Date: 1697
"Therefore Cicero tells us, in 3. de Oratore; Facilius ad ea qua visa sunt, quam adea qua auditasunt, Oculi Mentis feruntur: That the Eyes of the Understanding (and consequently of the Memory) are carried more easily to the things that are seen, than to those that are heard."
preview | full record— D'Assigny, Marius (1643-1717)
Date: 1697
" Let these Characters, or Beginnings of every Period, be well imprinted in our Minds, for they will quickly bring thither the whole Discourse also."
preview | full record— D'Assigny, Marius (1643-1717)
Date: 1697
"For this Similitude will certainly imprint the Thing or Person so in our Mind, that if we do casually forget, we shall the more easily recover the lost Idea; because the Idea that we have already in Memory, and that hath a resemblance and relation to that which is absent in some known Particular...
preview | full record— D'Assigny, Marius (1643-1717)
Date: 1697
"We may imprint in our Minds, and fix things in Memory, by thinking upon their Contraries or Opposites; and we may by the same means better remember things that are almost blotted out of our Imagination."
preview | full record— D'Assigny, Marius (1643-1717)
Date: 1698, 1751
"There is a natural and indelible Sence of Deity, and consequently of Religion, in the Mind of Man."
preview | full record— Whichcote, Benjamin (1609-1683)
Date: 1698
"All Divine Truth is of one of these two Emanations:--Either it flows from God, in the first Instant and Moment of God's Creation; and then it is the Light of that Candle which God set up in Man, to light him; and that which by this Light he may discover, are all the Instances of Morality; of goo...
preview | full record— Whichcote, Benjamin (1609-1683)
Date: w. 1694-1698, 1989
"Wn to my soul thou'st spoken peace / When from its bonds thou wilt my soul release / all my mourning then shall cease."
preview | full record— Parnell, Thomas (1679-1718)
Date: 1699
"The Passions still predominant will rule: / Uncivil, rude, nor bred in Reason's School."
preview | full record— Pomfret, John (1667-1702)
Date: 1699
"Our Understanding they [the passions] with darkness fill, / Cause strange Conceptions, and pervert the Will."
preview | full record— Pomfret, John (1667-1702)
Date: 1699
"On these the Soul, as on some flowing tide, / Must sit, and on the swelling Billows ride; / Hurry'd away, for how can be withstood / Th' Impetuous Torrent of the boyling blood?"
preview | full record— Pomfret, John (1667-1702)