Such a beautiful poem. It seems divinely inspired.
MY DOVES
OPPOSITE my chamber window,
On the sunny roof, at play,
High above the city's tumult,
Flocks of doves sit day by day.
Shining necks and snowy bosoms,
Little rosy, tripping feet,
Twinkling eyes and fluttering wings,
Cooing voices, low and sweet,--
Graceful games and friendly meetings,
Do I daily watch and see.
For these happy little neighbors
Always seem at peace to be.
On my window-ledge, to lure them,
Crumbs of bread I often strew,
And, behind the curtain hiding,
Watch them flutter to and fro.
Soon they cease to fear the giver,
Quick are they to feel my love,
And my alms are freely taken
By the shyest little dove.
In soft flight, they circle downward,
Peep in through the window-pane;
Stretch their gleaming necks to greet me,
Peck and coo, and come again.
Faithful little friends and neighbors,
For no wintry wind or rain,
Household cares or airy pastimes,
Can my loving birds restrain.
Other friends forget, or linger,
But each day I surely know
That my doves will come and leave here
Little footprints in the snow.
So, they teach me the sweet lesson,
That the humblest may give
Help and hope, and in so doing,
Learn the truth by which we live;
For the heart that freely scatters
Simple charities and loves,
Lures home content, and joy, and peace,
Like a soft-winged flock of doves.
Friday, 30 August 2013
Monday, 26 August 2013
Just another reason why intensive farming of animals has to stop...
Infectious diseases spread rapidly in amongst intensively farmed animals which is leading to the over-use of antibiotics by farmers on their animals. This has raised fears that antibiotic resistant strains of bacteria might develop which could infect humans. This is especially bad, as farmers are using some of our most potent antibiotics that we use as out last line of defence when others fail. If these antibiotics become useless then that is very bad. And the farmers are buying these antibiotics in off vets and using them in an unregulated way!
New technology makes cat and fish invisible...
http://www.theguardian.com/science/2013/jun/10/insibility-cloak-animals
Dear Lord...
Copper Mine in Afghanistan
Underneath some historical ruins in Afghanistan lies a vast copper mine. It is miners vs archaeologists at the moment debating whether the copper should be mined at the cost of the ruins. I understand that Afghanistan is very poor and needs the money, but they should not have to find fortune at the expense of their cultural heritage, especially to sell copper to the developed world that totally over uses resources as it is. I know we have a global shortage of copper, but there are other ways to get copper (bioleaching, phytomining, recycling etc.) or they could just start using an alternative metal or better yet stop making so much unnecessary stuff!!! This is a sad sad story.
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