Water Quotes
"Some people feel the rain. Others just get wet."
- Bob Marley -
"This lake exceeds anything I ever beheld in beauty."
- Percy
Bysshe Shelley (Speaking of Lake Como, Italy) -
"Still waters run
deep. Shallow waters run dry frequently."
- Thomas County Cat, June
5, 1890, Pg 3 -
"When you see clouds gathering, prepare to catch
rainwater."
- Gola People of Liberia -
"Water is the mother of
the vine, the nurse and fountain of fecundity, the adorner and refresher
of the world."
- Charles Mackay -
"When snow falls, nature
listens."
- Antoinette van Kleeff -
“Any party which takes
credit for the rain must not be surprised if its opponents blame it for
the drought.”
- Dwight Morrow -
“When one man drinks while
another can only watch, Doomsday follows.”
- Turkish Proverb -
"All water has a perfect memory and is forever trying to get back to
where it was.”
- Toni Morrison -
"One could argue that a
fractured, ad hoc, haphazard mish-mash of random, inconsistent, and
stove-piped projects, administered by a hodge-podge of 36 congressional
committees and more than 20 agencies in accordance with outdated and
inadequate laws constitutes a national water policy. A de facto one. But
with so many ignored aha moments followed by ever-more-frequent and
disastrous uh-oh moments, it seems we could use a policy that's not
quite so dependent upon sandbags and firehoses."
- Elizabeth de la
Vega -
"The health of our waters is the principle measure of how
we live on the land."
- Luna Leopold -
"Water, that wonderful,
flowing medium, the luck of the planet — which would serve humankind in
so many ways, and which would give our planet a special character.”
-
Daniel Boorstin, The Discoverers -
"It is water, in every form
and at every scale, that saturates the mind. All the water that will
ever be is, right now."
- National Geographic, October 1993 -
"Let the rain kiss you. Let the rain beat upon your head with silver
liquid drops. Let the rain sing you a lullaby."
- Langston Hughes -
"Of this we may be sure: Man must eat to live, and the problem of
food will always be inextricably associated with water."
– Thompson
King, Water, Miracle of Nature -
"What makes the desert beautiful
is that somewhere it hides a well."
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery -
"..I am inclined to believe that if there can be a meaningful human
right to any material thing, surely it starts with access to minimum
clean freshwater. ”
- Steven Solomon - Water – The Epic Struggle for
Wealth, Power, and Civilization
"Water, whether still or in
motion, has so great an attraction for the lover of nature, that the
most beautiful landscape seems scarcely complete without it. There are
no effects so fascinating as those produced by the reflexions in
nature’s living mirror, with their delicacy of form, ever fleeting and
changing, and their subtle combinations of colour.”
- Montagu Pollock
- Light and Water: A Study of Reflexion and Colour in River, Lake and
Sea, 1903 -
"Rain! Whose soft architectural hands have power to
cut stones, and chisel to shapes of grandeur the very mountains."
-
Henry Ward Beecher, preacher and writer (1813-1887) -
"Be
praised, My Lord, through Sister Water; she is very useful, and humble,
and precious, and pure."
- St. Francis of Assisi in Canticles of the
Sun -
"He that has satisfied his thirst turns his back on the
well.”
- Baltasar Gracian -
"..the mighty main [sea] is the
begetter of clouds and winds and rivers."
- Anaximenes of Miletus
(585-525 BC) -
"Deep flowing Oceanus, from which flow all rivers
and every sea and all springs and deep wells."
- Illiad -
"Water is personal, water is local, water is regional, water is
statewide. Everybody has a different idea, a different approach, a
different issue, a different concern. Water is the most personal issue
we have.."
- Susan Marks; OnLine interview, October 7, 2009 -
"Rain is grace; rain is the sky condescending to the earth; without rain
there would be no life."
- John Updike -
"The only books that
separate ground water and surface water are our law books."
- Duane
Smith, Executive Director, Oklahoma Water Resources Board -
"Water and its availability and quality will be the main pressures on,
and issues for, societies and the environment under climate change."
