's kick and the wind's song and the white sail's shaking, And a gray mist on the sea's face, and a gray dawn breaking.

I must down go to the seas again, for the call of the running tide Is a wild call and a clear call that may not be denied; And all I ask is a windy day with the white clouds flying, And the flung spray and the blown spume, and the sea-gulls crying.

I must go down to the seas again, to the vagrant gypsy life, To the gull's way and the whale's way, where the wind's like a whetted knife; And all I ask is a merry yarn from a laughing fellow-rover, And quiet sleep and a sweet dream when the long trick's over.

~John Masefield

NorseLady

Date: 2013-03-27 11:05 EST
Out of the darkness, fretted sometimes in its sleeping, Jets of sparks in fountains of blue come leaping To sight, revealing a secret, numberless secrets keeping.

Sometimes the darkness trapped within a wheel Runs into speed like a dream, the blue of the steel Showing the rocking darkness now a-reel.

And out of the invisible, streams of bright blue drops Rain from the showery heavens, and bright blue crops Surge from the under-dark to their ladder-tops.

And all the manifold blue and joyous eyes, The rainbow arching over in the skies, New sparks of wonder opening in surprise.

All these pure things come foam and spray of the sea Of Darkness abundant, which shaken mysteriously, Breaks into dazzle of living, as dolphins that leap from the sea Of midnight shake it to fire, so the secret of death we see.

~D.H. Lawrence

NorseLady

Date: 2013-03-31 16:34 EST
The art of the sailor is to leave nothing to chance. ~Annie Van De Wiele

On life's vast ocean diversely we sail, Reason the card, but passion is the gale. ~Alexander Pope

There is little man has made that approaches anything in nature, but a sailing ship does. There is not much man has made that calls to all the best in him, but a sailing ship does. ~Allan Villiers

NorseLady

Date: 2013-04-11 08:55 EST
No pessimist ever discovered the secret of the stars or sailed an uncharted land, or opened a new doorway for the human spirit. ~Helen Keller

NorseLady

Date: 2013-04-28 15:26 EST
Follow the river and you will get to the sea.

Nodding the head does not row the boat.

NorseLady

Date: 2013-04-28 15:49 EST
Der det er et Sj? ....se Vikinger!

Translation: Where there is a Sea ....see Vikings!

NorseLady

Date: 2013-05-07 16:27 EST
Man b"r l're " seile i alle vind.

Translation: One should learn to sail in all winds.

NorseLady

Date: 2013-05-09 09:12 EST
En kan ikke scoop opp sj?en med en skall.

Translation: One cannot scoop up the ocean with a (sea) shell.

NorseLady

Date: 2013-05-09 09:14 EST
The tide recedes, but leaves behind bright seashells on the sand. The sun goes down, but gentle warmth still lingers on the land. The music stops, yet echoes on in sweet, soulful refrains. For every joy that passes, something beautiful remains.

(Author Unknown)

NorseLady

Date: 2013-05-09 09:34 EST
The twilight is sad and cloudy, The wind blows wild and free, And like the wings of sea-birds Flash the white caps of the sea.

But in the fisherman's cottage There shines a ruddier light, And a little face at the window Peers out into the night.

Close, close it is pressed to the window, As if those childish eyes Were looking into the darkness, To see some form arise.

And a woman's waving shadow Is passing to and fro, Now rising to the ceiling, Now bowing and bending low.

What tale do the roaring ocean, And the night-wind, bleak and wild, As they beat at the crazy casement, Tell to that little child"

And why do the roaring ocean, And the night-wind, wild and bleak, As they beat at the heart of the mother, Drive the color from her cheek"

~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

NorseLady

Date: 2013-05-25 15:44 EST
Ikke alt du finner bading i sj?en er en fisk, eller en havfrue.

Translation: Not everything you find swimming in the sea is a fish, or a mermaid.

NorseLady

Date: 2013-05-25 15:50 EST
B"lger vil stige p" stille vann.

Translation: Waves will rise on silent water.

NorseLady

Date: 2013-05-26 02:06 EST
We sat within the farm-house old, Whose windows, looking o'er the bay, Gave to the sea-breeze damp and cold, An easy entrance, night and day. Not far away we saw the port, The strange, old-fashioned, silent town, The lighthouse, the dismantled fort, The wooden houses, quaint and brown. We sat and talked until the night, Descending, filled the little room; Our faces faded from the sight, Our voices only broke the gloom. We spake of many a vanished scene, Of what we once had thought and said, Of what had been, and might have been, And who was changed, and who was dead; And all that fills the hearts of friends, When first they feel, with secret pain, Their lives thenceforth have separate ends, And never can be one again; The first slight swerving of the heart, That words are powerless to express, And leave it still unsaid in part, Or say it in too great excess. The very tones in which we spake Had something strange, I could but mark; The leaves of memory seemed to make A mournful rustling in the dark. Oft died the words upon our lips, As suddenly, from out the fire Built of the wreck of stranded ships, The flames would leap and then expire. And, as their splendor flashed and failed, We thought of wrecks upon the main, Of ships dismasted, that were hailed And sent no answer back again. The windows, rattling in their frames, The ocean, roaring up the beach, The gusty blast, the bickering flames, All mingled vaguely in our speech; Until they made themselves a part Of fancies floating through the brain, The long-lost ventures of the heart, That send no answers back again. O flames that glowed! O hearts that yearned! They were indeed too much akin, The drift-wood fire without that burned, The thoughts that burned and glowed within.

