Sensuality is the grave of the soul. Channing.

Sentences are like sharp nails, which force truth upon our memory. Diderot.

Sentiment has a kind of divine alchemy, rendering grief itself the source of tenderest thoughts and far-reaching desires, which the sufferer cherishes as sacred treasures. Talfourd.

Sentiment is intellectualised emotion; emotion precipitated, as it were, in pretty crystals by the fancy. Lowell.

Sentiment is the ripened fruit of fantasy. Mme. Delazy.

Sentimental literature, concerned with the analysis and description of emotion, headed by the poetry of Byron, is altogether of lower rank than the literature which merely describes what it saw. Ruskin.

Sentimentalism is that state in which a man 5 speaks deep and true, not because he feels things strongly, but because he perceives that they are beautiful, and touching and fine to say them—things that he fain would feel, and fancies that he does feel. F. W. Robertson.

Senza Cerere e Bacco, Venere e di ghiaccio—Without bread and wine love is cold (lit. without Ceres and Bacchus, Venus is of ice). It. Pr.

Septem convivium, novem convitium—Seven is a banquet, nine a brawl. Pr.

Septem horas dormisse sat est juvenique, senique—Seven hours of sleep is enough both for old and young. Pr.