- IPCC, 2007 -
"Groundwater has been used for domestic and
irrigation needs from time immemorial. Yet its nature and occurrence
have always possessed a certain mystery because water below the land
surface is invisible and relatively inaccessible. The influence of this
mystery lingers in some tenets that govern groundwater law."
- T.N.
Narasimhan -
"Gutta cavat lapidem." (Dripping water carves a
stone.)"
- Ovid -
"In the Western United States, water flows
uphill to money."
- Glen Sanders -
"A generous person will be
enriched and one who gives water will get water."
- From Proverbs;
11:25 -
"We forget that the water cycle and the life cycle are
one."
- Jacques Cousteau -
"The solution to our water problems
is more rain."
- Attributed to Mark Twain (as Leslie says "Aren't
they all?") -
"Water is the lifeblood of our bodies, our economy,
our nation and our well-being."
- Stephen Johnson, EPA Administrator,
upon dedicating the new desalination plant at El Paso, TX, 2007 -
"A lake is the landscape's most beautiful and expressive feature. It
is Earth's eye; looking into which the beholder
measures the depth of
his own nature."
- Henry David Thoreau -
"To understand water
is to understand the cosmos, the marvels of nature, and life itself."
- Masaru Emoto in "The Hidden Messages in Water" -
"Everyone
understands that water is essential to life. But many are only just now
beginning to grasp how essential it is to everything in life – food,
energy, transportation, nature, leisure, identity, culture, social
norms, and virtually all the products used on a daily basis."
- World
Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD) -
"All the
waters run to the sea and yet the sea is not full, and from the place
where they began, thither they return again."
- Ecclesiastes -
"Water, thou hast no taste, no color, no odor; canst not be defined,
art relished while ever mysterious. Not necessary to life, but rather
life itself, thou fillest us with a gratification that exceeds the
delight of the senses."
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery, From Wind, Sand
and Stars, 1939 -
"If you gave me several million years, there
would be nothing that did not grow in beauty if it were surrounded by
water."
- Jan Erik Vold, 1970 -
"In their efforts to provide a
sufficiency of water where there was not one, men have resorted to every
expedient from prayer to dynamite. The story of their efforts is, on the
whole, one of pathos and tragedy, of a few successes and many failures"
- Walter Prescott Webb (The Great Plains) -
"It is hereby
recognized that a need exists for the creation of special districts for
the proper management of the groundwater resources of the state; for the
conservation of groundwater resources; for the prevention of economic
deterioration; for associated endeavors within the state of Kansas
through the stabilization of agriculture; and to secure for Kansas the
benefit of its fertile soils and favorable location with respect to
national and world markets. It is the policy of this act to preserve
basic water use doctrine and to establish the right of local water users
to determine their destiny with respect to the use of the groundwater
insofar as it does not conflict with the basic laws and policies of the
state of Kansas. It is, therefore, declared that in the public interest
it is necessary and advisable to permit the establishment of groundwater
management districts."
- Legislative declaration of the Kansas
Groundwater Management District Act, K.S.A. 82a-1020 -
"Water is
the only substance on earth that is naturally present in three different
forms - as a liquid, a solid (ice) and as a gas (water vapor)."
-
Author unknown -
"Battles over water in the West are always about
something more. At their most elemental, they are about survival."
-
Bettina Boxall, 2007 -
"There is too little public recognition of
how much we all depend upon farmers as stewards of our soil, water and
wildlife resources."
- John F. Kennedy -
"You could write the
story of man's growth in terms of his epic concerns with water."
-
Bernard Frank -
"Man is a complex being; he makes deserts bloom
and lakes die."
- Gil Stern -
"And all the air is filled with
pleasant noise of waters"
- Henry Wordsworth, "Resolution and
Independence" -
"And gentle winds and waters near, make music to
the lonely ear."
- Byron,"Parisina" -
"We think of our land
and water and human resources not as static and sterile possessions but
as life giving assets to be directed by wise provisions for future
days."
- Franklin D. Roosevelt -
"There has been a lot said
about the sacredness of our land which is our body; and the values of
our culture which is our soul; but water is the blood of our tribes, and
if its life-giving flow is stopped, or it is polluted, all else will die
and the many thousands of years of our communal existence will come to
an end."
