function showQuote(){
	var quotes=new Array();
	
	quotes[0]='A Christmas frost had come at midsummer; a white December storm had whirled over June; ice glazed the ripe apples, drifts crushed the blowing roses; on hayfield and cornfield lay a frozen shroud: lanes which last night blushed full of flowers, to-day were pathless with untrodden snow; and the woods, which twelve hours since waved leafy and flagrant as groves between the tropics, now spread, waste, wild, and white as pine-forests in wintry Norway.<br /><strong>Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre</strong> ';
	quotes[1]='A cynic is a man who, when he smells flowers, looks around for a coffin.<br /><strong>Henry L Mencken</strong>';
	quotes[2]='A flower, when offered in the bud, is no vain sacrifice.<br /><strong>Isaac Watts</strong>';
	quotes[3]='A flowerless room is a soulless room, to my way of thinking; but even on solitary little vase of a living flower may redeem it.<br /><strong>Vita Sackville-West</strong>';
	quotes[4]='A kiss without a hug is like a flower without the fragrance.<br /><strong>Maltese Proverb</strong>';
	quotes[5]='A morning-glory at my window satisfies me more than the metaphysics of books.<br /><strong>Walt Whitman</strong>';
	quotes[6]='A profusion of pink roses bending ragged in the rain speaks to me of all gentleness and its enduring.<br /><strong>William Carlos Williams</strong>';
	quotes[7]='A root is a flower that disdains fame.<br /><strong>Kahlil Gibran</strong>';
	quotes[8]='A rose is a rose is a rose.<br /><strong>Gertrude Stein</strong>';
	quotes[9]='A wedding is just like a funeral except that you get to smell your own flowers.<br /><strong>Grace Hansen</strong>';
	quotes[10]='Ah, ah, Cytherea! Adonis is dead. She wept tear after tear, with the blood which was shed,<br />And both turned into flowers for the earth\'s garden-close; Her tears, to the wind-flower,<br />his blood, to the rose.<br /><strong>Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Lament for Adonis</strong> ';
	quotes[11]='All the flowers of all the tomorrows are in the seeds of today.<br /><strong>Indian Proverb</strong>';
	quotes[12]='And lilies are still lilies, pulled By smutty hands, though spotted from their white.<br /><strong>Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Aurora Leigh</strong> ';
	quotes[13]='And \'t is my faith, that every flower<br />Enjoys the air it breathes.<br /><strong><br /><strong>William Wordsworth</strong></strong>';
	quotes[14]='Art is the unceasing effort to compete with the beauty of flowers - and never succeeding.<br /><strong>Marc Chagall</strong>';
	quotes[15]='As for marigolds, poppies, hollyhocks, and valorous sunflowers, we shall never have a garden without them, both for their own sake, and for the sake of old-fashioned folks, who used to love them.<br /><strong>Henry Ward Beecher, Star Papers--A Discourse of Flowers </strong>';
	quotes[16]='At Christmas I no more desire a rose<br />Than wish a snow in May\'s new-fangled shows;<br />But like of each thing that in season grows.<br /><strong>William Shakespeare, Love\'s Labour\'s Lost</strong> ';
	quotes[17]='At dawn I asked the lotus, \'What is the meaning of life?\'<br />Slowly she opened her hand with nothing in it.<br /><strong>Debra Woolard Bender, Paper Lanterns</strong>';
	quotes[18]='Beauty, unaccompanied by virtue, is as a flower without perfume.<br /><strong>French Proverb</strong>';
	quotes[19]='Big doesn\'t necessarily mean better. Sunflowers aren\'t better than violets.<br /><strong>Edna Ferber</strong>';
	quotes[20]='Brazen helm of daffodillies, With a glitter toward the light. Purple violets for the mouth, Breathing perfumes west and south; And a sword of flashing lilies, Holden ready for the fight.<br /><strong>Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Hector in the Garden</strong> ';
	quotes[21]='Bread feeds the body, indeed, but flowers feed also the soul.<br /><strong>The Koran</strong>';
