Date: 1635
"'Tis said that Polo the Tragedian / When hee on Stage to force some passion came, / Had his Sonnes ashes in an Urne enshrin'd / To worke more deepe impressions in his mind."
preview | full record— Brathwaite, Richard (1587/8-1673)
Date: 1635
"Reason, your viceroy in me, me should defend, / But is captiv'd, and proves weak or untrue."
preview | full record— Donne, John (1572-1631)
Date: 1636
"A man's heart is like those two-faced pictures: if you look one way towards one side of them, you shall see nothing but some horrid shape of a devil, or the like; but go to the other side and look again, and you shall see the picture of an angel or of some beautiful woman, &c."
preview | full record— Goodwin, Thomas (1600-1680)
Date: 1636
"So some have looked over their hearts by signs at one time, and have to their thinking found nothing but hypocrisy, unbelief, hardness, self-seeking; but not long after, examining their hearts again by the same signs, they have espied the image of God drawn fairly upon the table of their hearts."
preview | full record— Goodwin, Thomas (1600-1680)
Date: 1639
"[T]he onely rule of our conscience, is the Law of God written in our hearts."
preview | full record— Ames, William (1576-1633)
Date: 1639
"There are some principles so cleare, and written in the hearts of all men, that they cannot erre to obey and practise them."
preview | full record— Ames, William (1576-1633)
Date: 1639
"[T]he Law of Nature" of "the Law of God ... is naturally written in the hearts of all men."
preview | full record— Ames, William (1576-1633)
Date: 1640
"Hexamater's no sterling, and I feare / What the brain coines goes scarce for currency there"
preview | full record— Randolph, Thomas (bap. 1605, d. 1635)
Date: 1640
"The minds of men are after such strange waies besieged, that for to admit the true beams of things, a sincere and polisht Area is wanting"
preview | full record— Watts, Gilbert (d. 1657)
Date: MS. 1640, 1650
"[T]here is no doubt, if the true doctrine concerning the law of nature, and the properties of a body politic, and the nature of law in general, were perspicuously set down, and taught in the Universities, but that young men, who come thither void of prejudice, and whose minds are yet as white pa...
preview | full record— Hobbes, Thomas (1588-1679)