- Frank Tenorio, 1978 -
"Anyone who can solve the
problems of water will be worthy of two Nobel prizes - one for peace and
one for science."
- John F. Kennedy -
"A man from the west
will fight over three things: water, women and gold, and usually in that
order."
- Senator Barry Goldwater, AZ -
"Water is King, and he
is Knight who uses it successfully to make two blades grow where nature
produced none."
- J. S. Sherman, 1894. Proceedings of the 2nd Annual
Convention of the Kansas Irrigation Association -
"Til taught by
pain, men really know not what good water is worth."
- From "Don
Juan" by Byron -
"Man - despite his artistic pretensions, his
sophistication, and his many accomplishments - owes his existence to a
six inch layer of topsoil and the fact that it rains."
- Unknown
author -
"I have left almost to the last the magic of water, an
element which owing to its changefulness of form and mood and colour and
to the vast range of its effects is ever the principal source of
landscape beauty, and has like music a mysterious influence over the
mind."
- Sir George Sitwell (On the Making of Gardens) -
"I
have little need to remind you that water has become one of our major
national concerns."
Ezra Taft Benson, U.S. Secretary of Agriculture.
- (Opening sentence of the Foreword of the 1955 Yearbook of
Agriculture - dedicated entirely to water) -
"Water is life's
matter and matrix, mother and medium. There is no life without water."
- Albert Szent-Gyorgyi, Hungarian biochemist and Nobel Prize Winner for
Medicine -
"In an age when man has forgotten his origins and is
blind even to his most essential needs for survival, water along with
other resources has become the victim of his indifference."
- Rachel
Carson -
"Don't you realize that the sea is the home of water?
All water is off on a journey unless it's in the sea, and it's homesick,
and bound to make its way home someday."
- Zora Neale Hurston
(1903-1960), American folklorist and writer -
"Civilization has
been a permanent dialogue between human beings and water."
- Paolo
Lugari (founder of the Gaviotas Community in Colombia) -
"If we
lived in a desert and our lives depended on a water supply that came out
of a steel tube, we would inevitably watch that tube and talk about it
understandingly. No citizen would need to be lectured about his duty
toward its care and spurred to help if it were in danger. Teachers of
civics in such a community might develop a sense of public
responsibility, not only by describing the remote beginnings of the
commonwealth, but also how that tube got built, how long it would last,
how vital the intake might be if the rainfall on the forested mountains
nearby ever changed in seasonal habit or amount. It would be a most
unimaginative person, or a stupid one, who could not see the vital
relation between the mountains, the forests, that tube and himself."
- Isaiah Bowman, "Headwaters Control and Use - Influence of Vegetation
on Land-Water Relationships" 1937 -
"Water is the most basic of
all resources. Civilizations grew or withered depending on its
availability."
- Dr. Nathan W. Snyder, Ralph M. Parsons Engineering -
"If we could ever competitively, at a cheap rate, get fresh water
from saltwater, ..(this) would be in the long-range interests of
humanity which could really dwarf any other scientific accomplishments."
- John F. Kennedy -
"Rain is a blessing when it falls gently on
parched fields, turning the earth green, causing the birds to sing."
- Donald Worster, "Meeting the Expectations of the Land", 1984 -
"Throughout the history of literature, the guy who poisons the well
has been the worst of all villains..."
- Author unknown -
"Thousands have lived without love, not one without water."
- W.H.
Auden -
"The cure for anything is salt water - sweat, tears, or
the sea."
- Tagore - a Bengali poet and novelist -
"Water
should not be judged by its history, but by its quality"
- Dr Lucas
Van Vuuren, National Institute of Water Research, South Africa -
"A waster of water is a waster of better."
- Old Irish Adage -
"The wise man of Miletus thus declared the first of things is water"
- J.S. Blackie, 1877 -
"Nothing on earth is so weak and yielding
as water, but for breaking down the firm and strong it has no equal."
- Lao-Tsze -
"In sweet water there is a pleasure ungrudged by
anyone."
- Ovid, 13 A.D. -
"Solid stone is just sand and
water...Sand and water and a million years gone by."
- Beth Nielsen
Chapman -
"The noblest of the elements is water"
- Pindar, 476
B.C. -
"If there is magic on this planet, it is contained in
water."