	quotes[22]='break open a cherry tree and there are no flowers, but the spring breeze brings forth myriad blossoms.<br /><strong>Ikkyu Sojun</strong>';
	quotes[23]='Can we conceive what humanity would be if it did not know the flowers?<br /><strong>Maurice Maeterlinck</strong>';
	quotes[24]='Don\'t try to force anything. Let life be a deep let-go.<br />See [God/Spirit/All That Is] opening millions of flowers<br />every day without forcing the buds.<br /><strong>Bhagwan Shree Rayneesh</strong>';
	quotes[25]='Don\'t you love heavy fragrances, faint with sweetness, ravishing juices of odor, heliotropes, violets, water-lilies,--powerful attars and extracts that snatch your soul off your lips?<br /><strong>Harriet Prescott, Spofford The Amber Gods</strong> ';
	quotes[26]='Each flower is a soul opening out to nature.<br /><strong>Gerald De Nerval</strong>';
	quotes[27]='Earth laughs in flowers.<br /><strong>Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Hamatreya"</strong>';
	quotes[28]='Eighty percent of the world\'s rose species come from Asia.<br /><strong>Trivia</strong> ';
	quotes[29]='Every child is born a naturalist. His eyes are, by nature, open to the glories of the stars, the beauty of the flowers, and the mystery of life. <br /><strong>R. Search</strong>';
	quotes[30]='Every flower about a house certifies to the refinement of somebody.<br />Every vine climbing and blossoming tells of love and joy"<br /><strong>Robert G. Ingersoll</strong>';
	quotes[31]='Every flower is a soul blossoming in Nature.<br /><strong>Gerard De Nerval</strong>';
	quotes[32]='Every rose has its thorn: You never find a woman without pins and needles<br /><strong>Douglas Jerrold (1803-1857) - English humorist</strong>';
	quotes[33]='Fair flowers that are not gather\'d in their prime rot and consume themselves in little time.<br /><strong>William Shakespeare</strong>';
	quotes[34]='Flowers always make people better, happier and more helpful; they are sunshine, food and medicine to the soul.<br /><strong>Luther Burbank</strong>';
	quotes[35]='Flowers are as common in the country as people are in London.<br /><strong>Oscar Wilde (1856-1900) - British wit and poet</strong>';
	quotes[36]='Flowers are love\'s truest language.<br /><strong>Park Benjamin</strong>';
	quotes[37]='Flowers are Love\'s truest language; they betray, Like the divining rods of Magi old, Where precious wealth lies buried, not of gold, But love--strong love, that never can decay!<br /><strong>Park Benjamin, Sonnet--Flowers, Love\'s Truest Language</strong> ';
	quotes[38]='Flowers are not made by singing "Oh, how beautiful," and siting in the shade.<br /><strong>Rudyard Kipling</strong>';
	quotes[39]='Flowers are the sweetest things God ever made, and forgot to put a soul into.<br /><strong>Henry Beecher, Life Thoughts, 1858</strong>';
	quotes[40]='Flowers are without hope. Because hope is tomorrow and flowers have no tomorrow.<br /><strong>Antonio Porchia, Voces, 1943</strong>';
	quotes[41]='Flowers are words Which even a babe may understand.<br /><strong>Bishop Arthur Cleveland Coxe, The Singing of Birds</strong> ';
	quotes[42]='Flowers bring to a liberall and gentlemanly minde the remembrance of honestie, comelinesse and all kindes of virtues.<br /><strong>John Gerard</strong>';
	quotes[43]='Flowers construct the most charming geometries: circles like the sun, ovals, cones, curlicues and a variety of triangular eccentricities, which when viewed with the eye of a magnifying glass seem a Lilliputian frieze of psychedelic silhouettes.<br /><strong>Duane Michals, The Vanishing Act</strong>';
	quotes[44]='Flowers grow out of dark moments.<br /><strong>Corita Kent</strong>';
	quotes[45]='Flowers have an expression of countenance as much as men or animals. Some seem to smile; some have a sad expression; some are pensive and diffident; others again are plain, honest and upright, like the broad-faced sunflower and the hollyhock.<br /><strong>Henry Ward Beecher</strong>';
