Soul, Blessed to Souvenirs

A Concordance to the Collected Essays of Ralph Waldo Emerson
Compiled by Eugene F. Irey

Soul, Blessed, n. (1)

    ET14 5.254 23 ...having attempted to domesticate and dress the Blessed Soul itself in English broadcloth and gaiters, [the English] are tormented with fear that herein lurks a force that will sweep their system away.

Soul, Divine, n. (1)

    AmS 1.115 27 ...each believes himself inspired by the Divine Soul which also inspires all men.

soul, n. (655)

    Nat 1.12 11 [Commodity]...is a benefit which is...not ultimate, like its service to the soul.
    Nat 1.24 14 The world thus exists to the soul to satisfy the desire of beauty.
    Nat 1.24 17 No reason can be asked or given why the soul seeks beauty.
    Nat 1.27 5 Man is conscious of a universal soul within or behind his individual life...
    Nat 1.27 8 This universal soul [man] calls Reason...
    Nat 1.35 24 ...every object rightly seen, unlocks a new faculty of the soul.
    Nat 1.42 17 ...this moral sentiment...is caught by man and sinks into his soul.
    Nat 1.46 9 We are associated in adolescent and adult life with some friends...who, answering each to a certain affection of the soul, satisfy our desire on that side;...
    Nat 1.47 20 ...what difference does it make, whether Orion is up there in heaven, or some god paints the image in the firmament of the soul?
    Nat 1.54 27 The perception of real affinities between events...enables the poet...to assert the predominance of the soul.
    Nat 1.55 24 It is, in both cases [Plato and Sophocles]...that this feeble human being has penetrated the vast masses of nature with an informing soul...
    Nat 1.56 21 ...we think of nature as an appendix to the soul.
    Nat 1.57 9 Like a new soul, [ideas] renew the body.
    Nat 1.58 25 ...[external beauty] is the frail and weary weed, in which God dresses the soul which he has called into time.
    Nat 1.60 10 [Idealism] beholds the whole circle of persons and things...as one vast picture which God paints on the instant eternity for the contemplation of the soul.
    Nat 1.60 10 ...the soul holds itself off from a too trivial and microscopic study of the universal tablet.
    Nat 1.63 18 Let [the ideal theory] stand then...merely as a useful introductory hypothesis, serving to apprize us of the eternal distinction between the soul and the world.
    Nat 1.63 23 We learn that the highest is present to the soul of man;...
    Nat 1.64 24 This [spiritual] view...animates me to create my own world through the purification of my soul.
    Nat 1.73 23 The problem of restoring to the world original and eternal beauty is solved by the redemption of the soul.
    Nat 1.74 16 Is not prayer also...a sally of the soul into the unfound infinite?
    AmS 1.83 27 The tradesman...is ridden by the routine of his craft, and the soul is subject to dollars.
    AmS 1.86 9 The ambitious soul sits down before each refractory fact;...
    AmS 1.86 20 ...to this schoolboy under the bending dome of day, is suggested that he and [nature] proceed from one root;...relation, sympathy, stirring in every vein. And what is that root? Is not that the soul of his soul?
    AmS 1.86 23 ...when he has learned to worship the soul...[the scholar] shall look forward to an ever expanding knowledge as to a becoming creator.
    AmS 1.87 1 ...nature is the opposite of the soul...
    AmS 1.89 22 Hence the book-learned class, who value books...as making a sort of Third Estate with the world and the soul.
    AmS 1.90 4 The one thing in the world, of value, is the active soul.
    AmS 1.90 7 The soul active sees absolute truth and utters truth, or creates.
    AmS 1.92 7 There is some awe mixed with the joy of our surprise, when this poet...says that which lies close to my own soul...
    AmS 1.95 6 The world, - this shadow of the soul, or other me, - lies wide around.
    AmS 1.99 9 A great soul will be strong to live, as well as strong to think.
    AmS 1.108 22 [The universal mind] is one soul which animates all men.
    AmS 1.113 3 ...[Swedenborg] saw and showed the connection between nature and the affections of the soul.
    DSA 1.122 8 The intuition of the moral sentiment is an insight of the perfection of the laws of the soul.
    DSA 1.122 11 ...in the soul of man there is a justice whose retributions are instant and entire.
    DSA 1.123 3 [The moral sentiment's] operation in life...is at last as sure as in the soul.
    DSA 1.125 13 Through [the sentiment of virtue], the soul first knows itself.
    DSA 1.125 23 ...deep melodies wander through [man's] soul from Supreme Wisdom.
    DSA 1.125 26 In the sublimest flights of the soul, rectitude is never surmounted...
    DSA 1.127 4 ...it is not instruction, but provocation, that I can receive from another soul.
    DSA 1.127 23 ...the base doctrine of the majority of voices usurps the place of the doctrine of the soul.
    DSA 1.128 21 [Jesus Christ] saw with open eye the mystery of the soul.
    DSA 1.130 7 Thus is [Jesus]...the only soul in history who has appreciated the worth of man.
    DSA 1.130 15 ...[Christianity] is not the doctrine of the soul...
    DSA 1.130 18 The soul knows no persons.
    DSA 1.132 18 To aim to convert a man by miracles is a profanation of the soul.
    DSA 1.132 21 ...a great and rich soul...names the world.
    DSA 1.133 4 ...the gift of God to the soul is not a vaunting, overpowering, excluding sanctity...
    DSA 1.134 6 ...the Moral Nature, that Law of laws whose revelations introduce greatness...into the open soul, is not explored...
    DSA 1.134 14 ...it is the effect of conversation with the beauty of the soul, to beget a desire and need to impart to others the same knowledge and love.
    DSA 1.135 5 The man on whom the soul descends...alone can teach.
    DSA 1.135 6 The man...through whom the soul speaks, alone can teach.
    DSA 1.135 25 The soul is not preached.
    DSA 1.136 18 In how many churches...is man made sensible...that he is drinking forever the soul of God?
    DSA 1.137 2 The test of the true faith, certainly, should be its power to charm and command the soul...
    DSA 1.137 22 Men go, thought I, where they are wont to go, else had no soul entered the temple in the afternoon.
    DSA 1.139 19 ...each [poetic truth] is some select expression that broke out in a moment of piety from some stricken or jubilant soul...
    DSA 1.141 17 ...[preaching in this country] comes out of the memory, and not out of the soul;...
    DSA 1.142 5 ...the soul of the community is sick and faithless.
    DSA 1.143 14 What was once a mere circumstance, that...the young and old, should meet one day as fellows in one house, in sign of an equal right in the soul, has come to be a paramount motive for going thither.
    DSA 1.144 4 In the soul then let the redemption be sought.
    DSA 1.144 21 None believeth in the soul of man...
    DSA 1.144 27 [Men] think society wiser than their soul...
    DSA 1.144 27 [Men]...know not that one soul, and their soul, is wiser than the whole world.
    DSA 1.145 4 ...one good soul shall make the name of Moses...reverend forever.
    DSA 1.149 4 The silence that accepts merit as the most natural thing in the world, is the highest applause. Such souls...are...the dictators of fortune. One needs not praise their courage, - they are the heart and soul of nature.
    DSA 1.150 12 The remedy to [the old forms'] deformity is first, soul, and second, soul, and evermore, soul.
    DSA 1.150 13 The remedy to [the old forms'] deformity is first, soul, and second, soul, and evermore, soul.
    DSA 1.151 19 I look for the new Teacher that shall follow so far those shining laws that he...shall see the world to be the mirror of the soul;...
    LE 1.157 12 ...the diffidence of mankind in the soul has crept over the American mind;...
    LE 1.157 26 ...of what worth the world is, and with what emphasis it accosts the soul of man, such is the worth, such the call of the scholar.
    LE 1.158 16 When [the scholar] has seen that [the intellectual power]...is the soul which made the world...he will know that he...may rightfully hold all things subordinate and answerable to it.
    LE 1.159 5 There is no event but sprung somewhere from the soul of man;...
    LE 1.159 6 There is no event but sprung somewhere from the soul of man; and therefore there is none but the soul of man can interpret.
    LE 1.160 27 ...the soul seems to whisper, There is a better way than this indolent learning of another.
    LE 1.161 15 I console myself...by...seeing what the prolific soul could beget on actual nature;...
    LE 1.162 18 The youth, intoxicated with his admiration of a hero, fails to see that it is only a projection of his own soul which he admires.
    LE 1.163 1 The soul answers-Behold [Charles V's] day is here!
    LE 1.164 15 ...the soul has assurance...of all power in the direction of its ray...
    LE 1.168 26 ...[when I see the daybreak] I am cheered by the...hour, that takes down the narrow walls of my soul...
    LE 1.170 2 ...not less is there a relation of beauty between my soul and the dim crags of Agiochook up there in the clouds.
    LE 1.172 19 ...any particular portraiture...when considered by the soul, warps and shrinks away.
    LE 1.173 20 [The scholar] must be a solitary, laborious, modest, and charitable soul.
    LE 1.174 5 ...go cherish your soul;...
    LE 1.175 12 The reason why an ingenious soul shuns society, is to the end of finding society.
    LE 1.177 11 The scholar will feel that...the heart and soul of beauty, lies enclosed in human life.
    LE 1.180 3 ...[Napoleon] believed...in the...quite incalculable force of the soul.
    LE 1.181 21 ...the lower faculties of man are subdued to docility; through which as an unobstructed channel the soul now easily and gladly flows?
    LE 1.187 16 ...[Thought] shall yield every sincere good that is in the soul to the scholar...
    MN 1.206 8 Each individual soul is such in virtue of its being a power to translate the world into some particular language of its own;...
    MN 1.210 23 ...as far as we can trace the natural history of the soul, its health consists in the fulness of its reception?...
    MN 1.215 14 ...the soul can be appeased not by a deed but by a tendency.
    MN 1.216 3 The imaginative faculty of the soul must be fed with objects immense and eternal.
    MN 1.217 20 ...if the object [beloved] be not itself a living and expanding soul, [the lover] presently exhausts it.
    MN 1.218 7 Talent...goes to the soul only for power to work.
    MN 1.223 12 We cannot describe the natural history of the soul...
    MN 1.223 27 All things are known to the soul.
    MN 1.224 3 The soul is in her native realm...
    LT 1.266 11 Now and then comes...a more surrendered soul, more informed and led by God...
    LT 1.276 20 The love which lifted men to the sight of these better ends was...the disposition to trust a principle more than a material force. I think that the soul of reform;...
    Con 1.321 18 Instead of that reliance which the soul suggests, on the eternity of truth and duty, men are misled into a reliance on institutions...
    Tran 1.334 25 ...let the soul be erect, and all things will go well.
    Tran 1.353 21 ...the two lives, of the understanding and of the soul, which we lead, really show very little relation to each other;...
    Tran 1.355 6 ...the justice which is now claimed for the black...is for a necessity to the soul of the agent, not of the beneficiary.
    Tran 1.357 18 ...all these [Transcendentalists] of whom I speak...are novices; they only show the road in which man should travel, when the soul has greater health and prowess.
    Hist 2.6 4 Property also holds of the soul...
    Hist 2.13 5 Why should we make account of time, or of magnitude, or of figure? The soul knows them not...
    Hist 2.17 24 Strasburg Cathedral is a material counterpart of the soul of Erwin of Steinbach.
    Hist 2.27 2 ...when a truth that fired the soul of Pindar fires mine, time is no more.
    Hist 2.27 23 ...men of God have from time to time...made their commission felt in the heart and soul of the commonest hearer.
    Hist 2.32 8 Tantalus means the impossibility of drinking the waters of thought which are always gleaming and waving within sight of the soul.
    Hist 2.32 17 Ah! brother, stop the ebb of thy soul...
    Hist 2.33 10 ...if the man...remains fast by the soul and sees the principle; then the facts fall aptly and supple into their places;...
    Hist 2.38 16 Thus in all ways does the soul concentrate and reproduce its treasures for each pupil.
    SR 2.43 1 ...the soul that can/ Render an honest and a perfect man,/ Commands all light.../
    SR 2.45 3 The soul always hears an admonition in such [original] lines...
    SR 2.57 12 ...when the devout motions of the soul come, yield to them heart and life...
    SR 2.57 20 With consistency a great soul has simply nothing to do.
    SR 2.64 12 ...the sense of being which in calm hours rises...in the soul, is not diverse from things...
    SR 2.65 1 ...if we seek to pry into the soul that causes, all philosophy is at fault.
    SR 2.65 24 The relations of the soul to the divine spirit are so pure that it is profane to seek to interpose helps.
    SR 2.66 22 The centuries are conspirators against the sanity and authority of the soul.
    SR 2.66 23 ...the soul is light...
    SR 2.69 5 The soul raised over passion beholds identity and eternal causation...
    SR 2.69 20 This one fact the world hates; that the soul becomes;...
    SR 2.69 24 Inasmuch as the soul is present there will be power not confident but agent.
    SR 2.71 4 ...the vital resources of every animal and vegetable, are demonstrations of the self-sufficing and therefore self-relying soul.
    SR 2.77 20 [Prayer] is the soliloquy of a beholding and jubilant soul.
    SR 2.81 2 The soul is no traveller;...
    SR 2.82 17 The soul created the arts wherever they have flourished.
    SR 2.83 26 Not possibly will the soul...deign to repeat itself;...
    Comp 2.93 15 It seemed to me...that in [Compensation] might be shown men...the present action of the soul of this world...
    Comp 2.95 15 The blindness of the preacher consisted in deferring to the base estimate of the market of what constitutes a manly success, instead of... announcing the presence of the soul;...
    Comp 2.95 26 [Men's] daily life gives [their theology] the lie. Every ingenuous and aspiring soul leaves the doctrine behind him in his own experience...
    Comp 2.99 26 Has [the man of genius] light? he must...always outrun that sympathy which gives him such keen satisfaction, by his fidelity to new revelations of the incessant soul.
    Comp 2.102 6 That soul which within us is a sentiment, outside of us is a law.
    Comp 2.103 5 The causal retribution is in the thing and is seen by the soul.
    Comp 2.104 3 The soul says, Eat; the body would feast.
    Comp 2.104 4 The soul says, The man and woman shall be one flesh and one soul; the body would join the flesh only.
    Comp 2.104 5 The soul says, The man and woman shall be one flesh and one soul; the body would join the flesh only.
    Comp 2.104 6 The soul says, Have dominion over all things to the ends of virtue;...
    Comp 2.104 10 The soul strives amain to live and work through all things.
    Comp 2.105 12 Life invests itself with inevitable conditions...which one and another brags...that they do not touch him;--but the brag is on his lips, the conditions are in his soul.
    Comp 2.106 7 The human soul is true to these facts [of Compensation] in the painting of fable...
    Comp 2.112 10 The terror of cloudless noon...the instinct which leads every generous soul to impose on itself tasks of a noble asceticism and vicarious virtue, are the tremblings of the balance of justice through the heart and mind of man.
    Comp 2.119 4 The nature and soul of things takes on itself the guaranty of the fulfilment of every contract...
    Comp 2.120 23 There is a deeper fact in the soul than compensation, to wit, its own nature.
    Comp 2.120 24 The soul is not a compensation, but a life.
    Comp 2.120 25 The soul is.
    Comp 2.122 12 The soul refuses limits...
    Comp 2.122 17 Our instinct uses more and less in application to man, of the presence of the soul, and not of its absence;...
    Comp 2.123 17 In the nature of the soul is the compensation for the inequalities of condition.
    Comp 2.124 3 The heart and soul of all men being one, this bitterness of His and Mine ceases.
    Comp 2.124 12 It is the nature of the soul to appropriate all things.
    Comp 2.124 14 Jesus and Shakspeare are fragments of the soul...
    Comp 2.124 21 Every soul is by this intrinsic necessity quitting its whole system of things...
    Comp 2.125 21 We do not believe in the riches of the soul...
    SL 2.131 13 The soul will not know either deformity or pain.
    SL 2.133 26 When we see a soul whose acts are all regal, graceful and pleasant as roses, we must thank God that such things can be and are...
    SL 2.138 20 ...we have been ourselves that coward and robber, and shall be again,--not in the low circumstance, but in comparison with the grandeurs possible to the soul.
    SL 2.139 3 There is a soul at the centre of nature and over the will of every man...
    SL 2.141 5 This talent and this call depend on...the mode in which the general soul incarnates itself in [a man].
    SL 2.147 13 The world...is indebted to this gilding, exalting soul for all its pride.
    SL 2.150 27 ...only that soul can be my friend which I encounter on the line of my own march...
    SL 2.151 2 ...only that soul can be my friend which I encounter on the line of my own march, that soul to which I do not decline and which does not decline to me...
    SL 2.151 11 The scholar...follows some giddy girl, not yet taught by religious passion to know the noble woman with all that is serene, oracular and beautiful in her soul.
    SL 2.163 1 I desire not to disgrace the soul.
    SL 2.163 2 The fact that I am here certainly shows me that the soul had need of an organ here.
    SL 2.163 8 Shall I...imagine my being here impertinent?...and that the soul did not know its own needs?
    SL 2.163 11 The good soul nourishes me...
    SL 2.165 27 Let the great soul incarnated in some woman's form...go out to service...
    SL 2.166 8 ...lo! suddenly the great soul has enshrined itself in some other form...
    Lov1 2.169 1 Every promise of the soul has innumerable fulfilments;...
    Lov1 2.174 6 ...the coldest philosopher cannot recount the debt of the young soul wandering here in nature to the power of love...
    Lov1 2.176 18 Every bird on the boughs of the tree sings now to [the lover' s] heart and soul.
    Lov1 2.178 4 ...[the lover] is a soul.
    Lov1 2.181 5 ...[the ancient writers] said that the soul of man, embodied here on earth, went roaming up and down in quest of that other world of its own out of which it came into this...
    Lov1 2.181 12 ...the Deity sends the glory of youth before the soul...
    Lov1 2.181 22 If...from too much conversing with material objects, the soul was gross, and misplaced its satisfaction in the body, it reaped nothing but sorrow;...
    Lov1 2.181 27 ...if...the soul passes through the body and falls to admire strokes of character, and the lovers contemplate one another in their discourses and their actions, then they pass to the true palace of beauty...
    Lov1 2.182 14 ...so is the one beautiful soul only the door through which [the lover] enters to the society of all true and pure souls.
    Lov1 2.182 25 ...separating in each soul that which is divine from the taint which it has contracted in the world, the lover ascends to the highest beauty...
    Lov1 2.183 20 In the procession of the soul from within outward, it enlarges its circles ever...
    Lov1 2.183 23 The rays of the soul alight first on things nearest...
    Lov1 2.184 5 Cause and effect...the longing for harmony between the soul and the circumstance...predominate later...
    Lov1 2.184 21 Passion beholds its object as a perfect unit. The soul is wholly embodied...
    Lov1 2.185 4 Night, day, studies, talents, kingdoms, religion, are all contained in [the lover's] form full of soul, in this soul which is all form.
    Lov1 2.185 24 The union which is thus effected [by love] and which adds a new value to every atom in nature--for it...bathes the soul in a new and sweeter element--is yet a temporary state.
