“Heart on her lips, and soul within her eyes,
Soft as her clime, and sunny as her skies.”
George Gordon Byron (1788–1824) English poet and a leading figure in the Romantic movement
Stanza 45.
Beppo (1818)
Source: Daddy-Long-Legs
“Heart on her lips, and soul within her eyes,
Soft as her clime, and sunny as her skies.”
George Gordon Byron (1788–1824) English poet and a leading figure in the Romantic movement
Stanza 45.
Beppo (1818)
Giordano Bruno (1548–1600) Italian philosopher, mathematician and astronomer
As translated by Arthur Imerti (1964)
The Expulsion of the Triumphant Beast (1584)
“For nature forms our spirits to receive
Each bent that outward circumstance can give:
She kindles pleasure, bids resentment glow,
Or bows the soul to earth in hopeless woe.”
Format enim Natura prius nos intus ad omnem
Fortunarum habitum, juvat, aut impellit ad iram,
Aut ad humum moerore gravi deducit, et angit.
Source: Ars Poetica, or The Epistle to the Pisones (c. 18 BC), Line 108 (tr. Conington)
Porphyry (philosopher) (233–301) Neoplatonist philosopher
7 - 10
Auxiliaries to the Perception of Intelligible Natures
Context: The soul is bound to the body by a conversion to the corporeal passions; and again liberated by becoming impassive to the body.
That which nature binds, nature also dissolves: and that which the soul binds, the soul likewise dissolves. Nature, indeed, bound the body to the soul; but the soul binds herself to the body. Nature, therefore, liberates the body from the soul; but the soul liberates herself from the body.
Hence there is a twofold death; the one, indeed, universally known, in which the body is liberated from the soul; but the other peculiar to philosophers, in which the soul is liberated from the body. Nor does the one entirely follow the other.
We do not understand similarly in all things, but in a manner adapted to the essence of each. For intellectual objects we understand intellectually; but those that pertain to soul rationally. We apprehend plants spermatically; but bodies idolically (i. e., as images); and that which is above all these, super-intellectually and super-essentially.
“I know she ain't you, but she's here, and she's got that dark rhythm in her soul.”
Bob Dylan (1941) American singer-songwriter, musician, author, and artist
Song lyrics, Knocked Out Loaded (1986), Brownsville Girl (with Sam Shepard)
“Nature is the difference between the soul and God.”
Fernando Pessoa book The Book of Disquiet
Ibid., p. 150
The Book of Disquiet
Original: A natureza é a diferença entre a alma e Deus.