- Loran Eisley (Anthropologist), The Immense Journey, 1957 -
"Aquifer: a mysterious, magical and poorly defined area beneath the
surface of the earth that either yields or withholds vast or lesser
quantities of standing/flowing water, the quantity and/or quality of
which is dependent on who is describing it or how much money may be at
stake."
- R. Radden, "Watershed Resources", Jan. 2002 -
"Water
helped ancient man learn those first lessons about the rights of others
and responsibility to a larger society.... It became part of the moral
and mental legacy parents passed on to their children."
- M. Meyer,
"Water in the Hispanic Southwest" -
"Irrigation of the land with
seawater desalinated by fusion power is ancient. It's called rain."
-
Michael McClary -
"Whiskey is for drinking; water is for fighting
over."
- Unknown (widely attributed to Mark Twain, but this is under
dispute) -
"You could not step twice into the same rivers; for
other waters are ever flowing on to you."
- Heraclitus of Ephesus -
"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. 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 da Vinci -
"When you drink the
water, remember the spring."
- Chinese Proverb -
"When the
well is dry, we learn the worth of water."
- Widely attributed to
Benjamin Franklin, via Poor Richard's Almanac, but alas, this quote too
is debated -
"Children of a culture born in a water-rich
environment, we have never really learned how important water is to us.
We understand it, but we do not respect it."
- William Ashworth, Nor
Any Drop to Drink, 1982 -
"Don't empty the water jar until the
rain falls."
- Philippine proverb -
"The frog does not drink
up the pond in which he lives."
- American Indian Saying -
"The stone in the water knows nothing of the hill which lies parched in
the sun."
- African Proverb -
"The highest good is like water.
Water gives life to the ten thousand things and does not strive. It
flows in places men reject and so is like the Tao."
-Excerpt from the
Tao Te Ching, chapter 8 -
"By means of water, we give life to
everything."
- Koran, 21:30 -
"It is a fascinating and
provocative thought that a body of water deserves to be considered as an
organism in its own right."
- Lyall Watson, Supernature -
"Water links us to our neighbor in a way more profound and complex than
any other."
- John Thorson -
"Water is the one substance from
which the earth can conceal nothing; it sucks out its innermost secrets
and brings them to our very lips."
- Jean Giraudoux -
Quotes about Rivers.
"We must begin thinking like a river if we are to leave a legacy of
beauty and life for future generations."
- David Brower -
"Egypt is the gift of the Nile."
- Herodutus - 5th century B.C.E. -
"Rivers are roads which move, and which carry us whither we desire
to go."
- Blaise Pascal -
"No man ever steps in the same river
twice, for it's not the same river and he's not the same man."
-
Heraclitus -
"I do not know much about gods; but I think that the
river is a strong brown god - sullen, untamed and intractable."
- T.
S. Eliot -
"Until I came to New Mexico, I never realized how much
beauty water adds to a river."
- Mark Twain -
"The trees
reflected in the river -- they are unconscious of a spiritual world so
near to them. So are we."
- Nathaniel Hawthorne -
"How could
drops of water know themselves to be a river?"
- Antoine de
Saint-Exupery -
"Rivers depend for their existence on the rains
and on the water within the earth, as the earth is hollow and has water
in its cavities."
- Anaxagoras of Clazomenae (500-428 BC) -
"The Colorado River Compact encourages 'Thelma and Louise' water
management. It penalizes for overuse, but only after the fact."
-
Brad Udall, Western Water Assessment -
"If man fails to honor the
rivers, he shall not gain life from them"
- The Code of the Hammurabi
-
"Rivers have what man most respects and longs for in his own
life and thoughts - a capacity for renewal and replenishment, continual
energy, creativity, cleansing,"
- John M Kauffman, "Flow East" -
"I want my life to be a mountain stream that rushes down wild
flowered slopes through pine glades into green valleys, I do not want
culverts to contain my force or cement to channel my flow, nothing to
break my life's course with roots, stones and sand. "
- Lowell
McMullin -
"...Good luck and Good work for the happy mountain
raindrops, each one of them a high waterfall in itself, descending from
the cliffs and hollows of the clouds to the cliffs and hollows of the
rocks, out of the sky-thunder into the thunder of the falling rivers."