    Lov1 2.186 1 Not always can...even home in another heart, content the awful soul that dwells in clay.
    Lov1 2.186 4 The soul which is in the soul of each [lover], craving a perfect beatitude, detects incongruities, defects and disproportion in the behaviour of the other.
    Lov1 2.188 23 ...we need not fear that we can lose anything by the progress of the soul.
    Lov1 2.188 24 The soul may be trusted to the end.
    Fdsp 2.193 12 Now, when [the stranger] comes, he may get the order, the dress and the dinner,--but the throbbing of the heart and the communications of the soul, no more.
    Fdsp 2.193 24 Let the soul be assured that somewhere in the universe it should rejoin its friend, and it would be content and cheerful alone for a thousand years.
    Fdsp 2.196 6 Friendship, like the immortality of the soul, is too good to be believed.
    Fdsp 2.196 14 ...the soul does not respect men as it respects itself.
    Fdsp 2.197 20 Thou [my friend] art not Being...thou art not my soul...
    Fdsp 2.197 23 Is it not that the soul puts forth friends as the tree puts forth leaves...
    Fdsp 2.198 1 The soul environs itself with friends that it may enter into a grander self-acquaintance or solitude;...
    Fdsp 2.201 20 ...the sweet sincerity of joy and peace which I draw from this alliance with my brother's soul is the nut itself whereof all nature and all thought is but the husk and shell.
    Fdsp 2.207 13 In good company the individuals merge their egotism into a social soul...
    Fdsp 2.212 11 You shall not come nearer a man by getting into his house. If unlike, his soul only flees the faster from you...
    Fdsp 2.212 27 Men have sometimes exchanged names with their friends, as if they would signify that in their friend each loved his own soul.
    Prd1 2.222 15 [Prudence] is legitimate when it is the Natural History of the soul incarnate...
    Prd1 2.228 7 If you believe in the soul, do not clutch at sensual sweetness before it is ripe on the slow tree of cause and effect.
    Prd1 2.236 20 ...every fact hath its roots in the soul...
    Prd1 2.236 20 ...every fact hath its roots in the soul, and if the soul were changed would cease to be, or would become some other thing...
    Prd1 2.239 19 The natural motions of the soul are so much better than the voluntary ones that you will never do yourself justice in dispute.
    Hsm1 2.247 15 Mar. This admirable duke, Valerius,/ With his disdain of fortune and of death,/ Captived himself, has captivated me,/ And though my arm hath ta'en his body here,/ His soul hath subjugated Martius' soul./
    Hsm1 2.247 16 By Romulus, [Sophocles] is all soul, I think;/...
    Hsm1 2.250 7 To this military attitude of the soul we give the name of Heroism.
    Hsm1 2.251 27 [Heroism] is the state of the soul at war...
    Hsm1. 2.252 25 ...the little man takes the great hoax [the world] so innocently...that the great soul cannot choose but laugh at such earnest nonsense.
    Hsm1 2.253 10 ...the soul of a better quality thrusts back the unreasonable economy into the vaults of life...
    Hsm1 2.254 11 The brave soul rates itself too high to value itself by the splendor of its table and draperies.
    Hsm1 2.255 12 The heroic soul does not sell its justice and its nobleness.
    Hsm1 2.259 17 Let the maiden, with erect soul, walk serenely on her way...
    Hsm1 2.261 22 ...not only need we breathe and exercise the soul by assuming the penalties of abstinence...
    OS 2.267 17 What is the universal sense of want and ignorance, but the fine innuendo by which the soul makes its enormous claim?
    OS 2.267 24 The philosophy of six thousand years has not searched the chambers and magazines of the soul.
    OS 2.269 7 ...within man is the soul of the whole;...
    OS 2.269 18 We see the world piece by piece...but the whole, of which these are the shining parts, is the soul.
    OS 2.270 16 All goes to show that the soul in man is not an organ...
    OS 2.271 6 ...the soul, whose organ [what we commonly call man] is, would he let it appear through his action, would make our knees bend.
    OS 2.271 15 All reform aims in some one particular to let the soul have its way through us;...
    OS 2.271 27 ...as there is no screen or ceiling between our heads and the infinite heavens, so is there no bar or wall in the soul...
    OS 2.272 11 The soul circumscribes all things.
    OS 2.272 20 ...time and space are but inverse measures of the force of the soul.
    OS 2.273 19 Before the revelations of the soul, Time, Space and Nature shrink away.
    OS 2.274 2 ...we say...that a day of certain political, moral, social reforms is at hand, and the like, when we mean that in the nature of things one of the facts we contemplate is external and fugitive, and the other is permanent and connate with the soul.
    OS 2.274 9 The soul looketh steadily forwards...
    OS 2.274 13 The soul knows only the soul;...
    OS 2.275 14 The soul requires purity, but purity is not it;...
    OS 2.277 3 Persons are supplementary to the primary teaching of the soul.
    OS 2.278 12 The action of the soul is oftener in that which is felt and left unsaid than in that which is said in any conversation.
    OS 2.279 8 In my dealing with my child...as much soul as I have avails.
    OS 2.279 13 ...if I renounce my will and act for the soul...out of [my child' s] young eyes looks the same soul;...
    OS 2.279 15 ...if I renounce my will and act for the soul...out of [my child' s] young eyes looks the same soul;...
    OS 2.279 16 The soul is the perceiver and revealer of truth.
    OS 2.280 6 In the book I read, the good thought returns to me...the image of the whole soul.
    OS 2.280 7 To the bad thought which I find in [the book I read], the same soul becomes a discerning, separating sword, and lops it away.
    OS 2.281 1 We distinguish the announcements of the soul...by the term Revelation.
    OS 2.282 19 The rapture of the Moravian and Quietist;...the experiences of the Methodists, are varying forms of that shudder of awe and delight with which the individual soul always mingles with the universal soul.
    OS 2.282 24 The soul answers never by words...
    OS 2.282 27 Revelation is the disclosure of the soul.
    OS 2.283 2 In past oracles of the soul the understanding seeks to find answers to sensual questions...
    OS 2.283 15 Men ask concerning the immortality of the soul...
    OS 2.283 21 To truth, justice, love, the attributes of the soul, the idea of immutableness is essentially associated.
    OS 2.283 27 Jesus...never...uttered a syllable concerning the duration of the soul.
    OS 2.284 3 It was left to [Christ's] disciples...to teach the immortality of the soul as a doctrine...
    OS 2.284 9 ...the soul is true to itself...
    OS 2.284 19 ...the soul will not have us read any other cipher than that of cause and effect.
    OS 2.284 27 ...all unawares the advancing soul has built and forged for itself a new condition...
    OS 2.289 4 ...[Homer, Chaucer, Spenser, Shakspeare, Milton] are poets by the free course which they allow to the informing soul...
    OS 2.289 6 The soul is superior to its knowledge...
    OS 2.289 21 Why...should I make account of Hamlet and Lear, as if we had not the soul from which they fell as syllables from the tongue?
    OS 2.290 19 ...the soul that ascends to worship the great God is plain and true;...
    OS 2.291 5 The simplest utterances are worthiest to be written, yet are they so cheap and so things of course, that in the infinite riches of the soul it is like gathering a few pebbles off the ground...
    OS 2.292 16 Ineffable is the union of man and God in every act of the soul.
    OS 2.295 14 The reliance on authority measures...the withdrawal of the soul.
    OS 2.295 18 Great is the soul, and plain.
    OS 2.296 9 The soul gives itself, alone, original and pure, to the Lonely, Original and Pure...
    OS 2.296 20 [The soul saith] I am somehow receptive of the great soul...
    OS 2.297 1 ...revering the soul...man will come to see that the world is the perennial miracle which the soul worketh...
    OS 2.297 4 ...man will come to see that the world is the perennial miracle which the soul worketh...
    Cir 2.304 7 The extent to which this generation of circles, wheel without wheel, will go, depends on the force or truth of the individual soul.
    Cir 2.304 12 ...if the soul is quick and strong it bursts over that boundary on all sides...
    Cir 2.306 12 Every man supposes himself not to be fully understood; and... if he rests at last on the divine soul, I see not how it can be otherwise.
    Cir 2.314 21 Not through subtle subterranean channels need friend and fact be drawn to their counterpart, but...these things proceed from the eternal generation of the soul.
    Cir 2.318 20 ...this incessant movement and progression which all things partake could never become sensible to us but by contrast to some principle of fixture or stability in the soul.
    Cir 2.320 14 ...the masterpieces of God, the total growths and universal movements of the soul, he hideth;...
    Int 2.335 11 [The thought] is...a child of the old eternal soul...
    Int 2.342 24 The waters of the great deep have ingress and egress to the soul.
    Int 2.344 12 One soul is a counterpoise of all souls...
    Int 2.346 6 ...persuasion is in soul, but necessity is in intellect.
    Int 2.346 16 With a geometry of sunbeams the soul lays the foundations of nature.
    Art1 2.351 1 Because the soul is progressive, it never quite repeats itself...
    Art1 2.353 22 [Indian, Chinese and Mexican idols] denote the height of the human soul in that hour...
    Art1 2.358 13 ...what skill is...shown [in works of the highest art] is the reappearance of the original soul...
    Art1 2.363 6 The real value of the Iliad or the Transfiguration is as signs of power;...tokens of the everlasting effort to produce, which even in its worst estate the soul betrays.
    Pt1 3.3 18 ...men seem to have lost the perception of the instant dependence of form upon soul.
    Pt1 3.5 7 [Men of genius] receive of the soul as [the young man] also receives, but they more.
    Pt1 3.14 1 The soul makes the body, as the wise Spenser teaches...
    Pt1 3.14 8 ...of the soul, the body form doth take,/ For soul is form, and doth the body make./
    Pt1 3.14 9 ...of the soul, the body form doth take,/ For soul is form, and doth the body make./
    Pt1 3.14 15 The Universe is the externization of the soul.
    Pt1 3.21 5 All the facts of the animal economy...are symbols of the passage of the world into the soul of man...
    Pt1 3.23 13 ...when the soul of the poet has come to ripeness of thought, [nature] detaches and sends away from it its poems or songs...
    Pt1 3.23 19 ...when the soul of the poet has come to ripeness of thought, [nature] detaches and sends away from it its poems or songs...a fearless, vivacious offspring, clad with wings (such was the virtue of the soul out of which they came) which carry them fast and far...
    Pt1 3.23 22 ...when the soul of the poet has come to ripeness of thought, [nature] detaches and sends away from it its poems or songs...a fearless, vivacious offspring, clad with wings...which carry them fast and far, and infix them irrecoverably into the hearts of men. These wings are the beauty of the poet's soul.
    Pt1 3.24 8 ...nature has a higher end, in the production of new individuals, than security, namely...the passage of the soul into higher forms.
    Pt1 3.25 7 Over everything stands its daemon or soul...
    Pt1 3.25 9 ...the soul of the thing is reflected by a melody.
    Pt1 3.28 25 The sublime vision comes to the pure and simple soul in a clean and chaste body.
    Pt1 3.30 27 ...Socrates...tells us that the soul is cured of its maladies by certain incantations, and that these incantations are beautiful reasons, from which temperance is generated in souls;...
    Exp 3.74 6 ...in accepting the leading of the sentiments, it is not what we believe concerning the immortality of the soul or the like, but the universal impulse to believe, that is the material circumstance...
    Exp 3.77 20 The universe is the bride of the soul.
    Exp 3.78 3 The soul is not twin-born but the only begotten...
    Exp 3.80 11 The partial action of each strong mind in one direction is a telescope for the objects on which it is pointed. But every other part of knowledge is to be pushed to the same extravagance, ere the soul attains her due sphericity.
    Exp 3.84 21 I hear always the law of Adrastia, that every soul which had acquired any truth, should be safe from harm until another period.
    Chr1 3.96 6 All things exist in the man tinged with the manners of his soul.
    Chr1 3.96 15 A healthy soul stands united with the Just and the True...
    Chr1 3.97 23 ...the soul of goodness escapes from any set of circumstances;...
    Chr1 3.105 2 How death-cold is literary genius before this fire of life [character]! These are the touches that reanimate my heavy soul...
    Chr1 3.115 7 This is confusion, this the right insanity, when the soul no longer knows its own, nor where its allegiance, its religion, are due.
    Mrs1 3.131 18 A sainted soul is always elegant...
    Nat2 3.171 21 There are all degrees of natural influence, from these quarantine powers of nature, up to her dearest and gravest ministrations to the imagination and the soul.
    Nat2 3.180 14 It is a long way from granite to the oyster; farther yet to Plato and the preaching of the immortality of the soul.
    Nat2 3.188 12 Each young and ardent person writes a diary, in which, when the hours of prayer and penitence arrive, he inscribes his soul.
    Nat2 3.188 19 This is the man-child that is born to the soul...
    Nat2 3.194 18 ...if, instead of identifying ourselves with the work, we feel that the soul of the Workman streams through us, we shall find the peace of the morning dwelling first in our hearts...
    Nat2 3.196 6 ...the knowledge that we traverse the whole scale of being... and have some stake in every possibility, lends that sublime lustre to death, which philosophy and religion have too outwardly and literally striven to express in the popular doctrine of the immortality of the soul.
    Pol1 3.217 17 ...successes in those fields [of trade and ambition] are the poor amends, the fig-leaf with which the shamed soul attempts to hide its nakedness.
    NR 3.227 13 Our exaggeration of all fine characters arises from the fact that we identify each in turn with the soul.
    NR 3.242 5 ...whilst I fancied I was criticising [a man], I was censuring or rather terminating my own soul.
    NR 3.243 14 ...nothing is impassable to the soul...
    NR 3.243 16 ...though nothing is impassable to the soul...yet this is only whilst the soul does not see them.
    NR 3.243 17 As soon as the soul sees any object, it stops before that object.
    NR 3.243 20 ...the divine Providence which keeps the universe open in every direction to the soul, conceals all the furniture and all the persons that do not concern a particular soul, from the senses of that individual.
    NR 3.243 22 ...the divine Providence which keeps the universe open in every direction to the soul, conceals all the furniture and all the persons that do not concern a particular soul, from the senses of that individual.
    NER 3.251 15 ...that the Church, or religious party...is appearing...in very significant assemblies called Sabbath and Bible Conventions; composed...of all the soul of the soldiery of dissent...
    NER 3.263 11 ...wherever...a just and heroic soul finds itself, there it will do what is next at hand...
    NER 3.267 11 ...leave [a man] alone, to recognize in every hour and place the secret soul;...
    NER 3.271 4 ...Unwillingly the soul is deprived of truth.
    NER 3.271 7 The soul lets no man go without some visitations and holydays of a diviner presence.
    NER 3.271 26 How sinks the song in the waves of melody which the universe pours over [the master's] soul!
    NER 3.276 6 [A man] is sure that the soul which gives the lie to all things will tell none.
    UGM 4.6 19 It costs no more for a wise soul to convey his quality to other men.
    UGM 4.8 11 Right ethics...go from the soul outward.
    UGM 4.19 7 The soul is impatient of masters and eager for change.
    UGM 4.22 2 ...if there should appear in the company some gentle soul who...certifies me of the equity which checkmates every false player...that man liberates me;...
    UGM 4.28 5 It seems as if the Deity dressed each soul which he sends into nature in certain virtues and powers not communicable to other men...
    UGM 4.28 10 It seems as if the Deity dressed each soul which he sends into nature in certain virtues and powers not communicable to other men, and sending it to perform one more turn through the circle of beings, wrote, Not transferable and Good for this trip only, on these garments of the soul.
    UGM 4.29 25 Be another:...not a soul, but a Christian;...
    UGM 4.32 15 Nature never sends a great man into the planet without confiding the secret to another soul.
    PPh 4.50 2 What is the great end of all [said Krishna], you shall now learn from me. It is soul...
    PPh 4.50 26 As if [Krishna] had said, All is for the soul, and the soul is Vishnu;...
    PPh 4.51 3 That which the soul seeks is resolution into being above form...
    PPh 4.53 27 ...the infinitude of the Asiatic soul and the defining, result-loving, machine-making, surface-seeking, opera-going Europe,--Plato came to join...
    PPh 4.54 9 Metaphysics and natural philosophy expressed the genius of Europe; [Plato] substructs the religion of Asia, as the base. In short, a balanced soul was born, perceptive of the two elements.
    PPh 4.55 1 ...the union of impossibilities, which reappears in every object;, its real and its ideal power,--was now also transferred entire to the consciousness of a man [Plato]. The balanced soul came.
    PPh 4.60 22 I, therefore, Callicles, am persuaded by these accounts [said Plato], and consider how I may exhibit my soul before the judge in a healthy condition.
    PPh 4.63 11 The soul which has never perceived the truth, cannot pass into the human form [said Plato].
    PPh 4.65 20 ...in the Republic [Plato says],--By each of these disciplines a certain organ of the soul is both purified and reanimated which is blinded and buried by studies of another kind;...
    PPh 4.68 6 Plato...attempted as if on the part of human intellect, once for all to do it adequate homage,--homage fit for the immense soul to receive...
    PPh 4.69 6 To these four sections [images, objects, opinions, truths], the four operations of the soul correspond,--conjecture, faith, understanding, reason.
    PPh 4.70 8 ...the Banquet [of Plato] is a teaching in the same spirit [of ascension]...that the love of the sexes is initial, and symbolizes at a distance the passion of the soul for that immense lake of beauty it exists to seek.
    PPh 4.74 17 When accused before the judges of subverting the popular creed, [Socrates] affirms the immortality of the soul...
    PPh 4.76 3 ...expounding...the hope of the parting soul,--[Plato] is literary, and never otherwise.
    PNR 4.81 18 Plato's fame does not stand...on any thesis, as for example the immortality of the soul.
    PNR 4.83 2 Whatever [Plato] looks upon discloses a second sense, and ulterior senses. His...discernment of the little in the large and the large in the small; studying the state in the citizen and the citizen in the state; and leaving it doubtful whether he exhibited the Republic as an allegory on the education of the private soul;...
    PNR 4.83 13 Whatever [Plato] looks upon discloses a second sense, and ulterior senses. His...soliform eye and his boniform soul;...
    PNR 4.84 7 Plato affirms...that the soul is unwillingly deprived of true opinions...
    PNR 4.84 11 Plato affirms...that the order or proceeding of nature was from the mind to the body, and, though a sound body cannot restore an unsound mind, yet a good soul can, by its virtue, render the body the best possible.
    PNR 4.85 20 Ethical science was new and vacant when Plato could write thus:...as respects either of them in itself, and subsisting by its own power in the soul of the possessor...no one has yet sufficiently investigated...how, namely, that injustice is the greatest of all the evils that the soul has within it, and justice the greatest good.
    PNR 4.85 24 Ethical science was new and vacant when Plato could write thus:...no one has yet sufficiently investigated...how, namely, that injustice is the greatest of all the evils that the soul has within it, and justice the greatest good.
