Date: 1675
"But though my Person, nor my Wealth, should find / A room unfurnish'd in your well-built mind: / I'll rather be for plain defects despis'd, / Than for low cheats and false Perfections, priz'd"
preview | full record— Fane, Sir Francis (d. 1691)
Date: 1675
"They were i'th' dark, their heart was a dark room, / Till saving grace from God did thither come."
preview | full record— Keach, Benjamin (1640-1704)
Date: 1675
"True faith within, doth but apply, / Unto the soul, the soveraign remedy; / 'Tis as a door, or like a window bright, / Which to dark souls lets in the precious light"
preview | full record— Keach, Benjamin (1640-1704)
Date: 1675
"Sir, you will find Ingratitude a stranger to my thoughts."
preview | full record— Fane, Sir Francis (d. 1691)
Date: 1675
"Who th' Image yet unborn did entertain, / And hous'd the Theater within his Brain."
preview | full record— Leigh, Richard (1649/50-1728)
Date: 1675
"The Intellectual Theater appear'd, / As in the Fancy by a Builder rear'd."
preview | full record— Leigh, Richard (1649/50-1728)
Date: 1675
"Many such Theaters lodge in that Breast, / Where this at largest, a small space possest."
preview | full record— Leigh, Richard (1649/50-1728)
Date: August, 1674; 1675
"How! Is your Soul once more enter'd into that Bondage?"
preview | full record— Crowne, John (bap. 1641, d. 1712)
Date: 1675
"But when Christ's spirit comes i'th' soul to be, / From sin and bondage Christ doth set it free."
preview | full record— Keach, Benjamin (1640-1704)
Date: 1676
"Nature has her cheats, stums a brain, and puts sophisticate dullness often on the tasteless multitude for true wit and good humour"
preview | full record— Etherege, Sir George (1636-1691/2)