Date: Performed Dec 1756, published 1757
"Infernal fiends, if any fiends there are / More fierce than hate, ambition, and revenge, / Rise up and fill my bosom with your fires, / And policy remorseless!"
preview | full record— Home, John (1722-1808)
Date: Performed Dec 1756, published 1757
"Thy inspiration, Lord! / Hath fill'd his bosom with that sacred fire, / Which in the breasts of his forefathers burn'd."
preview | full record— Home, John (1722-1808)
Date: Performed Dec 1756, published 1757
"'Twas I! alas! 'twas I / That fill'd her breast with fury"
preview | full record— Home, John (1722-1808)
Date: Performed Dec 1756, published 1757
"Sadly he says, that pity is the best, / The noblest passion of the human breast: / For when its sacred streams the heart o'erflow, / In gushes pleasure with the tide of woe; / And when its waves retire, like those of Nile, / They leave behind them such a golden soil, / That there the virtues wit...
preview | full record— Home, John (1722-1808)
Date: 1758
"For this purpose there is thought to be a common receptacle of the [animal] spirits called the emporium."
preview | full record— Reeves, John (1710-1793)
Date: 1758
"But teach me in MYSELF to find / Whate'er can please or fill my mind."
preview | full record— Mulso [later Chapone], Hester (1727-1801)
Date: October 21, 1758.
"This counsel has been often given with serious dignity, and often received with appearance of conviction; but, as very few can search deep into their own minds without meeting what they wish to hide from themselves, scarce any man persists in cultivating such disagreeable acquaintance, but draws...
preview | full record— Johnson, Samuel (1709-1784)
Date: 1759
"His mind is continually occupied with what is too grand and solemn, to leave any room for the impressions of those frivolous objects, which fill up the attention of the dissipated and the gay."
preview | full record— Smith, Adam (1723-1790)
Date: 1759
"The soft, the amiable, the gentle virtues, all the virtues of indulgent humanity are in comparison but little insisted upon, and seem on the contrary, by the Stoics in particular, to have been often regarded as meer weaknesses which it behoved a wise man not to harbour in his breast."
preview | full record— Smith, Adam (1723-1790)
Date: September 15, 1759
"In the mythological pedigree of Learning, Memory is made the mother of the Muses by which the masters of ancient Wisdom, perhaps, meant to shew the necessity of storing the mind copiously with true notions, before the imagination should be suffered to form fictions or collect embellishments; for...
preview | full record— Johnson, Samuel (1709-1784)