    PNR 4.86 24 [Plato] domesticates the soul in nature...
    PNR 4.86 26 All the circles of the visible heaven represent [to Plato] as many circles in the rational soul.
    PNR 4.87 6 The gods are [to Plato] the ideas. Pan is speech, or manifestation; Saturn, the contemplative; Jove, the regal soul;...
    PNR 4.87 8 The gods are [to Plato] the ideas. ... Venus is proportion; Calliope, the soul of the world;...
    SwM 4.95 12 ...the Persian poet exclaims to a soul of this kind [of goodness],--Go boldly forth, and feast on being's banquet;/ Thou art the called,--the rest admitted with thee./
    SwM 4.96 3 The soul having been often born...there is nothing of which she has not gained the knowledge...
    SwM 4.96 13 ...the soul having heretofore known all, nothing hinders but that any man who has recalled to mind...one thing only, should of himself recover all his ancient knowledge...
    SwM 4.96 22 ...inquiry and learning is reminiscence all. How much more, if he that inquires be a holy and godlike soul!
    SwM 4.96 23 ...by being assimilated to the original soul...the soul of man does then easily flow into all things...
    SwM 4.96 24 ...by being assimilated to the original soul...the soul of man does then easily flow into all things...
    SwM 4.102 17 A colossal soul, [Swedenborg] lies vast abroad on his times...
    SwM 4.102 22 A colossal soul, [Swedenborg]...suggests...that a certain... quasi omnipresence of the human soul in nature, is possible.
    SwM 4.106 22 ...[Swedenborg] saw that the human body was...an instrument through which the soul feeds and is fed by the whole of matter;...
    SwM 4.111 27 [Swedenborg's Animal Kingdom] was written...to put science and the soul...at one again.
    SwM 4.118 16 ...whether it be that these things will not be intellectually learned, or that many centuries must elaborate and compose so rare and opulent a soul,--there is no comet, rock-stratum...that, for itself, does not interest more scholars and classifiers than the meaning and upshot of the frame of things.
    SwM 4.128 26 ...God is the bride or bridegroom of the soul.
    SwM 4.140 27 We should have listened on our knees to any favorite, who... could hint to human ears the scenery and circumstance of the newly parted soul.
    SwM 4.144 25 [Swedenborg] elected goodness as the clue to which the soul must cling in all this labyrinth of nature.
    MoS 4.151 13 Having at some time seen that the happy soul will carry all the arts in power, [men predisposed to morals] say, Why cumber ourselves with superfluous realizations?...
    MoS 4.160 26 The soul of man must be the type of our scheme...
    MoS 4.175 11 ...though philosophy extirpates bugbears, yet it supplies the natural checks of vice, and polarity to the soul.
    MoS 4.180 20 Belief consists in accepting the affirmations of the soul;...
    MoS 4.182 13 Even the doctrines dear to the hope of man, of the divine Providence and of the immortality of the soul, [the spiritualist's] neighbors can not put the statement so that he shall affirm it.
    MoS 4.184 27 ...in the soul of the soaring saint, this chasm is found,-- between the largest promise of ideal power, and the shabby experience.
    NMW 4.254 12 [Napoleon's] star, his love of glory, his doctrine of the immortality of the soul, are all French.
    GoW 4.273 11 [Goethe] was the soul of his century.
    ET1 5.18 6 We [Emerson and Carlyle] went out to walk over long hills, and looked at Criffel...and down into Wordsworth's country. There we sat down and talked of the immortality of the soul.
    ET10 5.170 8 At present [England] does not rule her wealth. She is simply a good England, but no divinity, or wise and instructed soul.
    ET14 5.242 3 In England these [generalizations]...do all have a kind of filial retrospect to Plato and the Greeks. Of this kind is...Spenser's creed that soul is form, and doth the body make;...
    ET16 5.280 3 The Acta Sanctorum show plainly that the men of those times believed in God and in the immortality of the soul...
    ET16 5.287 26 ...I insisted...that as to our secure tenure of our mutton-chop and spinach in London or in Boston, the soul might quote Talleyrand, Monsieur, je n'en vois pas la necessite.
    F 6.20 16 The limitations refine as the soul purifies...
    F 6.23 8 Forever wells up the impulse of choosing and acting in the soul.
    F 6.27 19 [Thought] is poured into the souls of all men, as the soul itself which constitutes them men.
    F 6.40 2 ...the soul contains the event that shall befall it;...
    F 6.40 9 We learn that the soul of Fate is the soul of us...
    F 6.40 10 We learn that the soul of Fate is the soul of us...
    F 6.46 1 If the threads are there, thought can follow and show them. Especially when a soul is quick and docile...
    Pow 6.75 20 ...I hope, said a good man to Rothschild, your children are not too fond of money and business; I am sure you would not wish that.--I am sure I should wish that; I wish them to give mind, soul, heart and body to business,--that is the way to be happy.
    Ctr 6.141 8 ...I think it the part of good sense to provide every fine soul with such culture that it shall not, at thirty or forty years, have to say, This which I might do is made hopeless through my want of weapons.
    Ctr 6.156 16 ...the wise instructor will press this point of securing to the young soul in the disposition of time and the arrangements of living, periods and habits of solitude.
    Bhr 6.169 1 The soul which animates nature is not less significantly published in the figure...of animated bodies, than in its last vehicle of articulate speech.
    Bhr 6.177 16 The eyes indicate the antiquity of the soul...
    Bhr 6.179 7 What inundation of life and thought is discharged from one soul into another, through [the eyes]!
    Wsp 6.201 16 ...I am sure that a certain truth will be said through me... though I should try to say the reverse. Nor do I fear skepticism for any good soul.
    Wsp 6.204 16 ...the public and the private element...adhere to every soul...
    Wsp 6.204 17 ...the public and the private element...cannot be subdued except the soul is dissipated.
    Wsp 6.216 14 ...when poems were made,--the human soul was in earnest...
    Wsp 6.229 22 Physiognomy and phrenology are...declarations of the soul that it is aware of certain new sources of information.
    Wsp 6.238 27 Of immortality, the soul when well employed is incurious.
    Wsp 6.239 14 ...he who would be a great soul in future must be a great soul now.
    CbW 6.245 10 The priest is glad if his prayers or his sermon meet the condition of any soul;...
    CbW 6.263 13 I figure [sickness] as a...phantom...losing its soul...
    CbW 6.265 1 ...the power of happiness of any soul is not to be computed or drained.
    CbW 6.272 13 In excited conversation we have...hints of power native to the soul...
    Bty 6.285 26 The miller, the lawyer and the merchant dedicate themselves to their own details, and do not come out men of more force. Have they... hospitality of soul...which we demand in man...
    Bty 6.287 13 ...there are many beauties; as, of general nature...of brain or method, moral beauty or beauty of the soul.
    Bty 6.289 26 In the true mythology Love is an immortal child, and Beauty leads him as a guide: nor can we express a deeper sense than when we say, Beauty is the pilot of the young soul.
    Bty 6.303 24 Every natural feature...speaks of that central benefit which is the soul of nature...
    Ill 6.319 24 ...the soul doth not know itself in its own act when that act is perfected.
    SS 7.1 25 ...As if in [Seyd] the welkin walked,/ The winds took flesh, the mountains talked,/ And he the bard, a crystal soul,/ Sphered and concentric with the whole./
    SS 7.5 2 [My friend] would have given his soul for the ring of Gyges.
    SS 7.9 23 Such is the tragic necessity which strict science finds underneath our domestic and neighborly life, irresistibly driving each adult soul as with whips into the desert...
    SS 7.11 5 ...the power to charm the disguised soul that sits veiled under this bearded and that rosy visage is [the scholar's] rent and ration.
    Art2 7.38 8 Always in proportion to the depth of its sense does [the thought] knock importunately at the gates of the soul, to be spoken, to be done.
    Art2 7.40 16 The universal soul is the alone creator of the useful and the beautiful;...
    Art2 7.48 15 ...so in art that aims at beauty must the parts be subordinated to Ideal Nature...so that it shall be the production of the universal soul.
    Art2 7.48 22 The artist who is to produce a work which is to be admired... by all men...must...be...one through whom the soul of all men circulates as the common air through his lungs.
    Elo1 7.99 11 [Eloquence] is the best speech of the best soul.
    DL 7.101 2 I reached the middle of the mount/ Up which the incarnate soul must climb/...
    DL 7.109 3 An increased consciousness of the soul, you say, characterizes the period.
    DL 7.119 13 Honor to the house where they are simple to the verge of hardship, so that there...the soul worships truth and love...
    DL 7.126 14 ...Nature has laid for each the foundations of a divine building, if the soul will build thereon.
    DL 7.126 17 There is no face, no form, which one cannot in fancy associate with great power of intellect or with generosity of soul.
    DL 7.132 11 Will not man one day open his eyes and see how dear he is to the soul of Nature...
    Boks 7.192 15 It seems...as if some charitable soul...would do a right act in naming those [books] which have been bridges or ships to carry him safely over dark morasses and barren oceans...
    Boks 7.220 7 ...these ejaculations of the soul are uttered one or a few at a time...
    Cour 7.259 18 ...the part of the leader and soul of the vigilance committee, must be taken by stout and sincere men...
    Cour 7.273 16 There is a persuasion in the soul of man that he is here for cause...
    Cour 7.275 16 ...the rack, the fire...appear trials beyond the endurance of common humanity; but to the hero whose intellect is aggrandized by the soul...these terrors vanish as darkness at sunrise.
    Suc 7.296 9 We assume...that there is but one Homer, but one Shakspeare, one Newton, one Socrates. But the soul in her beaming hour does not acknowledge these usurpations.
    Suc 7.296 22 The light by which we see in this world comes out from the soul of the observer.
    Suc 7.302 14 This sensibility appears...in the power which form and color exert upon the soul;...
    Suc 7.311 2 ...to help the young soul...that is not easy...
    Suc 7.311 27 This tranquil, well-founded, wide-seeing soul is no express-rider...
    OA 7.327 19 ...at the end of fifty years, [a man's] soul is appeased by seeing some sort of correspondence between his wish and his possession.
    PI 8.14 5 The return of the soul to God was described as a flask of water broken in the sea.
    PI 8.15 3 ...[the Hindoos]...have made it the central doctrine of their religion that what we call Nature...has no real existence,--is only phenomenal. Youth, age, property, condition, events, persons,--self, even,-- are successive maias (deceptions) through which Vishnu mocks and instructs the soul.
    PI 8.26 12 ...when, on rare days, [nature] speaks to the imagination, we feel...that the light, skies and mountains are but the painted vicissitudes of the soul.
    PI 8.26 16 Who has heard our hymn in the churches without accepting the truth,--As o'er our heads the seasons roll,/ And soothe with change of bliss the soul/?
    PI 8.27 1 ...against all the appearance [the true poet] sees and reports the truth, namely that the soul generates matter.
    PI 8.28 8 [Imagination] is the vision of an inspired soul...
    PI 8.28 10 ...as soon as this [inspired] soul is released a little from its passion...we call its action Fancy.
    PI 8.28 21 Bunyan, in pain for his soul, wrote Pilgrim's Progress;...
    PI 8.53 16 Poetry being an attempt to express...the beauty and soul in [the hero's] aspect...runs into fable, personifies every fact...
    PI 8.54 17 ...the verse must be...inseparable from its contents, as the soul of man inspires and directs the body...
    PI 8.63 25 Power, new power, is the good which the soul seeks.
    SA 8.92 7 The soul of a man must be the servant of another.
    SA 8.98 21 The law of the table is...a respect to the common soul of all the guests.
    SA 8.105 24 A little experience acquaints us with the unconvertibility of the sentimentalist, the soul that is lost by mimicking soul.
    SA 8.105 25 A little experience acquaints us with the unconvertibility of the sentimentalist, the soul that is lost by mimicking soul.
    Elo2 8.114 18 ...you may find [the orator] in some lowly Bethel, by the seaside...a man who conquers his audience by infusing his soul into them...
    Res 8.137 23 We like to see the inexhaustible riches of Nature, and the access of every soul to her magazines.
    Comc 8.161 27 We feel the absence of [a perception of the Comic] as a defect in the noblest and most oracular soul.
    Comc 8.163 4 [Wit]...unless it encounter a mystic or a dumpish soul, goes everywhere heralded and harbingered by smiles and greetings.
    Comc 8.164 6 ...the occasion of laughter is some seeming, some keeping of the word to the ear and eye, whilst it is broken to the soul.
    QO 8.198 25 Swedenborg threw a formidable theory into the world, that every soul existed in a society of souls...
    QO 8.204 11 We must not tamper with the organic motion of the soul.
    PC 8.219 8 ...in every wise and genial soul we have England, Greece, Italy, walking...
    PC 8.220 25 ...the next step in the series is the equivalence of the soul to Nature.
    PC 8.223 15 Nature is brute but as this soul quickens it;...
    PC 8.227 21 It is only in the sleep of the soul that we help ourselves by so many ingenious crutches and machineries.
    PC 8.228 4 The inviolate soul is in perpetual telegraphic communication with the Source of events...
    PC 8.231 20 A strenuous soul hates cheap successes.
    PPo 8.246 2 The world is a bride superbly dressed;-/ Who weds her for dowry must pay his soul./
    PPo 8.249 3 We would do nothing but good [says Hafiz], else would shame come to us on the day when the soul must hie hence;...
    PPo 8.255 7 In the following poem the soul is figured as the Phoenix alighting on Tuba, the Tree of Life...
    PPo 8.255 28 Either world inhabits [the phoenix],/ Sees oft below him planets roll;/ His body is all of air compact,/ Of Allah's love his soul./
    PPo 8.256 5 I declare myself the slave of that masculine soul/ Which ties and alliance on earth once forever renounces./
    PPo 8.264 8 The sun from near-by beamed/ Clearest light into [the birds'] soul;/ The resplendence of the Simorg beamed/ As one back from all three./ They knew not, amazed, if they/ Were either this or that./
    PPo 8.265 1 The Highest is a sun-mirror;/ Who comes to Him sees himself therein,/ Sees body and soul, and soul and body;/...
    Insp 8.268 9 ...if with bended head I grope/ Listening behind me for my wit,/ With faith superior to hope,/ More anxious to keep back than forward it,/ Making my soul accomplice there/ Unto the flame my heart has lit,/ Then will the verse forever wear,/ Time cannot bend a line which God hath writ./ Inspiration, H. Thoreau.
    Insp 8.272 23 ...not the immortality of the private soul is incredible, after we have experienced an insight...
    Insp 8.274 25 Plato...notes that the perception is only accomplished by long familiarity with the objects of intellect, and a life according to the things themselves. Then a light...will on a sudden be enkindled in the soul...
    Insp 8.279 13 Aristotle said: No great genius was ever without some mixture of madness, nor can anything grand or superior to the voice of common mortals be spoken except by the agitated soul.
    Insp 8.280 24 Sleep is like death, and after sleep/ The world seems new begun;/ White thoughts stand luminous and firm,/ Like statues in the sun;/ Refreshed from supersensuous founts,/ The soul to clearer vision mounts./
    Insp 8.284 12 My anchorite thought it sad that atmospheric influences should bring to our dust the communion of the soul with the Infinite.
    Insp 8.285 16 ...the love-filled singers [nightingales]/ Poured by night before my window/ Their sweet melodies,-/ Kept awake my dear soul,/ Roused tender new longings/ In my lately touched bosom/...
    Insp 8.292 24 Some perceptions...are granted to the single soul;...
    Insp 8.296 23 'T is the most difficult of tasks to keep/ Heights which the soul is competent to gain./
    Insp 8.297 12 These are some hints towards what is in all education a chief necessity,-the right government, or...the right obedience to the powers of the human soul.
    Grts 8.301 13 [Greatness] is the best tonic to the young soul.
    Grts 8.315 14 ...I please myself with [greatness's] diffusion; to find a spark of true fire amid much corruption. It is some guaranty, I hope, for the health of the soul which has this generous blood.
    Imtl 8.324 8 ...The Egyptians are the first of mankind who have affirmed the immortality of the soul.
    Imtl 8.324 25 ...as the savage could not detach in his mind the life of the soul from the body, he took great care for his body.
    Imtl 8.329 12 The experiences of the soul will fast outgrow this alarm [of death].
    Imtl 8.330 4 Plutarch, in Greece, has a deep faith that the doctrine of the Divine Providence and that of the immortality of the soul rest on one and the same basis.
    Imtl 8.330 6 Hear the opinion of Montesquieu: If the immortality of the soul were an error, I should be sorry not to believe it.
    Imtl 8.331 23 [One of the men] said that when he entered the Senate he became in a short time intimate with one of his colleagues, and...they daily... spent much time in conversation on the immortality of the soul...
    Imtl 8.333 15 I know...that there is...a satisfaction for every soul.
    Imtl 8.338 20 The soul does not age with the body.
    Imtl 8.340 17 Lord Bacon said: Some of the philosophers who were least divine denied generally the immortality of the soul...
    Imtl 8.342 6 To me, said Goethe, the eternal existence of my soul is proved from my idea of activity.
    Imtl 8.342 26 [A belief in the laws] communicates...an asylum in temples to the loyal soul.
    Imtl 8.343 7 The soul stipulates for no private good.
    Imtl 8.345 14 ...it is not my duty to prove to myself the immortality of the soul.
    Imtl 8.345 22 ...one abstains from writing or printing on the immortality of the soul, because, when he comes to the end of his statement, the hungry eyes that run through it will close disappointed;...
    Imtl 8.347 17 [Future state] is not duration, but a taking of the soul out of time...
    Imtl 8.348 23 ...the man puts off the ignorance and tumultuous passions of youth; proceeding thence puts off the egotism of manhood, and becomes at last a public and universal soul.
    Imtl 8.349 24 Nachiketas said, there is this inquiry. Some say the soul exists after the death of man; others say it does not exist.
    Imtl 8.350 23 [Yama said to Nachiketas] All those desires that are difficult to gain in the world of mortals, all those ask thou at thy pleasure;-those fair nymphs of heaven...for the like of them are not to be gained by men. I will give them to thee, but do not ask the question of the state of the soul after death.
    Imtl 8.351 16 [Yama said to Nachiketas] The wise, by means of the union of the intellect with the soul, thinking him whom it is hard to behold, leaves both grief and joy.
    Imtl 8.351 21 The soul is not born; it does not die;...
    Imtl 8.351 27 Thinking the soul as unbodily among bodies, firm among fleeting things, the wise man casts off all grief.
    Imtl 8.352 2 The soul cannot be gained by knowledge...
    Imtl 8.352 5 [The soul] can be obtained by the soul by which it is desired.
    Dem1 10.9 24 The soul contains in itself the event that shall presently befall it...
    Dem1 10.11 16 The jest and byword to an intelligent ear extends its meaning to the soul and to all time.
    Dem1 10.23 22 The fault of most men is that they...do not wait the simple movement of the soul...
    Dem1 10.27 25 [Man] is sure...the circumambient soul which flows into him as into all...has not been searched.