- John Muir, My First Summer in the Sierra -
"Eventually, all
things merge into one, and a river runs through it. The river was cut by
the world's great flood and runs over rocks from the basement of time.
On some of the rocks are timeless raindrops. Under the rocks are the
words, and some of the words are theirs. I am haunted by waters."
-
Norman Maclean, A River Runs Through It -
"So-this-is-a-River".
"THE River," corrected the Rat. "And you really live by the river? What
a jolly life!" "By it and with it and on it and in it," said the Rat.
"It's brother and sister to me, and aunts, and company, and food and
drink, and (naturally) washing. It's my world, and I don't want any
other. What it hasn't got is not worth having, and what it doesn't know
is not worth knowing. Lord! the times we've had together..."
-
Kenneth Grahme, "The Wind in the Willows" -
"I have never seen a
river that I could not love. Moving water…has a fascinating vitality. It
has power and grace and associations. It has a thousand colors and a
thousand shapes, yet it follows laws so definite that the tiniest
streamlet is an exact replica of a great river."
- Roderick
Haig-Brown -
"Many a time have I merely closed my eyes at the end
of yet another troublesome day and soaked my bruised psyche in wild
water, rivers remembered and rivers imagined. Rivers course through my
dreams, rivers cold and fast, rivers well-known and rivers nameless,
rivers that seem like ribbons of blue water twisting through wide
valleys, narrow rivers folded in layers of darkening shadows, rivers
that have eroded down deep into a mountain's belly, sculpted the land.
Peeled back the planet's history exposing the texture of time itself."
- Harry Middleton -
"To trace the history of a river or a
raindrop…is also to trace the history of the soul, the history of the
mind descending and arising in the body. In both, we constantly seek and
stumble upon divinity, which like feeding the lake, and the spring
becoming a waterfall, feeds, spills, falls, and feeds itself all over
again."
- Gretel Ehrlich (From Islands, The Universe, Home, 1991) -
“A river is more than an amenity, it is a treasure.”
- Justice
Oliver Wendell Holmes (quoted by the Supreme Court in its decision in
U.S. v. Republic Steel, 1960) -
"We let a river shower its banks
with a spirit that invades the people living there, and we protect that
river, knowing that without its blessings the people have no source of
soul."
- Thomas Moore -
"To live by a large river is to be
kept in the heart of things."
- John Haines -
Poems and Verses
Don Richmond - a verse from his "Stop AWDI" (groundwater export
proposal) protest song
Some of us have taken only what we need,
Some of us have seen the
need turn into greed,
Some of us would sell our future down the
drain,
Washed down by water from the land of little rain.
Water From the Wells of Home - Song by Johnny Cash (two verses)
My days all run together
Like a timeless honeycomb.
I find
myself wishing I could drink again
Water from the wells of home.
I want to come back some day
To the water from the wells of home.
Lord, take me back someday
To the water from the wells of home.
Kansas City Tap Water - Song by Jewel and Steve Poltz (first of 3
verses). (Thanks Gayle for sharing this!)
If I was gonna have a glass of tap water
Where would it be do you
suppose
Maybe St. Louis or old Chicago
I have to say that the
answer is no
City of Fountains
City of Chiefs
City of Royals
City of Beef
(?)
KC water taste like Champagne
Kansas City, Paris of the Plains
Song of the River - William Randolf Hearst (first 3 stanzas).
The snow melts on the mountain,
And the water runs down to the
spring,
And the spring in a turbulent fountain,
Has a song of
youth to sing.
Then runs down to the riotous river,
And the
river flows to the sea,
And the water again goes back to rain,
To
the hills where it used to be.
And I wonder if life’s deep
mystery
Isn’t much like the rain and the snow,
Returning through
eternity
To places it used to know.
The Water Song - (Translated from "water-language"). From "Hinds Feet
on High Places", by Hannah Hurnard.
Oh come! let us away—
Lower, lower every day,
Oh, what joy it
is to race
Down to find the lowest place.
This the dearest law we
know—
"It is happy to go low."
Sweetest urge and sweetest will,
"Let us go down lower still."