	quotes[46]='Flowers have spoken to me more than I can tell in written words. They are the hieroglyphics of angels, loved by all men for the beauty of their character, though few can decipher even fragments of their meaning.<br /><strong>Lydia M. Child</strong>';
	quotes[47]='Flowers leave some of their fragrance in the hand that bestows them.<br /><strong>Chinese proverb</strong>';
	quotes[48]='Flowers really do intoxicate me.<br /><strong>Vita Sackville-West</strong>';
	quotes[49]='Flowers seem intended for the solace of ordinary humanity.<br /><strong>John Ruskin</strong>';
	quotes[50]='Flowers... are a proud assertion that a ray of beauty outvalues all the utilities of the world.<br /><strong>Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1844</strong>';
	quotes[51]='Footfalls echo in the memory<br />Down the passage which we did not take<br />Towards the door we never opened<br />Into the rose garden.<br /><strong>T.S. Eliot, Four Quartets</strong>';
	quotes[52]='For myself I hold no preferences among flowers, so long as they are wild, free, spontaneous. Bricks to all greenhouses! Black thumb and cutworm to the potted plant!<br /><strong>Edward Abbey</strong>';
	quotes[53]='From a thorn comes a rose, and from a rose comes a thorn.<br /><strong>Greek Proverb</strong>';
	quotes[54]='Full many a flower is born to blush unseen,<br />And waste its sweetness on the desert air.<br /><strong>Thomas Gray</strong>';
	quotes[55]='Gather the flowers, but spare the buds.<br /><strong>Andrew Marvell</strong>';
	quotes[56]='Give me odorous at sunrise a garden of beautiful flowers where I can walk undisturbed.<br /><strong>Walt Whitman</strong>';
	quotes[57]='God gave us our memories so that we might have roses in December.<br /><strong>James Matthew Barrie (1860-1937) - Scottish novelist</strong>';
	quotes[58]='God loved the flowers and invented soil. Man loved the flowers and invented vases.';
	quotes[59]='He said the pleasantest manner of spending a hot July day was lying from morning till evening on a bank of heath in the middle of the moors, with the bees humming dreamily about among the bloom, and the larks singing high up overhead, and the blue sky and bright sun shining steadily and cloudlessly.<br /><strong>Emily Bronte, Wuthering Heights </strong>';
	quotes[60]='He who wants a rose must respect the thorn.<br /><strong>Persian Proverb</strong>';
	quotes[61]='How can one help shivering with delight when one\'s hot fingers close around the stem of a live flower, cool from the shade and stiff with newborn vigor!<br /><strong>Colette</strong>';
	quotes[62]='How can there be too many children? That is like saying there are too many flowers.<br /><strong>Mother Teresa</strong>';
	quotes[63]='I am following Nature without being able to grasp her... I perhaps owe having become a painter to flowers.<br /><strong>Claude Monet</strong>';
	quotes[64]='I didn\'t know the names of the flowers - now my garden is gone.<br /><strong>Allen Ginsberg</strong>';
	quotes[65]='I do not think I have ever seen anything more beautiful than the bluebell I have been looking at. I know the beauty of our Lord by it. <br /><strong>Gerald Manley Hopkins</strong>';
	quotes[66]='I don\'t know whether nice people tend to grow roses or growing roses makes people nice.<br /><strong>Roland A Beowne</strong>';
	quotes[67]='I hate flowers -- I paint them because they\'re cheaper than models and they don\'t move.<br /><strong>Georgia O\'Keeffe</strong>';
	quotes[68]='I have a garden of my own,<br />But so with roses overgrown,<br />And lilies, that you would it guess<br />to be a little wilderness.<br /><strong>Andrew Marvell</strong>';
	quotes[69]='I have loved flowers that fade, Within those magic tents Rich hues have marriage made With sweet unmemoried scents.<br /><strong>Robert Seymour Bridges</strong> ';
