Date: 1700
"If not your wife, let reason's rule persuade / Name but my fault, amends shall soon be made."
preview | full record— Dryden, John (1631-1700)
Date: 1700
One cannot find "A throne so soft as in a woman's mind"
preview | full record— Dryden, John (1631-1700)
Date: May 10, 1704
"Yet this is the first humble and civil design of all innovators in the empire of reason."
preview | full record— Swift, Jonathan (1667-1745)
Date: w. c. 1704, 1709
"Provided still, you moderate your Joy, / Nor in your Pleasures all your Might employ: / Let Reason's Rule your strong Desires abate, / Nor please too lavishly your gentle Mate."
preview | full record— Pope, Alexander (1688-1744)
Date: 1725
A child may be governed Reason and her Father, unless she (like the rest of the "ungovernable Sex") think her own will her best adviser
preview | full record— Davys, Mary (1674-1732)
Date: 1729, 1737
"But now no longer mine, / The Reins of Empire I resign: / Let Men submit to Reason's rules, / And be at least designing fools."
preview | full record— Thurston, Joseph (1704-1732)
Date: 1739, 1741
"Tho' Crouds may change, unfaithful as the Wind! / Can They depose the Monarc from his Mind?"
preview | full record— Ogle, George (1704-1746)
Date: 1739, 1741
"Great is the Empire of an honest Heart"
preview | full record— Ogle, George (1704-1746)
Date: 1739, 1741
"Fortune may change the State, not change the Soul"
preview | full record— Ogle, George (1704-1746)
Date: 1741
"He knew, that vain was ev'ry Art, design'd / To check the Freedom of the humane Will; / That Restraints could shackle up the Mind, / Which, self-determin'd, kept her Empire still."
preview | full record— Ogle, George (1704-1746)