    Aris 10.57 16 ...a soul on which elevated duties are laid will so realize its special and lofty duties as not to be in danger of assuming through a low generosity those which do not belong to it.
    Aris 10.61 17 The generous soul, on arriving in a new port, makes instant preparation for a new voyage.
    Aris 10.65 26 To many the word [Gentleman] expresses...only graceful manners, and independence in trifles; but the fountains of that thought are in the deeps of man, a beauty which reaches through and through, from the manners to the soul;...
    PerF 10.88 13 The soul of God is poured into the world through the thoughts of men.
    Chr2 10.97 11 The poor Jews of the wilderness cried: Let not the Lord speak to us; let Moses speak to us. But the simple and sincere soul makes the contrary prayer: Let no intruder come between thee and me;...
    Chr2 10.98 5 When I think of Reason, of Truth, of Virtue, I cannot conceive them as lodged in your soul and lodged in my soul...
    Chr2 10.98 6 When I think of Reason, of Truth, of Virtue, I cannot conceive them as lodged in your soul and lodged in my soul...
    Chr2 10.99 14 ...slowly the soul unfolds itself in the new man.
    Chr2 10.100 15 It happens now and then, in the ages, that a soul is born which has no weakness of self...
    Chr2 10.101 8 In [the man of profound moral sentiment's] presence, or within his influence, every one believes in the immortality of the soul.
    Chr2 10.101 15 When Omar prayed and loved,/ Where Syrian waters roll,/ Aloft the ninth heaven glowed and moved/ To the tread of the jubilant soul./
    Chr2 10.113 23 Some poor soul beheld the Law blazing through such impediments as he had, and yielded himself to humility and joy. What was gained by being told that it was justification by faith?
    Chr2 10.114 5 The soul...asks no interpositions...
    Chr2 10.114 27 ...I include in [revelations of the moral sentiment]...the history of Jesus, as well as those of every divine soul which in any place or time delivered any grand lesson to humanity;...
    Chr2 10.115 8 Jesus...knew how to guard the integrity of his brother's soul from himself also;...
    Chr2 10.115 10 ...in [Jesus's] disciples, admiration of him runs away with their reverence for the human soul...
    Chr2 10.118 21 How many people are there in Boston? Some two hundred thousand. Well, then so many sects. Of course, each poor soul loses all his old stays;...
    Chr2 10.119 6 ...this infant soul must learn to walk alone.
    Chr2 10.120 8 But I, father, says the wise Prahlada, in the Vishnu Purana, know neither friends nor foes, for I behold Kesava in all beings as in my own soul.
    Edc1 10.130 3 Whatever the man does, or whatever befalls him, opens another chamber in his soul...
    Edc1 10.137 27 I suffer whenever I see that common sight of a parent or senior imposing his opinion and way of thinking and being on a young soul...
    Edc1 10.144 27 This is the perpetual romance of new life, the invasion of God into the old dead world, when he sends into quiet houses a young soul with a thought which is not met...
    Edc1 10.151 4 What fiery soul will [the college] send out to warm a nation with his charity?
    Edc1 10.151 22 Is it not manifest...that...children should be treated as the high-born candidates of truth and virtue? So to regard the young child, the young man, requires...a patience that nothing but faith in the remedial forces of the soul can give.
    Edc1 10.158 23 By simple living, by an illimitable soul, you inspire...all.
    Supl 10.163 9 ...it is a long way from the Maine Law to the heights of absolute self-command which respect the conservatism of the entire energies of the body, the mind, and the soul.
    SovE 10.185 2 The poor grub, in the hole of a tree, by yielding itself to Nature, goes blameless through its low part...expands into a beautiful form with rainbow wings, and makes a part of the summer day. The Greeks called it Psyche, a manifest emblem of the soul.
    SovE 10.195 1 The fiery soul said: Let me be a blot on this fair world, the obscurest, the loneliest sufferer, with one proviso,-that I know it is his agency.
    SovE 10.197 6 I have not discovered, until this blessed ray flashed just now through my soul, that there dwelt any power in Nature that would relieve me of my load.
    SovE 10.200 19 It seems as if, when the Spirit of God speaks so plainly to each soul, it were an impiety to be listening to one or another saint.
    SovE 10.202 14 In the Christianity of this country there is wide difference of opinion in regard to...the future state of the soul;...
    Prch 10.218 12 ...[those persons in whom I am accustomed to look for tendency and progress] will not mask their convictions; they hate cant; but more than this I do not readily find. The gracious motions of the soul...I do not find.
    Prch 10.221 16 Unlovely, nay, frightful, is the solitude of the soul which is without God in the world.
    Prch 10.228 2 [Christianity] is the record of a pure and holy soul...
    Prch 10.238 5 The open secret of the world is the art of subliming a private soul with inspirations from the great and public and divine Soul from which we live.
    MoL 10.242 7 The inviolate soul is in perpetual telegraphic communication with the source of events.
    MoL 10.255 27 We should see in [the work of art] the great belief of the artist, which caused him to make it so as he did, and not otherwise;... somewhat that must be done then and there by him; he could not take his neck out of that yoke, and save his soul.
    Schr 10.279 16 ...the young...finding that nothing outside corresponds to the noble order in the soul, are confused...
    Schr 10.284 17 [The scholar] will have to answer certain questions, which... cannot be staved off. For all men, all women...are the interrogators:...Can you help any soul?
    Plu 10.291 1 The soul/ Shall have society of its own rank/...
    Plu 10.311 6 ...[Plutarch's] extreme interest in every trait of character and his broad humanity, lead him constantly...to the study of the Beautiful and Good. Hence...his clear convictions of the high destiny of the soul.
    Plu 10.313 14 [Plutarch's] faith in the immortality of the soul is another measure of his deep humanity.
    Plu 10.313 23 [Plutarch] believes that the doctrine of the Divine Providence, and that of the immortality of the soul, rest on one and the same basis.
    Plu 10.314 2 To [Plutarch] the Epicureans are hateful, who held that the soul perishes when it is separated from the body.
    Plu 10.314 3 The soul, incapable of death, suffers in the same manner in the body, as birds that are kept in a cage.
    Plu 10.314 8 I can easily believe that an anxious soul may find in Plutarch' s chapter called Pleasure not attainable by Epicurus...a more sweet and reassuring argument on the immortality than in the Phaedo of Plato;...
    Plu 10.315 11 To erect a trophy in the soul against anger is that which none but a great and victorious puissance is able to achieve.
    Plu 10.316 18 ...nothing so resembles an animal as fire. It is moved and nourished by itself, and by its brightness, like the soul, discovers and makes everything apparent...
    LLNE 10.326 18 This perception [that the individual is the world] is a sword such as was never drawn before. It divides and detaches bone and marrow, soul and body...
    LLNE 10.357 25 ...[the Fourierists] were unconscious prophets of a true state of society;...one which always establishes itself for the sane soul...
    MMEm 10.411 16 [Mary Moody Emerson] speaks of her attempts in Malden, to wake up the soul amid the dreary scenes of monotonous Sabbaths...
    MMEm 10.428 3 Oh how weary in youth-more so scarcely now, not whenever I [Mary Moody Emerson] can breathe, as it seems, the atmosphere of the Omnipresence: then...honors, pleasures, labors, I always refuse, compared to this divine partaking of existence;-but how rare, how dependent on the organs through which the soul operates!
    Thor 10.478 7 A truth-speaker [Thoreau]...a physician to the wounds of any soul;...
    Thor 10.485 2 It seems...a kind of indignity to so noble a soul [as Thoreau] that he should depart out of Nature before yet he has been really shown to his peers for what he is.
    Thor 10.485 5 [Thoreau's] soul was made for the noblest society;...
    LS 11.17 7 It has seemed to me that the use of this ordinance [the Lord's Supper] tends to produce confusion in our views of the relation of the soul to God.
    LS 11.17 11 It is the old objection to the doctrine of the Trinity...that such confusion was introduced into the soul that an undivided worship was given nowhere.
    LS 11.18 13 I appeal, brethren, to your individual experience. In the moment when you make the least petition to God...do you not, in the very act, necessarily exclude all other beings from your thought? In that act, the soul stands alone with God...
    LS 11.22 18 ...that for which Jesus gave himself to be crucified;...was to... teach us to seek our well-being in the formation of the soul.
    HDC 11.50 24 The man of the woods might well draw on himself the compassion of the planters. His erect and perfect form...was found joined to a dwindled soul.
    LVB 11.92 25 The soul of man...does abhor this business [the relocation of the Cherokees].
    EWI 11.136 15 ...The reasonableness of the law is the soul of the law...
    EWI 11.136 21 One feels very sensibly in all this history [of emancipation in the West Indies] that a great heart and soul are behind there...
    War 11.160 16 The sublime question has startled one and another happy soul in different quarters of the globe,-Cannot love be, as well as hate?
    War 11.160 22 Cannot peace be, as well as war? This thought is...the rising of the general tide in the human soul...
    War 11.167 12 At a still higher stage, [man] comes into the region of holiness;...being attacked, he bears it and turns the other cheek, as one engaged, throughout his being, no longer to the service of an individual but to the common soul of all men.
    War 11.171 5 ...[peace] is to be accomplished by the spontaneous teaching, of the cultivated soul, in its secret experience and meditation,-that it is now time that it should pass out of the state of beast into the state of man;...
    FSLN 11.215 6 All else is gone; from those great eyes/ The soul has fled:/ When faith is lost, when honor dies,/ The man is dead!/ Whittier, Ichabod!
    FSLN 11.219 9 I say Mr. Webster, for though the [Fugitive Slave] Bill was not his, it is yet notorious that he was the life and soul of it...
    FSLN 11.235 15 ...that I understand to be the end for which a soul exists in this world,-to be himself the counterbalance of all falsehood and all wrong.
    FSLN 11.239 3 The delay of the Divine Justice-this was the meaning and soul of the Greek Tragedy; this the soul of their religion.
    FSLN 11.239 6 There has come, too, one to whom lurking warfare is dear, Retribution, with a soul full of wiles;...
    AsSu 11.251 13 ...I think I may borrow the language which Bishop Burnet applied to Sir Isaac Newton, and say that Charles Sumner has the whitest soul I ever knew.
    TPar 11.291 16 Fops, whether in hotels or churches, will...faintly hope for the salvation of [Theodore Parker's] soul;...
    TPar 11.291 19 ...[Theodore Parker's] great hospitable heart was the sanctuary to which every soul conscious of an earnest opinion came for sympathy...
    HCom 11.342 20 ...it is the gentle soul that makes the firm hero after all.
    Koss 11.398 20 ...[the sympathy of Americans] is a living soul contending with living souls.
    Wom 11.413 13 This is the victory of Griselda, her supreme humility. And it is when love has reached this height that all our pretty rhetoric begins to have meaning. When we see that, it adds to the soul a new soul...
    SHC 11.428 17 ...Prison thy soul from malice, bar out pride,/ Nor these pale flowers nor this still field deride:/...
    SHC 11.436 5 We shall bring hither [to Sleepy Hollow] the body of the dead, but how shall we catch the escaped soul?
    Shak1 11.446 2 England's genius filled all measure/ Of heart and soul, of strength and pleasure,/ Gave to mind its emperor/ And life was larger than before;/...
    FRO1 11.480 15 The soul of our late war...was, first, the desire to abolish slavery in this country...
    FRO2 11.487 25 I think wise men wish their religion to be all of this kind, teaching the agent to go alone...an adult, self-searching soul...
    FRO2 11.488 24 George Fox, the Quaker, said that, though he read of Christ and God, he knew them only from the like spirit in his own soul.
    FRO2 11.490 13 ...you cannot bring me...too penetrating an insight from the Jews. I hail every one with delight, as showing the riches of my brother, my fellow soul...
    FRep 11.509 1 There is a mystery in the soul of state/ Which hath an operation more divine/ Than breath or pen can give expression to./
    PLT 12.6 5 Whilst we converse with truths as thoughts, they exist also as plastic forces; as the soul of a man, the soul of a plant, the genius or constitution of any part of Nature, which makes it what it is.
    PLT 12.6 6 Whilst we converse with truths as thoughts, they exist also as plastic forces; as the soul of a man, the soul of a plant, the genius or constitution of any part of Nature, which makes it what it is.
    PLT 12.18 16 The perceptions of a soul, its wondrous progeny, are born by the conversation, the marriage of souls;...
    PLT 12.24 2 ...if one remembers...how much we are braced by the presence and actions of any Spartan soul, it does not need vigor of our own kind...
    PLT 12.28 3 An individual mind...is a fixation or momentary eddy in which certain services and powers are taken up and minister in petty niches and localities, and then, being released, return to the unbounded soul of the world.
    PLT 12.40 9 The philosopher knows only laws. That is, he considers a purely mental fact, part of the soul itself.
    PLT 12.42 10 To every soul that is created is its path, invisible to all but itself.
    PLT 12.42 11 Each soul...walking in its own path walks firmly;...
    PLT 12.43 11 My measure for all subjects of science as of events is their impression on the soul.
    PLT 12.60 11 So long as you are capable of advance, so long you have not abdicated the hope and future of a divine soul.
    PLT 12.61 2 ...the soul in which one [mind or heart] predominates is ever watchful and jealous when such immense claims are made for one as seem injurious to the other.
    II 12.80 9 It is the exhortation of Zoroaster, Let the depth, the immortal depth of your soul lead you.
    Mem 12.102 4 The experienced and cultivated man is lodged in a hall hung with pictures...to which every step in the march of the soul adds a more sublime perspective.
    CInt 12.126 24 ...a college...should aim at a reverent discipline and invitation of the soul...
    CInt 12.128 4 This, then, is the theory of Education, the happy meeting of the young soul...with the living teacher...
    CL 12.141 3 The air, said Anaximenes, is the soul, and the essence of life.
    CW 12.169 9 ...unto me not morn's magnificence/.../Hath such a soul, such divine influence,/ Such resurrection of the happy past,/ As is to me when I behold the morn/ Ope in such low, moist roadside, and beneath/ Peep the blue violets out of the black loam./
    Bost 12.202 15 The soul of a political party is by no means usually the officers and pets of the party...
    Bost 12.206 5 When men saw that these people [of Boston], besides their industry and thrift, had a heart and soul...they desired to come and live here.
    MAng1 12.216 16 Beauty...comprehending grandeur as a part, and reaching to goodness as its soul,-this to receive and this to impart, was [Michelangelo's] genius.
    MAng1 12.216 19 It is a happiness to find...a soul at intervals born to behold and create only Beauty.
    MAng1 12.233 14 ...let no man suppose...that this profound soul [Michelangelo] was taken or holden in the chains of superficial beauty.
    MAng1 12.233 21 [Michelangelo] called external grace the frail and weary weed, in which God dresses the soul which he has called into Time.
    MAng1 12.233 25 [Michelangelo] sought, through the eye, to reach the soul.
    MAng1 12.240 16 [Michelangelo's sonnets] are founded on the thought that beauty is the virtue of the body, as virtue is the beauty of the soul;...
    MAng1 12.241 19 So vehement was this desire [for death], that, [Michelangelo] says, my soul can no longer be appeased by the wonted seductions of painting and sculpture.
    MAng1 12.242 23 ...[Michelangelo's] was a soul so enamoured of grace that it could not stoop to meanness or depravity;...
    Milt1 12.257 8 Aubrey says [of Milton], This harmonical and ingenuous soul dwelt in a beautiful, well-proportioned body.
    Milt1 12.261 16 We may even apply to [Milton's] performance on the instrument of language, his own description of music:-Notes, with many a winding bout/ Of linked sweetness long drawn out,/ With wanton heed and giddy cunning,/ The melting voice through mazes running,/ Untwisting all the chains that tie/ The hidden soul of harmony./
    Milt1 12.274 15 [Milton] beholds [man] as he walked in Eden:-His fair large front and eye sublime declared/ Absolute rule; and hyacinthine locks/ Round from his parted forelock manly hung/ Clustering, but not beneath his shoulders broad./ And the soul of this divine creature is excellent as his form.
    Milt1 12.278 21 ...as many poems have been written upon unfit society... yet have not been proceeded against...so should [Milton's plea for freedom of divorce] receive that charity which an angelic soul...is entitled to.
    ACri 12.303 9 The art of writing is the highest of those permitted to man as drawing directly from the soul...
    ACri 12.303 11 ...the means or material [writing] uses are also of the soul.
    ACri 12.303 17 ...there is much in literature that draws us with a sublime charm-the superincumbent necessity by which each writer, an infirm, capricious, fragmentary soul, is made to utter his part in the chorus of humanity...
    MLit 12.313 7 [Subjectiveness] is the uprise of the soul, and not the decline.
    MLit 12.313 13 Accustomed always to behold the presence of the universe in every part, the soul will not condescend to look at any new part as a stranger...
    MLit 12.313 20 ...the single soul feels its right to be no longer confounded with numbers...
    MLit 12.315 19 The great lead us...in our age to metaphysical Nature...to moral abstractions, which are not less Nature than is a river, or a coal-mine,- nay, they are far more Nature,-but its essence and soul.
    MLit 12.316 2 Has [the writer] led thee to Nature because his own soul was too happy in beholding her power and love?
    MLit 12.321 9 [Wordsworth's The Excursion] was the human soul in these last ages striving for a just publication of itself.
    MLit 12.321 20 ...[Shakespeare and Milton] are poets by the free course which they allow to the informing soul...
    MLit 12.321 22 The soul is superior to its knowledge...
    MLit 12.324 16 ...a certain greatness encircles every fact [Goethe] treats; for to him it has a soul...
    MLit 12.329 25 [We can fancy Goethe saying to himself] To a profound soul is not austere truth the sweetest flattery??
    MLit 12.334 14 He who doubts whether this age or this country can yield any contribution to the literature of the world only betrays his own blindness to the necessities of the human soul.
    Pray 12.356 9 And being admonished to reflect upon myself, I entered into the very inward parts of my soul, by thy conduct;...
    Pray 12.356 12 I [Augustine] entered and discerned with the eye of my soul...even beyond my soul and mind itself, the Light unchangeable.
    Pray 12.356 13 I [Augustine] entered and discerned with the eye of my soul...even beyond my soul and mind itself, the Light unchangeable.
    EurB 12.365 23 The Pindar, the Shakspeare, the Dante, whilst they have the just and open soul, have also the eye to see the dimmest star that glimmers in the Milky Way...
    Let 12.400 9 ...in good earnest, and in all love, let [a man] be that which he is; then there is a soul in his deed.
    Let 12.401 17 Where a people honors genius in its artists, there breathes like an atmosphere a universal soul...
    Trag 12.412 18 ...in life, actions are few, opinions even few, prayers few; loves, hatreds, or any emissions of the soul.

