| Author |
Quotes |
| Bible | And I will say to my soul, Soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many years; take thine ease, eat, drink, and be merry. |
| Bible | In your patience possess ye your souls. |
| Bible | For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? |
| Bible | The iron entered into his soul. |
| Bible | My soul is continually in my hand: yet do I not forget thy law. |
| Hartley Coleridge | The soul of man is larger than the sky, Deeper than ocean, or the abysmal dark Of the unfathomed centre. |
| Matthew Arnold | And see all sights from pole to pole And glance, and nod, and bustle by, And never once possess our soul Before we die. |
| Matthew Arnold | But each day brings from its pretty dust Our soon choked souls to fill. |
| Richard Crashaw | A happy soul, that all the way To heaven hath a summer's day. |
| Saint Aurelius Augustine | The soul, which is spirit, can not dwell in dust; it is carried along to dwell in the blood. |
| Thomas Brigham Bishop | John Brown's body lies a mould'ring in the grave, His soul goes marching on. |
| Wenonah Stevens Abbott | Today the journey is ended, I have worked out the mandates of fate, Naked, along, undefended, I knock at the Uttermost Gate. Behind is life and its longing, Its trial, its trouble, its sorrow, Beyond is the Infinite Morning Of a day without a tomorrow. |
| Marcus Tullius Cicero | The countenance is the portrait of the soul, and the eyes mark its intentions. |
| Joseph Addison | What sculpture is to a block of marble, education is to the soul. |
| Joseph Addison | But thou shall flourish in immortal youth, Unhurt amidst the wars of elements, The wrecks of matter, and the crush of worlds. |
| John Dryden | A fiery soul, which, working out its way, Fretted the pygmy-body to decay, And o'er-informed the tenement of clay. |
| John Dryden | Lord of oneself, uncumbered with a name. |
| Robert Browning | And I have written three books on the soul, Proving absurd all written hitherto, And putting us to ignorance again. |
| Samuel Butler | And he that makes his soul his surety, I think, does give the best security. |
| Thomas Carlyle | Everywhere the human soul stands between a hemisphere of light and another of darkness, on the confines of two everlasting hostile empires, Necessity and Freewill. |
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