Souffrir est la première chose qu'il doit apprendre, et celle qu'il aura le plus grand besoin de savoir—To be able to endure is the first lesson which a child ought to learn, and the one which it will have the most need to know. Rousseau.

Souls made of fire, and children of the sun, 20 with whom revenge is virtue. Young.

Souls must become expanded by the contemplation of Nature's grandeur before they can first comprehend the greatness of man. Heine.

Sound and sufficient reason falls, after all, to the share of but few men, and those few men exert their influence in silence. Goethe.

Sound maxims are the germs of good; strongly imprinted on the memory, they nourish the will. Joubert.

Sound, sound the clarion, fill the fife! / To all the sensual world proclaim, / One crowded hour of glorious life / Is worth an age without a name. Scott.

Sound the loud timbrel o'er Egypt's dark sea! / 25 Jehovah has triumph'd, His people are free. Moore.

Sound trumpets!—let our bloody colours wave; / And either victory or else a grave. 3 Hen. VI., ii. 2.

Soupçon est d'amitié poison—Suspicion is the poison of friendship. Fr. Pr.

Sour woe delights in fellowship, / And needly will be rank'd with other griefs. Rom. and Jul., iii. 2.