Soul, n. (10)

    Nat 1.4 24 Philosophically considered, the universe is composed of Nature and the Soul.
    DSA 1.136 16 In how many churches...is man made sensible that he is an infinite Soul;...
    DSA 1.144 4 We have contrasted the Church with the Soul.
    MN 1.221 3 ...Let us worship the mighty and transcendent Soul.
    Hist 2.1 2 There is no great and no small/ To the Soul that maketh all:/...
    Int 2.332 12 ...now you must labor with your brains, and now you must forbear your activity and see what the great Soul showeth.
    NER 3.285 21 May [the heart] not quit other leadings, and listen to the Soul...
    Suc 7.307 22 There is no such critic and beggar as this terrible Soul.
    Prch 10.238 7 The open secret of the world is the art of subliming a private soul with inspirations from the great and public and divine Soul from which we live.
    II 12.66 25 I know, of course, all the grounds on which any man affirms the immortality of the Soul.

Soul, Physician of the [Cha (1)

    Plu 10.296 25 M. Leveque has given an exposition of [Plutarch's] moral philosophy, under the title of A Physician of the Soul...

soul-destroying, adj. (1)

    DSA 1.146 23 ...for all our soul-destroying slavery to habit, it is not to be doubted that all men have sublime thoughts;...

soule, n. (1)

    F 6.46 3 ...if the soule of proper kind/ Be so parfite as men find,/ That it wot what is to come/...

soul-guided, adj. (1)

    NR 3.233 25 ...it was easy [at Handel's Messiah] to observe what efforts nature was making, through so many hoarse, wooden and imperfect persons, to produce beautiful voices, fluid and soul-guided men and women.

soul-refreshing, adj. (1)

    PPo 8.255 24 If over this world of ours/ His wings my phoenix spread,/ How gracious falls on land and sea/ The soul-refreshing shade!/

Soul's Errand [Walter Rale (1)

    MoS 4.172 21 [The wise skeptic's] politics are those of the Soul's Errand of Sir Walter Raleigh;...

souls, n. (148)

    AmS 1.92 12 ...we should suppose...some foresight of souls that were to be...
    DSA 1.123 22 ...of their own volition, souls proceed into heaven, into hell.
    DSA 1.133 10 The injustice of the vulgar tone of preaching is not less flagrant to Jesus than to the souls which it profanes.
    DSA 1.147 3 We mark with light in the memory the few interviews we have had...with souls that made our souls wiser;...
    DSA 1.147 4 We mark with light in the memory the few interviews we have had...with souls that made our souls wiser;...
    DSA 1.148 27 The silence that accepts merit as the most natural thing in the world, is the highest applause. Such souls...are...the dictators of fortune.
    DSA 1.151 8 I look for the hour when that supreme Beauty which ravished the souls of those Eastern men...shall speak in the West also.
    MN 1.202 4 When we have spent our wonder in computing this wasteful hospitality with which boon Nature turns off...suns and planets hospitable to souls...one can hardly help asking...whether it be quite worth while to... glut the innocent space with so poor an article.
    MN 1.202 19 ...we feel not much otherwise if, instead of beholding foolish nations, we take...the eminent souls, and narrowly inspect their biography.
    MN 1.212 25 ...[the stars] would have such poets as Newton, Herschel and Laplace, that they may re-exist and re-appear in the finer world of rational souls...
    MN 1.214 13 Does the sunset landscape seem to you the place of Friendship,-those purple skies and lovely waters the amphitheatre dressed and garnished only for the exchange of thought and love of the purest souls? It is that.
    MN 1.216 26 From the poisonous tree, the world, say the Brahmins, two species of fruit are produced, sweet as the waters of life; Love or the society of beautiful souls, and Poetry...
    MR 1.233 13 ...all such ingenuous souls as feel within themselves the irrepressible strivings of a noble aim...find these ways of trade unfit for them...
    LT 1.265 21 ...souls of as lofty a port as any in Greek or Roman fame might appear;...
    Hist 2.17 7 By a deeper apprehension...the artist attains the power of awakening other souls to a given activity.
    Hist 2.17 8 ...common souls pay with what they do, nobler souls with that which they are.
    Hist 2.17 9 ...common souls pay with what they do, nobler souls with that which they are.
    Hist 2.27 4 ...when a truth that fired the soul of Pindar fires mine, time is no more. When I feel that we two meet in a perception, that our two souls are tinged with the same hue...why should I measure degrees of latitude...
    Hist 2.32 9 The transmigration of souls is no fable.
    SR 2.66 2 It must be that when God speaketh he...should scatter forth light, nature, time, souls, from the centre of the present thought;...
    Lov1 2.182 16 ...so is the one beautiful soul only the door through which [the lover] enters to the society of all true and pure souls.
    Lov1 2.182 23 ...beholding in many souls the traits of the divine beauty... the lover ascends to the highest beauty...
    Lov1 2.183 2 ...separating in each soul that which is divine from the taint which it has contracted in the world, the lover ascends...to the love and knowledge of the Divinity, by steps on this ladder of created souls.
    Fdsp 2.200 17 [A delicate organization] would be lost if it knew itself before any of the best souls were yet ripe enough to know and own it.
    Fdsp 2.207 23 In good company the individuals merge their egotism into a social soul exactly co-extensive with the several consciousnesses there present. ... Now this convention...destroys the high freedom of great conversation, which requires an absolute running of two souls into one.
    Fdsp 2.210 2 Why should we desecrate noble and beautiful souls by intruding on them?
    Fdsp 2.211 27 Who set you to cast about what you should say to the select souls...
    Fdsp 2.213 7 ...a sublime hope cheers ever the faithful heart, that elsewhere...souls are now acting...which can love us and which we can love.
    Prd1 2.231 24 Appetite shows to the finer souls as a disease...
    Prd1 2.239 4 What low, poor, paltry, hypocritical people an argument on religion will make of the pure and chosen souls!
    Hsm1 2.250 20 ...[heroism] seems not to know that other souls are of one texture with it;...
    Hsm1 2.255 22 ...these rare [heroic] souls set opinion, success, and life at so cheap a rate that they will not soothe their enemies by petitions...
    Hsm1 2.259 11 ...why should a woman...think, because...the cloistered souls who have had genius and cultivation do not satisfy the imagination and the serene Themis, none can,--certainly not she?
    OS 2.276 24 ...these other souls, these separated selves, draw me as nothing else can.
    OS 2.291 13 Souls such as these treat you as gods would...
    OS 2.292 7 Souls like these make us feel that sincerity is more excellent than flattery.
    Int 2.323 4 Go, speed the stars of Thought/ On to their shining goals;--/ The sower scatters broad his seed;/ The wheat thou strew'st be souls./
    Int 2.344 13 One soul is a counterpoise of all souls...
    Art1 2.359 3 The best of beauty is...a wonderful expression through stone, or canvas, or musical sound, of the deepest and simplest attributes of our nature, and therefore most intelligible at last to those souls which have these attributes.
    Pt1 3.3 6 ...if you inquire whether [the umpires of taste] are beautiful souls... you learn that they are selfish and sensual.
    Pt1 3.24 2 The songs...are pursued by clamorous flights of censures, which swarm in far greater numbers and threaten to devour them; but these last are not winged. At the end of a very short leap they fall plump down and rot, having received from the souls out of which they came no beautiful wings.
    Pt1 3.31 3 ...Socrates...tells us that the soul is cured of its maladies by certain incantations, and that these incantations are beautiful reasons, from which temperance is generated in souls;...
    Exp 3.48 20 ...souls never touch their objects.
    Chr1 3.97 10 The feeble souls are drawn to the south or negative pole.
    Mrs1 3.141 15 The favorites of society, and what it calls whole souls, are able men...
    NER 3.274 4 We crave a sense of reality, though it comes in strokes of pain. I explain so...those excesses and errors into which souls of great vigor, but not equal insight, often fall.
    UGM 4.23 20 ...I find [a master] greater when he can abolish himself and all heroes, by letting in this element of reason...into our thoughts, destroying individualism; the power so great that the potentate is nothing. Then he is a...pontiff who preaches the equality of souls...
    UGM 4.33 17 ...the smallest acquisition of truth or of energy, in any quarter, is so much good to the commonwealth of souls.
    PPh 4.54 12 The reason why we do not at once believe in admirable souls is because they are not in our experience.
    PPh 4.58 19 [Plato] saw the souls in pain...
    PNR 4.84 20 ...the fine which the good, refusing to govern, ought to pay [affirms Plato], is, to be governed by a worse man; that his guards shall not handle gold and silver, but shall be instructed that there is gold and silver in their souls...
    PNR 4.87 11 [Plato's] thoughts, in sparkles of light, had appeared often to pious and to poetic souls;...
    PNR 4.88 1 ...a very well-marked class of souls...are said to Platonize.
    SwM 4.127 9 [Swedenborg's Conjugal Love] came near to be the Hymn of Love, which Plato attempted in the Banquet; the love...which, as rightly celebrated, in its genesis, fruition and effect, might well entrance the souls...
    SwM 4.128 5 ...of progressive souls, all loves and friendships are [to Swedenborg] momentary.
    SwM 4.129 1 Heaven is not the pairing of two, but the communion of all souls.
    SwM 4.131 14 ...a bird does not more readily weave its nest...than this seer of the souls [Swedenborg] substructs a new hell and pit...round every new crew of offenders.
    SwM 4.131 20 [Swedenborg] was let down through a column that...was formed of angelic spirits, that he might descend safely amongst the unhappy, and witness the vastation of souls...
    SwM 4.135 5 The genius of Swedenborg, largest of all modern souls in this [Hebraic] department of thought, wasted itself in the endeavor to reanimate and conserve what had already arrived at its natural term...
    SwM 4.137 4 [Swedenborg] carries his controversial memory with him in his visits to the souls.
    SwM 4.141 20 [Swedenborg's] spiritual world bears the same relation to the generosities and joys of truth of which human souls have already made us cognizant, as a man's bad dreams bear to his ideal life.
    SwM 4.142 12 Strange, scholastic, didactic, passionless, bloodless man [Swedenborg], who denotes classes of souls as a botanist disposes of a carex...
    SwM 4.142 18 [Swedenborg] goes up and down the world of men...and with nonchalance and the air of a referee, distributes souls.
    MoS 4.181 21 Charitable souls come with their projects and ask [the spiritualist's] co-operation.
    MoS 4.182 20 I believe, [the spiritualist] says, in the moral design of the universe; it exists hospitably for the weal of souls;...
    MoS 4.183 25 [The man of thought] can behold with serenity the yawning gulf between the ambition of man and his power of performance...which makes the tragedy of all souls.
    MoS 4.184 10 [The divine Providence] has shown the heaven and earth to every child and filled him with a desire for the whole;...a cry of famine, as of devils for souls.
    ShP 4.216 13 If [Shakespeare] should appear in any company of human souls, who would not march in his troop?
    ET4 5.44 21 The British Empire is reckoned to contain (in 1848) 222,000, 000 souls...
    ET4 5.45 10 The British Empire is reckoned to contain (in 1848)...perhaps a fifth of the population of the globe... Perhaps forty of these millions are of British stock. Add the United States of America...and you have a population of English descent and language of 60,000,000, and governing a population of 245,000,000 souls.
    ET8 5.128 13 Was it...a stroke of humor in the serious Swedenborg...that made him shut up the English souls in a heaven by themselves?
    ET10 5.153 8 A coarse logic rules throughout all English souls;...
    ET14 5.260 14 ...the two complexions, or two styles of mind [in England]... are ever in counterpoise, interacting mutually...these two nations, of genius and of animal force, though the first consist of only a dozen souls and the second of twenty millions, forever by their discord and their accord yield the power of the English State.
    F 6.27 19 [Thought] is poured into the souls of all men...
    F 6.27 24 ...when souls reach a certain clearness of perception they accept a knowledge and motive above selfishness.
    F 6.27 27 A breath of will blows eternally through the universe of souls in the direction of the Right and Necessary.
    F 6.48 7 Let us build altars to the Blessed Unity which holds nature and souls in perfect solution...
    Ctr 6.156 3 He who should inspire and lead his race must be defended from travelling with the souls of other men...
    Bhr 6.187 9 ...[Aspasia] adds good-humoredly, the movers and masters of our souls have surely a right to throw out their limbs as carelessly as they please...
    Wsp 6.205 6 In all ages, souls out of time...are born...
    Wsp 6.214 6 Souls are not saved in bundles.
    Wsp 6.218 6 ...the redeemer and instructor of souls, as it is their primal essence, is love.
    CbW 6.247 1 'T is the fine souls who serve us...
    CbW 6.263 14 I figure [sickness] as a...phantom...afflicting other souls with meanness and mopings...
    CbW 6.273 15 There is a pudency about friendship as about love, and though fine souls never lose sight of it, yet they do not name it.
    SS 7.5 9 Do you think, [my friend] said, I am in such great terror of being shot, I, who am only waiting to...put diameters of the solar system and sidereal orbits between me and all souls...
    WD 7.172 22 The Hindoos represent Maia, the illusory energy of Vishnu, as one of his principal attributes. As if, in this gale of warring elements which life is, it was necessary to bind souls to human life as mariners in a tempest lash themselves to the mast and bulwarks of a ship...
    Suc 7.286 15 We have seen a woman who by pure song could melt the souls of whole populations.
    PI 8.14 8 Saint John gave us the Christian figure of souls washed in the blood of Christ.
    PI 8.24 15 [The intellect] knows that these transfigured results are not the brute experiences, just as souls in heaven are not the red bodies they once animated.
    PI 8.37 7 There is no subject that does not belong to [the poet],--politics, economy, manufactures and stock-brokerage, as much as sunsets and souls;...
    PI 8.42 4 Better men saw heavens and earths; saw noble instruments of noble souls.
    PI 8.56 23 ...[Newton] only shows...that the poetry which satisfies more youthful souls is not such to a mind like his...
    PI 8.67 3 A good poem...goes about the world offering itself to reasonable men, who...carry it to their reasonable neighbors. Thus it draws to it the wise and generous souls...
    QO 8.195 24 Hallam...is...able to appreciate poetry unless it becomes deep, being always blind and deaf to imaginative and analogy-loving souls...
    QO 8.198 26 Swedenborg threw a formidable theory into the world, that every soul existed in a society of souls...
    PC 8.216 26 ...in [Michelangelo's] own days...you would need to hunt him in a conventicle with the Methodists of the era...superior souls...
    PC 8.220 14 How much more are...the wise and good souls...than the foolish and sensual millions around them!
    PC 8.225 20 The highest flight to which the muse of Horace ascended was in that triplet of lines in which he described the souls which can calmly confront the sublimity of Nature...
    Insp 8.275 6 There are thoughts beyond the reaches of our souls;...
    Insp 8.284 6 Plutarch affirms that souls are naturally endowed with the faculty of prediction...
    Imtl 8.327 9 ...Swedenborg...explained his opinion of the history and destiny of souls in a narrative form...
    Imtl 8.346 2 I mean that I am a better believer, and all serious souls are better believers in the immortality, than we can give grounds for.
    Imtl 8.346 23 ...only by rare integrity...can the vision of [immortality] be clear to a use the most sublime. And hence the fact that in the minds of men the testimony of a few inspired souls has had such weight and penetration.
    Dem1 10.7 2 It was in this glance [at an animal] that Ovid got the hint of his metamorphoses; Calidasa of his transmigration of souls.
    Chr2 10.98 6 When I think of Reason, of Truth, of Virtue, I cannot conceive them as lodged in your soul and lodged in my soul, but that you and I and all souls are lodged in that;...
    Chr2 10.98 13 How can [a man] exist to weave relations of joy and virtue with other souls...
    Chr2 10.100 18 It happens now and then, in the ages, that a soul is born... which comes down into Nature as if only for the benefit of souls...
    Chr2 10.100 20 It happens now and then, in the ages, that a soul is born which offers no impediment to the Divine Spirit...and all its thoughts are perceptions of things as they are, without any infirmity of earth. Such souls are as the apparition of gods among men...
    Chr2 10.102 23 Such [self-reliant] souls do not come in troops...
    Edc1 10.132 6 ...in history an idea always overhangs, like the moon, and rules the tide which rises simultaneously in all the souls of a generation.
    Edc1 10.142 16 Heaven often protects valuable souls charged with great secrets, great ideas, by long shutting them up with their own thoughts.
    SovE 10.185 8 ...presently...a new perception opens, and [the man down in Nature] is made a citizen of the world of souls...
    SovE 10.212 23 ...innocence is a wonderful electuary for purging the eyes to search the nature of those souls that pass before it.
    Prch 10.215 4 Ascending through just degrees/ To a consummate holiness,/ As angel blind to trespass done,/ And bleaching all souls like the sun./
    MoL 10.257 7 All of us have shared the new enthusiasm of country and of liberty which swept like a whirlwind through all souls at the outbreak of war...
    Schr 10.277 13 I like to see a man...who wins all souls to his way of thinking.
    Schr 10.285 22 ...what [Genius] says and does is...on the great highways of Nature...which all souls must travel.
    Schr 10.286 24 Dissuade all you can from the lists [of scholarship]. Sift the wheat, frighten away the lighter souls.
    Plu 10.307 21 [Plutarch] thinks that souls are naturally endowed with the faculty of prediction;...
    Plu 10.312 16 [Seneca] called pity, that fault of narrow souls.
    Plu 10.313 20 [Plutarch] reminds his friends that the Delphic oracles have given several answers the same in substance as that formerly given to Corax the Naxian: It sounds profane impiety/ To teach that human souls e'er die./
    Plu 10.314 6 [Plutarch] believes that the souls of infants pass immediately into a better and more divine state.
    Plu 10.317 11 ...it was [Plutarch's] severe fate to flourish in those days of ignorance, which, 't is a favorable opinion to hope that the Almighty will sometime wink at; that our souls may be with these philosophers together in the same state of bliss.
    LLNE 10.346 12 These [19th Century] reformers were a new class. Instead of the fiery souls of the Puritans...these were gentle souls...
    LLNE 10.346 14 These [19th Century] reformers were a new class. Instead of the fiery souls of the Puritans...these were gentle souls...
    LLNE 10.360 14 I think the numbers of this mixed community [at Brook Farm] soon reached eighty or ninety souls.
    MMEm 10.425 27 How grand [the earth's] preparation for souls,-souls who were to feel the Divinity, before Science had dissected the emotions...
    HDC 11.78 6 [Concord's] little population of 1300 souls behaved like a party to the contest [the American Revolution].
    HDC 11.82 14 [Concord's] population, in the census of 1830, was 2020 souls.
    LVB 11.91 7 ...out of eighteen thousand souls composing the [Cherokee] nation, fifteen thousand six hundred and sixty-eight have protested against the so-called treaty.
    EWI 11.123 18 The customer is the immediate jewel of our souls.
    War 11.160 24 Cannot peace be, as well as war? This thought is...the rising of the general tide in the human soul,-and rising highest, and first made visible, in the most simple and pure souls...
    War 11.166 5 ...the least change in the man will change his circumstances;...if, for example, he could be inspired with a tender kindness to the souls of men...
    FSLC 11.185 9 Because of this preoccupied mind, the whole wealth and power of Boston-two hundred thousand souls, and one hundred and eighty millions of money-are thrown into the scale of crime...
    TPar 11.292 3 ...every sound heart loves a responsible person, one who... says one thing...always...because he sees that, whether he speak or refrain from speech, this is said over him; and history, nature and all souls testify to the same.
    Koss 11.398 21 ...[the sympathy of Americans] is a living soul contending with living souls.
    FRO2 11.490 23 I am glad to believe society contains a class of humble souls who enjoy the luxury of a religion that does not degrade;...
    PLT 12.18 18 The perceptions of a soul, its wondrous progeny, are born by the conversation, the marriage of souls;...
    PLT 12.40 15 In all healthy souls is an inborn necessity of presupposing for each particular fact a prior Being which compels it to a harmony with all other natures.
    PLT 12.42 13 Each soul...walking in its own path walks firmly; and to the astonishment of all other souls, who see not its path, it goes as softly and playfully on its way as if...it were a wide prairie.
    PLT 12.61 13 ...the clear-headed thinker complains of souls led hither and thither by affections...
    CL 12.141 7 Plutarch thought [the air] contained the knowledge of the future. If it be true that souls are naturally endowed with the faculty of prediction, and that the chief cause that excites that faculty is a certain temperature of the air and winds, etc.
    CL 12.165 20 If we believed that Nature was...some rock on which souls wandering in the Universe were shipwrecked, we should think all exploration of it frivolous waste of time.
    Bost 12.208 24 What public souls have lived here [in Boston]...
    MLit 12.309 10 Our souls are not self-fed...
    Pray 12.350 5 ...with true prayers,/ That shall be up at heaven and enter there/ Ere sunrise; prayers from preserved souls,/ From fasting maids, whose minds are delicate/ To nothing temporal./ Shakspeare..
    Pray 12.351 8 Among the remains of Euripides we have this prayer: Thou God of all! infuse light into the souls of men...

soul's, n. (12)

    DSA 1.134 22 ...somehow [the seer] publishes [his dream] with solemn joy...sometimes in towers and aisles of granite, his soul's worship is builded;...
    Comp 2.122 26 ...all the good of nature is the soul's...
    SL 2.132 16 These [problems of original sin, origin of evil, predestination and the like] are the soul's mumps and measles and whooping-coughs...
    SL 2.145 4 The soul's emphasis is always right.
    OS 2.273 17 ...always the soul's scale is one, the scale of the senses and the understanding is another.
    OS 2.274 17 The soul's advances are not made by gradation...
    OS 2.280 21 ...the soul's communication of truth is the highest event in nature...
    OS 2.282 22 [Revelations] are solutions of the soul's own questions.
    Wth 6.125 22 The merchant's economy is a coarse symbol of the soul's economy.
    Bty 6.282 12 However rash and however falsified by pretenders and traders in [astrology], the hint was true and divine, the soul's avowal of its large relations...
    PPo 8.250 15 Bring wine; for in the audience-hall of the soul's independence, what is sentinel or Sultan?...
    Chr2 10.115 13 ...[Jesus's disciples] hamper us with limitations of person and text. Every exaggeration of these is a violation of the soul's right...