Hear the summons night and day
Calling us to come away.
From the heights we leap and flow
To the
valleys down below.
Always answering to the call,
To the lowest
place of all.
Sweetest urge and sweetest pain,
To go low and rise
again.
Water - Chris Dubois; John Lovelace; and Brad Paisley
Inflatable pool full of dad's hot air
I was three years old
splashin' everywhere
And so began my love affair - with water
River - Mason Williams (selected stanzas)
I am born in the sky
The silent snow is my seed
In the season of the sun
My crystal
blood runs
Over the earth
Gathering unto itself
Godspeed
Whispering in the beginning
I uncover brown and gold
Yellow, red
and green
From under the whiteness of my mother
Until I have voice
enough
To carry leaves
And roll little stones
I bear the
colors of the sky for my banner
And make a path for the wind
And
fog for the night
And mist for the morning's meadows
And rainbows
when I soar in cataracts
We blend our bloods and soils
And
fishes and voices
To carry boats and big logs
Our strength is
harnessed
And we are painted and photographed
Marvelled at and
swam in
And given a name
Spent and sullied
Slowly we go on
down
To be lost in the sea
Sussex - Rudyard
Kipling
We have no waters to delight
Our broad and brookless
vales—
Only the dewpond on the height
Unfed, that never fails—
Tiegnmouth - John Keats (Second stanza)
There's
Arch Brook
And there's Larch Brook,
Both turning many a mill:
And cooling the drouth
of the salmon mouth,
And fattening his
silver gill.
Living Waters - Caroline S. Spencer;
Published in "The Outlook", September 26, 1896
There are some hearts
like wells, green-mossed and deep
As ever summer saw;
And cool
their water is - yea, cool and sweet -
But you must come to draw.
They hoarde not, yet they rest in calm content,
And not unsought will
give;
They can be quiet with their wealth unspent,
So
self-contained they live.
And there are some like springs, that
bubbling burst
To follow dusty ways,
And run with offered cup to
quench his thirst
Where the tired traveler strays;
That never ask
the meadows if they want
What is their joy to give;
Unasked, their
lives to other life they grant,
So self-bestowed they live!
And One is like the ocean, deep and wide,
Wherein all waters fall;
That girdles the broad earth, and draws the tide,
Feeling and bearing
all;
That broods the mists, that sends the clouds abroad,
That
takes, again to give;-
Even the great and loving heart of God,
Whereby all doth live.
The Brook - Alfred Lord
Tennyson
Till last by Philip's farm I flow
To join the brimming
river,
For men may come and men may go,
But I go on for ever.
The Doll's Washing - Mary F. Butts (first 2
stanzas). Published in "The Outlook", March 28, 1896
Earth-fairies
bring the water
From pond and marshy dell-
Drop by drop, all day,
all night,
And fill the deep, deep well.
Down goes the
gracefull well-sweep
Along the mossy sides.
Brimful of sparkling
water,
Up the bucket rides.
Water - Phillip
Larkin, 1954
If I were called in
To construct a religion
I
should make use of water.
Going to church
Would entail a
fording
To try, different clothes;
My liturgy would employ
Images of sousing,
A furious devout drench,
And I should raise
in the east
A glass of water
Where any-angled light
Would
congregate endlessly.
Going for Water - Robert
Frost
The well was dry beside the door,
And so we went with pail
and can
Across the fields behind the house
To seek the brook if
still it ran;
Not loth to have excuse to go,
Because the
autumn eve was fair
(Though chill), because the fields were ours,
And by the brook our woods were there.
We ran as if to meet the
moon
That slowly dawned behind the trees,
The barren boughs
without the leaves,
Without the birds, without the breeze.
But
once within the wood, we paused
Like gnomes that hid us from the
moon,
Ready to run to hiding new
With laughter when she found us
soon.
Each laid on other a staying hand
To listen ere we dared
to look,
And in the hush we joined to make
We heard, we knew we
heard the brook.
A note as from a single place,
A slender
tinkling fall that made
Now drops that floated on the pool
Like
pearls, and now a silver blade.
