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Life & Wisdom Quote by Barry Cornwall

"There's not a wind but whispers of thy name; And not a flow'r that grows beneath the moon, But in its hues and fragrance tells a tale Of thee, my love"

About this Quote

Romance, here, isn’t a private feeling so much as an atmosphere that colonizes the natural world. Cornwall’s speaker hears the beloved everywhere: the wind “whispers,” the flowers “tell a tale,” even moonlight seems enlisted as a stage manager. It’s a classic Romantic move - not just describing love, but projecting it outward until landscape becomes an accomplice. The intent is persuasion by saturation: if every breeze and bloom repeats her name, then the beloved is no longer merely desired; she’s ordained, inevitable, woven into the fabric of perception.

The craft is in the piling up of negatives (“not a wind,” “not a flow’r”) that paradoxically create abundance. He doesn’t name one symbolic flower or one decisive gust; he claims the whole system. That rhetorical totality is the seduction. The subtext, though, is slightly less serene: this kind of omnipresence suggests obsession as much as devotion. When everything becomes a sign, nothing is allowed to be neutral. Nature is stripped of its own meanings and turned into a mirror for a single fixation.

Context matters. Barry Cornwall, the pen name of Bryan Waller Procter, wrote in a post-Byron, post-Wordsworth Britain where lyric intensity and natural imagery were already a shared vernacular. The poem doesn’t innovate so much as refine a popular technology of feeling: personification, sensory detail (hues, fragrance), and the moon as Romantic spotlight. It works because it makes infatuation feel cosmically confirmed - and because it quietly reveals how love can be a beautiful form of possession, starting with the speaker’s own mind.

Quote Details

TopicRomantic
Source
Verified source: Many Thoughts of Many Minds (1863)ID: ZkDxClCtWsoC
Text match: 98.06%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... There's not a wind but whispers of thy name , And not a flow'r that grows beneath the moon , But in its hues and fragrance tells a tale Of thee , my love . Barry Cornwall . ASSOCIATION - Poetry of . He whose heart is not excited upon ...
Other candidates (1)
Mirandola: A Tragedy (Barry Cornwall, 1821)90.3%
There's not an hour Of day or dreaming night, but I am with thee; There's not a wind but whispers of thy name, And no...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Cornwall, Barry. (2026, February 19). There's not a wind but whispers of thy name; And not a flow'r that grows beneath the moon, But in its hues and fragrance tells a tale Of thee, my love. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/theres-not-a-wind-but-whispers-of-thy-name-and-160055/

Chicago Style
Cornwall, Barry. "There's not a wind but whispers of thy name; And not a flow'r that grows beneath the moon, But in its hues and fragrance tells a tale Of thee, my love." FixQuotes. February 19, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/theres-not-a-wind-but-whispers-of-thy-name-and-160055/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"There's not a wind but whispers of thy name; And not a flow'r that grows beneath the moon, But in its hues and fragrance tells a tale Of thee, my love." FixQuotes, 19 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/theres-not-a-wind-but-whispers-of-thy-name-and-160055/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by Barry Add to List
Whispers of Thy Name: Love in Nature's Embrace
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About the Author

Barry Cornwall

Barry Cornwall (November 21, 1787 - October 5, 1874) was a Poet from England.

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