Date: 1749
"For Philosophy and Religion may be called the Exercises of the Mind, and when this is disordered they are as wholesome as Exercise can be to a distempered Body."
preview | full record— Fielding, Henry (1707-1754)
Date: April 1750, 1791
"Yet still let reason thro' the eye of faith / View Him with fearful love; let truth pronounce, / And adoration on her bended knee / With Heav'n-directed hands confess His reign."
preview | full record— Smart, Christopher (1722-1771)
Date: November 10, 1750
"Does the soul (one would be almost tempted to ask) contract and shrivel up with old age, like the body?"
preview | full record— Mulso [later Chapone], Hester (1727-1801)
Date: Tuesday, June 12, 1750
"But timidity is a disease of the mind more obstinate and fatal; for a man once persuaded that any impediment is insuperable, has given it, with respect to himself, that strength and weight which it had not before."
preview | full record— Johnson, Samuel (1709-1784)
Date: August 13, 1750
"Beings conscious of a frame of mind originally diseased, as all the human race has cause to be, must use the regimen of a stricter self- government."
preview | full record— Johnson, Samuel (1709-1784)
Date: Tuesday, August 28, 1750
"The passions are diseases indeed, but they necessarily direct us to their proper cure."
preview | full record— Johnson, Samuel (1709-1784)
Date: Saturday, September 15, 1750
"But this medicine of the mind is like many remedies applied to the body, of which, though we see the effects, we are unacquainted with the manner of operation, and of which, therefore, some, who are unwilling to suppose any thing out of the reach of their own sagacity, have been inclined to doub...
preview | full record— Johnson, Samuel (1709-1784)
Date: Tuesday, November 27, 1750
"I had formed schemes which I cannot execute, I had supposed events which do not come to pass, and the rest of my life must pass in craving solicitude, unless you can find some remedy for a mind, corrupted with an inveterate disease of wishing, and unable to think on any thing but wants, which re...
preview | full record— Johnson, Samuel (1709-1784)
Date: Saturday, December 1, 1750
"No disease of the mind can more fatally disable it from benevolence, the chief duty of social beings, than ill-humour or peevishness; for though it breaks not out in paroxysms of outrage, nor bursts into clamour, turbulence, and bloodshed, it wears out happiness by slow corrosion, and small inju...
preview | full record— Johnson, Samuel (1709-1784)
Date: Saturday, December 13, 1750
"Thus far the mind resembles the body, but here the similitude is at an end."
preview | full record— Johnson, Samuel (1709-1784)