I Stood Tip-toe
Upon a Little Hill - John Keats (Lines 61-84)
Linger awhile upon some
bending planks
That lean against a streamlet’s rushy banks,
And
watch intently Nature’s gentle doings:
They will be found softer than
ring-dove’s cooings.
How silent comes the water round that bend;
Not the minutest whisper does it send
To the o’erhanging sallows:
blades of grass
Slowly across the chequer’d shadows pass.
Why,
you might read two sonnets, ere they reach
To where the hurrying
freshnesses aye preach
A natural sermon o’er their pebbly beds;
Where swarms of minnows show their little heads,
Staying their wavy
bodies ’gainst the streams,
To taste the luxury of sunny beams
Temper’d with coolness. How they ever wrestle
With their own sweet
delight, and ever nestle
Their silver bellies on the pebbly sand.
If you but scantily hold out the hand,
That very instant not one will
remain;
But turn your eye, and they are there again.
The ripples
seem right glad to reach those cresses,
And cool themselves among the
em’rald tresses;
The while they cool themselves, they freshness give,
And moisture, that the bowery green may live:
From the song "It's All About the Water" - Jimmie Buffett, 1998
It’s
all about da water, don’t you know
Kinja needs da water, da h2o
It’s all about da water, it ain’t no lie
Widout de water we shrivel
up and die
De main cistern go down to zero
De new bossman, he
be a hero
Solve de problem, so give a cheer-o
He turn on de water!
From the song "One Sweet World" - Dave Matthews Band
Nine planets around the Sun,
Only one does the Sun embrace,
And on
this watered one,
So much we take for granted...
From the poem "Keramos" - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Turn, turn,
my wheel!
To something new, to something strange;
Nothing that is
can pause or stay;
The moon will wax, the moon will wane,
The mist
and cloud will turn to rain,
The rain to mist and cloud again,
To-morrow be to-day.
Child's Song - Title &
author unknown
Water, water everywhere, not a drop to spare
Water
in the ground, water in the air
Tho' it may evaporate, it never goes
away
Snows onto a mountaintop, flows into a bay
Animals need
water, people need it too
Keep it clean for me and I'll keep it clean
for you.
"The River Speaks"
Poem by Gene
Lindberg (published on front page of the Denver Post Weekly Magazine -
February 5, 1933)
Down from the mountains of eternal snow
The streams come tumbling, joining as they flow
To send a river
winding toward the sea.
I listen, and the river speaks to me.
It
tells of meadows on a thirsty plain;
Of gardens blooming where there
is no rain;
Of mighty cities built upon its banks;
Of living
things that owe the river thanks.
The waters speak to me, and
hurry on,
Eager to come and eager to be gone.
Almost it seems as
if the river knew
How many things there are for it to do.
Sometimes it pauses, to lay up a store
of liquid wealth in lake and
reservoir,
Then leaps a dam and hastens on again,
Turning a wheel
to light the homes of men.
The river speaks, and deserts cease to
be;
Wide fields grow green, and ships go down to the sea,
I hear
the water singing as it goes:
"Let life go on, because the river
flows."
"The Great Sea "
From "In the Trail of
the Mind, American Indian Poems" (Eskimo) Edited by John Bierhurst
The great sea-
Has sent me adrift,
It moves me as the weed
in a great river,
Earth and the great weather Move me,
Have
carried me away
And move my inward parts with joy.
"The Rime of the Ancient Mariner"
Excerpt from the Poem by
Samuel Coleridge, 1798
Water, water, everywhere,
And all
the boards did shrink;
Water, water, everywhere,
Nor any drop to
drink.
Poem by Hilda Conkling, Child Poet
(1910-1986)
The world turns softly
Not to spill its lakes
and rivers,
The water is held in its arms
And the sky is held in
the water.
What is water,
That pours silver,
And can hold the
sky?
Water
"Water"
by Ralph Waldo
Emerson; 1883
The water understands
Civilization well,
It wets my foot, but prettily,
It chills my life, but wittily,
It
is not disconcerted,
It is not broken-hearted:
Well used, it
decketh joy,
Adorneth, doubleth joy:
Ill used, it will destroy,
In perfect time and measure
With a face of golden pleasure
Elegantly destroy.
