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Quotes about Nature

Girls, sometimes I feel as if those exams mean everything, but when I look at the big buds swelling on those chestnut trees and the misty blue air at the end of the streets they don't seem half so important.
— LM Montgomery
Anne came dancing home in the purple winter twilight across the snowy places. Afar in the southwest was the great shimmering, pearl-like sparkle of an evening star in a sky that was pale golden and ethereal rose over gleaming white spaces and dark glens of spruce. The tinkles of sleigh bells among the snowy hills came like elfin chimes through the frosty air, but their music was not sweeter than the song in Anne's heart and on her lips.
— LM Montgomery
Roses red and vi'lets blue, Sugar's sweet, and so are you
— LM Montgomery
I think it pisses God off if you walk by the color purple in a field somewhere and don't notice it.
— Alice Walker
When I have a terrible need of - shall I say the word - religion. Then I go out and paint the stars.
— Vincent Van Gogh
What I know of the divine sciences and Holy Scriptures, I learned in woods and fields. I have no other masters than the beeches and the oaks.
— Bernard of Clairvaux
Man is a Religious Animal. He is the only Religious Animal. He is the only animal that has the True Religion - several of them.
— Mark Twain
I have found, after a good deal of consideration, that the best place to seek God is in a garden. You can dig for Him here.
— George Bernard Shaw
In nature there is a fundamental unity running through all the diversity we see about us. Religions are given to mankind so as to accelerate the process of realisation of fundamental unity.
— Mahatma Gandhi
The man who does not know the nature of the Law, cannot know the nature of sin.
— John Bunyan
There was a time when people accepted magical experiences as natural. There were no priests then, and no one went chasing after the secrets of the occult.
— Paulo Coelho
Art itself, in all its methods, is the child of religion. The highest and best works in architecture, sculpture and painting, poetry and music, have been born out of the religion of Nature.
— James Freeman Clarke