"If there is, indeed, a Great Music from which all things have formed, it appears that Nikola Tesla had a brief opportunity to listen to it." — John J. O'Neill
Pythagoras certainly participated in what he called The Music of the Spheres.
Tolkien in the Silmarillion describes creation as the result of singing.
Frequency, resonance, vibration have been catch-phrases for decades, and they all describe the qualities of sound.
So, yes, there definitely is that wonder, that melody divine.
We tend to forget this, perhaps a feature of being mired in a world that really doesn't deserve our attention, yet captures it nontheless. Thank you, Christine, for this important reminder as we are poised upon the cusp of the solar eclipse.
Will get to this when I have good internet access again, some day. Thanks for all the amazing healing and coffee today. Deep appreciation for your soul here right now. Cx
Is there a great music of the cosmos?
Pythagoras certainly participated in what he called The Music of the Spheres.
Tolkien in the Silmarillion describes creation as the result of singing.
Frequency, resonance, vibration have been catch-phrases for decades, and they all describe the qualities of sound.
So, yes, there definitely is that wonder, that melody divine.
We tend to forget this, perhaps a feature of being mired in a world that really doesn't deserve our attention, yet captures it nontheless. Thank you, Christine, for this important reminder as we are poised upon the cusp of the solar eclipse.
Will get to this when I have good internet access again, some day. Thanks for all the amazing healing and coffee today. Deep appreciation for your soul here right now. Cx
I like your writing.