| Robert Christy, comp. Proverbs, Maxims and Phrases of All Ages. 1887. | | | | Soul |
| | | A little body often harbors a great soul. | 1 |
| A pensive soul feeds upon nothing but bitters. | 2 |
| A soul in a fat body lieth soft and is loth to rise. | 3 |
| As sight in the eye so is the mind in the soul. | 4 |
| Corn is cleansed with the wind and the soul with chastening. | 5 |
| It is nobler to convert souls than to conquer kingdoms. Louis le Debonnaire. | 6 |
| Lay not that flattering unction to your soul. Shakespeare. | 7 |
| Little bodies have great souls. | 8 |
| Little souls on little shifts rely. Dryden. | 9 |
| My chest locked up, my soul safe. Portuguese. | 10 |
| Provide for thy soul by doing good works. | 11 |
| The body is the socket of the soul. | 12 |
| The body is the workhouse of the soul. | 13 |
| The soul is a prisoner which in escaping always kills his jailer. | 14 |
| The soul is not where it lives but where it loves. | 15 |
| The soul of a choleric man sits ever by the fireside. | 16 |
| What is a man profited if he shall gain the whole world and lose his own soul. New Testament. | 17 | | |
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