Calmness

Calmness is the mental state of being free from agitation, excitement, or disturbance. Calmness can most easily occur for the average person during a state of relaxation, but it can also be found during much more alert and aware states.

Quotes

 * You have to hold back yourself. Calm down; your heart will prompt you to achieve nothing.
 * An assembly of priests to Ensuhkeshdanna, in Enmerkar and En-suhgir-ana, period (ca. 21st century BCE).


 * O haste to shed the sovereign balm— My shattered nerves new string: And for my guest serenely calm,  The nymph Indifference bring.
 * Frances Greville, Prayer for Indifference, published in the Edinburgh Chronicle (April 19, 1759).


 * How calm, how beautiful comes on The stilly hour, when storms are gone! When warring winds have died away, And clouds, beneath the glancing ray, Melt off, and leave the land and sea Sleeping in bright tranquillity!
 * Thomas Moore, Lalla Rookh (1817), Fire Worshippers, Stanza 62.


 * 'Tis Noon;—a calm, unbroken sleep Is on the blue waves of the deep; A soft haze, like a fairy dream, Is floating over wood and stream; And many a broad magnolia flower, Within its shadowy woodland bower, Is gleaming like a lovely star.
 * George D. Prentice, To an Absent Wife, Stanza 2; published in The Guardian: Volume 4 (1853), p. 115.


 * The noonday quiet holds the hill.
 * Alfred Tennyson, Œnone (1832), line 2.


 * Pure was the temperate Air, an even Calm Perpetual reign'd, save what the Zephyrs bland Breath'd o'er the blue expanse.
 * James Thomson, The Seasons, Spring (1728), line 323.