Date: 1776-1789
"Like most of the Africans, Severus was passionately addicted to the vain studies of magic and divination, deeply versed in the interpretation of dreams and omens, and perfectly acquainted with the science of judicial astrology; which, in almost every age except the present, has maintained its do...
preview | full record— Gibbon, Edward (1737-1794)
Date: 1776-1789
"She maintained an absolute and lasting empire over the mind of her son, and in his affection the mother could not brook a rival"
preview | full record— Gibbon, Edward (1737-1794)
Date: 1776
"I have very uneasy apprehensions, tho' I hope they are not well founded, that Sir James Desmond's ruling passion is the love of play."
preview | full record— Griffith, Elizabeth (1720-1793)
Date: 1776
"Banished be the vile idea from every honest breast, and may his couch be ever strewed with thorns, that can for his sport, create a pang, in the bosom of unsuspecting innocence!"
preview | full record— Griffith, Elizabeth (1720-1793)
Date: 1776
"Too much a slave to all the fond affections of the heart, love for my brother tempted me to hope that his society might sooth my griefs, and lull my cares to rest."
preview | full record— Griffith, Elizabeth (1720-1793)
Date: 1776
"he more approaching to the testimony of our senses every philosophical solution is, the more perhaps is it conformable to nature."
preview | full record— Goldsmith, Oliver (1728?-1774)
Date: 1776, 1778
"If Peace hath fled the human kind, / With her the empire of the Mind, For bodies to contend"
preview | full record— Stevenson, William (1730-1783)
Date: 1776
The ruling passion of an author may be "strongly marked in his writings"
preview | full record— Mickle, William Julius [formerly William Meikle] (1734-1788)
Date: 1776
"Oh! jealousy, / Thou tyrant of the mind."
preview | full record— Dibdin, Charles (bap. 1745, d. 1814)
Date: 1776
"It is this which hath been so justly celebrated as giving one man an ascendant over others, superior even to what despotism itself can bestow; since by the latter the more ignoble part, only the body and its members, are enslaved; whereas, from the dominion of the former, nothing is exempted, ne...
preview | full record— Campbell, George (1719-1796)