	quotes[70]='I know not which I love the most, Nor which the comeliest shows, The timid, bashful violet Or the royal-hearted rose: The pansy in purple dress, The pink with cheek of red, Or the faint, fair heliotrope, who hangs, Like a bashful maid her head.<br /><strong>Phoebe Cary, Spring Flowers</strong> ';
	quotes[71]='I know of no other genus whose plants flower out-of-doors every day of the year. I know of no other genus with one or more species coming into bloom or growth, peaking or going dormant at every season.<br /><strong>Nancy Goodwin, Cyclamen</strong>';
	quotes[72]='I love to smell flowers in the dark, she said. "You get hold of their soul then."<br /><strong>Lucy Maud Montgomery, Anne\'s House of Dreams</strong> ';
	quotes[73]='I sold flowers. I didn\'t sell myself. Now you\'ve made a lady of me I\'m not fit to sell anything else.<br /><strong>George Bernard Shaw, Pygmalion</strong> ';
	quotes[74]='I will be the gladdest thing Under the sun! I will touch a hundred flowers And not pick one.<br /><strong>Edna St. Vincent Millay, "Afternoon on a Hill"</strong>';
	quotes[75]='I\'d rather have roses on my table than diamonds on my neck.<br /><strong>Emma Goldman</strong>';
	quotes[76]='If dandelions were hard to grow, they would be most welcome on any lawn.<br /><strong>Andrew Mason</strong>';
	quotes[77]='If there were nothing else to trouble us, the fate of the flowers would make us sad.<br /><strong>John Lancaster Spalding, Aphorisms and Reflections</strong>';
	quotes[78]='If thou canst but thither,<br />There grows the flower of Peace,<br />The Rose that cannot wither,<br />Thy fortress and thy ease.<br /><strong>Henry Vaughn</strong>';
	quotes[79]='If we plant a flower or a shrub and water it daily it will grow so tall that in time we shall need a spade and a hoe to uproot it. It is just so, I think, when we commit a fault, however small, each day, and do not cure ourselves of it.<br /><strong>St. Teresa of Avila</strong>';
	quotes[80]='In friendship\'s fragrant garden,<br />There are flowers of every hue.<br />Each with its own fair beauty<br />And its gift of joy for you.<br /><strong>Friendship\'s Garden</strong>';
	quotes[81]='In joy or sadness, flowers are our constant friends.<br /><strong>Kozuko Okakura</strong>';
	quotes[82]='In the cherry blossom\'s shade there\'s no such thing as a stranger.<br /><strong>Issa</strong>';
	quotes[83]='In the hope of reaching the moon men fail to see the flowers that blossom at their feet.<br /><strong>Albert Schweitzer</strong>';
	quotes[84]='Isn\'t it odd that flowers are the reproductive organs of the plants they grow on? <br /><strong>Logan Pearsall Smith</strong>';
	quotes[85]='It is not in fighting that my God delights but in causing the trees to grow, and in adorning the plains with grass and flowers. He loves not the proud warrior nor the hunter, but the lowly and the good Standish O\'Grady';
	quotes[86]='It will never rain roses. When we want to have more roses, we must plant more roses.<br /><strong>George Eliot</strong> ';
	quotes[87]='Let me show you<br />Sweet smell of a delicate whisper<br />Behind the vision of gardens<br />Go and read of your life<br />Tiny ripping at the heart<br />Drunk from a rose<br /><strong>Erica Caitlin Lee</strong>';
	quotes[88]='Let us open our leaves like a flower, and be passive and receptive.<br /><strong>John Keats</strong>';
	quotes[89]='Little things seem nothing, but they give peace, like those meadow flowers which individually seem odorless but all together perfume the air.<br /><strong>Georges Bernanos</strong>';
	quotes[90]='Look at us, said the violets blooming at her feet, all last winter we slept in the seeming death but at the right time God awakened us, and here we are to comfort you.<br /><strong>Edward Payson Rod</strong>';