~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

NorseLady

Date: 2014-01-16 02:46 EST
1

To-day a rude brief recitative, Of ships sailing the Seas, each with its special flag or ship-signal; Of unnamed heroes in the ships"Of waves spreading and spreading, far as the eye can reach; Of dashing spray, and the winds piping and blowing; And out of these a chant, for the sailors of all nations, Fitful, like a surge.

Of Sea-Captains young or old, and the Mates"and of all intrepid Sailors; Of the few, very choice, taciturn, whom fate can never surprise, nor death dismay, Pick'd sparingly, without noise, by thee, old Ocean"chosen by thee, Thou Sea, that pickest and cullest the race, in Time, and unitest Nations! Suckled by thee, old husky Nurse"embodying thee! Indomitable, untamed as thee.

(Ever the heroes, on water or on land, by ones or twos appearing, Ever the stock preserv'd, and never lost, though rare"enough for seed preserv'd.)

2

Flaunt out O Sea, your separate flags of nations! Flaunt out, visible as ever, the various ship-signals! But do you reserve especially for yourself, and for the soul of man, one flag above all the rest, A spiritual woven Signal, for all nations, emblem of man elate above death, Token of all brave captains, and all intrepid sailors and mates, And all that went down doing their duty; Reminiscent of them"twined from all intrepid captains, young or old; A pennant universal, subtly waving, all time, o?er all brave sailors, All seas, all ships.

~Walt Whitman

NorseLady

Date: 2014-01-18 20:53 EST
Aboard at a ship's helm, A young steersman steering with care. A bell through fog on a sea-coast dolefully ringing, An ocean-bell"O a warning bell, rock'd by the waves. O you give good notice indeed, you bell by the sea-reefs ringing, Ringing, ringing, to warn the ship from its wreck-place. For, as on the alert, O steersman, you mind the bell's admonition, The bows turn, the freighted ship, tacking, speeds away under her gray sails, The beautiful and noble ship, with all her precious wealth, speeds away gaily and safe. But O the ship, the immortal ship! O ship aboard the ship! O ship of the body, ship of the soul"voyaging, voyaging, voyaging.

~Walt Whitman

NorseLady

Date: 2014-01-20 02:46 EST
He who is not lucky, let him not go to sea.

NorseLady

Date: 2014-02-03 04:17 EST
The prudent embark n"r the sea is calm ....the rash n"r 'tis stormy.

NorseLady

Date: 2014-02-15 18:40 EST
"ke din seilet en fot og f" ti meter av vind!

Translation: Raise your sail one foot and get ten feet of wind!

NorseLady

Date: 2014-02-16 03:50 EST
Glatt hav gj"r ikke dyktige sj"menn.

Translation: Smooth seas do not make skillful sailors.

NorseLady

Date: 2014-04-04 03:04 EST
I fortsatt "yeblikk ved sj"en livet synes store-trukket og enkel. Det er der vi kan se inn i oss selv.

~Rolf Edberg

Translation: In still moments by the sea life seems large-drawn and simple. It is there we can see into ourselves.

~ Rolf Edberg

NorseLady

Date: 2015-01-08 15:35 EST
"Look at that sea, girls—all silver and shadow and vision of things not seen. We couldn't enjoy its loveliness any more if we had millions of dollars and ropes of diamonds."

~ L.M. Montgomery, Anne of Green Gables

NorseLady

Date: 2015-01-10 09:04 EST
"We need the tonic of wildness...At the same time that we are earnest to explore and learn all things, we require that all things be mysterious and unexplorable, that land and sea be indefinitely wild, unsurveyed and unfathomed by us because unfathomable. We can never have enough of nature."

~ Henry David Thoreau, Walden: Or, Life in the Woods

NorseLady

Date: 2015-01-12 09:08 EST
"The sea always filled her with longing, though for what she was never sure."

~ Cornelia Funke, Inkheart

NorseLady

Date: 2015-01-15 09:52 EST
"She loves the serene brutality of the ocean, loves the electric power she felt with each breath of wet, briny air."

~ Holly Black, Tithe

NorseLady

Date: 2015-01-16 16:59 EST
"It is a curious situation that the sea, from which life first arose should now be threatened by the activities of one form of that life. But the sea, though changed in a sinister way, will continue to exist; the threat is rather to life itself." ~ Rachel Carson, The Sea Around Us

NorseLady

Date: 2015-01-19 10:37 EST
"We are like islands in the sea, separate on the surface but connected in the deep."

~ William James

NorseLady

Date: 2015-01-23 16:15 EST
?The sea does not like to be restrained."

~ Rick Riordan, The Lightning Thief

NorseLady

Date: 2015-01-24 14:12 EST
"I felt once more how simple and frugal a thing is happiness: a glass of wine, a roast chestnut, a wretched little brazier, the sound of the sea. Nothing else."

~ Nikos Kazantzakis, Zorba the Greek

NorseLady

Date: 2015-01-29 00:59 EST
"I am longing to be with you, and by the sea, where we can talk together freely and build our castles in the air."

~ Bram Stoker, Dracula

NorseLady

Date: 2015-01-31 02:45 EST
"My soul is full of longing for the secret of the sea, and the heart of the great ocean sends a thrilling pulse through me."

~ Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

NorseLady

Date: 2015-02-05 13:56 EST
"There was a single blue line of crayon drawn across every wall in the house. What does it mean' I asked. A pirate needs the sight of the sea, he said, and then he pulled his eye patch down and turned and sailed away."

~ Brian Andreas, Story People: Selected Stories & Drawings of Brian Andreas

NorseLady

Date: 2015-02-06 04:08 EST
"Hark, now hear the sailors cry, smell the sea, and feel the sky let your soul & spirit fly, into the mystic..."

~ Van Morrison

NorseLady

Date: 2015-02-07 16:36 EST
"I must be a mermaid, Rango. I have no fear of depths and a great fear of shallow living."

~ Ana's Nin

NorseLady

Date: 2015-02-10 01:36 EST
"THAT crazed girl improvising her music. Her poetry, dancing upon the shore,

Her soul in division from itself Climbing, falling She knew not where, Hiding amid the cargo of a steamship, Her knee-cap broken, that girl I declare A beautiful lofty thing, or a thing Heroically lost, heroically found.

No matter what disaster occurred She stood in desperate music wound, Wound, wound, and she made in her triumph Where the bales and the baskets lay No common intelligible sound But sang, 'O sea-starved, hungry sea"

~ W.B. Yeats, The Collected Poems

NorseLady

Date: 2015-03-01 07:16 EST
"Water, water, everywhere, And all the boards did shrink; Water, water, everywhere, Nor any drop to drink."

~ Samuel Taylor Coleridge, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner

NorseLady

Date: 2015-03-16 09:31 EST
"It is said by the Eldar that in water there lives yet the echo of the Music of the Ainur more than in any substance that is in this Earth; and many of the Children of Il"vatar hearken still unsated to the voices of the Sea, and yet know not for what they listen.?

~ J.R.R. Tolkien, The Silmarillion

NorseLady

Date: 2015-03-18 11:09 EST
"The sea, the snotgreen sea, the scrotumtightening sea."

~ James Joyce, Ulysses

NorseLady

Date: 2015-04-03 10:36 EST
"There was a magic about the sea. People were drawn to it. People wanted to love by it, swim in it, play in it, look at it. It was a living thing that as as unpredictable as a great stage actor: it could be calm and welcoming, opening its arms to embrace it's audience one moment, but then could explode with its stormy tempers, flinging people around, wanting them out, attacking coastlines, breaking down islands. It had a playful side too, as it enjoyed the crowd, tossed the children about, knocked lilos over, tipped over windsurfers, occasionally gave sailors helping hands; all done with a secret little chuckle."

~ Cecelia Ahern, The Gift

NorseLady

Date: 2015-04-16 13:59 EST
"To reach a port we must set sail " Sail, not tie at anchor Sail, not drift.?

~ Franklin D. Roosevelt

NorseLady

Date: 2015-04-24 12:37 EST
"Time is more complex near the sea than in any other place, for in addition to the circling of the sun and the turning of the seasons, the waves beat out the passage of time on the rocks and the tides rise and fall as a great clepsydra."

~ John Steinbeck, Tortilla Flat

NorseLady

Date: 2015-05-04 11:45 EST
"A fragrant breeze wandered up from the quiet sea, trailed along the beach, and drifted back to the sea again, wondering where to go next. On a mad impulse it went up to the beach again. It drifted back to sea."

~ Douglas Adams, The Ultimate Hitchhiker's Guide: Five Complete Novels and One Story

NorseLady

Date: 2015-05-12 08:39 EST
"Little islands are all large prisons; one cannot look at the sea without wishing for the wings of a swallow."

~ Richard Francis Burton

NorseLady

Date: 2015-05-13 14:41 EST
"Those who live by the sea can hardly form a single thought of which the sea would not be part."

~ Hermann Broch

NorseLady

Date: 2015-05-21 09:33 EST
"for whatever we lose (like a you or a me) it's always ourselves we find in the sea."

~ E.E. Cummings, 100 Selected Poems

NorseLady

Date: 2015-05-31 07:47 EST
"I spent uncounted hours sitting at the bow looking at the water and the sky, studying each wave, different from the last, seeing how it caught the light, the air, the wind; watching patterns, the sweep of it all, and letting it take me. The sea."

~ Gary Paulsen, Caught by the Sea

NorseLady

Date: 2015-06-24 08:42 EST
"The winds, the sea, and the moving tides are what they are. If there is wonder and beauty and majesty in them, science will discover these qualities....If there is poetry in my book about the sea, it is not because I deliberately put it there, but because no one could write truthfully about the sea and leave out the poetry."

~ Rachel Carson

NorseLady

Date: 2015-06-28 12:51 EST
"We clear the harbor and the wind catches her sails and my beautiful ship leans over ever so gracefully, and her elegant bow cuts cleanly into the increasing chop of the waves. I take a deep breath and my chest expands and my heart starts thumping so strongly I fear the others might see it beat through the cloth of my jacket. I face the wind and my lips peel back from my teeth in a grin of pure joy."

~ L.A. Meyer, Under the Jolly Roger: Being an Account of the Further Nautical Adventures of Jacky Faber

NorseLady

Date: 2015-07-08 11:38 EST
"The castle of Cair Paravel on its little hill towered up above them; before them were the sands, with rocks and little pools of salt water, and seaweed, and the smell of the sea and long miles of bluish-green waves breaking for ever and ever on the beach. And oh, the cry of the seagulls! Have you ever heard it' Can you remember?"

