Date: 1760
"This place, where we are, is the seat of memory; and these traces, which you see me running over thus, are the impressions made on the brain by a communication of the impressions made on the senses by external objects."
preview | full record— Johnstone, Charles (c.1719-c.1800)
Date: 1760
"These first impressions are called ideas, which are lodged in this repository of the memory, in these marks, by running which over, I can raise the same ideas, when I please, which differ from their first appearance only in this, that, on their return, they come with the familiarity of a former ...
preview | full record— Johnstone, Charles (c.1719-c.1800)
Date: 1760
"[W]e of superior orders, who animate this universal monarch Gold, have also a power of entering into the hearts of the immediate possessors of our bodies, and there reading all the secrets of their lives"
preview | full record— Johnstone, Charles (c.1719-c.1800)
Date: 1760
"[W]hen the mighty spirit of a large mass of gold takes possession of the human heart, it influences all its actions, and overpowers, or banishes, the weaker impulse of those immaterial, unessential notions called virtues"
preview | full record— Johnstone, Charles (c.1719-c.1800)
Date: 1760
"Heaven has blessed thee with a fertile genius, and steel'd thy soul with fortitude"
preview | full record— Johnstone, Charles (c.1719-c.1800)
Date: 1760
"But though I lost the greatest part of my power over her, by coming into her possession, I still found ample room in her heart for my abode"
preview | full record— Johnstone, Charles (c.1719-c.1800)
Date: 1760
"And here it will be proper to have recourse to the expedient we made use of before, and holding up the mirrour to imagination, view the whole scene as if actually present"
preview | full record— Johnstone, Charles (c.1719-c.1800)
Date: 1760-7
"That had said glass been there set up, nothing more would have been wanting, in order to have taken a man's character, but to have taken a chair and gone softly, as you would to a dioptrical bee-hive, and look'd in,--view'd the soul stark naked;--observ'd all her motions,--her machinations;--tra...
preview | full record— Sterne, Laurence (1713-1768)
Date: 1760-7
"For the next two whole stages, no subject would go down, but the heavy blow he had sustain'd from the loss of a son, whom it seems he had fully reckon'd upon in his mind, and register'd down in his pocket-book, as a second staff for his old age, in case Bobby should fail him."
preview | full record— Sterne, Laurence (1713-1768)
Date: 1760-7
"In short, he had so many little subjects of disquietude springing out of this one affair, all fretting successively in his mind as they rose up in it, that my mother, whatever was her journey up, had but an uneasy journey of it down."
preview | full record— Sterne, Laurence (1713-1768)