	quotes[91]='Love is no hot-house flower, but a wild plant, born of a wet night, born of an hour of sunshine; sprung from wild seed, blown along the road by a wild wind. A wild plant that, when it blooms by chance within the hedge of our gardens, we call a flower; and when it blooms outside we call a weed; but, flower or weed, whose scent and colour are always, wild!<br /><strong>John Galsworthy, The Forsyte Saga</strong> ';
	quotes[92]='Loveliest of lovely things are they On earth, that soonest pass away. The rose that lives its little hour Is prized beyond the sculptured flower.<br /><strong>William C. Bryant</strong>';
	quotes[93]='Lowly, with a broken neck,<br />The crocus lays her cheek to mire.<br /><strong>George Meredith</strong>';
	quotes[94]='Mama was my greatest teacher, a teacher of compassion, love and fearlessness. If love is sweet as a flower, then my mother is that sweet flower of love.<br /><strong>Stevie Wonder</strong>';
	quotes[95]='Men do not weigh the stalk for that it was, When once they find her flower, her glory, pass.<br /><strong>Samuel Daniel</strong>';
	quotes[96]='None can have a healthy love for flowers unless he loves the wild ones.<br /><strong>Forbes Watson</strong>';
	quotes[97]='Not a flower But shows some touch, in freckle, streak or stain, Of his unrivall\'d pencil.<br /><strong>William Cowper, Task</strong>';
	quotes[98]='Now blooms the lily by the bank, The primrose down the brae; The hawthorn\'s budding in the glen, The milkwhite is the slae.<br /><strong>Robert Burns, Lament of Mary, Queen of Scots</strong> ';
	quotes[99]='Often the prickly thorn produces tender roses<br /><strong>Ovid</strong>';
	quotes[100]='One of the most attractive things about the flowers is their beautiful reserve.<br /><strong>Henry David Thoreau</strong>';
	quotes[101]='Our highest assurance of the goodness of Providence seems to me to rest in the flowers. All other things, our powers, our desires, our food, are all really necessary for our existence in the first instance. But this rose is an extra. Its smell and its color are an embellishment of life, not a condition of it. It is only goodness which gives extras, and so I say again that we have much to hope from the flowers.<br /><strong>Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, The Navel Treaty</strong> ';
	quotes[102]='People from a planet without flowers would think we must be mad with joy the whole time to have such things about us.<br /><strong>Iris Murdoch, A Fairly Honourable Defeat</strong>';
	quotes[103]='Perfumes are the feelings of flowers.<br /><strong>Heinrich Heine, The Hartz Journey</strong>';
	quotes[104]='Pluck not the wayside flower;<br />It is the traveler\'s dower.<br /><strong>William Allingham</strong>';
	quotes[105]='Rose, what is become of thy delicate hue? And where is the violet\'s beautiful blue? Does aught of its sweetness the blossom beguile? That meadow, those daisies, why do they not smile?<br /><strong>John Byrom, A Pastoral</strong> ';
	quotes[106]='Roses red and roses white Plucked I for my love\'s delight. She would none of all my posies-- Bade me gather her blue roses.<br />Half the world I wandered through, Seeking where such flowers grew. Half the world unto my quest Answered me with laugh and jest.<br />Home I came at wintertide, But my silly love had died Seeking with her latest breath Roses from the arms of Death.<br /><strong>Rudyard Kipling</strong>';
	quotes[107]='Science, or para-science, tells us that geraniums bloom better if they are spoken to. But a kind word every now and then is really quite enough. Too much attention, like too much feeding, and weeding and hoeing, inhibits and embarrasses them.<br /><strong>Victoria Glendinning</strong>';
	quotes[108]='She and Stephen were in that stage of courtship which makes the most exquisite moment of youth, the freshest blossom-time of passion,--when each is sure of the other\'s love, but no formal declaration has been made, and all is mutual divination, exalting the most trivial word, the lightest gesture, into thrills delicate and delicious as wafted jasmine scent.<br /><strong>George Eliot, The Mill on the Floss</strong> ';