~ C.S. Lewis, The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe

NorseLady

Date: 2015-08-22 14:55 EST
"So fine was the morning except for a streak of wind here and there that the sea and sky looked all one fabric, as if sails were stuck high up in the sky, or the clouds had dropped down into the sea."

~ Virginia Woolf, To the Lighthouse

NorseLady

Date: 2015-09-10 10:55 EST
"A full moon sprinkled the black ocean with diamonds, and she could imagine fairies dancing in the silver foam that laced the huge, dark waves."

~ Patricia Hagan, Ocean of Dreams

NorseLady

Date: 2015-10-04 16:09 EST
"The three great elemental sounds in nature are the sound of rain, the sound of wind in a primeval wood, and the sound of outer ocean on a beach. I have heard them all, and of the three elemental voices, that of ocean is the most awesome, beautiful and varied."

~ Henry Beston, The Outermost House: A Year of Life On The Great Beach of Cape Cod

NorseLady

Date: 2015-10-17 13:05 EST
"May your love for me be like the scent of the evening sea

drifting in through a quiet window

so I do not have to run or chase or fall ....to feel you

all I have to do is breathe."

~ Sanober Khan

NorseLady

Date: 2015-10-18 15:05 EST
"She found out that having something to do prevented you from feeling seasick, and that even a job like scrubbing a deck could be satisfying, if it was done in a seamanlike way. She was very taken with this notion, and later on she folded the blankets on her bunk in a seamanlike way, and put her possessions in the closet in a seamanlike way, and used 'stow' instead of 'tidy' for the process of doing so. After two days at sea, Lyra decided that this was the life for her."

~ Philip Pullman, The Golden Compass

NorseLady

Date: 2015-10-20 16:20 EST
"I whisper like the sea in the horse's ear."

~ Maggie Stiefvater, The Scorpio Races

NorseLady

Date: 2015-10-27 09:55 EST
"I am in awe of the perpetual tumult of the sea. I am moved by the still place on the horizon where the sky begins. I am stirred by the soaring and dipping fields that make the landscape into a rumpled green counterpane. I thought I would never have such powerful feelings again. I thought I would live through the rest of my life having experiences, and thoughts, but I never thought I would again feel deeply— I was convinced that my wounds had healed and become thick scars, essentially numb."

~ Katharine Weber, The Music Lesson

NorseLady

Date: 2015-10-31 15:38 EST
"How do men act on a sinking ship" Do they hold each other" Do they pass around the whiskey' Do they cry?"

~ Sebastian Junger, The Perfect Storm: A True Story of Men Against the Sea

NorseLady

Date: 2015-11-11 16:58 EST
"If the private life of the sea could ever be transposed onto paper, it would talk not about rivers or rain or glaciers or of molecules of oxygen and hydrogen, but of the millions of encounters its waters have shared with creatures of another nature."

~ Federico Chini, The Sea Of Forgotten Memories

NorseLady

Date: 2015-11-12 16:53 EST
"Shandy looked ahead. Blackbeard, apparently willing to get the explanation later, had picked up his oars and was rowing again. 'May I presume to suggest,' yelled Shandy giddily to Davies,'that we preoceed the hell out of here with all due haste.' Davies pushed a stray lock of hair back from his forehead and sat down on the rower's thwart. 'My dear fellow consider it done.'"

~ Tim Powers, On Stranger Tides

NorseLady

Date: 2015-11-14 14:03 EST
?The children had an argument once about whether there was more grass in the world or more sand, and Roger said that of course there must be more sand because of under the sea; in every ocean all over the world there would be sand, if you looked deep down. But there could be grass too, argued Deborah, a waving grass, a grass that nobody had ever seen, and the colour of that ocean grass would be darker than any grass on the surface of the world, in fields or prairies or people's gardens in America. It would be taller than tress and it would move like corn in the wind."

~ Daphne du Maurier, Echoes from the Macabre: Selected Stories (The Pool)

NorseLady

Date: 2015-11-14 17:18 EST
"I dreamt of turrets and craggy ledges where the windswept rain blew in from the ocean with the odor of violets. A pale woman in Elizabethan dress stood beside my bed and whispered in my ear that the bells would ring. An old salt in an oilcloth jacket sat atop a piling, mending nets with an awl, while far out at sea a tiny aeroplane winged its way towards the setting sun."

~ Alan Bradley, The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie

NorseLady

Date: 2015-11-20 19:01 EST
"It was a time of dark dreams. They washed in like flotsam on the night tide, slipping beneath doorways and window latches, rising through the streets and hills; and the little fishing-town of Scarlock foundered deep."

~ J.A. Clement, On Dark Shores: The Lady

NorseLady

Date: 2015-11-21 12:27 EST
"For sailors who love the wind, memory is a good port of departure."

~ Eduardo Galeano, Walking Words

NorseLady

Date: 2015-11-21 12:35 EST
"Whenever I find myself growing grim about the mouth; whenever it is a damp, drizzly November in my soul; whenever i find myself involuntarily pausing before coffin warehouses, and bringing up the rear of every funeral I meet....I quietly take to the ship. There is nothing surprising in this. If they but knew it, almost all men in their degree, some time or other, cherish very nearly the same feelings towards the ocean with me."

