¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Ensouls
1. ensoul [v] - See also: ensoul
Lexicographical Neighbors of Ensouls
Literary usage of Ensouls
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Rosicrucian Cosmo-conception; Or, Mystic Christianity: An Elementary by Max Heindel (1911)
"One deals with Form, which was built up through mineral, plant and animal and
reached the human last. The other tells us that the Life which now ensouls ..."
2. The Theosophical Review by Theosophical Publishing Society (London, England) (1896)
"The portion of essence that thus ensouls a form ... and temporarily separate
existence of its own, lasting as long as the form that it ensouls endures. ..."
3. Notes and Queries by Martim de Albuquerque (1857)
"... or invisible Fire which ensouls and concatenates all things in Nature : § that
Intellectual and Winged Spirit which illuminates, vivifies, ..."
4. The Monist by Hegeler Institute (1918)
"... but if we understand by mind not only the subjective aspect of a mental process
but also the bodily commotion of the brain which it ensouls, ..."
5. The Century (1902)
"An abstraction, an ideal—the spirit that ensouls the words 'my country.' He may
forget it in times of material prosperity ..."
6. The Missions and Missionaries of California by Zephyrin Engelhardt (1916)
"It sets down just what it finds in the documents at hand; and it uses and interprets
these documents. Here we have the spirit that ensouls the work of ..."