	quotes[109]='Silently a flower blooms,<br />In silence it falls away;<br />Yet here now, at this moment, at this place,<br />The world of the flower, the whole of the world is blooming.<br /> This is the talk of the flower, the truth of the blossom:<br />The glory of eternal life is fully shining here.<br /><strong>Zenkei Shibayama</strong> ';
	quotes[110]='Simply trust:<br />Do not the petals flutter down,<br />Just like this?<br /><strong>Issa</strong>';
	quotes[111]='Some people are always grumbling because roses have thorns. I am thankful that thorns have roses.<br /><strong>Alphonse Karr (1808-1890) - French novelist</strong>';
	quotes[112]='Someone said that God gave us memories so that we might have roses in December. <br /><strong>J M Barrie</strong>';
	quotes[113]='Summer set lip to earth\'s bosom bare, And left the flushed print in a poppy there.<br /><strong>Francis Thompson, "The Poppy," 1891</strong>';
	quotes[114]='Sweet letters of the angel tongue, I\'ve loved ye long and well, And never have failed in your fragrance sweet To find some secret spell,-- A charm that has bound me with witching power, For mine is the old belief, That midst your sweets and midst your bloom, There\'s a soul in every leaf!<br /><strong>Mathurin M. Ballou</strong> ';
	quotes[115]='The Amen! of Nature is always a flower.<br /><strong>Oliver Wendell Holmes</strong>';
	quotes[116]='The berries of the brier rose Have lost their rounded pride: The bitter-sweet chrysanthemums Are drooping heavy-eyed.<br /><strong>Alice Cary, Faded Leaves</strong> ';
	quotes[117]='The Earth Laughs in Flowers<br /><strong>Ralph Waldo Emerson</strong>';
	quotes[118]='The flower in the vase still smiles, but no longer laughs. <br /><strong>Malcolm de Chazal</strong>';
	quotes[119]='The flower is the poetry of reproduction. It is an example of the eternal seductiveness of life.<br /><strong>Jean Giraudoux</strong>';
	quotes[120]='The flower-girl\'s prayer to buy roses and pinks, Held out in the smoke, like stars by day.<br /><strong>Elizabeth Barrett Browning, The Soul\'s Travelling</strong> ';
	quotes[121]='The flowers anew, returning seasons bring; But beauty faded has no second spring.<br /><strong>Ambrose Philips</strong>';
	quotes[122]='The flowers of late winter and early spring occupy places in our hearts well out of proportion to their size.<br /><strong>Gertrude S. Wister</strong>';
	quotes[123]='The flowers that sleep by night, opened their gentle eyes and turned them to the day. The light, creation\'s mind, was everywhere, and all things owned its power. <br /><strong>Charles Dickens, The Old Curiosity Shop</strong> ';
	quotes[124]='The gardens that make us happiest flourish because we have taken the time to make sure they feed our souls and fill a special place in our lives. Sometimes you have to think about what you really want from your garden ... once the beds are laid out and the rose bushes planted.<br /><strong>Lindley Karstens</strong>';
	quotes[125]='The happy bells shall ring Marguerite; The summer birds shall sing Marguerite; You smile but you shall wear Orange blossoms in your hair, Marguerite.<br /><strong>Thomas Bailey Aldrich, Wedded</strong> ';
	quotes[126]='The nature of This Flower is to bloom.<br /><strong>Alice Walker</strong>';
	quotes[127]='The old tree is shook<br />White blossoms slowly float down<br />Dancers in the wind<br /><strong>Alexandra Kim</strong>';
	quotes[128]='The rich, sweet smell of the hayricks rose to his chamber window; the hundred perfumes of the little flower-garden beneath scented the air around; the deep-green meadows shone in the morning dew that glistened on every leaf as it trembled in the gentle air: and the birds sang as if every sparkling drop were a fountain of inspiration to them.<br /><strong>Charles Dickens, The Pickwick Papers</strong> ';