~ Herman Melville, Moby-Dick; or, The Whale

NorseLady

Date: 2015-11-22 02:15 EST
"I feel like it's a big ocean, full of bottom feeders, midlevel fish, the occasional shark, and some wonderful savvy whales, the elders, and the ones who guide you on your way. If you're lucky enough, you get to be a dolphin and have your waves broken by the passage of these elders before you, but at the same time, you get an occasional shark bite in the tail and maybe one of the bottom feeders comes up and takes a little nibble. But I see myself as cresting a series of waves, dipping down, sometimes, lower than I'd like, but mainly kind of happily staying above. And, of course, I try to avoid the fishnets."

~ Anjelica Huston, speaking about Hollywood

NorseLady

Date: 2015-11-24 16:37 EST
"It isn't always the treasure that drives men down deep into the sea; it's something else, something unexplainable, even to them."

~ Jennifer Arnett, Into Her Chambers

NorseLady

Date: 2015-11-25 14:56 EST
"The nights now are full of wind and destruction; the trees plunge and bend and their leaves fly helter skelter until the lawn is plastered with them and they lie packed in gutters and choke rain pipes and scatter damp paths. Also the sea tosses itself and breaks itself, and should any sleeper fancying that he might find on the beach an answer to his doubts, a sharer of his solitude, throw off his bedclothes and go down by himself to walk on the sand, no image with semblance of serving and divine promptitude comes readily to hand bringing the night to order and making the world reflect the compass of the soul. The hand dwindles in his hand; the voice bellows in his ear. Almost it would appear that it is useless in such confusion to ask the night those questions as to what, and why, and wherefore, which tempt the sleeper from his bed to seek an answer."

~ Virginia Woolf

NorseLady

Date: 2015-12-09 08:12 EST
"The smell of the sea, of kelp and fish and bitter moving water, rose stronger in my nostrils. It flooded my consciousness like an ancestral memory. The swells rose sluggishly and fell away, casting up dismal gleams between the boards of the pier. And the whole pier rose and fell in stiff and creaking mimicry, dancing its long slow dance of dissolution. I reached the end and saw no one, heard nothing but my footsteps and the creak of the beams, the slap of waves on the pilings. It was a fifteen-foot drop to the dim water."

~ Ross Macdonald, The Drowning Pool

NorseLady

Date: 2015-12-29 14:17 EST
"Every few days the sea delivers us gifts, and I am convinced that there is something of the divine nature in this process. Often I have prayed for a jacket, a bucket, or a handsaw, but instead I find one single flip-flop. Many times it has left my heart bitter, but then I find some useful purpose for my found treasure. Maybe the sea doesn't give me what I want, but what I need."

~ Jennifer Arnett, Day One: A Novella

NorseLady

Date: 2015-12-31 15:35 EST
"Based on the medical evidence that clearly states that being above 10,000 feet is hazardous to the health of sea level adapted humans, it is clear that all of the manned facilities on top of the 13,796 feet Mauna Kea summit in Hawaii should be removed and the summit restored back to its native environment."

~ Steven Magee, Health Forensics

NorseLady

Date: 2016-01-27 18:44 EST
"I have been feeling very clearheaded lately and what I want to write about today is the sea. It contains so many colors. Silver at dawn, green at noon, dark blue in the evening. Sometimes it looks almost red. Or it will turn the color of old coins. Right now the shadows of clouds are dragging across it, and patches of sunlight are touching down everywhere. White strings of gulls drag over it like beads.

It is my favorite thing, I think, that I have ever seen. Sometimes I catch myself staring at it and forget my duties. It seems big enough to contain everything anyone could ever feel."

~ Anthony Doerr, All the Light We Cannot See

NorseLady

Date: 2016-02-01 17:16 EST
"Land and sea. We may think of them as opposites; as complements. But there is a difference in how we think of them; the sea, and the land. If we are walking around in a forest, a meadow or a town, we see our surroundings as being made up of individual elements. There are many different kinds of trees in varying sizes, those buildings, these streets. The meadow, the flowers, the bushes. Our gaze lingers on details, and if we are standing in a forest in the autumn, we become tongue-tied if we try to describe the richness around us. All this exists on land.

But the sea. The sea is something completely different. The sea is one. We may note the shifting moods of the sea. What the sea looks like when the wind is blowing, how the sea plays with the light, how it rises and falls. But still it is always the sea we are talking about. We have given different parts of the sea different names for navigation and identification, but if we are standing before the sea, there is only one whole. The Sea.

If we are taken so far out in a small boat that no land is visible in any direction, we may catch sight of the sea. It is not a pleasant experience. The sea is a god, an unseeing, unhearing deity that does not even know we exist. We mean less than a grain of sand on an elephant's back, and if the sea wants us, it will take us. That's just the way it is. The sea knows no limits, makes no concessions. It has given us everything and it can take everything away from us.

To other gods we send our prayer: Protect us from the sea."

~ John Ajvide Lindqvist, Harbor

NorseLady

Date: 2016-02-15 08:46 EST
?The perpetual movement of the water, rolling from and to unknown destinations, the voices of the sea shield us from the raging furies and shrieking sounds of dystopian surroundings, creating an unwinding veil for stilled happiness, acquainting us with the gentle, cosmic rhythms of an extraneous world. They are a soothing relief and let us listen to the voices of our inner world."

~ Erik Pevernagie

NorseLady

Date: 2016-02-19 09:11 EST
"Sometimes I fall And feel myself slowly wilt and die, But then I suddenly spring back on my feet To go play in the sun outside. I am no different than the weather, The planets or the trees; For there do not always have to be reasons For the seasons turning inside of me. The magnetism that swirls In the sky, land, and sea Are the exact same currents found twirling In the electric ocean within me. I am a moving vessel of energy. And if my emotions do not Flow up, down, Within and around, Then I am not alive.?

