Walk it like you talk it: Hope, joy, belief…and feet
Would we live with a generous, perspective if we believed that joy, wonder, and peace are what’s real?
Would we live with a generous, perspective if we believed that joy, wonder, and peace are what’s real?
A dear friend passed away. She lived with a sense of individual wonder, the power of hope, and the vivid but questing belief in a future for the globe.
During high school graduation ceremonies for Andrew, one of the speakers built her remarks around a relatively new work at the time that captured the love of knowledge and learning. Five years later, I finally picked up Richard Holmes’ The Age of Wonder (first published in 2008). Sometimes it takes a while, but I try never to pass up a good book recommendation. And I’m so glad I did. The Age of Wonder is a terrific work which looks at the growth of science in the Romantic Age. Holmes tackles this broad topic with a blend of history, biography, art, science, and philosophy. In 500 pages that seem to fly by, the reader follows the intertwined stories of such historical luminaries as astronomer William Herschel and his sister Caroline, botanist Joseph Banks, chemist Humphry Davy, and writers such as Mary Shelley, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and John Keats. The book rightly received stellar reviews from the start, which I cannot top. “Flat-out fascinating,” “groundbreaking,” and “superlative” are just a few of the descriptions applied to this …