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  1     I|          in death.~ For what the soul may be they do not know,~
  2     I|       what the mind, of what the soul is made,~ And what it is
  3    II|         will spare~ To taint his soul with foul religion.~ ~ So,
  4    II|        Undoes the vital knots of soul from body~ And throws that
  5    II|       from body~ And throws that soul, to outward wide-dispersed,~
  6   III|        leaves of thine, renowned soul~ (Like bees that sip of
  7   III|       the nature of the mind and soul,~ And drive that dread of
  8   III|        know the substance of the soul is blood,~ Or rather wind (
  9   III|         members dwells~ Also the soul, and body ne'er is wont~
 10   III|      nature of mind~ And even of soul is found to be, as 'twere,~
 11   III|          other maxims.~ Mind and soul,~ I say, are held conjoined
 12   III| intellect, the mind. The rest of soul,~ Throughout the body scattered,
 13   III|         That moves it, moves nor soul nor body at all.~ And as,
 14   III|      with a joy,~ Whilst yet the soul's remainder through the
 15   III|       fierce,~ We mark the whole soul suffering all at once~ Along
 16   III|         can readily remark~ That soul conjoined is with mind,
 17   III|          That nature of mind and soul corporeal is:~ For when '
 18   III|          not grant that mind and soul consist~ Of a corporeal
 19   III|        hold on man~ And mind and soul retire, thou markest there~
 20   III|        and exhalation hot.~ Thus soul entire must be of smallmost
 21   III|        again, nature of mind and soul~ 'Tis thine to know created
 22   III|          will fail, and parts of soul~ Will scatter through the
 23   III|         view,~ And 'tis the very soul of all the soul.~ And as
 24   III|         the very soul of all the soul.~ And as within our members
 25   III|      energy of mind and power of soul~ Is mixed and latent, since
 26   III|       small,~ And seems the very soul of all the soul,~ And holds
 27   III|         the very soul of all the soul,~ And holds dominion o'er
 28   III|        the gods.~ ~ So then this soul is kept by all the body,~
 29   III|          body nature of mind and soul~ To draw away, without the
 30   III|        dissevering of its joined soul,~ But, rent and ruined,
 31   III|          contact of the body and soul~ Learns from their earliest
 32   III|       body feel,~ And holds that soul, through all the body mixed,~
 33   III|         and taught us? "But when soul is parted,~ Body's without
 34   III|       much beside it loses, when soul's driven~ Forth from that
 35   III|       This canst thou guarantee: soul's primal germs~ Maintain
 36   III|        us~ Ere once the seeds of soul that through our frame~
 37   III|          dominion over life than soul.~ For without intellect
 38   III|         there's not~ One part of soul can rest within our frame~
 39   III|       the limbs lopped off,~ The soul withdrawn and taken from
 40   III|      deprived of all but all the soul,~ Yet will it linger on
 41   III|         by like compact that the soul and mind~ Are each to other
 42   III|          bound forevermore.~ THE SOUL IS MORTAL~ ~ Now come: that
 43   III|       instance, I shall speak of soul,~ Teaching the same to be
 44   III|          since I have taught how soul exists~ A subtle fabric,
 45   III|         winds away, believe~ The soul no less is shed abroad and
 46   III|       Cannot for longer hold the soul, how then~ Thinkst thou
 47   III| Therefore it suits that even the soul's dissolved,~ Like smoke,
 48   III|          Is wont to confound the soul within the body?~ But whatso
 49   III|         he foams, as if to vomit soul,~ As on the salt sea boil
 50   III|         since energy of mind and soul~ Confounded is, and, as
 51   III|          his senses and recovers soul.~ Thus, since within the
 52   III|      itself of man~ The mind and soul are by such great diseases~
 53   III|          then, can body, wanting soul, endure~ And use the senses.
 54   III|        peer about at naught,~ So soul and mind it seems are nothing
 55   III|       alive,~ If in that air the soul can keep itself,~ And in
