A poet is a nightingale, who sits in darkness and sings to cheer its own solitude with sweet sounds. -- Percy Bysshe Shelley
The nightingale sings to itself. But its melodious message flies far from the bird's tiny tongue. The song soars beyond her beak; catches fire in another's nest. Like listens to like; that is the mystic chord of the forest, in which singer and listener unite, trading nuance and beauty for nuance and beauty.
The nightingale sings to itself. But only one self grasps her poetry: the Oversoul of nature; the universal spirit of art. There is no bird ululating in isolation; its voice penetrates the darkness, the thickness of the forest; it echoes in the twigs of empty nests. Music always flees to another's ears, forever reverberating within.