Date: 1604
"For, as the Ratte running behinde a paynted cloth, betrayeth her selfe; even so, a Passion lurking in the heart, by thoughts and speech discovereth it selfe, according to the common Proverbe, ex abundantia cordis os loquitur, from the aboundance of heart, the tongue speaketh: for as a Riv...
preview | full record— Wright, Thomas (c. 1561-1623)
Date: 1607
"To quench thy learned thirst I meant to draine / The Hippocrenian Fountaine of my braine."
preview | full record— Walkington, Thomas (b. c. 1575, d. 1621)
Date: 1609
"My mind is troubled, like a fountain stirr'd;/ And I myself see not the bottom of it."
preview | full record— Shakespeare, William (1564-1616)
Date: 1610
Souls may "by our first touch, take in / The poisonous tincture of original sin"
preview | full record— Donne, John (1572-1631)
Date: w. 1610-11, 1623
"A solemn air, and the best comforter / To an unsettled fancy, cure thy brains, / Now useless, boiled within thy skull."
preview | full record— Shakespeare, William (1564-1616)
Date: w. 1610-11, 1623
"Their understanding / Begins to swell, and the approaching tide / Will shortly fill the reasonable shores / That now lie foul and muddy."
preview | full record— Shakespeare, William (1564-1616)
Date: 1612-3, 1623
"I know you have a gentle, noble temper,/ A soul as even as a calm."
preview | full record— Shakespeare, William (1564-1616)
Date: 1615
"Go too then, is not he said to know himself, who can tell how to temper and order the state and condition of his mind, how to appease those civil tumults within himself, by the storms and waves whereof he is pitifully tossed, and how to suppress and appease those varieties of passions wherewith ...
preview | full record— Crooke, Helkiah (1576-1648)
Date: 1615
"Enter thou whosoever thou art (though thou be an Atheist, and acknowledgest no God at all,) enter I beseech thee, into the Sacred Tower of Pallas, I mean the brain of Man, and behold and admire the pillars and arched Cloysters of that princely palace, the huge greatness of that stately building,...
preview | full record— Crooke, Helkiah (1576-1648)
Date: 1632
"Looke as it is with a Gold smith that melteth the metall that he is to make a vessell of, if after the melting thereof, there follow a cooling, it had beene as good it had never beene melted, it is as hard, haply harder, as unfit, haply unfitter, then it was before to make vessell of; but after ...
preview | full record— Hooker, Richard (1554-1600)