 56   III|          is forced without,~ The soul, the senses of the mind
 57   III|       sustain~ Division from the soul, without decay~ And obscene
 58   III|         thou doubt but that~ The soul, uprisen from the body's
 59   III|      been moved from place,~ The soul out-filtering even through
 60   III|         learn that nature of the soul~ Hath passed in fragments
 61   III|        Dying appears to feel the soul go forth~ As one sure whole
 62   III|         away, admit we must that soul,~ Shivered in all that body,
 63   III|       bounds of life,~ Often the soul, now tottering from some
 64   III|       mind~ And all the power of soul are shook so sore,~ And
 65   III|           Why, then, doubt~ That soul, when once without the body
 66   III|            Besides, if nature of soul immortal be,~ And able to
 67   III|          from body can exist for soul,~ Nor tongue nor ears apart.
 68   III|      Beyond a doubt likewise the soul itself,~ Divided, dissevered,
 69   III|          up~ All remnants of the soul. Nay, once again:~ If, when
 70   III|      many souls.~ Therefore, the soul, which was indeed but one,~
 71   III|         since this nature of the soul is torn,~ Nor mounts away,
 72   III|          thou supposest that the soul itself~ Can inward draw
 73   III|     place in which such stock of soul~ Collected is, should greater
 74   III|          the false, and say that soul~ Can thus be lumped within
 75   III|          by bit,~ Still must the soul as mortal be confessed;~
 76   III|       lingers.~ And besides,~ If soul immortal is, and winds its
 77   III|  declares against all this:~ For soul is so entwined through the
 78   III| perchance thou thinkest that the soul,~ From outward winding in
 79   III|       For other nature, thus the soul and mind,~ Though whole
 80   III|        our body,~ Born from that soul which perished, when divided~
 81   III|          Wherefore it seems that soul~ Hath both a natal and funeral
 82   III|      hour.~ Besides are seeds of soul there left behind~ In the
 83   III|          a wise become a dullard soul?~ And why is never a child'
 84   III|        never a child's a prudent soul?~ And the mare's filly why
 85   III|          needful to confess~ The soul but mortal, since, so altered
 86   III|     appears arranged sure~ Where soul and mind can each exist
 87   III|     might.~ But if perchance the soul's to be adjudged~ Immortal,
 88   III|      when the frame's diseased,~ Soul sickens too, there cometh,
 89   III|        sundering of our body and soul~ Through which we're fashioned
 90   III|     nature of mind and energy of soul,~ After their severance
 91   III|        bonds~ And wedlock of the soul and body live,~ Through
 92   III|          and rest?~ For when the soul and frame together are sunk~
 93   III|       This too, O often from the soul men say,~ Along their couches
 94   III| bellowings of ocean - poured his soul~ From dying body, as his
 95    IV|          first particles~ Whence soul and mind must fashioned
 96    IV|          at once~ That energy of soul that's sown about~ In all
 97    IV|          performance, since~ The soul is close conjoined with
 98    IV|  conjoined with the mind.~ Next, soul in turn strikes body, and
 99    IV|     chiefly comes when energy of soul~ Hath now been scattered
100    IV|         none that by the work of soul~ Exist in us this sense,
101    IV|          are bound to think~ The soul confounded and expelled
102    IV|      sooth, where no one part of soul remained~ Lurking among
103    IV|      occasioned, and by what the soul~ Can be confounded and the
104    IV|        pass~ That next a part of soul's expelled abroad,~ A part
105    IV|         change: a forcing of the soul~ Down deeper, more a casting-forth
106     V|     appears arranged sure~ Where soul and mind can each exist
107     V|       this most subtle energy of soul~ Supports our body, though
108    VI|         frame, and undermine the soul~ In its abodes within. To
109    VI|        kind of death each nobler soul would meet.~ The funerals,
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