Date: 1764
"Have I well weigh'd the great, the noble part / I'm now to play? have I explored my heart, / That labyrinth of fraud, that deep, dark cell, / Where, unsuspected, e'en by me, may dwell / Ten thousand follies?"
preview | full record— Churchill, Charles (1731-1764)
Date: 1764
"[I]n his breast, / Crowded with follies, Honour found no room"
preview | full record— Churchill, Charles (1731-1764)
Date: January, 1764; 1774
Genius "Turns rebel to dame reason's throne / And holds no judgment like his own."
preview | full record— Lloyd, Robert (bap. 1733, d. 1764)
Date: 1765
"O God, to what a pitch are wrought / The councils of omniscient thought."
preview | full record— Smart, Christopher (1722-1771)
Date: 1765
"O ye pure inmates of the gentle breast, / Truth, Freedom, Love, O where is your abode?"
preview | full record— Beattie, James (1735-1803)
Date: 1765
"Virtue resides not in the head, but heart"
preview | full record— Stevenson, William (1730-1783)
Date: 1765
"Why sent below, a moment or an age, / To act his part on life's oft-trodden stage; / The appetites and passions in his train, / With dignity the drama to sustain"
preview | full record— Stevenson, William (1730-1783)
Date: 1766
"Each art and science lodg'd in her fair breast, / With heav'n's bright caravan of virtues rest."
preview | full record— Woodhouse, James (bap. 1735, d. 1820)
Date: 1767
"Man in this world, Sir, may be compared to a hackney-coach upon a stand; continually subject to be drawn by his unruly appetites, on one foolish jaunt or another; but you will say, if his appetites are horses, which as it were drag him along, reason is the coachman to rule those horses--But, Sir...
preview | full record— Bickerstaff, Isaac (b. 1733, d. after 1808)
Date: 1767
"E'er since my tortur'd mind has known no rest; / Peace is become a stranger to my breast:"
preview | full record— Fawkes, Francis (1720-1777); Theocritus (3rd. Century. B.C.)