Nothing says new beginnings and second
chances quite like spring. Spring, that season of warmer weather, flowers
blooming, birds returning, and longer days (at least in the Northern
Hemisphere). The new season brings a revival of the body and spirit and proof
that Mother Nature has this four season’s shtick on lock. Writers have long
waxed poetic about the bountiful nature of spring, and how its arrival signals
everything from new life (think: baby chicks and bunnies for Easter) to the
dutiful purging of our personal belongings (see: spring cleaning). Shakespeare
has paid homage to the season, as have Virginia Woolf, Pablo Neruda, Langston
Hughes, and others.
Our positive associations with the season
might seem obvious — more daylight, a reprieve from the long winter months, an
embarrassment of holidays — but humans’ long love affair with spring actually
has roots in a number of different cultures and belief systems. The English name itself is believed to have replaced
the word “Lent,” an Old English way to describe the season prior to the 14th
century. “Lent” is derived from “lencten,” or “lengthen”; the season’s original
name referred to how days begin to lengthen with the arrival of spring.
In Iranian and Chinese cultures, spring
marks the real beginning of the new year, according to their respective
calendars, and is commemorated with a thorough home cleansing to get rid of
negativity and lingering spirits. Hence, some believe, the advent of spring
cleaning. (Other historians believe spring cleaning is tied to the soot left in 19th-century houses at the end of
a winter of kerosene lamps and coal fireplaces.) In the Jewish tradition,
spring marks the annual celebration of Passover, the occasion when persecuted Jews
were liberated from slavery in Egypt. It is therefore a time of rebirth and a
chance at new ways of being. In the Bible, spring symbolizes a time for growth
and renewal; there is an undercurrent of awakening and revival that is tied to
Easter and the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
There’s also the philosophical take on
spring as a metaphor for life on a grander scale — spring is when new life
emerges from the cold of winter, when new ideas and projects begin to take
root, when we’re allowed to stretch our limbs and turn our faces toward the
sun. The seasons have been used to describe the stage of growing older: Summer
is a time of youth and movement and languishing in sensual delights; autumn
turns folks inward as a symbol of maturity and transition; and winter is of
course a time for reflection and dormancy, of preparing for deep sleep. As a
result, then, quotes about spring — as opposed to the other three seasons — are
largely upbeat, hopeful, and bursting with the language of possibility and
vivacity. Philosophers have heralded the return of spring as proof that there
really is light at the end of even the darkest tunnel, and that there is much
to learn from nature’s unwavering adherence to the four seasons.
Here, we’ve rounded up some particularly
resonant quotes about spring, gathered from a wide range of cultural and
generational sources — proving that our obsession with clean slates and new
beginnings, while universal and deeply felt, is definitely nothing new.
Earth laughs in flowers.
– Ralph Waldo Emerson, “Hamatreya”
When spring came, even the
false spring, there were no problems except where to be happiest. The only
thing that could spoil a day was people, and if you keep from making
engagements, each day had no limits. People were always the limiters of
happiness except for the very few that were as good as spring itself.
– Ernest Hemingway, "A Moveable Feast"
Nobody can keep spring out of
Harlem. I stuck my head out the window this morning and spring kissed me bang
in the face. Sunshine patted me all over the head.
– Langston Hughes, "The Early Simple Stories"
If we had no winter, the spring
would not be so pleasant; if we did not sometimes taste of adversity, prosperity
would not be so welcome. – Poet
Anne Bradstreet
Everything is blooming most
recklessly; if it were voices instead of colors, there would be an unbelievable
shrieking into the heart of the night.
– Poet Rainer Maria Rilke
Flowers don’t worry about how
they’re going to bloom. They just open up and turn toward the light and that
makes them beautiful. – Jim
Carrey
Here comes the sun, and I say,
it’s alright.
– George Harrison, “Here Comes the Sun”
If people did not love one
another, I really don’t see what use there would be in having any spring.
– Victor Hugo, "Les Miserables"
The beautiful spring came; and
when Nature resumes her loveliness, the human soul is apt to revive also.
– Author Harriet Ann Jacobs, "Incidents in the Life of a Slave
Girl"
You can cut all the flowers but
you cannot keep spring from coming. – Poet Pablo
Neruda
In the spring, at the end of
the day, you should smell like dirt.
– Margaret Atwood, "Bluebeard’s Egg"
Nature does not hurry, yet
everything is accomplished.
– Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu
Where flowers bloom so does
hope.
– Former First Lady Lady Bird Johnson
What a strange thing! / to be
alive / beneath cherry blossoms.
– Japanese poet Kobayashi Issa
I enjoy the spring more than
the autumn now. One does, I think, as one gets older. – Virginia Woolf, "Jacob’s
Room"
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