~ Suzy Kassem, Rise Up and Salute the Sun: The Writings of Suzy Kassem

NorseLady

Date: 2016-02-21 16:48 EST
"My brother William is a fisherman, and he tells me that when he is in the middle of a fogbound sea the water is a color for which there is no name."

~ Patricia MacLachlan, Sarah, Plain and Tall

NorseLady

Date: 2016-02-24 10:18 EST
"The sea is a desert of waves, A wilderness of water."

~ Langston Hughes, Selected Poems

NorseLady

Date: 2016-02-26 10:00 EST
"Grief came in waves, sometimes big, sometimes small, but even on the calmest days, the grief remained. The tide still came ashore."

~ Dianna Hardy, Rise Of The Wolf

NorseLady

Date: 2016-03-14 13:49 EST
"Searching my heart for its true sorrow, This is the thing I find to be: That I am weary of words and people, Sick of the city, wanting the sea."

~ Edna St. Vincent Millay

NorseLady

Date: 2016-03-15 17:35 EST
"Then all was quiet, except for that murmurous half telling, half withholding of tremendous secrets that the sea would keep up all night. Each little wave seemed to say, "I'll tell you-" and then pull back with a smothered "Oh!" to be followed by another wave saying, "Then I will say-" but whatever it was remained unsaid and unsayable."

~ L.M. Boston, The Sea Egg

NorseLady

Date: 2016-03-22 12:36 EST
"The sea reminds me of my finiteness, limitations, minuteness and powerlessness, because the sea is none of these."

~ Michael C. Christen

NorseLady

Date: 2016-03-23 12:30 EST
"Let the sea breeze blow your hair, let the sunset bring tranquility to your heart, let the distant places you travel allow you to explore yourself."

~ Somya Kedia

NorseLady

Date: 2016-03-31 14:50 EST
"I will find comfort in the rhythm of the sea."

~ Charlotte Eriksson

NorseLady

Date: 2016-04-11 10:55 EST
"Whenever my hypos get such an upper hand of me, that it requires a strong moral principle to prevent me from deliberately stepping into the street, and methodically knocking people's hats off"then, I account it high time to get to sea as soon as I can.?

~ Herman Melville

NorseLady

Date: 2016-04-21 09:16 EST
"She loved the sea. She liked the sharp salty smell of the air, and the vastness of the horizons bounded only by a vault of azure sky above. It made her feel small, but free as well."

~ George R.R. Martin, A Storm of Swords

NorseLady

Date: 2016-04-25 08:48 EST
"You can't cross the sea merely by standing and staring at the water. Don't let yourself indulge in vain wishes."

~ Laurence Peter

NorseLady

Date: 2016-04-26 11:29 EST
"Never seen the sea! How could anyone not have seen the sea" Surely the sea must somehow belong to the happiness of every child.?

~ Iris Murdoch, The Time of the Angels

NorseLady

Date: 2016-04-27 19:47 EST
"A pebble thrown in a pool may ripple from end to end, but tossed into the sea, it is swallowed by enormity."

~Craig Froman, An Owl on the Moon: A Journal from the Edge of Darkness

NorseLady

Date: 2016-05-10 15:03 EST
"There had only ever been two roads home: there was the long road and there was the sea road, and tonight I would take the sea road."

~ Clara Winter, The Seafarer

NorseLady

Date: 2016-05-23 09:58 EST
"Springtime blooms the starry tree Bearing fruit the mariners see. High by night and low by dawn The silver apple guides us home."

~ F.T. McKinstry, The Gray Isles

NorseLady

Date: 2016-06-22 09:51 EST
"The sea is very beautiful and gives us many things, but it must be understood and respected, or it will slap you ..."

~ J.Z. Colby, Journey

NorseLady

Date: 2016-07-05 16:23 EST
"The sea, perhaps because of its saltiness, roughens the outside but keeps sweet the kernel of its servants' soul."

~ Joseph Conrad

NorseLady

Date: 2016-07-27 11:43 EST
"The green sea swept into the shallows and seethed there like slaking quicklime. It surged over the rocks, tossing up spangles of water like a juggler and catching them deftly again behind. It raced knee-deep through the clefts and crevices, twisted and tortured in a thousand ways, till it swept nuzzling and sucking into the holes at the base of the cliff. The whole reef was a shambles of foam, but it was bright in the sun, bright as a shattered mirror, exuberant and leaping with light."

~ Colin Thiele

NorseLady

Date: 2016-09-16 11:20 EST
"I would travel far and wide...seeing, listening, creating. I would weave tales for an enthralled audience. A song would be heard throughout the kingdom, and I would be a part of that. You would normally think that a bard would pick up his tales from stories heard in his travels or, perhaps, from personal observation of these events. Perhaps some bards would create the stories themselves or, at least, adapt the original versions heard.

But what if the bard were really more than a bard" What if he were once a gallant knight or an old sea captain...perhaps even a forgotten prince" What if the stories he told, what if the characters brought to life in his stories, were really of his comrades and himself" Stories from long ago that he finally wished to be heard" What if those who listened to his tales, all the while assuming that they were far disconnected from their communicator, were really listening to the narrative of a wanderer intimately connected to it all" And where would such an individual go when his final days as an "official" bard were spent' Perhaps he would decide to retire in a lighthouse. For, surely, no place would be more fitting for the hero emeritus. He would gaze upon the glorious sea in recollection...guiding others with the beacon of light atop his home as he had once been shepherded. The adventurer became the storyteller...and then the Sentinel of the Sea.?