	quotes[129]='The rose has thorns only for those who would gather it.<br /><strong>Chinese proverb</strong>';
	quotes[130]='The snowdrop and primrose our woodlands adorn, And violets bathe in the wet o\' the morn.<br /><strong>Robert Burns, My Nanny\'s Awa</strong> ';
	quotes[131]='The temple bell stops but I still hear the sound coming out of the flowers.<br /><strong>Basho</strong>';
	quotes[132]='The violets in the mountains have broken the rocks.<br /><strong>Tennessee Williams</strong>';
	quotes[133]='The windflower and the violet, they perished long ago, And the brier-rose and the orchis died amid the summer glow; But on the hills the golden-rod, and the aster in the wood, And the yellow sunflower by the brook, in autumn beauty stood, Till fell the first from the clear cold heaven, as falls the plague on men, And the brightness of their smile was gone, from upland glade and glen.<br /><strong>William Cullen Bryant, Death of the Flowers</strong> ';
	quotes[134]='The world is a rose; smell it and pass it to your friends.<br /><strong>Persian Proverb</strong>';
	quotes[135]='There came a time when the risk to remain tight in the bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom.<br /><strong>Anais Nin</strong>';
	quotes[136]='There is that in the glance of a flower which may at times control the greatest of creation\'s braggart lords.<br /><strong>John Muir, A Thousand-Mile Walk to the Gulf, 1916</strong>';
	quotes[137]='They are not long, the days of wine and roses:<br />Out of a misty dream<br />Our path emerges for a while, then closes<br />Within a dream.<br /><strong>Ernest Dowson, 1867 - 1900</strong>';
	quotes[138]='They know the time to go! The fairy clocks strike their inaudible hour In field and woodland, and each punctual flower Bows at the signal an obedient head And hastens to bed.<br /><strong>Susan Coolidge, Time to Go</strong> ';
	quotes[139]='Thick on the woodland floor Gay company shall be, Primrose and Hyacinth And frail Anemone, Perennial Strawberry-bloom, Woodsorrel\'s pencilled veil, Dishevel\'d Willow-weed And Orchis purple and pale.<br /><strong>Robert Seymour Bridges, Idle Flowers</strong>';
	quotes[140]='This old world that we\'re livin\' in<br />Is might hard to beat.<br />You get a thorn with every Rose<br />But - ain\'t the roses sweet?<br /><strong>Frank Stanton</strong>';
	quotes[141]='\'Tis my faith that every flower Enjoys the air it breathes!<br /><strong>William Wordsworth</strong>';
	quotes[142]='To analyze the charms of flowers is like dissecting music; it is one of those things which it is far better to enjoy, than to attempt to fully understand.<br /><strong>Henry T. Tuckerman</strong>';
	quotes[143]='To be overcome by the fragrance of flowers is a delectable form of defeat.<br /><strong>Beverly Nichols</strong>';
	quotes[144]='To pick a flower is so much more satisfying than just observing it, or photographing it ...<br />So in later years, I have grown in my garden as many flowers as possible for children to pick.<br /><strong>Anne Scott-James</strong>';
	quotes[145]='To see a world in a Grain of Sand,<br />And a Heaven in a Wild Flower,<br />Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand,<br />And eternity in an hour.<br /><strong>William Blake</strong>';
	quotes[146]='True friendship is like a rose: we don\'t realize its beauty until it fades.<br /><strong>Evelyn Loeb</strong>';
	quotes[147]='We can complain because rose bushes have thorns, or rejoice because thorn bushes have roses.<br /><strong>Abraham Lincoln</strong>';
	quotes[148]='We gathered the wild-flowers.<br />Yes, life there seem\'d one pure delight;<br />As thro\' the field we rov\'d.<br />Yes, life there seem\'d one pure delight.<br /><strong>George Linley</strong>';
	quotes[149]='Whatever a man\'s age, he can reduce it several years by putting a bright-colored flower in his buttonhole.<br /><strong>Mark Twain</strong>';
