tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2565838610938196976.post2903340668684163139..comments2010-09-27T18:24:01.515-07:00Comments on Quedula: The force that through the green fuse drives the flowerquedulahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09737971867539674984noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2565838610938196976.post-81179075300768236462010-04-04T06:16:55.162-07:002010-04-04T06:16:55.162-07:00Thanks for the Dylan Thomas, I really like the fee...Thanks for the Dylan Thomas, I really like the feeling of life/nature in this poem. He seems to touch the raw nerve. Apparently his mother was deeply religious yet his father was not. And I think he leant more towards his mother's feelings. However, I really like the way you put it "Surely a poetic expression of a basic unalienable truth, the common ancestry of all life." <br />I don't believe in the supernatural or the "proposterous subject matter" propagated by the proponents of religion either; these things have been invented and perpetuated over the centuries by the human species.<br />PB Shelley, Wordsworth and some of the other English romantic poets also expose those nerves very well; as with Kahil Gibran.oceanswell33https://www.blogger.com/profile/07264977954006986597noreply@blogger.com