Souls, Of Bodies and of [K (1)

    ET5 5.79 12 Sir Kenelm wrote a book, Of Bodies and of Souls, in which he propounds, that syllogisms do breed, or rather are all the variety of man's life.

Soult, Nicolas Jean de Dei (1)

    Cour 7.271 23 ...Wellington and Soult...become aware that they are nearer and more alike than any other two...

sound, adj. (56)

    Nat 1.4 17 ...to a sound judgment, the most abstract truth is the most practical.
    AmS 1.90 10 The soul active sees absolute truth and utters truth, or creates. In this action it is...the sound estate of every man.
    Con 1.317 8 ...the thoughts of some beggarly Homer...sufficed to build what you call society on the spot and in the instant when the sound mind in a sound body appeared.
    Con 1.317 9 ...the thoughts of some beggarly Homer...sufficed to build what you call society on the spot and in the instant when the sound mind in a sound body appeared.
    SR 2.53 8 I wish [my life] to be sound and sweet...
    Comp 2.111 5 The vulgar proverb, I will get it from his purse or get it from his skin, is sound philosophy.
    Prd1 2.231 12 Health or sound organization should be universal.
    Hsm1 2.256 13 In Beaumont and Fletcher's Sea Voyage, Juletta tells the stout captain and his company,--Jul. Why, slaves, 't is in our power to hang ye./ Master. Very likely,/ 'T is in our powers, then, to be hanged, and scorn ye./ These replies are sound and whole.
    Exp 3.51 18 I knew a witty physician who...used to affirm that if there was a disease in the liver, the man became a Calvinist, and if that organ was sound, he became a Unitarian.
    Exp 3.61 19 The fine young people despise life, but in me...to whom a day is a sound and solid good, it is a great excess of politeness to look scornful and cry for company.
    Exp 3.65 26 Human life is made up of the two elements, power and form, and the proportion must be invariably kept if we would have it sweet and sound.
    NR 3.244 9 ...men feign themselves dead...and there they stand looking out of the window, sound and well, in some new and strange disguise.
    UGM 4.7 13 A sound apple produces seed...
    PPh 4.45 17 How Plato came thus to be Europe, and philosophy, and almost literature, is the problem for us to solve. This could not have happened without a sound, sincere and catholic man...
    PPh 4.76 25 Here is the world, sound as a nut...
    PNR 4.84 10 Plato affirms...that the order or proceeding of nature was from the mind to the body, and, though a sound body cannot restore an unsound mind, yet a good soul can, by its virtue, render the body the best possible.
    ET4 5.45 24 [The English] have sound bodies...
    ET8 5.130 16 [The English] are full of coarse strength, rude exercise, butcher's meat and sound sleep;...
    ET8 5.130 21 [The English] doubt a man's sound judgment if he does not eat with appetite...
    ET8 5.142 10 ...the calm, sound and most British Briton shrinks from public life as charlatanism...
    F 6.23 18 [Man's] sound relation to these facts is to use and command...
    Bhr 6.190 19 Another opposes [a man who is already strong] with sound argument, but the argument is scouted until by and by it gets into the mind of some weighty person; then it begins to tell on the community.
    Wsp 6.229 13 To a sound constitution the defect of another is at once manifest;...
    CbW 6.260 27 ...good hearts and sound minds are of no condition...
    Ill 6.323 2 I prefer to be owned as sound and solvent...
    SS 7.16 1 ...a sound mind will derive its principles from insight...
    Elo1 7.88 23 [Lord Mansfield's sentences] come from and they go to the sound human understanding;...
    DL 7.126 26 Every face, every figure, suggests its own right and sound estate.
    PI 8.27 3 ...poetry is...the expression of a sound mind speaking after the ideal...
    PC 8.212 22 The oldest empires...now that we have true measures of duration [in Geology], show like creations of yesterday. It is yet quite too early to draw sound conclusions.
    PC 8.234 5 ...when I...consider the sound material of which the cultivated class here is made up...I cannot distrust this great knighthood of virtue...
    PPo 8.247 4 That hardihood and self-equality of every sound nature...are in Hafiz...
    Insp 8.280 9 Sleep benefits mainly by the sound health it produces;...
    Imtl 8.329 16 I think all sound minds rest on a certain preliminary conviction, namely, that if it be best that conscious personal life shall continue, it will continue; if not best, then it will not;...
    Imtl 8.340 14 [Truth] is self-sufficing, sound, entire.
    Dem1 10.14 8 The poor ship-master discovered a sound theology, when in the storm at sea he made his prayer to Neptune, O God, thou mayst save me if thou wilt, and if thou wilt thou mayst destroy me; but, however, I will hold my rudder true.
    Aris 10.43 1 ...a sound body must be at the root of any excellence in manners and actions;...
    Edc1 10.135 27 ...if [the moral nature] monopolize the man he is not yet sound...
    Prch 10.225 10 [The moral sentiment] is that, which being in all sound natures...we know to be implanted by the Creator of Men.
    LLNE 10.352 21 There is an order in which in a sound mind the faculties always appear...
    Thor 10.462 15 When I was planting forest trees, and had procured half a peck of acorns, [Thoreau] said that only a small portion of them would be sound...
    Thor 10.462 17 When I was planting forest trees, and had procured half a peck of acorns, [Thoreau]...proceeded to...select the sound ones.
    Carl 10.493 15 If a scholar goes into a camp of lumbermen or a gang of riggers, those men will quickly detect any fault of character. Nothing will pass with them but what is real and sound.
    EWI 11.136 11 Granville Sharpe filled the ear of the judges with the sound principles that had from time to time been affirmed by the legal authorities...
    War 11.153 16 Plutarch...considers the invasion and conquest of the East by Alexander as one of the most bright and pleasing pages in history; and it must be owned he gives sound reason for his opinion.
    War 11.166 27 At a certain stage of his progress, the man fights, if he be of sound body and mind.
    TPar 11.291 23 ...every sound heart loves a responsible person...
    ALin 11.332 8 ...this man [Lincoln] was sound to the core...
    Koss 11.398 26 As you [Kossuth] see, the love you win [from Americans] is worth something; for it has been argued through;...it has proved sound and whole;...
    Wom 11.421 18 For their want of intimate knowledge of affairs, I do not think this ought to disqualify [women] from voting at any town-meeting which I ever attended. I could heartily wish the objection were sound.
    Shak1 11.451 18 How good and sound and inviolable [Shakespeare's] innocency...
    FRO2 11.489 24 ...in sound frame of mind, we read or remember the religious sayings and oracles of other men...only for friendship...
    CPL 11.505 22 One curious witness [to the value of reading] was that of a Shaker who, when showing me the houses of the Brotherhood, and a very modest bookshelf, said there was Milton's Paradise Lost, and some other books in the house, and added that he knew where they were, but he took up a sound cross in not reading them.
    Mem 12.99 5 ...there is a sound sleep of children and of savages...which never visits the eyes of civil gentlemen...
    CInt 12.124 6 Here [in a good teacher] is sympathy; here is an order that corresponds to that in [a young man's] own mind, and in all sound minds...
    Milt1 12.265 8 ...[Milton] replies to the...calumny respecting his morning haunts. Those morning haunts are where they should be, at home;...up and stirring...with...labors preserving the body's health and hardiness, to render...obedience to the mind, to the cause of religion and our country's liberty, when it shall require firm hearts in sound bodies to stand and cover their stations.

sound, adv. (1)

    CL 12.163 2 ...the very time at which [my naturalist] used [the farmers'] land and water (for his boat glided like a trout everywhere unseen) was in hours when they were sound asleep.

Sound, Lancaster, n. (1)

    Pow 6.69 17 ...when [the young English] have no wars to breathe their riotous valors in, they seek for travels as dangerous as war...yachting among the icebergs of Lancaster Sound;...

sound, n. (46)

    MN 1.205 23 ...O rich and various Man! thou palace of sight and sound......
    MN 1.209 25 If [a man] listen with insatiable ears...the sound swells to a ravishing music...
    Hist 2.37 17 Does not...the ear of Handel predict the witchcraft of harmonic sound?
    Comp 2.96 23 Polarity, or action and reaction, we meet in every part of nature;...in the undulations of fluids and of sound;...
    Prd1 2.221 22 ...it would be hardly honest in me not to balance these fine lyric words of Love and Friendship with words of coarser sound...
    Prd1 2.228 25 A gay and pleasant sound is the whetting of the scythe in the mornings of June...
    Prd1 2.229 1 ...what is more lonesome and sad than the sound of a whetstone or mower's rifle when it is too late in the season to make hay?
    Hsm1 2.247 24 We have a great many flutes and flageolets, but not often the sound of any fife.
    OS 2.294 1 ...every sound that is spoken over the round world, which thou oughtest to hear, will vibrate on thine ear!
    Art1 2.359 1 The best of beauty is...a wonderful expression through stone, or canvas, or musical sound, of the deepest and simplest attributes of our nature...
    Art1 2.366 26 As soon as beauty is sought...for pleasure, it degrades the seeker. High beauty is no longer attainable by him...in sound, or in lyrical construction;...
    Nat2 3.185 26 The child...commanded by every sight and sound...lies down at night overpowered by the fatigue which this day of continual pretty madness has incurred.
    NR 3.247 23 ...if there could be any regulation...that a man should never leave his point of view without sound of trumpet.
    PPh 4.74 27 Crito bribed the jailer; but Socrates would not go out by treachery. Whatever inconvenience ensue, nothing is to be preferred before justice. These things I hear like pipes and drums, whose sound makes me deaf to every thing you say.
    SwM 4.126 25 [To Swedenborg] The angels, from the sound of the voice, know a man's love;...
    SwM 4.126 26 [To Swedenborg] The angels, from the sound of the voice, know a man's love; from the articulation of the sound, his wisdom;...
    SwM 4.131 8 There is an air of infinite grief and the sound of wailing all over and through [Swedenborg's] lurid universe.
    MoS 4.165 27 ...I, [says Montaigne,]...am afraid that Plato, in his purest virtue, if he had listened and laid his ear close to himself, would have heard some jarring sound of human mixture;...
    MoS 4.176 1 ...a book...or only the sound of a name, shoots a spark through the nerves, and we suddenly believe in will...
    Art2 7.43 25 The pulsation of a stretched string or wire gives the ear the pleasure of sweet sound...
    DL 7.104 17 With an acoustic apparatus of whistle and rattle [the child] explores the laws of sound.
    Clbs 7.226 17 ...the sound of some bells makes us think of the bell merely...
    Suc 7.307 5 Every sound ends in music.
    PI 8.9 2 The laws of light and of heat translate each other;--so do the laws of sound and of color;...
    PI 8.55 14 Welcome, folded arms and fixed eyes,/ A sigh that piercing mortifies,/ A look that 's fastened to the ground,/ A tongue chained up without a sound;/...
    PI 8.57 10 [The early bard's] advantage is that his words are things, each the lucky sound which described the fact...
    PI 8.68 10 What we once admired as poetry has long since come to be a sound of tin pans;...
    QO 8.199 20 ...does it not look...as if we stood...in a circle of intelligences that reached...back to the first negro, who...gave a shriller sound or name for the thing he saw and dealt with?
    Aris 10.38 8 From the most accumulated culture we are always running back to the sound of any drum and fife.
    Chr2 10.94 17 He that speaks the truth executes no private function of an individual will, but the world utters a sound by his lips.
    Chr2 10.121 12 ...the electricity goes round the world without a spark or a sound, until there is a break in the wire or the water chain.
    Edc1 10.133 24 It is ominous...that this word Education has so cold, so hopeless a sound.
    Prch 10.222 1 To see men pursuing in faith their varied action...what are they to...the man who hears only the sound of his own footsteps in God's resplendent creation?
    Schr 10.265 10 ...[poets] sit white over their stoves, and talk themselves hoarse over the...the effeminacy of book-makers. But...at the sound of some subtle word that falls from the lips of an imaginative person...this grave conclusion is blown out of memory;...
    MMEm 10.407 11 ...in the country, we converse so much more with ourselves, that we are almost led to forget everybody else. The very sound of your bells and the rattling of the carriages have a tendency to divert selfishness.
    Thor 10.481 7 ...[Thoreau] could not bear to hear the sound of his own steps...
    Thor 10.482 22 Sugar is not so sweet to the palate as sound to the healthy ear.
    EWI 11.124 11 If any mention was made of homicide, madness, adultery, and intolerable tortures [of negroes], we would let the church-bells ring louder, the church-organ swell its peal and drown the hideous sound.
    SMC 11.376 5 A duty so severe has been discharged [in the Civil War], and with such immense results of good...that, though the cannon volleys have a sound of funeral echoes, [men] can yet hear through them the benedictions of their country and mankind.
    Koss 11.398 2 The mighty tread/ Brings from the dust the sound of liberty./
    CPL 11.501 13 I know the word literature has in many ears a hollow sound.
    Milt1 12.260 11 At nineteen years...[Milton] addresses his native language, saying to it that it would be his choice to leave trifles for a grave argument,-Such as may make thee search thy coffers round,/ Before thou clothe my fancy in fit sound;/...
    Milt1 12.261 7 ...[Milton]...searched the kennel and jakes as well as the palaces of sound for the harsh discords of his polemic wrath.
    Milt1 12.264 25 In like spirit, [Milton] replies to the suspicious calumny respecting his morning haunts. Those morning haunts are where they should be, at home;...up and stirring, in winter, often ere the sound of any bell awake men to labor or devotion;...
    PPr 12.391 26 Whatever thought or motto has once appeared to [Carlyle] fraught with meaning...is sure to return...in gigantic reverberation, as if the hills, the horizon, and the next ages returned the sound.
    Trag 12.405 18 Already our thoughts and words have an alien sound.

Sound, The, n. (1)

    ET4 5.62 2 It was a tardy recoil of these invasions [of Northmen], when, in 1801, the British government sent Nelson to bombard the Danish forts in the Sound...

sound, v. (9)

    SR 2.73 23 Does this sound harsh to-day?
    OS 2.269 23 Every man's words who speaks from that [inner] life must sound vain to those who do not dwell in the same thought on their own part.
    DL 7.104 6 ...when [the nestler] fasts, the little Pharisee fails not to sound his trumpet before him.
    PI 8.9 22 The privates of man's heart/ They speken and sound in his ear/ As tho' they loud winds were;/...
    Insp 8.278 6 The depth of the notes which we accidentally sound on the strings of Nature is out of all proportion to our taught and ascertained faculty...
    EPro 11.314 4 To-day unbind the captive,/ So only are ye unbound;/ Lift up a people from the dust,/ Trump of their rescue, sound!/
    ALin 11.333 3 [Lincoln's good humor] enabled him...to mask his own purpose and sound his companion;...
    SHC 11.428 14 Learn from the loved one's rest serenity;/ To-morrow that soft bell for thee shall sound,/ And thou repose beneath the whispering tree,/ One tribute more to this submissive ground;-/...
    ACri 12.291 11 Resolute blotting rids you of all those phrases that sound like something and mean nothing...

Sound, Wellington, n. (1)

    ET4 5.68 17 ...Sir Edward Parry said of Sir John Franklin, that if he found Wellington Sound open, he explored it;...

sounded, v. (10)

    SwM 4.141 10 Melodious poets shall be hoarse as street ballads when once the penetrating key-note of nature and spirit is sounded...
    GoW 4.284 6 There are nobler strains in poetry than any [Goethe] has sounded.
    Elo1 7.99 17 In its right exercise, [eloquence] is an elastic, unexhausted power,--who has sounded, who has estimated it?...
    Boks 7.210 21 ...Earl Spencer exclaimed, Two thousand two hundred and fifty pounds! An electric shock went through the assembly. And ten, quietly added the Marquis [of Blandford]. There ended the strife [for the Valdarfer Boccaccio]. Ere Evans let the hammer fall, he paused; the ivory instrument swept the air; the spectators stood dumb, when the hammer fell. The stroke of its fall sounded on the farthest shores of Italy.
    Elo2 8.111 12 ...all can see and understand the means by which a battle is gained...they see...the character and advantages of the ground, so that the result is often predicted by the observer with great certainty before the charge is sounded.
    LLNE 10.338 6 ...while society remained in doubt between the indignation of the old school and the audacity of the new, a higher note sounded.
    HDC 11.40 2 ...the wailing of the tempest in the woods sounded kindlier in [the settlers of Concord's] ear than the smooth voice of the prelates, at home, in England.
    Koss 11.397 24 ...[the people of Concord] think that the graves of our heroes around us throb to-day to a footstep that sounded like their own...
    PLT 12.11 13 Let me have your attention to this dangerous subject [the laws and powers of the Intellect], which we will cautiously approach on different sides of this dim and perilous lake, so attractive, so delusive. We have had so many guides and so many failures. And now the world is still uncertain whether the pool has been sounded or not.
    Bost 12.190 22 In our beautiful [Boston] bay...with its waters bounded and marked by lighthouses, buoys and sea-marks; every foot sounded and charted;...a good boatman can easily find his way for the first time to the State House...

sounder, adj. (1)

    ET7 5.117 15 'T is said that the wolf, who makes a cache of his prey and brings his fellows with him to the spot, if, on digging, it is not found, is instantly and unresistingly torn in pieces. English veracity seems to result on a sounder animal structure...

soundest, adj. (1)

    PPh 4.57 20 [Plato's] patrician polish, his intrinsic elegance...adorn the soundest health and strength of frame.

sounding, adj. (3)

    ET10 5.160 21 ...a better measure than these sounding figures is the estimate that there is wealth enough in England to support the entire population in idleness for one year.
    Insp 8.296 11 ...now one, now another landscape, form, color, or companion, or perhaps one kind of sounding word or syllable, strikes the electric chain with which we are darkly bound...
    HDC 11.72 17 On 13th March [1775]...[William Emerson] preached to a very full assembly, taking for his text, 2 Chronicles xiii.12, And, behold, God himself is with us for our captain, and his priests with sounding trumpets to cry alarm against you.

sounding, n. (1)

    CL 12.150 20 In March, the thaw, and the sounding of the south wind...

sounding, v. (2)

    ET5 5.86 14 Before the bombardment of the Danish forts in the Baltic, Nelson spent day after day, himself, in the boats, on the exhausting service of sounding the channel.
    Cour 7.268 19 The beautiful voice at church goes sounding on, and covers up in its volume...all the defects of the choir.

soundings, n. (3)

