id,comments,provenance,dictionary,created_at,reviewed_on,work_id,theme,context,updated_at,metaphor,text
8626,•C-H takes from Poems and Translations(1961).,"Searching ""mind"" and ""steel"" in HDIS (Poetry)",Metal,2005-06-09 00:00:00 UTC,,3353,"",Ethica,2009-09-14 19:33:40 UTC,"""And as the Grindstone to unpolish'd Steel / Gives Edge, and Lustre: so my Mind, I feel / VVhetted, and glaz'd by Fortunes turning VVheel""","And as the Grindstone to unpolish'd Steel
Gives Edge, and Lustre: so my Mind, I feel
VVhetted, and glaz'd by Fortunes turning VVheel"
9341,"",Browsing in EEBO,"",2003-10-16 00:00:00 UTC,2003-12-12,3601,"","",2010-06-29 03:30:30 UTC,"""Thales argued, that the Load-stone, and Amber had soules; the first because it drawes Iron, the second Straw.""","From the second part of the difference in the definition ( viz. from moving other things) Thales argued, that the Load-stone, and Amber had soules; the first because it drawes Iron, the second Straw. He further (saith Laertius) asserted those things we count inoni|mate, to have souls, arguing it from the loadstone and Amber: the reason of which latter example, Aldobrandinu[...] falsely interprets its change of colour, and jarring as it were at poison: But Aristotle more plainly, for of those whom we mentioned, Thales seems to have taken the soul to be something [...], apt to move, since he affirmed a stone to have a soul, because it moved Iron.
He asserted likewise the soul (of man) to be immortall, and according to Cherilus, was the first that held so. Cicero ascribes the originall of this opinion to Pherecydes, but it rather seems to have been brought by Thales from the Egyptians; that they held so Herodotus attests.
(I.iv.4, pp. 13-14)"
9350,"","Searching ""heart"" and ""steel"" in HDIS (Poetry)",Metal,2005-06-09 00:00:00 UTC,,3606,"","",2009-09-14 19:34:09 UTC,"""But like true steel my heart doth pant, / To touch the long'd for Adamant.""","Thus being banisht from my love,
And forc't to leave her sight,
No thoughts but those of her can move
In me the least delight;
But like true steel my heart doth pant,
To touch the long'd for Adamant."