Date: 1755
"The only true zeal is that which is guided by a good light in the head"
preview | full record— Spratt [from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language]
Date: 1755
"Where beams of warm imagination play, / The memory's soft figures melt away"
preview | full record— Pope [from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language]
Date: 1756, 1766
"I will love thee therefore, O Lord, my strength; yea, I will love thee: and it ever shall be my heart's desire, that my soul may behold by faith in its self, as in a glass, the glory of the Lord, able and ready to change it into the same image from glory to glory, reflected upon, and conveyed to...
preview | full record— Amory, Thomas (1690/1-1788)
Date: 1756, 1766
From "the natural lights of our understanding" we have the highest reason to conclude we will be rewarded or punished in the afterlife
preview | full record— Amory, Thomas (1690/1-1788)
Date: 1756, 1766
God may cast his "bright beams of light upon our souls, and irradiate our understandings with the rays of ... wisdom"
preview | full record— Amory, Thomas (1690/1-1788)
Date: 1746, 1757
"Yet tho' to human Sight invisible, / If She, whom I implore, Urania deign, / With Euphrasy to purge away the Mists / Which, humid, dim the Mirror of the Mind; / (As Venus gave Æneas to behold / The angry Gods with Flame o'erwhelming Troy, / Neptune and Pallas,) not in vain, I'll sing / The mysti...
preview | full record— Thompson, William (bap. 1712, d.c. 1766)
Date: 1757
"Shall ev'ry blockhead think his mind, / Like yours, the mirrour of mankind?"
preview | full record— Boyce, Samuel (d. 1775)
Date: 1757
"Behold, thro' fancy's mirrour, what a scene / The phantom opens, ample, wide, and fair, / Each golden minute, bearing as it flies / Imaginary raptures on its wing; / Flatt'ring my fond deluded heart with dreams / Of lasting pleasure--but alas, how soon / This fairy Eden to a waste is turn'd?"
preview | full record— Hervey, James (1714-1758)
Date: w. 1757-1758, 1861
"Nous ne voyons ni l'âme d'autrui, parce qu'elle se cache, ni la notre, parce que nous n'avons point de miroir intellectuel [We do not see the soul of others, because it hides itself, nor our own, because we have no intellectual mirror]."
preview | full record— Rousseau, Jean-Jacques (1712-1778)
Date: 1759
"Unfortunately this moral looking-glass is not always a very good one. Common looking-glasses, it is said, are extremely deceitful, and by the glare which they throw over the face, conceal from the partial eyes of the person many deformities which are obvious to every body besides. But there is n...
preview | full record— Smith, Adam (1723-1790)