    ET2 5.32 12 Reckoned from the time when we left soundings, our speed was such that the captain [of the Washington Irving] drew the line of his course in red ink on his chart...
    FSLC 11.195 12 By law of Congress September, 1850, it is a high crime and misdemeanor, punishable with fine and imprisonment, to resist the reenslaving a man on the coast of America. Off soundings, it is piracy and murder to enslave him. On soundings, it is fine and prison not to reenslave.
    FSLC 11.195 13 By law of Congress September, 1850, it is a high crime and misdemeanor, punishable with fine and imprisonment, to resist the reenslaving a man on the coast of America. Off soundings, it is piracy and murder to enslave him. On soundings, it is fine and prison not to reenslave.

soundly, adv. (1)

    FRep 11.542 9 The distinction and end of a soundly constituted man is his labor.

soundness, n. (7)

    F 6.35 20 No statement of the Universe can have any soundness which does not admit [Fate's] ascending effort.
    Wth 6.104 4 If you take out of State Street the ten honestest merchants and put in ten roguish persons controlling the same amount of capital...the soundness of banks will show it;...
    Bty 6.290 18 It is the soundness of the bones that ultimates itself in a peach-bloom complexion;...
    PC 8.221 22 To this material essence [centrality] answers Truth, in the intellectual world,-Truth...the soundness and health of things...
    Supl 10.174 19 We are...distrustful of health, of soundness, of pure innocence.
    HDC 11.45 17 The bands of love and reverence, held fast the little state [the Massachusetts Bay Colony], whilst [the settlers] untied the great cords of authority to examine their soundness...
    FRO2 11.488 13 This claim [of miraculour dispensation] impairs, to my mind, the soundness of him who makes it...

sound-pipes, n. (1)

    Res 8.142 22 ...the walls of a modern house are perforated with water-pipes, sound-pipes, gas-pipes, heat-pipes...

sounds, n. (17)

    Nat 1.44 3 The law of harmonic sounds reappears in the harmonic colors.
    Lov1 2.177 6 ...A midnight bell, a passing groan,--/ These are the sounds we [lovers] feed upon./
    Lov1 2.177 8 [The lover] is a palace of sweet sounds and sights;...
    Hsm1 2.262 1 ...it behooves the wise man...to familiarize himself...with sounds of execration...
    GoW 4.261 21 The air is full of sounds; the sky, of tokens;...
    Art2 7.44 25 A jumble of musical sounds...gives pleasure to the unskilful ear.
    PI 8.23 1 ...Thomson's Seasons and the best parts of many old and many new poets are simply enumerations by a person who felt the beauty of the common sights and sounds...
    PI 8.55 20 Welcome, folded arms and fixed eyes,/...A midnight bell, a passing groan,/ These are the sounds we feed upon/...
    Dem1 10.13 3 Nature...works...by infinite graduation; so that we live embosomed in sounds we do not hear...
    PerF 10.75 22 [Labor] is...in every spectacle, in odors, in flavors, in sweet sounds...
    MMEm 10.418 10 O the power of vision, then the delicate power of the nerve which receives impressions from sounds!
    MMEm 10.418 13 Could I [Mary Moody Emerson] at times be regaled with music, it would remind me that there are sounds.
    Thor 10.463 15 [Thoreau] said...Nature knows very well what sounds are worth attending to...
    PLT 12.29 5 To the poet all sounds and words are melodies and rhythms.
    PLT 12.32 20 The air rings with sounds, but only a few vibrations can reach our tympanum.
    CW 12.170 7 The gentle deities/ Showed me the love of color and of sounds,/...
    Trag 12.411 6 ...a terror of freezing to death that seizes a man in a winter midnight on the moors; a fright at uncertain sounds heard by a family at night in the cellar or on the stairs...are no tragedy...

sounds, v. (14)

    Nat 1.10 12 The name of the nearest friend sounds then foreign and accidental...
    DSA 1.133 20 ...with yet more entire consent of my human being, sounds in my ear the severe music of the bards that have sung of the true God in all ages.
    DSA 1.136 19 Where now sounds the persuasion, that...imparadises my heart...
    Tran 1.354 26 A reference to Beauty in action sounds...a little hollow and ridiculous in the ears of the old church.
    Fdsp 2.196 2 Our own thought sounds new and larger from [our friend's] mouth.
    GoW 4.279 9 ...at last the hero [of Sand's Consuelo]...no longer answers to his own titled name; it sounds foreign and remote in his ear.
    Art2 7.50 4 The first time you hear [good poetry], it sounds rather as if copied out of some invisible tablet in the Eternal mind than as if arbitrarily composed by the poet.
    Chr2 10.91 15 Surely it is not to prove or show the truth of things,-that sounds a little cold and scholastic,-no, it is for benefit, that all subsists.
    Plu 10.313 19 [Plutarch] reminds his friends that the Delphic oracles have given several answers the same in substance as that formerly given to Corax the Naxian: It sounds profane impiety/ To teach that human souls e'er die./
    FSLN 11.238 11 The plea in the mouth of a slave-holder that the negro is an inferior race sounds very oddly in my ear.
    PLT 12.36 7 [Pan] could intoxicate by the strain of his shepherd's pipe,- silent yet to most, for his pipes make the music of the spheres,, which, because it sounds eternally, is not heard at all by the dull, but only by the mind.
    MAng1 12.216 26 The ancient Greeks called the world kosmos, Beauty; a name which, in our artificial state of society, sounds fanciful and impertinent.
    MAng1 12.244 18 The traveller from a distant continent, who gazes on that marble brow [bust of Michelangelo], feels that he is not a stranger in the foreign church; for the great name of Michael Angelo sounds hospitably in his ear.
    Trag 12.409 9 Hark! what sounds on the night wind...

soup, n. (4)

    GoW 4.270 23 [Goethe] appears at a time...when, in the absence of heroic characters, a social comfort and cooperation have come in. There is...no Columbus, but hundreds of post-captains, with...concentrated soup and pemmican;...
    ET5 5.80 13 ...[the English] have a supreme eye to facts, and theirs is a logic that brings salt to soup...
    Schr 10.276 15 There is plenty of wild azote and carbon unappropriated, but it is nought till we have made it up into loaves and soup.
    EurB 12.377 20 [The Vivian Greys] discuss sun and planets, liberty and fate, love and death, over the soup.

soup-ladles, n. (1)

    PPh 4.55 8 ...[Plato] fortified himself by drawing all his illustrations from sources disdained by orators and polite conversers;...from pitchers and soup-ladles;...

soup-pans, n. (1)

    PPh 4.72 1 [Socrates]...affected low phrases, and illustrations from...soup-pans and sycamore-spoons...

soup-societies, n. (1)

    Chr1 3.103 16 We know who is benevolent, by quite other means than the amount of subscription to soup-societies.

soup-society, n. (1)

    LLNE 10.348 6 [Fourier] took his measure of that which all should and might enjoy, from no soup-society or charity-concert, but from the refinements of palaces, the wealth of universities and the triumphs of artists.

sour, adj. (14)

    MN 1.192 4 I do not wish to look with sour aspect at the industrious manufacturing village...
    LT 1.280 18 ...I own our virtue makes me ashamed; so sour and narrow...
    Tran 1.343 1 ...[Transcendentalists] are not by nature melancholy, sour and unsocial......
    SR 2.56 2 ...a man must know how to estimate a sour face.
    SR 2.56 7 ...the sour faces of the multitude, like their sweet faces, have no deep cause...
    Lov1 2.171 20 ...all is sour if seen as experience.
    MoS 4.171 18 ...we...reject a sour, dumpish unbelief...
    ET8 5.129 14 [The English] are contradictorily described as sour, splenetic and stubborn,--and as mild, sweet and sensible.
    F 6.47 16 ...when a man is the victim of his fate, has...a sour face and a selfish temper;...he is to rally on his relation to the Universe...
    SS 7.7 21 Michel Angelo had a sad, sour time of it.
    LLNE 10.353 23 ...in a day of small, sour and fierce schemes, one is admonished and cheered by a project of such friendly aims [as Fourier's]...
    EWI 11.143 3 Our planet, before the age of written history, had its races of savages, like the generations of sour paste...
    Mem 12.104 14 The spring days when the bluebird arrives...are sour and unlovely;...
    ACri 12.302 10 [Channing] is the April day incarnated and walking...sour east wind and flowery southwest...

sour, n. (2)

    Comp 2.98 9 Every sweet hath its sour; every evil its good.
    UGM 4.10 10 ...sweet and sour...circle us round in a wreath of pleasures...

sour, v. (2)

    Prd1 2.234 23 ...beer, if not brewed in the right state of the atmosphere, will sour;...
    Prd1 2.235 8 Iron cannot rust, nor beer sour...in the few swift moments in which the Yankee suffers any one of them to remain in his possession.

Source, Eternal, n. (1)

    Grts 8.312 22 ...the highest wisdom does not concern itself with particular men, but with man enamoured with the law and the Eternal Source.

source, n. (73)

    Nat 1.41 6 Prophet and priest...have drawn deeply from this source [of nature].
    Nat 1.44 17 So intimate is this Unity, that...it...betrays its source in Universal Spirit.
    AmS 1.99 9 The stream retreats to its source.
    MN 1.195 10 The festival of the intellect and the return to its source cast a strong light on the always interesting topics of Man and Nature.
    MN 1.219 1 Genius...advertises us that it flows out of a deeper source than the foregoing silence...
    MR 1.229 9 It is when your facts and persons grow unreal and fantastic by too much falsehood, that the scholar flies for refuge to the world of ideas, and aims to recruit and replenish nature from that source.
    SR 2.64 4 The inquiry leads us to that source...of life, which we call... Instinct.
    SR 2.64 15 ...the sense of being which in calm hours rises...in the soul, is not diverse from things...from man, but...proceeds obviously from the same source whence their life and being also proceed.
    SL 2.137 4 Our society is encumbered by ponderous machinery, which resembles the endless aqueducts which the Romans built...and which are superseded by the discovery of the law that water rises to the level of its source.
    OS 2.268 3 Man is a stream whose source is hidden.
    Int 2.336 26 [The imaginative vocabulary] does not flow from experience only or mainly, but from a richer source.
    Chr1 3.105 25 Two persons lately...have given me occasion for thought. When I explored the source of their sanctity and charm for the imagination, it seemed as if each answered, From my non-conformity...
    PPh 4.69 23 [Plato] has the same regard to [wisdom] as the source of excellence in works of art.
    ShP 4.196 27 [The poet in illiterate times] is...little solicitous whence his thoughts have been derived;...from whatever source, they are equally welcome to his uncritical audience.
    ET1 5.19 26 Sin is what [Wordsworth] fears,--and how society is to escape without gravest mischiefs from this source.
    ET10 5.171 8 A large family is reckoned a misfortune [in England]. And it is a consolation in the death of the young, that a source of expense is closed.
    ET14 5.235 19 To the images from this twin source (of Christianity and art), the mind became fruitful as by the incubation of the Holy Ghost.
    ET14 5.241 6 Plato had signified the same sense, when he said, All the great arts require a subtle and speculative research into the law of nature, since loftiness of thought and perfect mastery over every subject seem to be derived from some such source as this.
    ET14 5.245 22 Hallam...is unconscious of the deep worth which lies in the mystics, and which often outvalues as a seed of power and a source of revolution all the correct writers and shining reputations of their day.
    ET14 5.260 11 ...the two complexions, or two styles of mind [in England],-- the perceptive class, and the practical finality class,--are ever in counterpoise, interacting mutually...one studious, contemplative, experimenting; the other, the ungrateful pupil, scornful of the source whilst availing itself of the knowledge for gain;...
    ET18 5.302 18 ...the wealth of the source is seen in the plenitude of English nature.
    ET18 5.303 4 [The English people's] many-headedness is owing to the advantageous position of the middle class, who are always the source of letters and science.
    Pow 6.69 27 Cut off the connection between any of our works and this aboriginal source, and the work is shallow.
    Wth 6.85 17 Wealth has its source in applications of the mind to nature...
    Wth 6.98 16 There is a refining influence from the arts of Design on a prepared mind which is...not to be supplied from any other source.
    Wsp 6.216 9 It is certain that worship stands in some commanding relation to the health of man and to his highest powers, so as to be in some manner the source of intellect.
    SS 7.10 6 [The ends of thought] reach down to that depth...where the individual is lost in his source.
    Boks 7.201 7 ...Plato's [delineation of Athenian manners] has merits of every kind...containing that ironical eulogy of Socrates which is the source from which all the portraits of that philosopher current in Europe have been drawn.
    QO 8.180 26 Rabelais is the source of many a proverb, story and jest...
    QO 8.192 21 In so far as the receiver's aim is on life, and not on literature, will be his indifference to the source.
    Insp 8.268 4 If with light head erect I sing,/ Though all the Muses lend their force,/ From my poor love of anything,/ The verse is weak and shallow as its source./
    Insp 8.295 23 Only our newest knowledge works as a source of inspiration and thought...
    PerF 10.88 13 ...the massive might of ideas is irresistible at last. Whence does the knowledge come? Where is the source of power?
    PerF 10.88 17 ...the iron of iron, the fire of fire, the ether and source of all the elements is moral force.
    Chr2 10.91 4 Morals respects the source or motive of this action.
    Chr2 10.102 18 Character...by implication points to the source of right motive.
    Chr2 10.104 23 ...sometimes also [the moral sentiment] is the source, in natures less pure, of sneers and flippant jokes of common people, who feel that the forms and dogmas are not true for them...
    Chr2 10.115 4 The [moral] sentiment itself teaches unity of source...
    SovE 10.208 3 ...the most accomplished culture, or rapt holiness, never exhausted the claim of these lowly duties,-never...was able to look behind their source.
    Prch 10.234 8 A vivid thought brings the power to paint it; and in proportion to the depth of its source is the force of its projection.
    MoL 10.242 8 The inviolate soul is in perpetual telegraphic communication with the source of events.
    MoL 10.252 17 Thought...is the prolific source of all arts, of all wealth, of all delight, of all grandeur.
    Plu 10.307 13 These men [who revere the spiritual power]...are not the parasites of wealth. Perhaps they sometimes compromise...but they keep open the source of wisdom and health.
    LLNE 10.335 26 ...the paramount source of the religious revolution was Modern Science;...
    Thor 10.474 23 ...[Thoreau] had the source of poetry in his spiritual perception.
    Carl 10.493 10 It is not so much that Carlyle cares for this or that dogma, as that he likes genuineness (the source of all strength) in his companions.
    FSLN 11.223 20 ...it was the misfortune of his country that with this large understanding [Webster] had not what is better than intellect, and the source of its health.
    FSLN 11.223 26 ...[Webster] wanted that deep source of inspiration.
    AKan 11.259 10 I do not know any story so gloomy as the politics of this country for the last twenty years, centralizing ever more manifestly round one spring, and that a vast crime...until it is notorious that all promotion, power and policy are dictated from one source...
    ChiE 11.474 13 ...I have read in the journals a statement from an English source, that Sir Frederic Bruce attributed to Mr. Burlingame the merit of the happy reform in the relations of foreign governments to China.
    FRO2 11.487 26 I think wise men wish their religion to be all of this kind, teaching the agent to go alone...only humble and docile before the source of the wisdom he has discovered within him.
    FRep 11.511 2 It is a rule that holds in economy as well as in hydraulics that you must have a source higher than your tap.
    FRep 11.513 27 ...if this is true in all the useful and in the fine arts, that the direction must be drawn from a superior source or there will be no good work, does it hold less in our social and civil life?
    FRep 11.533 1 The source of mischief is the extreme difficulty with which men are roused from the torpor of every day.
    FRep 11.539 20 ...liberty...like all power subsists only by new rallyings on the source of inspiration.
    NHI 12.2 2 Power that by obedience grows,/ Knowledge that its source not knows,/ Wave which severs whom it bears/ From the things which he compares./
    PLT 12.6 17 My belief in the use of a course of philosophy is that the student shall learn to appreciate the miracle of the mind;...that he shall see in it the source of all traditions...
    PLT 12.9 26 ...what we really want is...a certain piety toward the source of action and knowledge.
    PLT 12.16 9 ...the suggestion is always returning, that hidden source publishing at once our being and that it is the source of outward Nature.
    PLT 12.16 10 ...the suggestion is always returning, that hidden source publishing at once our being and that it is the source of outward Nature.
    PLT 12.27 11 These views of the source of thought and the mode of its communication lead us to a whole system of ethics...
    PLT 12.28 7 'T is only the source that we can see;-the eternal mind...
    PLT 12.34 22 [Instinct] is that source of thought and feeling which acts on masses of men...
    II 12.66 13 All men are, in respect to this source of truth [consciousness], on a certain footing of equality...
    II 12.74 24 ...this wonderful source of knowledge [Inspiration] remains a mystery;...
    II 12.79 2 The whole ethics of thought is of this kind, flowing out of reverence of the source...
    II 12.85 3 The source of thought evolves its own rules, its own virtues, its own religion.
    CL 12.167 6 ...as soon as man...knows that Nature and he are from one source...then Nature has a lord.
    CL 12.167 8 ...as soon as man...knows that Nature and he are from one source, and that he, when humble and obedient, is nearer to the source... then Nature has a lord.
    MAng1 12.244 23 ...[Michelangelo] was a brother and a friend to all who acknowledge the beauty that beams in universal Nature, and who seek by labor and self-denial to approach its source in perfect goodness.
    Milt1 12.261 22 ...[Milton] knew that this mastery of language was a secondary power, and he respected the mysterious source whence it had its spring;...
    Milt1 12.276 10 Shall we say that in our admiration and joy in these wonderful poems [of Homer and Shakespeare] we have even a feeling of regret...that [the men]...were channels through which streams of thought flowed from a higher source, which they did not appropriate...
    Trag 12.406 22 The bitterest tragic element in life to be derived from an intellectual source is the belief in a brute Fate or Destiny;...

