Date: 1754
"Religion stamp'd her sorrow-melting heart"
preview | full record— Jeffreys, George (1678-1755)
Date: 1754
"Thus my Conscience being tossed in the Waves of a scrupulous Mind, and partly Despair to have any other Issue than I had already by this Lady now my Wife, it behoved me further to consider the State of this Realm, and the Danger it stood in for lack of a Prince to succeed me."
preview | full record— Lennox, née Ramsay, (Barbara) Charlotte (1730/1?-1804)
Date: 1754, 1762
"While private resentment was boiling in his sullen, unsociable mind, he heard the nation resound with complaints against the duke; and he met with the remonstrance of the commons, in which his enemy was represented as the cause of every national grievance, and as the great enemy of the public."
preview | full record— Hume, David (1711-1776)
Date: 1754
Soft Repose may glide smooth through the heart, calm as a stream
preview | full record— Bowden, Samuel (fl. 1733-1761)
Date: 1755
"The Observations to be made, by that Means, refine the Understanding and improve the Judgment, as something is to be gathered from the various Dispositions of People in the highest and lowest Stations of Life; which Persons of Reflection may render greatly con|ducive, in clearing and purging the...
preview | full record— Charke [née Cibber; other married name Sacheverell], Charlotte [alias Mr Brown] (1713-1760)
Date: 1755
"Where beams of warm imagination play, / The memory's soft figures melt away"
preview | full record— Pope [from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language]
Date: 1755
"Malignant tempers ... will discover their natural tincture of mind."
preview | full record— Addison [from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language]
Date: 1755
"The foolish old poet says, that the souls of some women are made of sea-water"
preview | full record— Addison [from Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language]
Date: 1755
"Now if the human understanding be, essentially and originally, a tabula rasa, susceptible of impression from the occurrence of every casual object, then the ideas it receives thereby will be the fountain, and, as it were, the materials of all its future proficiencies; and the number and e...
preview | full record— Sharp, William, Vicar of Long Burton
Date: 1755
"If ever gentle Pity touch'd thy Heart, / Now let it melt!"
preview | full record— Brown, John (1715-1766)