Date: 1319
"Only two men of all // Are truly just--whose words the rest ignore, / For the triple sparks of envy, greed, and pride / Ignite their hearts."
preview | full record— Dante, Alighieri (1265-1321)
Date: 1582
"So great a Light hath set my mind on fire, / That flesh and bone consume with secret flame"
preview | full record— Watson, Thomas (1555/6-1592)
Date: w. 1592-3 or 1595?, 1623
"I cannot weep, for all my body's moisture / Scarce serves to quench my furnace-burning heart; / Nor can my tongue unload my heart's great burden, / For selfsame wind that I should speak withal / Is kindling coals that fires all my breast, / And burns me up with flames that tears would quench."
preview | full record— Shakespeare, William (1564-1616)
Date: 1593
"And care consumes the minde of man, / as fire melts Virgin Waxe."
preview | full record— Churchyard, Thomas (1523?-1604)
Date: 1598
"And our supplies live largely in the hope / Of great Northumberland, whose bosom burns / With an incensèd fire of injuries."
preview | full record— Shakespeare, William (1564-1616)
Date: 1605, 1640
"But the poets and writers of histories are the best doctors of this knowledge; where we may find painted forth, with great life, how affections are kindled and incited; and how pacified and refrained; and how again contained from act and further degree; how they disclose themselves; how they wor...
preview | full record— Bacon, Sir Francis, Lord Verulam (1561-1626)
Date: 1607
"[Y]our continuance after in all studious actions, constancy in your fauours and kind disposition (for I must needs say as hee of Augustus -- 'Rarus tu quidem ad recipiendas amicitias, ad retinendas vero constantissimus') these incited mee to cause that which as a sparke lay shrowded in embers in...
preview | full record— Walkington, Thomas (b. c. 1575, d. 1621)
Date: w. c. 90, trans. 1611
"Did not our heart burn within us, while he talked with us by the way, and while he opened to us the scriptures?"
preview | full record— Luke the Evangelist (d. c. 84)
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)
Date: 1637
"I supposed, too, that in the beginning God did not place in this body any rational soul or any other thing to serve as a vegetative or sensitive soul, but rather that he kindled in its heart one of those fires without light which I had already explained, and whose nature I understood to be no di...
preview | full record— Descartes, René (1596-1650)