Source, n. (1)

    PC 8.228 5 The inviolate soul is in perpetual telegraphic communication with the Source of events...

sources, n. (32)

    Nat 1.64 18 This [spiritual] view, which admonishes me where the sources of wisdom and power lie...carries upon its face the highest certificate of truth...
    MR 1.227 13 ...some sources of human instruction are almost unnamed and unknown among us;...
    Hist 2.14 16 Observe the sources of our information in respect to the Greek genius.
    OS 2.294 18 ...the sources of nature are in [man's] own mind...
    Chr1 3.106 13 They are a relief from literature,--these fresh draughts from the sources of thought and sentiment;...
    Pol1 3.210 5 The philosopher, the poet, or the religious man, will of course wish to cast his vote with the democrat...for facilitating in every manner the access of the young and the poor to the sources of wealth and power.
    NER 3.274 25 Caesar, just before the battle of Pharsalia...offers to quit the army, the empire, and Cleopatra, if [the Egyptian priest] will show him those mysterious sources [of the Nile].
    UGM 4.6 15 ...[other than great men] must...keep a vigilant eye on many sources of error.
    PPh 4.55 6 ...[Plato] fortified himself by drawing all his illustrations from sources disdained by orators and polite conversers;...
    GoW 4.269 27 ...how can [the writer] be honored...when he must...write conventional criticism, or profligate novels, or at any rate write...without recurrence...to the sources of inspiration?
    ET4 5.54 26 The sources from which tradition derives [the English] stock are mainly three.
    ET14 5.256 25 ...the grave old [English] poets...heeded their designs, and less considered the finish. It was their office to lead to the divine sources...
    Pow 6.80 11 There are sources on which we have not drawn.
    Bhr 6.189 13 So deep are the sources of this surface-action that even the size of your companion seems to vary with his freedom of thought.
    Wsp 6.206 16 What Gothic mixtures the Christian creed drew from the pagan sources, Richard of Devizes' chronicle of Richard I.'s crusade, in the twelfth century, may show.
    Wsp 6.229 23 Physiognomy and phrenology are...declarations of the soul that it is aware of certain new sources of information.
    Art2 7.44 12 In sculpture and in architecture the material...and in architecture the mass, are sources of great pleasure quite independent of the artificial arrangement.
    QO 8.202 24 Pindar uses this haughty defiance, as if it were impossible to find his sources: There are many swift darts within my quiver which have a voice for those with understanding;...
    PC 8.227 16 ...the recurrence to high sources is rare.
    Insp 8.279 22 How many sources of inspiration can we count?
    Insp 8.296 6 Neither are these all the sources [of inspiration], nor can I name all.
    PerF 10.72 9 ...behind all these [natural forces] are finer elements, the sources of them...
    LLNE 10.369 23 I please myself with the thought that our American mind... is beginning to show a quiet power, drawn from wide and abundant sources...
    HDC 11.83 1 Concord has always been noted for its ministers. The living need no praise of mine. Yet it is among the sources of satisfaction and gratitude, this day, that the aged [Ezra Ripley] with whom is wisdom, our fathers' counsellor and friend, is spared to counsel and intercede for the sons.
    War 11.175 4 ...if the search of the sublime laws of morals and the sources of hope and trust, in man, and not in books, in the present, and not in the past, proceed;...then war has a short day...
    FSLC 11.200 1 When a moral quality comes into politics...the discussion draws on deeper sources: general principles are laid bare...
    FSLC 11.210 20 ...granting...that these evils [of slavery] are to be relieved only by the wisdom of God working in ages,-and by what instrument... none can tell, or by what sources God has guarded his law; still the question recurs, What must we do?
    PLT 12.33 9 In reckoning the sources of our mental power it were fatal to omit that one which pours all the others into its mould;...
    II 12.65 1 In reckoning the sources of our mental power, it were fatal to omit that one which pours all the others into mould...
    II 12.71 19 We brood on the words or works of our companion, and ask in vain the sources of his information.
    MAng1 12.238 26 It has been the defect of some great men that they did not duly appreciate or did not confess the talents and virtues of others, and so lacked one of the richest sources of happiness...
    ACri 12.293 19 ...these cardinal rules of rhetoric find best examples in the great masters, and are main sources of the delight they give.

sourly, adv. (3)

    SL 2.134 2 When we see a soul whose acts are all regal, graceful and pleasant as roses, we must...not turn sourly on the angel...
    SA 8.90 21 Do not look sourly at the set or the club which does not choose you.
    JBS 11.279 17 [In John Brown's boyhood] was formed a romantic character...abstemious, refusing luxuries, not sourly and reproachfully, but simply as unfit for his habit;...

sous, n. (1)

    ET11 5.181 5 As [the French] do not mean to live with their tenants, they... wring from them the last sous.

south, adj. (10)

    Chr1 3.97 7 Will is the north, action the south pole.
    Chr1 3.97 11 The feeble souls are drawn to the south or negative pole.
    Nat2 3.172 17 The fall of snowflakes in a still air...the musical, steaming, odorous south wind...these are the music and pictures of the most ancient religion.
    ET2 5.28 18 In one week [the ship] has made 1467 miles, and now...is flying before the gray south wind eleven and a half knots the hour.
    MoL 10.244 7 On the south and east shores of the Mediterranean Mahomet impressed his fierce genius how deeply into the manners, language and poetry of Arabia and Persia!
    HDC 11.38 10 ...after the bargain [for Concord] was concluded, Mr. Simon Willard, pointing to the four corners of the world, declared that they had bought three miles from that place, east, west, north and south.
    CL 12.150 6 [The Indian] consults by way of natural compass, when he travels: (1) large pine-trees...(2) ant-hills...(3) aspens, whose bark is rough on the north and smooth on the south side.
    CL 12.150 21 In March, the thaw, and the sounding of the south wind...
    CL 12.152 1 The world has nothing to offer more rich or entertaining than the days which October always brings us, when, after the first frosts, a steady shower of gold falls in the strong south wind from the chestnuts, maples and hickories;...
    PPr 12.389 6 That morbid temperament has given [Carlyle's] rhetoric a somewhat bloated character; a luxury to many imaginative and learned persons, like a showery south wind with its sunbursts and rapid chasing of lights and glooms over the landscape...

South, adj. (1)

    HDC 11.42 3 ...the town [Concord] having divided itself into three districts, called the North, South and East quarters, ordered that the North quarter are to keep and maintain all their highways and bridges over the great river, in their quarter...

south, adv. (3)

    Hist 2.36 5 In old Rome the public roads beginning at the Forum proceeded north, south, east, west...
    SL 2.148 21 [A man] is like a quincunx of trees, which counts five,--east, west, north, or south;...
    SMC 11.373 25 On the first of January, 1865, the Thirty-second Regiment made itself comfortable in log huts, a mile south of our rear line of works before Petersburg.

South, adv. (2)

    SMC 11.353 7 Every Democrat who went South came back a Republican...
    Bost 12.207 17 The Massachusetts colony grew...all the while sending out colonies to every part of New England; then South and West...

South Africa, n. (2)

    Pow 6.69 13 ...when [the young English] have no wars to breathe their riotous valors in, they seek for travels as dangerous as war...hunting lion, rhinoceros, elephant, in South Africa;...
    FSLC 11.212 27 Every Englishman in Australia, in South Africa, in India... represents London...

South America, n. (3)

    Pow 6.69 15 ...when [the young English] have no wars to breathe their riotous valors in, they seek for travels as dangerous as war...riding alligators in South America with Waterton;...
    Suc 7.283 13 We interfere in Central and South America...
    Thor 10.465 23 Admiring friends offered to carry [Thoreau] at their own cost...to South America.

South Boston Bridge, n. (1)

    ACri 12.301 22 When Samuel Dexter...argued the claims of South Boston Bridge, he had to meet loud complaints of the shutting out of the coasting-trade by the proposed improvements.

South Carolina, n. (4)

    ET3 5.37 17 As soon as you enter England, which, with Wales, is no larger than the State of Georgia, this little land stretches by an illusion to the dimensions of an empire. Add South Carolina, and you have more than an equivalent for the area of Scotland.
    SlHr 10.437 20 At the time when [Samuel Hoar] went to South Carolina... he was repeatedly warned that it was not safe for him to appear in public...
    EWI 11.130 6 ...I see...poor black men of obscure employment...in ships, yet citizens of this our Commonwealth of Massachusetts,-freeborn as we,-whom the slave-laws of the States of South Carolina and Georgia and Louisiana have arrested in the vessels in which they visited those ports...
    AsSu 11.248 7 The whole state of South Carolina does not now offer one or any number of persons who are to be weighed for a moment in the scale with such a person as the meanest of them all has now struck down.

South Europe, n. (1)

    ET4 5.57 20 The heroes of the [Norse] Sagas are not the knights of South Europe.

south, n. (12)

    Nat 1.76 27 As when the summer comes from the south the snow-banks melt...so shall the advancing spirit create its ornaments along its path...
    AmS 1.115 17 Is it not the chief disgrace in the world...to be reckoned in the gross...of the section, to which we belong; and our opinion predicted geographically, as the north, or the south?
    Comp 2.97 2 If the south attracts, the north repels.
    Chr1 3.92 3 Our frank countrymen of the west and south have a taste for character...
    Chr1 3.97 6 Everything in nature...has a positive and a negative pole. There is...a north and a south.
    Wsp 6.204 14 ...the public and the private element, like north and south... adhere to every soul...
    Elo1 7.69 5 ...neither can the Southerner in the United States, nor the Irish, compare [in eloquence] with the lively inhabitant of the south of Europe.
    Grts 8.306 12 ...whilst ordinarily magnetism of steel is from north to south, in other substances, gases, it acts from east to west.
    Schr 10.263 25 [Intellect] is the power that makes the world incarnated in man, and...setting the north and the south, and the stars in their places.
    SMC 11.353 5 A thunder-storm at sea sometimes reverses the magnets in the ship, and south is north.
    FRep 11.543 15 We shall stand...for vast interests; north and south, east and west will be present to our minds...
    CL 12.150 4 [The Indian] consults by way of natural compass, when he travels: (1) large pine-trees...(2) ant-hills, which have grass on their south and whortleberries on the north; (3) aspens...

South, n. (23)

    PPo 8.260 4 And since round lines are drawn/ My darling's lips about,/ The very Moon looks puzzled on,/ And hesitates in doubt/ If the sweet curve that rounds thy mouth/ Be not her true way to the South./
    Aris 10.48 20 In the South a slave was bluntly but accurately valued at five hundred to a thousand dollars, if a good field-hand;...
    EzRy 10.390 22 We remember the remark made by the old farmer who used to travel hither from Maine, that no horse from the Eastern country would go by the Doctor's [Ezra Ripley's] gate. Travellers from the West and North and South bear the like testimony.
    GSt 10.503 19 ...there are few men with real or supposed influence, North or South, with whom [George Stearns] has not at some time communicated.
    FSLC 11.206 5 Under the Union I suppose the fact to be that there are really two nations, the North and the South.
    FSLC 11.206 6 The South does not like the North, slavery or no slavery...
    FSLC 11.206 8 The North likes the South well enough, for it knows its own advantages.
    FSLC 11.207 20 ...will any expert statesman furnish us a plan for the summary or gradual winding up of slavery, so far as the Republic is its patron? Where is the South itself?
    FSLC 11.207 22 Since it is agreed by all sane men of all parties...that slavery is mischievous, why does the South itself never offer the smallest counsel of her own?
    FSLC 11.211 20 ...Massachusetts is little, but, if true to itself, can be the brain which turns about the behemoth [slavery]. I say Massachusetts, but I mean...Massachusetts...as she sees her progeny scattered over the face of the land, in the farthest South, and the uttermost West.
    FSLC 11.213 6 Every Englishman...in whatever barbarous country their forts and factories have been set up,-represents London, represents the art, power and law of Europe. Every man educated at the Northern school carries the like advantages into the South.
    FSLN 11.225 12 Nobody doubts that there were good and plausible things to be said on the part of the South.
    ACiv 11.304 8 [Emancipation] is a progressive policy...puts every man in the South in just and natural relations with every man in the North...
    ACiv 11.304 25 ...the South, with its inferior numbers, is almost on a footing in effective war-population with the North.
    ACiv 11.307 22 Emancipation at one stroke elevates the poor-white of the South...
    EPro 11.314 10 O North! give [the slave] beauty for rags,/ And honor, O South! for his shame;/ Nevada! coin thy golden crags/ With freedom's image and name./
    EPro 11.323 11 If we had consented to a peaceable secession of the rebels... the insatiable temper of the South made it impossible...
    SMC 11.352 26 The aim of the hour was to reconstruct the South;...
    SMC 11.355 14 ...there are noble men everywhere, and there are such in the South;...
    SMC 11.355 27 The invasion of Northern...tradesmen, lawyers and students did more than forty years of peace had done to educate the South.
    SMC 11.356 26 All sorts of men went to the [Civil] war...the village politician, who could now...see the South...
    Wom 11.404 1 Lo, when the Lord made North and South,/ And sun and moon ordained he,/ Forth bringing each by word of mouth/ In order of its dignity,/ Did man from the crude clay express/ By sequence, and, all else decreed,/ He formed the woman; nor might less/ Than Sabbath such a work succeed./ Coventry Patmore.
    Bost 12.196 12 ...New England supplies annually a large detachment of preachers and schoolmasters and private tutors to the interior of the South and West.

South, Old, Church, Boston (1)

    OA 7.334 6 [John Adams] talked of Whitefield, and remembered when he was a Freshman in College to have come into town to the Old South church (I think) to hear him...

South Sea, n. (1)

    SR 2.69 9 Vast spaces of nature...the South Sea;...are of no account.

South Western Railway, Eng (1)

    ET16 5.273 17 On Friday, 7th July, we [Emerson and Carlyle] took the South Western Railway through Hampshire to Salisbury...

Southampton, Earl of [Henry (1)

    QO 8.198 1 The bold theory of Delia Bacon, that Shakspeare's plays were written by a society of wits,-by Sir Walter Raleigh, Lord Bacon and others around the Earl of Southampton,-had plainly for her the charm of the superior meaning they would acquire when read under this light;...

Southeast, n. (1)

    Supl 10.179 11 ...there is no question...that the warm sons of the Southeast have bent the neck under the yoke of the cold temperament and the exact understanding of the Northwestern races.

southern, adj. (5)

    MR 1.232 3 The abolitionist has shown us our dreadful debt to the southern negro.
    Pt1 3.38 2 Our log-rolling...the southern planting...are yet unsung.
    ET5 5.91 5 Sir John Herschel...expatriated himself for years at the Cape of Good Hope, finished his inventory of the southern heaven...
    CL 12.139 18 ...in choosing a farm, we like a southern exposure...
    CL 12.150 3 [The Indian] consults by way of natural compass, when he travels: (1) large pine-trees, which bear more numerous branches on their southern side; (2) ant-hills...(3) aspens...

Southern, adj. (22)

    Elo1 7.68 26 Our Southern people are almost all speakers...
    Clbs 7.247 21 ...it was explained to me, in a Southern city, that it was impossible to set any public charity on foot unless through a tavern dinner.
    SA 8.91 18 ...presidents of the United States are afflicted by rude Western and Southern gossips...
    PPo 8.238 1 Oriental life and society, especially in the Southern nations, stand in violent contrast with the multitudinous detail...of the Western nations.
    GSt 10.507 11 Almost I am ready to say to these mourners [of George Stearns], Be not too proud in your grief, when you remember that there is... not a Southern State in which the freedmen will not learn to-day from their preachers that one of their most efficient benefactors has departed...
    EWI 11.130 26 ...the private interference of two excellent citizens of Boston has...rescued several natives of this State from these Southern prisons.
    EWI 11.131 5 The poorest fishing-smack that...hunts whale in the Southern ocean, should be encompassed by [Massachusetts's] laws with comfort and protection...
    EWI 11.133 19 There is a scandalous rumor...that members [of Congress] are bullied into silence by Southern gentlemen.
    FSLC 11.193 10 ...it is absurd...to accuse the friends of freedom in the North with being the occasion of the new stringency of the Southern slave-laws.
    FSLC 11.196 20 But worse, not the officials alone are bribed [by the Fugitive Slave Law], but the whole community is solicited. The scowl of the community is attempted to be averted by the mischievous whisper, Tariff and Southern market, if you will be quiet: no tariff and loss of Southern market, if you dare to murmur.
    FSLC 11.196 21 But worse, not the officials alone are bribed [by the Fugitive Slave Law], but the whole community is solicited. The scowl of the community is attempted to be averted by the mischievous whisper, Tariff and Southern market, if you will be quiet: no tariff and loss of Southern market, if you dare to murmur.
    FSLC 11.196 26 I wonder that our acute people...should not find out that an immoral law costs more than the loss of the custom of a Southern city.
    FSLC 11.197 2 New York advertised in Southern markets that it would go for slavery...
    FSLC 11.197 23 ...here are gentlemen whose believed probity was the confidence and fortification of multitudes, who, by the fear of public opinion, or through the dangerous ascendency of Southern manners, have been drawn into the support of this foul business [the Fugitive Slave Law].
    FSLC 11.213 22 That is the secret of Southern power, that they rest not on meetings, but on private heats and courages.
    AKan 11.260 16 ...can any citizen of the Southern country who happens to think kidnapping a bad thing, say so?
    TPar 11.290 10 [Theodore Parker's] ministry fell...on the years when Southern slavery broke over its old banks...
    ACiv 11.307 14 ...[Emancipation] alters the atomic social constitution of the Southern people.
    EPro 11.323 27 The [Civil] war...brought with it the immense benefit of... preventing the whole force of Southern connection and influence throughout the North from distracting every city with endless confusion...
    EPro 11.324 7 The [Civil] war...brought with it the immense benefit of... disinfecting us of our habitual proclivity...to follow Southern leading.
    EPro 11.325 7 ...the aim of the war on our part is...to break up the false combination of Southern society...
    SMC 11.355 22 ...the common people [in the South], rich or poor, were...as arrogant as the negroes on the Gambia River; and...it looks as if the editors of the Southern press were in all times selected from this class.

Southern Ocean, n. (1)

    Chr1 3.93 6 This immensely stretched trade, which makes the capes of the Southern Ocean his wharves and the Atlantic Sea his familiar port, centres in [the natural merchant's] brain only;...

Southern States, n. (2)

    Ctr 6.146 23 Poor country boys of Vermont and Connecticut formerly owed what knowledge they had to their peddling trips to the Southern States.
    EPro 11.324 25 ...in the Southern States, the tenure of land and the local laws, with slavery, give the social system not a democratic but an aristocratic complexion;...

southerner, n. (1)

    Prd1 2.226 21 ...the inhabitants of these [northern] climates have always excelled the southerner in force.

Southerner, n. (3)

    Elo1 7.69 3 ...neither can the Southerner in the United States, nor the Irish, compare [in eloquence] with the lively inhabitant of the south of Europe.
    FSLN 11.238 16 ...when the Southerner points to the anatomy of the negro, and talks of chimpanzee,-I recall Montesquieu's remark, It will not do to say that negroes are men, lest it should turn out that whites are not.
    ACiv 11.304 16 The war is welcome to the Southerner;...

southerners, n. (1)

    ET8 5.128 12 [The English] are...not so easily amused as the southerners...

Southerners, n. (2)

    ACiv 11.306 24 Neither do I doubt, is such a composition should take place, that the Southerners will come back quietly and politely...
    ACiv 11.307 7 ...the North will for a time have its full share and more, in place and counsel. But this will not last;-not for want of sincere good will in sensible Southerners...

Southey, Robert, n. (1)

    ET1 5.8 9 [Landor] pestered me with Southey; but who is Southey?

Southey's, Robert, n. (3)

    Boks 7.208 24 There is a class [of books] whose value I should designate as Favorites: such as Froissart's Chronicles; Southey's Chronicle of the Cid;...
    Cour 7.274 12 There are ever appearing in the world men who, almost as soon as they are born, take a bee-line to...the axe of the tyrant, like...Jesus and Socrates. Look at...Southey's Book of the Church...
    QO 8.183 27 ...we find in Southey's Commonplace Book this said of the Earl of Strafford: I learned one rule of him, says Sir G. Radcliffe, which I think worthy to be remembered.

southward, adv. (1)

    PPo 8.246 26 On turnpikes of wonder/ Wine leads the mind forth,/ Straight, sidewise and upward,/ West, southward and north./

southwest, adj. (2)

    Wth 6.108 21 If the wind were always southwest by west, said the skipper, women might take ships to sea.
    ACri 12.302 11 [Channing] is the April day incarnated and walking...sour east wind and flowery southwest...

souvenir, n. (1)

    Mem 12.104 25 A souvenir is a token of love.

souvenirs, n. (1)

    ET6 5.112 6 An Englishman of fashion is like one of those souvenirs, bound in gold vellum...but with nothing in it worth reading or remembering.

Content (Text): Copyright © 2005 by Charlotte York Irey
Coding (HTML): Copyright © 2005 by Bradley P. Dean

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