"Cologne"
by Samuel
Coleridge; 1828
The Rhine River, it is well known,
Doth
wash your city of Cologne;
But tell me, nymphs! what power devine
Shall henceforth wash the river Rhine?
"Water"
by Sir Alan Herbert
The rain is plenteous but, by
God's decree,
Only a third is meant for you and me;
Two-thirds are
taken by the growing things
Or vanish Heavenward on vapour's wings:
Nor does it mathematically fall
With social equity on one and all.
The population's habit is to grow
In every region where the water's
low:
Nature is blamed for failings that are Man's,
And well-run
rivers have to change their plans.
Words from
Thomas H. Ferril, 1940
Here is the land where life is
written in water
The West is where the water was and is
Father and
son of old mother and daughter
Following rivers up immensities
of
range and desert thirsting the sundown ever
Crossing a hill to climb
a hill still drier
Naming tonight a city by some river
a different
name from last night's camping fire
Look to the green within the
mountain cup
look to the prairie parched for water lack
Look to
the sun that pulls the oceans up
look to the cloud that gives the
oceans back
Look to your heart and may your wisdom grow
to power
of lightning and to peace of snow
"Ode, On the
General Subject of Water"
by Kenneth Boulding; Feather River
Anthology
Water is far from a simple commodity,
Water's a
sociological oddity,
Water's a pasture for science to forage in,
Water's a mark of our dubious origin,
Water's a link with a distant
futurity,
Water's a symbol of ritual purity.
Water is politics,
Water's religion,
Water is just about anyone's pigeon.
Water is
frightening, water's endearing,
Water's a lot more than mere
engineering.
Water is tragical, water is comical,
Water is far
from Pure Economical,
So studies of water, though free from aridity
Are apt to produce a good deal of turbidity.
"Two Tramps in Mud Time" (verse 5)
by Robert Frost, 1936
The water for which we may have to look
In summertime with a
witching-wand,
In every wheelrut's now a brook,
In every print of
a hoof a pond.
Be glad of water, but don't forget
The lurking
frost in the earth beneath
That will steal forth after the sun is set
And show on the water its crystal teeth.
"Gunga Din"
(first half of first verse)
by Rudyard Kipling, 1865
YOU
may talk o' gin an' beer
When you're quartered safe out 'ere,
An' you're sent to penny-fights an' Aldershot it;
But if it comes to
slaughter
You will do your work on water,
An' you'll lick the
bloomin' boots of 'im that's got it.
"Just Add Water"
by David J. Ford
The words on labels tell this tale,
In
recipes, in ads by mail,
And chances are, at work or play,
You'll
see these famous words today -
Just add water.
You'd be
surprised how many things
Are dry and useless till one brings
The
magic liquid known to all;
You use it when you heed the call -
Just add water.
To illustrate and prove this thought,
Remember
all the food you've bought
On which was printed, clear and bright,
Instructions that make cooking light -
Just add water.
You now
can buy
Dried fruits, or soups, or tasty cakes;
To powdered milk
and frozen juices,
To products with a thousand uses,
Just add
water.
Imagine for a minute, please,
An arid wasteland, bare
of trees;
This could be farmland, rich and good
And quite
productive if we could
Just add water.
What turns cement into
concrete?
What changes seed to golden wheat?
No other words now
known to man
Can answer that: but these words can:
Just add water.
"Cool Water"
Cowboy Song
All day I
face the barren waste without the taste of water,
Cool water.
Old
Dan and I with throats burned dry and souls that cry for water,
Cool
water.
The nights are cool and I'm a fool each stars a pool of
water,
Cool water.
But with the dawn I'll wake and yawn and carry
on to water,
Cool water.
(Chorus)
Keep a movin' Dan, don't
you listen to him Dan, he's a devil not a man
and he spreads the
burnin' sand with water.
Dan can't you see that big green tree where
the waters runnin' free
and it's waiting there for me and you.
Water, cool water.
The shadows sway and seem to say tonight we
pray for water,
Cool water.
And way up there He'll hear our prayer
and show us where there's water,
Cool Water.
Dan's feet are
sore he's yearning for just one thing more than water,
Cool water.
Like me, I guess, he'd like to rest where there's no quest for water,
Cool water.