It is the soul itself which sees and hears, and not those parts which are, as it were, but windows to the soul.


The Academic Questions, Treatise de Finibus, and Tusculan Disputations, of Marcus Tullius Cicero (ed. 1853)


It is the soul itself which sees and hears, and not those parts which are, as it were, but windows to the soul.

It is the soul itself which sees and hears, and not those parts which are, as it were, but windows to the soul.

It is the soul itself which sees and hears, and not those parts which are, as it were, but windows to the soul.

It is the soul itself which sees and hears, and not those parts which are, as it were, but windows to the soul.