~ Gina Marinello-Sweeney, I Thirst

NorseLady

Date: 2016-09-17 10:53 EST
"tread carefully into my life, my dear.

the currents are strong.

you will get lost in this warm ocean of my skin."

~ Sanober Khan

NorseLady

Date: 2016-09-22 10:49 EST
"Then very faintly, he heard above his head the low familiar murmur of the sea outside. At once the comfortable noise made him cheerful, and he even remembered what they were supposed to be."

~ Susan Cooper, Over Sea, Under Stone

NorseLady

Date: 2016-09-28 16:33 EST
"Only the ocean kept the same rhythm. Crashing in and slowly pulling back out, it never lied, never changed. It tried to teach them a life of romantic consistency."

~ Lawren Leo, Love's Shadow: Nine Crooked Paths

NorseLady

Date: 2016-10-11 10:35 EST
"The pulse of lapping water; slow waves invisible in the dark; two entangled minds; two lives; two beating hearts."

~ D.J. MacLennan, Frozen to Life: A Personal Mortality Experiment

NorseLady

Date: 2016-10-12 10:41 EST
"The sea is a dangerous place because it makes you believe in forever. I stare back at the shoreline, where heavy boulders clutter the shore, a remembrance of the attacks during the Secessionary War. For all the hundreds of thousands of people killed in the war, more are dead and gone beneath the waves of the sea. I tread water, turning slowly, so the island's behind me and all I can see is the blue-green waters. The sea goes on forever and ever. We are tiny, almost invisible specks. It could swallow us up. We are less than the bright stars of the night sky, compared to the vastness of the sea."

~ Beth Revis, The Body Electric

NorseLady

Date: 2016-10-18 09:40 EST
"Ocean waves gently rock the boat, As if to the tune of a lullaby. She sits still as the boat silently floats Under the infinite blue sky."

~ Rachel Lewis, Alone Upon the Sea

NorseLady

Date: 2016-10-22 13:21 EST
"Shall I come to you, a boundless drop to a boundless ocean."

~ Kahlil Gibran, The Prophet

NorseLady

Date: 2016-11-08 14:45 EST
"Eventually man, too, found his way back to the sea. Standing on its shores, he must have looked out upon it with wonder and curiosity, compounded with an unconscious recognition of his lineage. He could not physically re-enter the ocean as the seals and whales had done. But over the centuries, with all the skill and ingenuity and reasoning powers of his mind, he has sought to explore and investigate even its most remote parts, so that he might re-enter it mentally and imaginatively."

~ Rachel Carson, The Sea Around Us

NorseLady

Date: 2016-12-19 13:43 EST
"The graces are restless today. They pweet and muss, shuddering their wings so that the feathers stick out at defensive angles. I feel that restlessness too. When the sea is fractious like this " when it chutters and schwaks against the moorings, when it won't talk but only mumbles " it's difficult to think."

~ Kirsty Logan, The Rental Heart and Other Fairytales

NorseLady

Date: 2016-12-24 11:07 EST
"They are ill discoverers that think there is no land, when they can see nothing but sea."

~ Francis Bacon, The Advancement Of Learning

NorseLady

Date: 2016-12-27 23:24 EST
"That's what sailing is, a dance, and your partner is the sea. And with the sea you never take liberties. You ask her, you don't tell her. You have to remember always that she's the leader, not you. You and your boat are dancing to her tune."

~ Michael Morpurgo, Alone on a Wide Wide Sea

NorseLady

Date: 2017-01-02 15:03 EST
"One ship drives east and another drives west With the selfsame winds that blow. Tis the set of the sails And not the gales Which tells us the way to go. Like the winds of the seas are the ways of fate, As we voyage along through the life: Tis the set of a soul That decides its goal, And not the calm or the strife."

~ Ella Wheeler Wilcox

NorseLady

Date: 2017-01-05 09:30 EST
"The forces of the sea give rise to imagination, which reflects them according to the nature and disposition of the perceiver. The sea itself is undifferentiated and without bias."

~ F.T. McKinstry, The Gray Isles

NorseLady

Date: 2017-01-08 18:10 EST
"I preferred to look at the sea, which said nothing and never made you feel alone.?

~ Paula McLain, The Paris Wife

NorseLady

Date: 2017-01-12 16:02 EST
"Now she realized that she was not peering at a so-dark-blue-it-looked-black ocean, but rather she was looking straight through miles of incredibly clear water at something enormous and black in its nethermost depths. Maybe it was the bottom—so deep that not even light could touch it.

And yet, down in those impossible depths, she thought she could see tiny lights sparkling. She stared uncertainly at the tiny glimmerings. They seemed almost like scattered grains of sand lit from within; in some places they clustered like colonies, faint and twinkling.

Like stars..."

~ Fuyumi Ono, The Twelve Kingdoms: Sea of Shadow

NorseLady

Date: 2017-02-03 14:49 EST
"You have to understand the sea, he said, to listen to her, to look out for her moods, to get to know her and respect her and love her. Only then can you build boats that feel at home on the sea."