	quotes[150]='What\'s in a name? That which we call a rose<br />By any other name would smell as sweet.<br /><strong>William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet</strong>';
	quotes[151]='When bright flowers bloom<br />Parchment crumbles, my words fade<br />The pen has dropped ...<br /><strong>Morpheus</strong>';
	quotes[152]='When I walk with you, I feel as if I had a flower in my buttonhole.<br /><strong>William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863) - English novelist</strong>';
	quotes[153]='When you have only two pennies left in the world, buy a loaf of bread with one, and a lily with the other.<br /><strong>Chinese Proverb</strong>';
	quotes[154]='Where fall the tears of love the rose appears, And where the ground is bright with friendship\'s tears, Forget-me-not, and violets, heavenly blue, Spring glittering with the cheerful drops like dew.<br /><strong>William Cullen Bryant, trans. of N. Muller\'s "Paradise of Tears"</strong> ';
	quotes[155]='Where flowers bloom so does hope.<br /><strong>Lady Bird Johnson, Public Roads: Where Flowers Bloom</strong>';
	quotes[156]='While the flowers, pale and unreal in the moonlight, floated away upon the river; and thus do greater things that once were in our breasts, and near our hearts, flow from us to the eternal seas.<br /><strong>Charles Dickens, Little Dorrit</strong> ';
	quotes[157]='Who that has loved knows not the tender tale Which flowers reveal, when lips are coy to tell?<br /><strong>Edward George Earle Lytton Bulwer-Lytton, first Baron Lytton</strong>';
	quotes[158]='Who would have thought it possible that a tiny little flower could preoccupy a person so completely that there simply wasn\'t room for any other thought...<br /><strong>Sophie Scholl</strong>';
	quotes[159]='Why don\'t you get a haircut? You look like a chrysanthemum.<br /><strong>Pelham Grenville Wodehouse - English novelist</strong>';
	quotes[160]='With a few flowers in my garden, half a dozen pictures and some books, I live without envy.<br /><strong>Lope de Vega</strong>';
	quotes[161]='With daffodils mad footnotes for the spring, And asters purple asterisks for autumn<br /><strong>Conrad Aiken, Preludes for Memnon, 1930</strong>';
	quotes[162]='Woman, a pleasing but a short-lived flower, Too soft for business and too weak for power: A wife in bondage, or neglected maid: Despised, if ugly: if she\'s fair, betrayed.<br /><strong>Mary Leapor</strong>';
	quotes[163]='Ye field flowers! the gardens eclipse you \'tis true: Yet wildings of nature, I dote upon you, For ye waft me to summers of old, When the earth teem\'d around me with fairy delight, And when daisies and buttercups gladden\'d my sight, Like treasures of silver and gold.<br /><strong>Thomas Campbell, Field Flowers</strong> ';
	quotes[164]='Yet here\'s eglantine, Here\'s ivy!--take them as I used to do Thy flowers, and keep them where they shall not pine. Instruct thine eyes to keep their colours true, And tell thy soul their roots are left in mine.<br /><strong>Elizabeth Barrett Browning</strong> ';
	quotes[165]='You can\'t be suspicious of a tree, or accuse a bird or a squirrel of subversion or challenge the ideology of a violet.<br /><strong>Hal Borland, Sundial of the Seasons, 1964</strong>';
	quotes[166]='You love the roses - so do I. I wish The sky would rain down roses, as they rain<br />From off the shaken bush. Why will it not?<br />Then all the valley would be pink and white<br />And soft to tread on. They would fall as light<br />As feathers, smelling sweet; and it would be<br />Like sleeping and like waking, all at once!<br /><strong>George Eliot, Roses</strong>';
	quotes[167]='For the shy or uncertain, handing over a bouquet is often the easiest way to express their sentiments.';
	
	document.getElementById("quote").innerHTML = quotes[Math.floor(Math.random()*(quotes.length))]
	//alert(quotes[Math.floor(Math.random()*(quotes.length))])
}