~Michael Morpurgo, Alone on a Wide Wide Sea

NorseLady

Date: 2017-02-08 11:29 EST
"The ocean exerts an inexorable pull over sea people wherever they are - in a bright-lit, inland city or the dead center of a desert - and when they feel the tug there is no choice but somehow to reach it and stand at its immense, earth-dissolving edge, straightaway calmed."

~ Anuradha Roy, The Folded Earth

NorseLady

Date: 2017-03-02 11:13 EST
"The choice lay out for me. Stay on land or plunge into the icy depths of the sea.

I always chose the sea."

~ Katherine McIntyre, By the Sea

NorseLady

Date: 2017-04-18 22:55 EST
"I celebrate myself, I paint and dance and sing myself, and what I assume you will assume, for every atom as of me as good belongs to dreamy You. I am a song. I am a poem. I am the soil and a gem. I am a stargate and a voyage. I am the ocean and your soul."

~ Oksana Rus

NorseLady

Date: 2017-05-08 01:27 EST
"You're throwing stones across my water but my inner sea stays calm, whatever happens.

The peaceful sound of the moving water makes everything fade . . . and if waves will grow it will be just to wash everything away."

~ Fernweher

NorseLady

Date: 2017-05-16 12:27 EST
"Over the drop, a luminous pond lay below them like a pale magic lantern. It was as if the moon had plummeted into the water and smashed open. Engulfed in darkness, with only a scatter of stars above, the place felt like a bright secret ? something ancient and precious."

~ Sara Sheridan, On Starlit Seas

NorseLady

Date: 2017-05-25 10:23 EST
"Ocean people are different from land people. The ocean never stops saying and asking into ears, which don't sleep like eyes. Those who live by the sea examine the driftwood and glass balls that float from foreign ships. They let scores of invisible imps loose out of found bottles. In a scoop of salt water, they revive the dead blobs that have been beached in storms and tides: fins, whiskers, and gills unfold; mouths, eyes, and colors bloom and spread. Sometimes ocean people are given to understand the newness and oldness of the world; then all morning they try to keep that boundless joy like a little sun inside their chests. The ocean also makes its people know immensity."

~ Maxine Hong Kingston

NorseLady

Date: 2017-06-03 11:00 EST
"Be calm...calm as a calm lagoon, then you will look beautiful as a beautiful calm lagoon crowned by the Moon and sheltered by the brilliance of the stars reclaiming your royalty of regal life..."

~ Oksana Rus

NorseLady

Date: 2017-06-16 17:01 EST
"Away from the sea I languish, I suffocate, I die! Ah! I believe that the waves roll their foam in my veins, that in my hair the tempest blows. My raptures and my cries are the echo of the ocean, my beauty is but a reflection of its waves. I feel it beat, roar, and abate by turns. Away from the sea all is ennui and sadness."

~ Deirdre Cavanagh, The Legend of the City of Ys

NorseLady

Date: 2017-07-18 11:16 EST
"I write our names on the page. What of it, if the paper will be burned" I write our names in the sand. What of it, if the shore will be washed by waves" I write our names on trees that will be cut and benches that will be painted, but what of it? I will keep on writing our names because in this world of ephemera, You and I are the only constant."

~ Kamand Kojouri

NorseLady

Date: 2017-07-24 11:33 EST
"Sometimes, the waves grow hushed, but the sea is always there, touching, caressing, eating the earth..."

~ Keri Hulme, The Bone People

NorseLady

Date: 2017-08-17 23:08 EST
?Standing on the roof at night, beside the golden ship I look across the city and I dream a wild trip. The waves are high, the wind is strong, the moon is white and full. I smell the salt upon the sea, a strong magnetic pull. I shout into the endless dark, awaiting the reply: 'Away! Away' It says: 'Away! Now spread your wings and fly'."

~ Brian Selznick, The Marvels

NorseLady

Date: 2017-08-27 02:00 EST
"The heart of man is very much like the sea; it has its storms, it has its tides, and in its depths it has its pearls too."

~ Vincent van Gogh, The Letters of Vincent van Gogh

NorseLady

Date: 2017-10-09 11:17 EST
"I felt once more how simple and frugal a thing is happiness: a glass of wine, a roast chestnut, a wretched little brazier, the sound of the sea. Nothing else."

~ Nikos Kazantzakis, Zorba the Greek

NorseLady

Date: 2017-11-09 08:26 EST
"I, while the gods laugh, the world's vortex am; Maelstr?m of passions in that hidden sea Whose waves of all-time lap the coasts of me; And in small compass the dark waters cram."

~ Mervyn Peake, Collected Poems

NorseLady

Date: 2018-03-14 16:20 EST
"This unlikely story begins on a sea that was a blue dream, as colorful as blue-silk stockings, and beneath a sky as blue as the irises of children's eyes. From the western half of the sky the sun was shying little golden disks at the sea—if you gazed intently enough you could see them skip from wave tip to wave tip until they joined a broad collar of golden coin that was collecting half a mile out and would eventually be a dazzling sunset."

~ F. Scott Fitzgerald, Flappers and Philosophers

NorseLady

Date: 2018-04-17 22:34 EST
"I wish I could describe the feeling of being at sea: the anguish, frustration, and fear, the beauty that accompanies threatening spectacles, the spiritual communion with creatures in whose domain I sail. There is a magnificent intensity in life that comes when we are not in control but are only reacting, living, surviving."

~ Steve Callahan